Maxwell School News and Commentary
Filtered by: International Affairs
Elise Roberts awarded grant from the Smith Richardson Foundation
Roberts is a Ph.D. candidate in political science who focuses on comparative politics and international relations. The Foundation is supporting her dissertation research, which examines the effect of foreign aid in post-conflict states and the processes of conflict relapse, as part of their mission to support scholars and organizations that promote international security and domestic public policy.
See related: Grant Awards, International Affairs, National Security, Student Experience
On 70th anniversary of NATO, Murrett discusses its impact in US News
"The alliance has had overwhelming positive influence and maintained its relevance," writes Robert Murrett, professor of practice of public administration and international affairs.
See related: NATO, United States
Lovely discusses President Xi Jinping's visit to France on Bloomberg
According to Mary Lovely, professor of economics, China's leadership is "looking for friends everywhere." And with France being an important player in Europe, "they're also looking to continue to diversify their portfolio in terms of where they do business and how they do business," she says.
See related: China, Europe, International Affairs
Model UN team named distinguished delegation at conference in DC
See related: Foreign Policy, International Governmental Organizations, Model U.N.
Miriam Elman speaks to WAER about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict
See related: Foreign Policy, Middle East & North Africa
It All Started Here: The Very First Model League of Nations Assembly (Model UN) Was Held at Maxwell
Almost a century ago, a Maxwell faculty member turned a top-of-the-head idea into a student exercise in diplomacy—and basically invented Model UN.
See related: Centennial, Foreign Policy, International Governmental Organizations, Model U.N.
Lili Dalton ’16, US Department of State
See related: Africa (Sub-Saharan), Foreign Policy
Global NATO and the Catastrophic Failure in Libya
See related: NATO
Migration and National Identity in South Africa, 1860-2010
See related: Africa (Sub-Saharan), International Affairs
What Makes Them Tick?
Peg Hermann is a pioneer in the field of political psychology, creating a new method for analyzing what political leaders are like — and for anticipating what they might do next.
See related: Autonomous Systems, International Affairs
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