Short description:
Rup teaches Macroeconomics and Economic Growth. His research interests are applied areas of economics, including COVID19 impact analysis. He has published 2 authored book and over 40 journal articles in internationally ranked journals. He has also worked with other regional and international organizations on various research projects and contributes to policy modeling.
Short description:
I'm a Postdoctoral Associate working at Duke University Center for Child and Family Policy in the Sanford School of Public Policy. My research interests focus on child maltreatment prevention, child welfare policy, and parenting in families with low socio-economic status in the U.S. and Asian countries.
Short description:
I am a professor of Political Science and Contemporary Africa at MIT, where I direct MIT-Africa and the Global Diversity Lab. My research and teaching centers around the opportunities and challenges of diversity within and across countries for building healthy and resilient societies. At the Global Diversity Lab, we are focused on research concerning global public health, climate change, and efforts to promote human development and dignity.
Short description:
Anastasia Shesterinina is a UKRI Future Leaders Fellow leading the £1.2m Civil War Paths project "Understanding Civil War from Pre- to Post-War Stages: A Comparative Approach," Director of the Centre for the Comparative Study of Civil War and Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Politics at the University of Sheffield. After receiving her PhD in Political Science from the University of British Columbia, she was a Canada Social Science and Humanities Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow at Yale University's Program on Order, Conflict, and Violence. Her field-intensive research examines the internal dynamics of and international intervention in contemporary armed conflict, with a focus on violent mobilization, ex-combatant reintegration, and civilian protection norms and practices. Her book Mobilizing in Uncertainty: Collective Identities and War in Abkhazia published with Cornell University Press in 2021 received the 2022 APSA Charles Taylor Book Award. Her work has appeared in American Political Science Review, Journal of Peace Research, Perspectives on Politics, European Journal of International Relations, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, and International Peacekeeping.
Short description:
Gwen Prowse is a joint PhD candidate in the departments of political science and African American studies at Yale University. Her work is broadly concerned with grassroots political mobilization in the Deep South region of the U.S. Gwen’s research is multi-method and aims to involve community members in every step of the research process.
Gwen is a research fellow with the Institute for Social Policy Studies (ISPS) and affiliated with the Justice Collaboratory at Yale Law School. She is also the co-PI for the Portals Policing Project, which examines how police-citizen interactions shape political knowledge and political discourse in majority-Black communities in the United States.