2 014 –15 A N N U A L R E V I E W O F T H E J O S E F K O R B E L S C H O O L O F I N T E R N A T I O N A L S T U D I E S
RESEARCH and SCHOLARSHIP with real- world relevance
Placing of the spire at the Anna and John J. Sie International Relations Complex, September 24, 2015
CO NTENTS 4
Message from the Dean
6
The Future of Korbel
8
Faculty
10
Research and Scholarship
14
Centers and Programs
18
Public Engagement
19
In the Media
20
Admissions
21
Careers
22
Student Profiles
24
Alumni Profiles
26
In Memoriam
26
Donor Spotlight
27
Korbel Dinner
The Josef Korbel School of International Studies is one of the world’s leading institutions for the study of international relations. Located at the foot of the Rocky Mountains in the vibrant city of Denver, Colorado, our innovative programs provide students the skills, knowledge and expertise necessary to become successful global leaders in the public, private and nonprofit sectors. Since its founding in 1964, the award-winning faculty of the Josef Korbel School have challenged students to think independently and innovatively to create change. We foster a community that harnesses the Rocky Mountain West’s innovative spirit to examine global issues from multiple perspectives and create actionable solutions.
CONNECT WITH KORBEL: du.edu/korbel josefkorbel
josefkorbel
josefkorbelschool G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N | 3
MESSAGE FROM THE DEAN Last year was marked by great momentum as we continued our journey toward the Future of Korbel—the campaign launched in 2014 as we celebrated our 50th anniversary and looked ahead to a new era of growth and international significance. Our vibrant community leads the way in bringing fresh perspectives and outside-the-Beltway thinking to the most pressing global issues of our time— and nowhere is this more apparent than in sponsored research. Long regarded as the top master’s program for the study of international affairs in the western United States, the Korbel School has now cemented its reputation as one of the nation’s leading institutions focused on social science research. Since 2007 we’ve seen a 23-fold increase in sponsored research. In 2015 alone, we secured nearly $4 million in new funding for project-related research. Twenty-five percent of our graduate students are engaged in faculty research. These numbers demonstrate a tremendous trajectory in this area. In the Research and Scholarship section of this report, you’ll have the opportunity to learn why research is so important for the Korbel School and read examples of how our policy-relevant research programs link scholarship to the real world. I invite you to also read about the impressive scholarship produced by our faculty and students, the top-notch faculty whom we welcomed last year, our robust public programming which continues to bring the world to Denver and profiles of several students, alumni and donors—exemplars of the Korbel community. While all of the stories in this third edition of Global Connection represent the Future of Korbel, there is one which tangibly does so. With excitement and pride, we are watching the construction progress of the Anna and John J. Sie International Relations Complex. The technologically-advanced Sie Complex will transform and support our growing institution, providing our students and faculty with much-needed space and a collaborative learning environment unavailable in similar institutions. In just a few short months, I look forward to inviting you to join us in celebrating its opening. Until then, on behalf of the students, faculty and staff of the Josef Korbel School, thank you for your continued support and engagement. Sincerely,
Ambassador Christopher R. Hill, Ret. Dean, Josef Korbel School of International Studies
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Hon. Chuck Hagel greets Lt. Col. Dan Allen, Army Fellow, and Korbel students Capt. Matthew West, Foreign Area Officer; Karoline Rønning; and Brooke Snowdon, at Fall Orientation. Hagel was later honored at the Korbel Dinner (see page 27).
Our journey toward the Future of Korbel
THE FUTURE OF KORBEL
began with a $17 million gift from the Anna and John J. Sie Foundation to construct a new 46,000 square foot building addition. Since then, we have raised additional support for our school: momentum continues to build, and we are more than halfway to our ambitious $40 million goal.
PEOPLE, PROGRAMS AND PLACES Anna and John J. Sie’s transformational gift is about more than a building. It’s also about what will occur inside the building— for our students, faculty, staff and academic and research programs—for decades to come. The Future of Korbel campaign has three priorities: People, Programs and Places. PRIORITY 1: PEOPLE Students We seek the best and brightest students who will learn from the world’s top scholars and eventually lead the world in peacebuilding, solving humanitarian issues and ensuring global security. The Future of Korbel supports: w Endowed Scholarships—to reinforce our students’ ability to study and grow with less burden from loans looming in their future. wE ndowed Internship Support—so students can apply classroom knowledge and skills through meaningful internships across sectors with organizations such as the U.S. State Department, the World Health Organization and Save the Children. w Endowed Satellite Study Scholarships—to make accessible the unique opportunities for more students to participate in Korbel in D.C. (Washington, D.C.) and Korbel in Geneva (Switzerland). wE ndowed Support for the Korbel School’s Office of Career and Professional Development—to strengthen the capacity of this department which is exclusively dedicated to enhancing the career success of our graduate students.
Photos: Center – Visiting Scholar Dr. Rami Khouri, American University of Beirut Right – U.S. Army War College International Strategic Crises Negotiation Exercise
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Faculty Continuing Josef Korbel’s legacy of scholarship, our award-winning faculty inspire and support our students as they navigate their choices and career goals. The Future of Korbel will fund: w Endowed Professorships and Chairs—to continue attracting top-notch faculty and practitioners. w The Rice Family Endowed Professor of Practice—which provides opportunities for practitioners to teach at the School in a non-tenured position for up to three years. w Visiting Scholars—who impart wisdom and experience in a specific academic area.
PRIORITY 2: PROGRAMS The Korbel School’s research centers, institutes and clinics add depth and breadth to integrated teaching and practical problem solving. Students work alongside world-renowned scholars, practitioners and experts in these centers: w Center for China-U.S. Cooperation w Center for Middle East Studies w Center on Rights Development w Colorado European Union Center of Excellence w Conflict Resolution Institute w Crossley Center for Public Opinion Research
PRIORITY 3: PLACES The Anna & John J. Sie International Relations Complex As we marked our 50th anniversary in 2014 with the ground-breaking of the new Sie International Relations Complex, the Josef Korbel School entered a new era: the Future of Korbel. The Sie Complex will equip students with the tools necessary to reinforce lessons, connect students and faculty with international leaders and colleagues across the globe and provide students with the technological know-how they will utilize in their future careers. Take a virtual tour of the Sie Complex with our interactive floor plans at korbel-future.du.edu.
w Human Trafficking Center w Latin America Center w Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures w Sié Chéou-Kang Center for International Security and Diplomacy
LEAVE YOUR MARK – BUY A BRICK Join Korbel School alumni, parents, faculty, staff and friends in supporting the Future of Korbel by purchasing an engraved brick at the Anna and John J. Sie International Relations Complex. Your personalized brick may include your name or the name of a friend or loved one you wish to honor. Bricks will be placed at a prominent location on the west end of the Sie Complex, in the stately overlook area adjacent to the flagpoles. You may purchase multiple bricks and have them placed next to one another, but we must receive these orders together. Installation will take place in late spring/early summer 2016. To order your personalized brick online, please visit korbel-future.du.edu/leave-your-mark.
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FACULTY New Faculty Appointments MARIE BERRY ASSISTANT PROFESSOR An affiliate of the Sié Chéou-Kang Center for International Security and Diplomacy, Marie Berry is a political sociologist with a focus on mass violence, gender, institutions and development. Her research examines the political and social consequences of war, genocide or ethnic conflict.
KEITH GEHRING TEACHING ASSISTANT PROFESSOR Keith Gehring provides undergraduate instruction in the areas of technology, political economy, globalization and development. Gehring’s research is focused on the institutions supportive of knowledge economy development, specifically in the area of information and communication technology (ICT).
THOMAS LAETZ PROFESSOR OF THE PRACTICE Thomas Laetz is a Professor of the Practice of Program Development and Evaluation. Laetz has nearly 40 years of experience managing teams to design and evaluate a variety of projects and programs for planning consulting firms; local, state and federal governments; and privately. His research interests are incorporating complexity theory into international development interventions to improve their design, outcomes and sustainability, particularly in conflict environments.
EMILY VAN HOUWELING VISITING ASSISTANT PROFESSOR Emily Van Houweling conducts interdisciplinary research about human-environment interactions, with a focus on water issues in Africa. Her research looks at how environmental changes impact gender equality, livelihoods, culture, poverty and social relationships and how, in turn, people transform their environments. Van Houweling has worked in nine countries in Africa and has spent the most time in Mozambique and Mali.
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Recognition
PROFESSOR MARTIN RHODES JOHN EVANS PROFESSOR AWARD Martin Rhodes, professor of Comparative Political Economy and co-director of the Korbel School’s PhD program and the Colorado European Union Center of Excellence, received the John Evans Professor award in 2015. This award is the University of Denver’s highest faculty honor. Rhodes was recognized for his work researching and analyzing the politics of economic policy across the globe. He is co-editor of two recent books on European politics: “New Modes of Governance in Europe” and “Social Pacts in Europe: Emergence, Evolution and Institutionalization.” Rhodes completed a new book this year that explores governance issues raised by the ongoing Eurozone crisis.
ASSOCIATE PROFESSOR E. THOMAS (TOM) ROWE
PROFESSOR SUISHENG (SAM) ZHAO
Tom Rowe, creator of the Korbel School’s International Career Advancement Program (ICAP), was named by The Economist magazine as one of the Top 50 Diversity Figures in Public Life. ICAP was also named as one of the Top Ten Ethnicity Employee Networks. Rowe created ICAP with the belief that the diversity of U.S. society should be reflected in its leadership, and created midcareer support for professionals in underrepresented groups seeking to rise to the highest echelons of international affairs. The Economist’s list is a newly established assessment of organizations and individuals with outstanding commitment to diversity, as nominated by readers of The Economist and judged by a panel of experts.
Sam Zhao, director of the Korbel School’s Center for China-U.S. Cooperation, was named one of the world’s most influential scholars on China’s international affairs based on number of citations in the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) database for the five-year period ending in 2013. The SSCI, which is produced by Thomson Reuters, tracks citations from nearly 2,500 journals of social sciences across more than 50 disciplines. Zhao is editor of the China Center’s Journal of Contemporary China, the world’s top-ranked China study journal. During Chinese President Xi Jinping’s first official visit to the U.S. in September 2015, Zhao was among other dignitaries and businesspeople attending a dinner in the president’s honor.
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RESEARCH
and
SCHOLARSHIP
Ideas with impact–outside the Beltway By E rica Chenoweth, PhD, Professor and Associate Dean for Research
The Josef Korbel School’s top-ranked faculty are committed to producing high-quality, timely research and scholarship with real-world relevance. Our experts include specialists in emerging issues in international security; international development; human rights; political economy; global environmental and energy politics; gender, political theory and political thought; American foreign policy; the Middle East; China; Latin America; and public health. Our policy-relevant research provides a pathway for our faculty and students to have greater global impact.
REAL-WORLD RELEVANCE The questions we ask at the Korbel School often bear on real-world problems. For instance, should the United States intervene in Syria (and if so, how)? What kinds of policies should developing countries adopt to reduce the impacts of climate change on their societies? How can communities confront oppressive governments without resorting to arms? How should Kenyan, Tanzanian and Ugandan governments produce sustainable fisheries to feed millions of people living in poverty in their countries? What kinds of common-sense regulations should apply to private security companies, and how can the international community implement and enforce such principles? What combination of governmental policies is most effective in reducing terrorist violence in the Middle East? How can economists accurately weigh the potential risks of different economic policies so as to produce fair and ethical outcomes? How can governments effectively tax their populations in ways that do not exacerbate economic inequality? This is just a sampling of the types of questions asked—and the knowledge produced and disseminated—by Korbel faculty today. In 2015 alone, Korbel School faculty produced more than 80 scholarly publications—books, top-ranked peer-reviewed journal articles and policy reports. In addition to scholarly works, many faculty contribute regularly through columns in the popular media; online columns such as Project Syndicate; and widely-read blogs including the Human Trafficking Center’s blog and Political Violence @ a Glance, an award-winning blog co-hosted at the Korbel School that is widely praised for its contributions to broader understandings of political violence and its alternatives. 10 | G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N
Pardee Center Director Jonathan Moyer
STUDENT ENGAGEMENT IN RESEARCH Faculty research also yields incredible opportunities for the Korbel School’s students to become directly involved in producing new knowledge during their time at the school. This is a differentiating experience for students, better preparing them for future careers. Many students travel with faculty into the field to engage in field research, while many others work in faculty labs on data collection, analysis and writing. Other students publish with faculty members, with and without sponsored research projects. Twenty-five percent of the school’s graduate students are engaged in faculty research in a paid capacity, and we have a number of impressive research outputs among faculty and student collaborations.
Associate Professor Cullen Hendrix speaks at DU about his book, “Confronting the Curse: The Economics and Geopolitics of Natural Resource Governance.”
Assistant Professor Marie Berry (right) with members of a women’s cooperative in Rwanda.
Professor Oliver Kaplan with Heraldo Muñoz, Josef Korbel School alumnus (MA ’76, PhD ’79) and current Minister of Foreign Affairs in Chile.
GRADUATE RESEARCH ASSISTANT ALEX PORTER, MA ‘14 GLOBAL FINANCE, TRADE AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION As a graduate Research Assistant at the Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures at Korbel, Alex Porter worked with the International Futures model. Developed by Professor Barry Hughes, the International Futures model is a sophisticated, long-term global forecasting tool used to inform policy decisions. “Working at Pardee gives you the chance to contribute to relevant policy work and research,” says Porter. “The most interesting thing I worked on was our recent project with the USAID mission to Uganda. We produced a research document evaluating policy choices in Uganda over the next five years and their impacts out to 2040. The deliverable was pretty comprehensive and hopefully it will end up influencing policy making and development projects at the USAID mission to Uganda.” The experience of working as a graduate student Research Assistant provided Porter with a mix of hands-on skills and knowledge that prepared him well for his career. “It helped me to understand how the world works in a general sense— learning what drives outcomes in various different development sectors, from health to energy to international politics.” Porter is now working in South Africa in the Policy and Strategy Unit of the Office of the Premier in the Western Cape Provincial Government. “We’ve partnered with the
“Working at Pardee gives you the chance to contribute to relevant policy work and research. It helped me to understand how the world works in a general sense—learning what drives outcomes in various different development sectors, from health to energy to international politics.”
Institute for Security Studies and the Pardee Center to produce a series of policy briefs concerning the future of the Western Cape Province,” Porter explains. “The project is called FuturesCape and it aims to provide insight into potential paths of human, economic and political development in the province out to 2040…[working as a Research Assistant] kick-started my career by giving me direct experience with development forecasting and policy analysis. It helped me to understand how the world works in a general sense—learning what drives outcomes in various different development sectors, from health to energy to international politics.”
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PEER-REVIEWED JOURNALS HOUSED AT KORBEL In addition to publishing books and articles in peer-reviewed outlets, the Korbel School is the editorial home to two world-class, peer-reviewed journals. The Journal of Contemporary China, consistently ranked #1 in academic journals on China, is published by Routledge with a readership in the thousands (Professor Suisheng Zhao, Editor). The Journal of Global Security Studies, launched in January 2016 with Oxford University Press, was awarded to the Korbel School in 2015 by the International Studies Association (ISA). Each ISA member will receive a copy of the journal, assuring a readership in the thousands and recognition that the Korbel School is a key convener of scholarly conversation about international security (Professor Deborah Avant, Editor-in-Chief; Jill Schmieder Hereau, Managing Editor). EXPLOSIVE GROWTH IN SPONSORED RESEARCH Since 2007, the Korbel School faculty have generated a 23-fold increase in sponsored research awards (from two awards in 2007 to 28 awards in 2015). This past year has been the most successful so far, with $4 million in new research funding and $9 million in active funding overall. Of the 28 active research awards, 12 Korbel faculty are involved as Principal Investigators for one or more projects. Several of these projects are collaborative efforts involving multiple Korbel faculty, bringing the total number of sponsored faculty to 16. THE FUTURE OF RESEARCH AT KORBEL The tremendous growth and quality of the Korbel School’s research program is a reflection of top-tier talent among our faculty and staff and our focus on ideas with real-world impacts. The future is bright and includes many opportunities for cross-disciplinary collaboration. The National Science Foundation aquaculture grant (see sidebar, facing page) involves biologists, economists, systems statisticians and political scientists—a diversity which demonstrates our commitment to multidisciplinary research. The Human Trafficking Center worked with the Pardee Center for International Futures and the University’s Center for Statistics and Visualization to develop a new interactive mapping tool (see page 17). Beyond the Korbel School, collaboration is taking place with colleagues across the University of Denver campus—a key principle in the University’s new strategic plan, DU Impact 2025. Initiatives currently underway include two with the Daniels College of Business: a USAID-funded project on how communities effectively use protest to confront human rights abuses by corporations, and establishment of the Global Business and Corporate Social Responsibility certificate. Similarly, the Human Trafficking Center is increasingly partnering with researchers in the International Disaster Psychology program and graduate students at Daniels College of Business.
Erica Chenoweth, PhD, Professor and Associate Dean for Research Erica Chenoweth is an internationally-recognized authority on political violence and its alternatives. Foreign Policy magazine ranked her among the Top 100 Global Thinkers in 2013 for her efforts to promote the empirical study of civil resistance. Chenoweth received the 2014 Karl Deutsch Award, which the International Studies Association gives annually to the scholar under the age of 40 who has made the greatest impact on the field of international politics or peace research. 12 | G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N
KORBEL AWARDED MAJOR GRANTS FROM NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION AND CARNEGIE CORPORATION The Korbel School announced two significant research
explores innovations in peacebuilding in Nepal and South
grant awards in the fall of 2015. The school was one of
Africa. Through cross-regional research on Asia, Africa
16 institutions to receive a National Science Foundation
and the Americas, researchers will focus on how local
grant to explore how humans interact with the environment.
stakeholders in conflict-affected countries relate to, and
The $1.8 million grant, awarded to professors Sarah Glaser,
advance, international human rights norms. Sisk’s team will
Dale Rothman and Karin Wedig, funds research on how the
collaborate with DU alumna Dr. Astri Suhrke, a Norwegian
growth of aquaculture in and around Lake Victoria will affect
researcher on ethnic conflict and peacebuilding. Suhrke
the wild fisheries for Nile perch and tilapia, and whether
earned her PhD in 1969 at the Korbel School (then known
aquaculture can be designed to provide income in an equitable
as the Graduate School of International Studies) under the
fashion. The project also looks at aquaculture’s potential
supervision of Professor Josef Korbel.
pollution impacts, trade-offs in investment for farmed versus wild fish, and how supply and demand for the different types of fish might impact the global market.
Through a separate grant made in 2014 the Carnegie Corporation is also funding the work of Korbel post-doctoral students Cassy Dorff, Steve Zech and Devin Finn. Awarded
The second award was a $1 million combined grant from the
to the Sié Chéou-Kang Center for International Security
Carnegie Corporation of New York and the Royal Ministry of
and Diplomacy, the $1 million, two-year grant is toward a
Foreign Affairs of Norway, won by Professor Timothy Sisk.
“Bridging the Academic-Policy Gap” program that is generating
The project, “Innovations in Peacebuilding: International
and disseminating policy-relevant research on nonviolent
Norms and Local Dynamics in Conflict-Affected Countries,”
strategies for violence prevention and response.
Research Scientist Sarah Glaser at Lake Victoria
Professor Timothy Sisk
CENTERS
and
PROGR A MS
The Josef Korbel School is home to innovative research centers and academic programs which enhance the student experience and the school’s global impact. Here are highlights from last year. NEW LATIN AMERICA CENTER CONTRIBUTES TO DEEPER UNDERSTANDING OF US-LATIN AMERICA RELATIONS The Latin America Center was founded in the 2014-15 academic year to create a Rocky Mountain hub for scholarship and events on Latin America. Established with seed funding from the Social Science Foundation, the center supports and coordinates educational, research, policy and cultural activities related to Latin America and international relations in the region. “Our center aims to be an open and collective enterprise that contributes to deeper understanding and social change to bring progress to the Americas and especially U.S.-Latin American relations,” says the center’s director, Associate Professor Aaron Schneider. Colorado has historic ties to different parts of Latin America. It is located in one of the important migrant and trade corridors linking NAFTA countries Mexico, Canada and the U.S.; and Denver (whose population is currently about one-third Latino) boasts vibrant Native American and Latino communities. Colorado is important enough to Latin America to host consulates from multiple countries, including Mexico, Guatemala and Peru, but far enough from the Beltway business-as-usual to allow innovative thinking about a new U.S.-Latin America relation.
Dr. Claudia Paz y Paz and Associate Professor Aaron Schneider, director of the Latin America Center. Paz y Paz’s talk on prosecution of genociders was cosponsored by the Sié Chéou-Kang Center for International Security and Diplomacy. 14 | G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N
The center is building on these historic, geographic and political connections by maintaining an active teaching, research and public engagement agenda. It has supported students with fellowships for travel and conferences, and supports research by facilitating top-level faculty exchange with Latin American partners. Panel discussions have covered immigration; human trafficking; normalizing relations with Cuba; electoral shifts in Latin America; and human rights and political change in Mexico.
“Our center aims to be an open and collective enterprise that contributes to deeper understanding and social change to bring progress to the Americas and especially U.S.-Latin American relations.” Distinguished guest speakers last year included Alejandro Toledo, former president of Peru; Francisco Altschul, Ambassador of El Salvador; and Claudia Paz y Paz, Guatemala’s first female attorney general and a 2013 Nobel Peace Prize nominee.
His Excellency Alejandro Toledo, former president of Peru, spoke about his book, “The Shared Society.” His talk was co-sponsored with the Center on Rights Development (CORD) Symposium. This year’s CORD Symposium will take place April 5–8, 2016, on Gender and Conflict.
HUMANITARIAN CRISIS SIMULATION OFFERS STUDENTS REAL-WORLD PERSPECTIVE The Josef Korbel School held its third Humanitarian Crisis Simulation in 2015—an opportunity for students built from the professional experience of the simulation’s organizer, Clinical Associate Professor Chen Reis. Reis, who joined the Korbel School in 2011 and is also director of the Korbel School’s Humanitarian Assistance Program, worked with the World Health Organization (WHO) for seven years and, prior to that, conducted research with Physicians for Human Rights. During that time, Reis experienced what it was like to work in conflict and disaster areas and to participate in WHO simulation exercises to train staff members. “When I came here, I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be a brilliant idea to do something similar for our students?’” Reis said. Since then, she has helped organize and grow Korbel’s Humanitarian Crisis Simulation from a single-day exercise in the spring of 2012 to the annual three-day event in 2015. The idea behind the simulation is to give students an opportunity to understand the kind of high-stress environment associated with humanitarian fieldwork, as well as allow participants to learn about their own strengths and weaknesses, Reis said.
“This is actually putting you in that stressful situation to see how you’re going to be able to work not only alone, but with a team of people all having different levels of experience.” Amber Prainito, an MA candidate in International Development, said that while she wasn’t sure if she wanted to spend her entire career working directly in the field following graduation, she still enjoyed having the opportunity to get more perspective on the difficulties of providing humanitarian assistance. “When you sit in a class, it’s one thing,” she said, “but you can’t really tell if you’re going to enjoy doing it or be able to handle it. This is actually putting you in that stressful situation to see how you’re going to be able to work not only alone, but with a team of people all having different levels of experience.”
COLORADO EUROPEAN UNION CENTER OF EXCELLENCE JOINS THE KORBEL SCHOOL The Josef Korbel School welcomed the Colorado European Union Center of Excellence (CEUCE) in the fall of 2015. CEUCE’s mission is to foster institutional and peopleto-people links between the mountain west region of the United States and the European Union. CEUCE was founded in 2008 at the University of Colorado with the support of the Delegation of the European Commission to the United States in Washington, D.C. The center represents one of eight institutions forming the Network of European Union Centers of Excellence in the United States. “CEUCE has an interdisciplinary focus, promoting research excellence, enhancing undergraduate and graduate education, engaging in community outreach and fostering public-private-academic relationships,” according to Executive Director Felicia Naranjo Martinez. Korbel School professors Martin Rhodes and Rachel Epstein serve as the center’s academic directors. Both have many years of experience and research expertise in EU affairs and comparative European politics and political economy. The center supports EU-related public events across the University of Denver campus and Rocky Mountain region. Last year’s topics included the European refugee crisis, the war in eastern Ukraine, the European debt and currency crisis and the Paris climate talks. Among CEUCE’s guest speakers were Ambassador Rudi Veestraeten, Consul General of Belgium; Dr. Jan Marco Müller, Policy Officer, International, Inter-institutional and Stakeholder Relations, Joint Research Centre, EU Commission; and Dr. Donald Abenheim, formerly a research fellow at the Hoover Institution and an associate professor at the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California.
Members of the CEUCE staff (left to right): professors and academic co-directors Martin Rhodes and Rachel Epstein; Will Trout; Executive Director Felicia Naranjo Martinez; Sarah Edwards; and Baret Walker.
“CEUCE has an interdisciplinary focus, promoting research excellence, enhancing undergraduate and graduate education, engaging in community outreach and fostering public-private-academic relationships.”
In August 2015 CEUCE announced two prestigious grant awards: the Jean Monnet Center of Excellence award from the European Union (EU) Commission; and a two-year grant, “‘Getting to Know Europe,” from the EU Delegation (Diplomatic Mission) to the United States in Washington, D.C.
With DU’s Sturm College of Law, CEUCE sponsored “The Road to Paris: EU and US Approaches to the World Climate Talks,” a panel discussion with world experts on climate change and utility models for sustainable electricity.
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HUMAN TRAFFICKING CENTER SET TO LAUNCH INTERACTIVE MAPPING TOOL With the spread of globalization, human trafficking is a modern scourge that is growing in visibility. A large amount of human trafficking involves the flow of victims across national borders. To increase awareness of human trafficking, the Korbel School’s Human Trafficking Center has created the Human Trafficking Flow Map, an online dashboard that displays some of the data from the Center’s Human Trafficking Index project. The dashboard is a tool that aims to help policymakers, researchers, advocates, students and the general public easily and interactively map and explore human trafficking flows between countries. The map is the product of years of research by the graduate students and faculty of the Human Trafficking Center, with support from the Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures (Oliver Kaplan, Claude d’Estrée, and Jonathan Moyer, Principal Investigators). According to Oliver Kaplan, assistant professor and associate director of the Human Trafficking Center, “We have hosted several international human trafficking delegations through U.S. State Department and WorldDenver programs, and visitors have consistently pleaded for accessible, comparative data to advocate for stronger anti-human trafficking policies in their home countries. We hope our visualization dashboard will provide such a tool for them, as well as serve as an educational aid for policymakers and the general public.”
The project was funded by a Korbel School Research Fund grant and the visualization design and development was conducted by the University’s new Center for Statistics and Visualization. The HTC Flow Map is expected to launch in early 2016 and will be freely available to the public via the Human Trafficking Center’s website (humantraffickingcenter.org). For more information, contact Oliver Kaplan at Oliver.Kaplan@du.edu.
KORBEL SCHOOL RESEARCH CENTERS ENHANCE THE STUDENT EXPERIENCE In addition to the centers featured on pages 14–17, the Korbel School is home to additional research centers, institutes and clinics through which students gain enriching research and internship opportunities, working alongside world-renowned scholars, practitioners and experts. We invite you to learn more about all of our centers through the links and contact information listed below. Center for China-U.S. Cooperation
Crossley Center for Public Opinion Research
du.edu/korbel/china | ccusc@du.edu
du.edu/korbel/crossleycenter | crossleycenter.adm@du.edu
Center for Middle East Studies
Human Trafficking Center
du.edu/korbel/middleeast | mec@du.edu
humantraffickingcenter.org | info@humantraffickingcenter.org
Center On Rights Development
Latin America Center
centeronrightsdevelopment.org | cord.du@gmail.com
du.edu/korbel/latinamerica | jksis.lac@du.edu
Colorado European Union Center of Excellence
Frederick S. Pardee Center for International Futures
du.edu/korbel/ceuce | ceuce@du.edu
pardee.du.edu | pardee.center@du.edu
Conflict Resolution Institute
Sié Chéou-Kang Center for International Security & Diplomacy
du.edu/conflictresolution | cri@du.edu
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PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT PUBLIC LECTURES in 2014–15 including these guest speakers:
THE HONORABLE CHUCK HAGEL Former U.S. Secretary of Defense
DR. MICHAEL PILLSBURY Director, Center on Chinese Strategy, Hudson Institute MR. RANDY ARCHIBOLD The New York Times Bureau Chief Mexico, Central America and Caribbean
PROFESSOR KEVIN BALES Human rights scholar and activist Co-founder, Free the Slaves
THE HONORABLE PAUL JONES U.S. Ambassador to Poland HIS EXCELLENCY FRANCISCO ALTSCHUL Ambassador of El Salvador to the United States
DR. CLAUDIA PAZ Y PAZ Former Attorney General of Guatemala
HIS EXCELLENCY ENVER HOXHAJ Former Minister of Foreign Affairs Republic of Kosovo
FOREIGN MINISTER MOHAMMAD JAVAD ZARIF MA ‘84, PhD ‘88, Islamic Republic of Iran
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THE HONORABLE NICHOLAS PLATT Author and Former U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan, Philippines and Zambia
PROFESSOR KEN ROBERTS Department of Government, Cornell University MS. KATHY KELLY Peace Activist and Coordinator Voice for Creative Nonviolence
DR. JOHN PAUL LEDERACH Author and Professor International Peacebuilding University of Notre Dame
THE HONORABLE ARNOLD CHACON Director General, U.S. Department of State HIS EXCELLENCY ALEJANDRO TOLEDO Former President of Peru
MS. ROBIN WRIGHT Author and Journalist
DR. JAN MARCO MÜLLER Policy Officer, International, Inter-institutional and Stakeholder Relations, Joint Research Centre, EU Commission
MR. ROGER COHEN Author and Journalist, The New York Times
in the
MEDIA
The Josef Korbel School’s renowned dean, faculty and alumni are often sought by media worldwide to comment on current events. Here’s a look at the issues we commented on and the media outlets with which we spoke during the 2014-15 academic year. Visit our media archive at du.edu/korbel/about/news.
ISIS
Greek Resistance Saudi Arabia
Cuba
Colombia Peace Agreement
Human Trafficking
Diplomacy
Resistance North Korea Nonviolent Refugee Crisis
Immigration
Iran Nuclear Deal Extremism
World Hunger
Middle East Terrorism Iraq China
Syria
Authoritarian Regimes
Reducing Poverty
Russia
Nigeria’s Elections
Ukraine
Ethnic Conflicts Artificial European Monetary Policy Cybersecurity
Ebola
Intelligence
w 7News Denver
w PRI’s The World
w 9News Denver
w Project Syndicate
w ABC This Week
w Salon
w Al Jazeera America
w Scientific American
w BBC World News
w The Cairo Review of Global Affairs
w Center for Strategic and International Studies
w The Denver Post
w CNN
w The Hill
w Colorado Public Radio
w The Huffington Post
w Council on Foreign Relations
w The Jerusalem Post
w Forbes
w The Korea Times
w Foreign Affairs
w The New York Times
w Foreign Policy
w The Wall Street Journal
w FoxNews
w The Washington Post
w Institute for Security Studies
w The Washington Times
w Meet the Press
w UN Dispatch
w Middle East Post
w UPI
w MSNBC
w USA Today
w National Public Radio
w US News
w Peace Talks Radio
w Yonhap News Agency
w Politico G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N | 19
ADMISSIONS MASTERS DEGREE STUDENTS
PHD STUDENTS
NEW STUDENTS ARE RETURNED PEACE CORPS VOLUNTEERS
NEW STUDENT ADMISSIONS
COUNTRIES REPRESENTED United States | Afghanistan | Canada | China Ghana | South Korea | Kosovo | Nigeria Norway | Pakistan | Russia | Turkey United Kingdom | Uzbekistan | Zambia (1% undisclosed)
10
DEGREE PROGRAMS WITH LARGEST STUDENT ENROLLMENT
6 6 4
International Security 61
21
International Studies International Development International Human Rights Global Finance, Trade and Economic Integration
49 58
Conflict Resolution International Administration PhD in International Studies
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CAREERS EMPLOYMENT STATUS
EMPLOYMENT BY SECTOR
EMPLOYMENT BY LOCATION
Total known graduates = 222
Total employed graduates = 207
Total employed graduates = 207
93% = Employed
49% = Nonprofit
41% = Colorado
4% = Seeking
36% = Private
25% = Other U.S.
3% = Continuing Education
13% = Public
17% = Washington, D.C.
2% = Multilateral
12% = International 5% = Unknown
INTERNSHIPS BY REGION
U.S-BASED INTERNSHIPS 72% = North America 13% = Europe
59% = Denver Metro
5% = Asia
24% = Washington, D.C.
4% = L atin America & Carribean
12% = Other 5% = New York
3% = Africa 3% = Middle East Total internships = 183
Total U.S. internships = 132
INTERNSHIPS BY SECTOR
INTERNSHIPS BY COMPENSATION
51% = Nonprofit/NGO
76% = Unpaid
32% = Public
14% = Paid
10% = Private
10% = Stipend
7% = Multilateral
Total internships = 183
Total internships = 183
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STUDENT
p r o f i l es
CHAD BRINGHURST, MA ‘15 GLOBAL FINANCE, TRADE AND ECONOMIC INTEGRATION Chad Bringhurst has sound advice for anyone considering attending the Korbel School. “Josef Korbel is a great international affairs school and I’m highly satisfied with my time there. However, simply attending isn’t enough. Be prepared to take advantage of internship, fellowship and extracurricular opportunities afforded students at JKSIS.” Bringhurst should know. As a Boren Fellow, he spent a year in Slovenia researching how political connections affect the ability of companies in Slovenia to obtain loans. “I did this through data analysis on publicly-available lending data and interviews,” he said. “I learned what political analysis is like in a real world setting, where data is often limited, hard to find, and purposefully obscured.” His fellowship included intensive language study in Slovenian. After starting his studies at the Korbel School in the fall of 2012 as an international security major, Bringhurst decided to change to Global Finance, Trade and Economic Integration (GFTEI) in the first semester, “after a particularly interesting course in International Political Economy,” he recalled. “Classes were more conversational than lecture-based, which required a greater understanding of the subject material and were ultimately more interesting.” After changing his major to GFTEI, Bringhurst continued to take elective courses in international security.
“Be prepared to take advantage of internship, fellowship and extracurricular opportunities afforded students at JKSIS.”
Bringhurst is looking forward to a new position as an asylum officer with U.S. Citizen and Immigration Services in Los Angeles. “Korbel helped me to focus my interest in international affairs,” he said, “and gave me the opportunity to pursue a career in the field.”
BRITTANY FRANCK, MA ’15 INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT GRADUATE CERTIFICATE, GLOBAL HEALTH AFFAIRS Brittany Franck is a former Sié Fellow who exemplifies the high caliber student the Josef Korbel School attracts. Like many Korbel School students, she started her program after working abroad—in her case, after serving as a Peace Corps volunteer in Ethiopia where she worked at a school for the blind. Franck discovered a passion for working with people with disabilities. One experience stands out in Franck’s mind. Along with a nurse and a leader from the local Women With Disabilities Association, she paved the way for girls with disabilities to take part in an annual cultural ceremony called Ashenda. “It’s basically a celebration of women,” she explained, “but they never invited girls with disabilities to participate. They assumed that they wouldn’t be able to perform, and that they didn’t have the money to buy the proper dress. “We went around our community and collected money from everyone, and ended up having enough money to buy every girl their first traditional dress. For the first time, these girls danced in the full performance, in front of the entire town. Everyone was amazed.” After completing her service Franck returned to Ethiopia and found that this community continued to include girls with disabilities Today, Franck is completing a PhD degree in medical anthropology at the University of Arizona. She plans to return to Ethiopia to conduct her dissertation research, and she hopes to eventually move there to either teach or work with a health-related nongovernmental organization.
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HABIB ZAHORI, MA ‘15 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES As a 31-year-old Fulbright Scholar from Kabul, Afghanistan, Habib Zahori represents the diversity of experiences and perspectives that Korbel School students bring to the classroom. Zahori, his family and other citizens of Afghanistan have been living through war for the last 40 years. When he was an undergraduate in Kabul, Zahori studied medicine. Following his graduation in 2009, “I had two choices,” he said. “I could either go work as a doctor and make, like 50 bucks per month, which was nothing, or I could get a job with foreign journalists and work as an interpreter and make enough money to take care of the family.” Zahori opted to work as an interpreter for foreign journalists.
”I will be armed with a lot of knowledge—things I’ve learned here. And I’ll have the opportunity to do something good for the country.” But his interest soon turned to the study of international relations. “I was hoping I would eventually get a job with the Afghan government,” Zahori recalled. “I was thinking, if I could bring a small bit of change to a small office, why not? Given the level and scope of corruption that exists in the government, I changed my mind about that.” He enrolled in the Josef Korbel School. Zahori ultimately decided that, after graduation from the Korbel School, he’d like to pursue a job with a human rights organization in Afghanistan. ”I will be armed with a lot of knowledge—things I’ve learned here. And I’ll have the opportunity to do something good for the country—if not for the entire country, then for a small number of people. Everything I’ve learned here, I’m going to transfer it to whoever is interested back home.”
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ALUMNI
p r o f i l es
Recent Doctoral Student Placements JOEL DAY, PhD ‘15 – University of Massachusetts-Lowell, Assistant Professor FLETCHER COX, PhD ‘15 – William Jewell College, Assistant Professor MATTHEW KLICK, PhD ‘15 – Josef Korbel School, Post-Doctoral Fellow KEITH GEHRING, PhD ‘15
– Josef Korbel School, Teaching Assistant Professor
RONI KAY O’DELL, PhD ‘14 – Webster University, Assistant Professor SUSAN BRIDLE, PhD ‘14 – Tulane University, Post-Doctoral Fellow RASLAN IBRAHIM, PhD ‘14 – Haverford College, Visiting Assistant Professor
Korbel School Prepared Alumna to Make a Real-World Impact When Jillian Gonacha began her graduate studies at the Korbel School, she brought a strong interest in the field of intelligence. Thanks to her coursework, a key internship with a counterterrorism organization and learning from professors who had previously worked in the intelligence community, she quickly learned that the intelligence field was indeed an attainable career choice in which she could have a real-world impact. She went on to do just that. As an analyst with the National Counterterrorism Center (NCTC) in Washington, D.C., and NCTC’s representative to the Joint Terrorism Task Force in Chicago, based at the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Gonacha’s assignments included involvement in the aftermath of the Osama bin Laden raid, investigations into Al Qaeda leadership in Pakistan and the U.S. investigation of David Headley, the American who was sentenced to prison in the U.S. for his part in planning the 2008 terrorist attack in Mumbai. JILLIAN GONACHA, MA ‘07 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES GRADUATE CERTIFICATE, HOMELAND SECURITY
“Korbel really does offer a fresh perspective that’s different from the D.C. area schools.” 2 4 | G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N
Recalling her time at Korbel, Gonacha said, “I took as many classes as I could from Professor Peg Sanders,” who worked in the intelligence community. (Sanders retired from the Korbel School in 2011.) Tough assignments prepared her well, as in learning how to distill 30 pages of knowledge on a topic into mock daily one-page intelligence briefings. “Those probably prepared me more than anything. You are expected to be able to do this on the job.” After nearly a decade in the Beltway and Chicago, Gonacha believes that “Korbel really does offer a fresh perspective that’s different from the D.C. area schools.” She thinks that’s due in part to the mix of disciplines and students at Korbel—ranging from security to conflict resolution to human rights and more. “This gave me a broad perspective on security. Korbel is a well-regarded, well-known school, especially in the intelligence community.”
A Protégé of Josef Korbel Looks Back HANS PETERSON MA ‘63, PhD ‘66 INTERNATIONAL STUDIES In the middle of a September snowstorm in 1959, German-born Hans Peterson arrived in Denver to begin his graduate studies in political science under the tutelage of Josef Korbel. His studies at DU were made possible thanks to a scholarship from University of Denver’s Social Science Foundation. In 1963, as a new U.S. citizen and with an MA from DU under his belt, Peterson returned to Germany as an Army Reservist. With the Cold War in full swing, Peterson arrived in Berlin during the building of the Berlin Wall and was once involved in a three-day standoff with Russian troops. As a member of the U.S. Army’s security detail he provided security for West Berlin Mayor Willy Brandt, who would later become chancellor of Germany, and U.S. President John F. Kennedy. On June 26, 1963, Peterson was on duty when President Kennedy made his famous “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech in West Berlin. Following the fall of the Berlin Wall and the reunification of Germany in 1989, Peterson worked for the German government providing “re-education” seminars for secondary teachers in former East German schools so the citizens could, he said, “learn the truth about the U.S.” Peterson joined the faculty as a full professor at Troy State University in Alabama in contract service to the United States Air Force teaching International Studies to young officers in England, Portugal, Italy, Spain, Turkey and Holland. He was also a visiting professor at the University of Ilmenau in Thuringia, Germany, and taught at Montana State University for 30 years. His graduate school experience helped him considerably in his global teaching career—“truly international relations!” Dr. Peterson retired in 2002 and lives today with his wife Patricia in Boulder, Colorado.
Mohammad Javad Zarif Special Guest at New York City Alumni Event DU Alumnus Mohammad Javad Zarif (MA ‘84, PhD ‘88), Iran’s Foreign Minister, was the special guest at a Korbel School alumni event in New York City in October 2015. Zarif’s attendance coincided with his attendance at the United Nations General Assembly. Doug Scrivner, Chair of the DU Board of Trustees, opened the event by welcoming more than 120 New York-area DU alumni and friends. Ambassador Christopher R. Hill, dean of the Josef Korbel School, held an on-stage foreign policy conversation with Minister Zarif. Topics included the course of negotiations for the Iran nuclear deal, current Middle East regional issues including the situation in Syria and Iranian-Saudi relations. To cap off the New York alumni event, Zarif was presented with a Pioneers lacrosse helmet, among other DU mementos. G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N | 25
IN MEMORIA M WILLIAM D. (BILL) STANFILL It is with deep appreciation for his service to the Josef Korbel School, and sadness at his passing, that we remember Bill Stanfill (1936-2015). At the time of his death, Stanfill was the president of the Social Science Foundation (SSF) Board of Trustees at the Josef Korbel School. Stanfill had served on the SSF Board since 1980. Established in 1923 to promote the study of international relations, the SSF board manages an endowment fund that provides scholarship funds and seed grants to support innovative programs at the Korbel School, and advises the University of Denver in its internationalization efforts. Stanfill was Founding General Partner of Trailhead Ventures and general partner of two fund-of-fund venture partnerships, Larimer Venture Management Ltd., and
DONOR
Larimer Venture Management II, L.P. He also co-founded the investment-counseling firm of Morrill, Stanfill and Company. Most recently, he served as a principal with Montegra Capital Resources, LTD. He also served on the boards of several U.S. venture capital partnerships. Stanfill was a very generous and active civic volunteer. His dedication included decades of service on many non-profit boards, frequently as chair. In addition to the Josef Korbel School and the Social Science Foundation, he supported other Denver non-profit organizations including Colorado Public Radio, the Denver Health Foundation and the Colorado Outward Bound School. The Josef Korbel School is grateful for Bill Stanfill’s generous gift to establish the William Deming Stanfill Endowed Scholarship Fund, which will support students who might not otherwise be able to attend the Korbel School.
s p ot l i g h t JIM AND AMY HECHT
As a young child, Amy Blatchford Hecht often heard of the American University of Beirut (AUB)—a household name in her home. She was named for her great aunt who was married to the second president of AUB, and her parents met when they were both teaching at the university. As an adult, Amy and her husband Jim Hecht developed great admiration for AUB, a premier university in the Middle East. In Lebanon, it is recognized as the university that educates the leaders of tomorrow, as well as having educated major figures of the 20th century. As a result of their engagement in the Josef Korbel School and the Center for Middle East Studies, the Hechts established an endowed fund that will provide ongoing funding for a partnership between the University of 26 | G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N
Denver and AUB. Their goal—to foster strong relationships between faculty and students at each institution, and ultimately help improve relations between the U.S. and the Middle East—will be addressed initially through an academic exchange, in which selected faculty or directors will serve as short-term scholars in residence. In the future the DU/AUB partnership also intends to provide scholarship support for students from AUB to study at DU, combined with an internship at the University. As the situation in Lebanon permits, the partnership may also send students from DU to study at AUB. The seed funding for this partnership is provided by the Hechts through a combination of current contributions and through a Charitable Gift Annuity. The annuity will provide lifetime payments to the Hechts, with the remainder to come to the University when they are gone.
Korbel Dinner 2015 Honors Chuck Hagel, Jacqueline Hinman and Grant Wilkins The 2015 Korbel Dinner, held in September 2015, honored three individuals who embody the school’s mission of meeting global challenges through practical knowledge and innovative thinking. DU Chancellor Rebecca Chopp presented the University’s Global Security Award to Hon. Chuck Hagel, 24th U.S. Secretary of Defense, our special guest. Speaking of the Korbel School, Hagel said, “Now more than ever, the world needs more practitioners of peace, who are prepared to tackle threats to global security which are unlike anything we’ve ever seen before. The Korbel School is in the business of training people who will take on the toughest security challenges and make the world a better place.” Ambassador Christopher R. Hill, dean of the Josef Korbel School, and Hagel engaged in an on-stage conversation about international policy topics including the Middle East and other current issues. Hill also presented awards to two local community leaders. Jacqueline Hinman, Chairman and CEO of CH2M, received the University’s International Bridge Builders Award; and Grant Wilkins, past director of Rotary International and a DU Alumnus (BA ‘47), received the Josef Korbel School’s Humanitarian Award. The annual dinner honors Josef Korbel, the first dean and founder of the Josef Korbel School and father of Hon. Madeleine Albright, who became the first woman U.S. Secretary of State. The dinner is the school’s principal fundraising event. Contributions benefit the school’s programs, scholarships and centers, which are designed to serve the school’s students and the community at large. Each year, the dinner’s program includes an internationally-prominent keynote speaker and local honorees who have made a global impact.
Office of the Dean isdean@du.edu 303-871-2539 External Relations & Development Jennifer Thompson Associate Dean of External Relations jennifer.thompson@du.edu 303-871-2555 Ann Irving Director of Development ann.irving@du.edu 303-871-2729 Alumni Relations Alicia Kirkeby Director of Alumni Relations alicia.kirkeby@du.edu 303-871-2541 Communications Joanne Napper Director of Communications joanne.napper@du.edu 303-871-3513 Graduate Admissions korbeladm@du.edu 303-871-2544
Editor Joanne Napper Director of Communications Dean Christopher R. Hill, Chancellor Rebecca Chopp and Hon. Chuck Hagel
Designer Wendy Kent WKent Designs Photographers Wayne Armstrong University of Denver Andrew Kowalyshyn AK Photo Members of the Josef Korbel School Community Robin Wright photo courtesy of robinwright.net
Grant Wilkins
Jacqueline Hinman
G LO BA L CO N N E C T I O N | 27
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SUPPORT KORBEL Korbel students, graduates and faculty are putting their
“The Josef Korbel School is poised to become a state-of-the-art institution. Our bold vision for the Future of Korbel
intellectual capital to work to solve global problems by
requires financial support from across
improving the human condition, enhancing human
the community. Together we can meet
security and advancing human prosperity. To continue our strong legacy of training and preparing the next generation requires an investment in global leadership. We hope you’ll support our efforts. Josef Korbel students at the White House during D.C. Career Connections Week in December 2015
the needs of the future and continue to train global leaders.” – Ambassador Christopher R. Hill, Dean, Josef Korbel School