News + Media

 
Headshot of Sara Plana

In the News

May 21, 2020

Sara Plana receives inaugural Jeanne Guillemin Prize

Michelle EnglishMIT News

The prize, which provides financial support to women working toward a PhD in international affairs, will be applied toward her research into proxy warfare.

Image of people at meeting taking notes

précis

May 20, 2020

Briefings

Experts rethink national security in the era of pandemics; Robert Art retires as director of Seminar XXI; Sara Plana receives Jeanne Guillemin Prize; Yukio Okamoto, distinguished diplomat and fellow, felled by Covid-19; Africa takes on Covid-19; and Pandemic insights from iGEM conference.

Headshot of Sara Plana

News Release

May 20, 2020

Sara Plana is the inaugural recipient of the Jeanne Guillemin Prize

Sara Plana, a fifth-year PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science, was recently named the inaugural recipient of the Jeanne Guillemin Prize at the Center for International Studies (CIS).  The prize provides financial support to women studying international affairs and was endowed at CIS by the late Jeanne Guillemin. 

Headshot of Robert Art

News Release

May 20, 2020

Robert Art retires as director of the Seminar XXI Program after 20 years of dedicated service

The Center for International Studies (CIS) announces today that Robert Art will step down from his role as the director of the Seminar XXI Program effective June 30.  Art has directed the CIS Seminar XXI program since 2000.

Anat Biletzki

précis

May 19, 2020

precis Interview: Anat Biletzki

Anat Biletzki is the Albert Schweitzer Professor of Philosophy at Quinnipiac University, a research affiliate at CIS, and founding co-director of its Human Rights and Technology Fellowship Program. In this interview, she describes the work of the human rights and technology program and her book, Philosophy of Human Rights: A Systematic Introduction.

Battle in Iraq

précis

May 19, 2020

The cult of the persuasive: The organizational origins of US strategy in military assistance

PhD candidate Rachel Tecott explains in her essay that "as long as the White House and the Congress continue to grant the military the autonomy and the resources to perpetuate military assistance projects without serious evaluation...the cult of the persuasive is likely to persist, and US military assistance projects are likely to fail."

Pouya Alimagham and his book

précis

May 19, 2020

Contesting the Iranian Revolution: The Green Uprisings

Pouya Alimagham is a historian of the modern Middle East, with a focus on Iran, Iraq, and the Levant. In Contesting the Iranian Revolution: The Green Uprisings, he harnesses the wider history of Iran and the Middle East to highlight how activists contested the Islamic Republic's legitimacy to its very core.

Trophy with 2020 medal hanging on it

précis

May 19, 2020

End Notes

End Notes features the professional achievements of our scholars, students, and staff. This includes recent awards, speaking engagements, and publications.​

Spring 2020 activities

précis

May 19, 2020

Activities

Starr Forums explore topics through the lens of Covid-19; Africa and India take on Covid-19; Summer Study Grants; SSP Wednesday Seminars; International Migration Seminar Series; SHASS Infinite Miles Awards; the Policy Lab at CIS completes fifth call for proposals with record turnout. 

Screenshot of Barry Posen being interviewed on tv show

In the News

May 19, 2020

Intervention or restraint: Ruger and Posen debate Kristol and Flournoy

Jacob HeilbrunnThe National Interest

On the American Public Television program “The Whole Truth,” hosted by historian and author David Eisenhower, a panel of leading foreign policy figures, including William Ruger, Michele Flournoy, William Kristol and Barry Posen, recently debated America’s purpose.

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