WWS Viewbook 2017

Page 1

Graduate

VIEWBOOK 2017-18


Message from the

DEAN


“In the Nation’s Service and the Service of Humanity” — Coined by the School’s namesake and later expanded, this phrase captures the essence of the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University. What began in 1930 as a small interdisciplinary undergraduate program has become a major center of research and education, providing training in its graduate programs to master’s and doctoral students. Our work is informed by a commitment to a multidisciplinary approach to policy issues, a global perspective, and an emphasis on top-quality research and teaching. The Woodrow Wilson School faculty reflects the complexity of today’s policy issues; it currently includes economists, historians, political scientists, and sociologists, as well as scientists, engineers, psychologists, and legal scholars. Practitioners are an important part of students’ training, and bring real-world policy experience to the classroom. And our students and alumni are committed to service in all parts of the world. I trust you will see in the pages that follow that the Woodrow Wilson School is an exciting place to learn, to practice, and to teach. I hope you are inspired to learn more, so please visit us in person or connect with us virtually. I look forward to having our paths cross. Sincerely, Cecilia Elena Rouse


Faculty

88

Full-Time Faculty

36*

Visiting Professors, Lecturers, and Practitioners

Learn from

20

Research Centers

Engaged Experts

The Woodrow Wilson School’s faculty are innovative researchers and policy experts who equip students with the analytical tools and in-depth knowledge needed to tackle important issues. They conduct groundbreaking research and lend nonpartisan policy analysis to policymakers, nonprofit organizations, industry, and the media. Most tenure-track faculty have dual appointments with disciplinary departments at the University, ranging from the social sciences to computer science and the natural sciences, providing students with a multifaceted perspective on policy issues. *Those who teach in the graduate program

Faculty Research · Quiet ‘Epidemic’ Has Killed Half a Million Middle-Aged White Americans

· Zika Virus Alerts May Have Prompted Uptick in Abortion Requests in Latin America

· Orange is the New Green: How Orange Peels Revived a Costa Rican Forest

· Court’s Gutting of Campaign Finance Laws May Enhance Influence of Corporations and Wealthy Americans

· Social Exclusion Leads to Conspiratorial Thinking

· Seeing the Forest for the Trees: World’s Largest Reforestation Program Overlooks Wildlife

· A Deadly Shadow: Measles May Weaken Immune System Up to Three Years

· Wage Disclosures for Public Officials Lead to Salary Cuts, High Turnover Rates

· New Bird Species Confirmed 15 Years After First Observation


2016-17 Guest Speakers

27

Public Lectures

Interact with

30

Lunch-Timers

12

Leadership Through Mentorship Visitors

Guest Speakers

Distinguished guest speakers at the Woodrow Wilson School provide more than a short lecture. They are an extension of the learning experience at WWS and often come to the School for multiple days as part of the Leadership Through Mentorship Program. These influential leaders share meals with students, attend classes, hold office hours, and impart knowledge and insight from their fields of expertise.

Leadership Visitors Beth F. Cobert ’80 Former Acting Director, U.S. Office of Personnel Management

Anthony W. Marx, MPA ’86 President and CEO, The New York Public Library

Teresa C. Younger President and CEO, Ms. Foundation for Women

Gen. Michael V. Hayden (U.S. Air Force, Ret.) Principal, The Chertoff Group; Former Director, Central Intelligence Agency; Former Director, National Security Agency

Hon. Willy Mutunga Former Chief Justice and President of the Supreme Court of Kenya

Amb. Michael B.G. Froman ’85 Former U.S. Trade Representative, Executive Office of the President

Ana Navarro CNN Political Contributor and Republican Strategist

Hon. Rosalie Silberman Abella Puisne Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada


Centers and PROGRAMS

The School is home to 20 research centers and programs, which are organized around policy-relevant areas. They focus on research efforts, host seminars, and bring distinguished scholars and practitioners to campus throughout the academic year.


• Bendheim-Thoman Center for Research on Child Wellbeing

• Kahneman-Treisman Center for Behavioral Science & Public Policy

• Center for Arts and Cultural Policy Studies

• Liechtenstein Institute on Self-Determination

• Center for Health and Wellbeing

• Niehaus Center for Globalization and Governance

• Center for Information Technology Policy • Center for International Security Studies • Center for the Study of Democratic Politics • Princeton-Harvard China and the World Program • Education Research Section

• Office of Population Research • Princeton Survey Research Center • Program in Law and Public Affairs • Program in Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy

• Innovations for Successful Societies

• Program on Science and Global Security

• Julis-Rabinowitz Center for Public Policy and Finance

• Research Program in Political Economy

• Research Program in Development Studies


Admissions

Joining the

WILSON SCHOOL COMMUNITY

“WWS financial aid packages are uniquely generous. They allow students to concentrate on learning at Princeton and to pursue careers in public service without worrying about graduate school debt.” Diane Coffey MPA ’10, Ph.D. ’15 Executive Director, Research Institute for Compassionate Economics

The Woodrow Wilson School offers a rigorous academic experience in a tight-knit, intimate community. Admitted students will join an intellectually stimulating family that includes more than 4,000 alumni, faculty with high-level policy experience, and staff dedicated to helping students succeed. With just over 200 graduate students enrolled in our three graduate programs, students will be able to create meaningful connections and lifelong friendships with peers and professors. Generous financial aid packages allow students to pursue their passions in public service upon graduation without being encumbered by debt.

Getting In The School admits individuals who have demonstrated a deep commitment to public service and who have successfully demonstrated an ability to learn what we teach.

Application Deadline: December 15, 2017

Admissions Timeline


Other schools ask you to invest in your education. We invest in you by covering

100%

of Tuition and Fees.

Financial Aid

MPA MPP Ph.D.

All students receive 100% of tuition and a generous stipend for living expenses for two years of study. Tuition may be covered by the Woodrow Wilson School and/or outside fellowships. All students receive 100% of tuition and a generous stipend for living expenses for one year of study. All or some of the stipend may be covered by the student’s institutional sponsor. All students are awarded full tuition and a generous stipend for up to five years.

Health Insurance Covered 100%

Tuition and Student Health Plan Fee (Regular) 2017-18:

Most students graduate debt-free.

Admissions Decisions: March 15, 2018

Admitted Students Hosting Weekend: April 7-9, 2018

$48,940

Admitted Students Decision Deadline: April 15, 2018


Admissions

MPA JOINT DEGREE PROGRAMS SINSI

POLICY WORKSHOPS

MPP Ph.D.

# of Students (2017-18):

160

Master in

PUBLIC AFFAIRS The School’s two-year Master in Public Affairs (MPA) program offers a core curriculum that allows students to develop the analytical skills necessary for addressing the political, economic, quantitative, and behavioral aspects of complex public policy issues. The School enrolls individuals who have demonstrated a deep commitment to public service through their volunteer interests, internships, and professional experiences. In between their first and second years of study, MPA students are required to complete an approved, full-time summer internship in their sector of interest. During the second year, policy workshops provide students with an opportunity to use the analytical skills they have acquired to analyze challenging policy issues, usually for real-world clients.

“WWS gave me the space, time, and opportunity at a critical point in our global history to question and challenge and engage with some of the nation’s best policy thinkers. My experience at the Wilson School prepared me to not only analyze the complexity of challenges facing cities and states, but also to work across sectors and at the intersections of communities to develop solutions with sustainable impact.” Christina Henderson MPA ’12 Legislative Assistant for U.S. Senator Charles E. Schumer United States Senate


Average Enrolled 2015-2017

Curriculum Required: 16 Courses

Female

Male

57%

43%

International

United States

24%

76%

Core Courses

Microeconomics Macroeconomics Quantitative Analysis Politics of Public Policy Psychology for Policy Analysis and Implementation Applied Econometrics

75+ Electives 8 Policy Workshops Fields of Concentration International Relations International Development Domestic Policy Economics and Public Policy

Optional Certificate Programs

U.S. Students of Color

45%

Demography Health and Health Policy Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy Urban Policy Urban Policy and Planning


Getting in:

MPA

Prior Work Experience

44%

4 years

5+ years

None

5%

21%

1% 3 years

15%

Public Sector Nonprofit

Private Sector

14%

1 year 2 years

36% 53% 11%


Admitted MPA Student Average from 2015-2017

Grade Point Average 76%

3.7 - 4.0 22%

3.4 - 3.6 3.0 - 3.3

2%

GRE Average QUANTITATIVE 90% - 99%

27%

80-89% 70-79% 60-69% <60%

31% 23% 12% 7%

ANALYTICAL WRITING 6.0

90-99%

7% 57%

5.0-5.5 33%

4.0-4.5 3.0-3.5

3%

VERBAL

80-89%

75% 14%

70-79%

5%

60-69%

4%

<60% 2%


MPA / J.D.

JOINT DEGREE PROGRAMS

The four-year MPA/J.D. program enables students to combine the study of law and the study of public affairs. The Woodrow Wilson School has formal joint degree arrangements with law schools at Columbia University, New York University, and Stanford University. In addition, students have arranged joint degrees with other law schools such as the University of California, Berkeley; Georgetown University; the University of Pennsylvania; the University of Virginia; Yale University; and Harvard University. Students admitted into the joint degree program spend five semesters at the law school and three semesters at the Woodrow Wilson School, thereby reducing by two semesters the time required to earn the two degrees. Enrollment in the joint program requires separate application and admission to each university, and the Woodrow Wilson School requires an essay setting forth the rationale for the joint MPA/J.D. as part of the School’s application.

Other Joint Degree Programs The School may also permit a limited number of candidates to pursue joint degrees in such disciplines as business or public health with the cooperation of other institutions. Students interested in pursuing any joint degree must submit in writing an academic rationale for the program proposed at the time of application to the MPA program. Enrollment requires separate application and admission to each university.

“As a joint-degree student at the Woodrow Wilson School, I am building my arsenal to advocate for women’s rights. The Wilson School program’s quantitative and qualitative approaches to public policy add a breadth of perspective to my legal training and allow me to tackle problems holistically. This will ultimately make me a stronger lawyer and a more effective agent of change.” Kate Vlach MPA/J.D. ’19


The Scholars in the Nation’s Service Initiative (SINSI) SINSI allows students to obtain a two-year fellowship in the federal government between the first and second year of their MPA. The Wilson School provides salary and health care benefits during this two-year stint. Qualified applicants can either be Princeton University seniors from a broad range of academic backgrounds, or firstyear students admitted to and enrolled in the School’s MPA program. The highly competitive selection criteria includes: • outstanding academic performance • personal accomplishments • leadership potential and maturity • sound judgment • strong written and oral communication skills • strong commitment to a career in government service SINSI fully funds the fellow’s salary and health care benefits, as well as relevant language training. Host agencies arrange all necessary clearances, provide professional-level experience appropriate to the fellow’s background and career goals as well as the needs of the department/office, and mentorship and other career development opportunities. SINSI fellows normally do at least two (and no more than four) rotations within the two-year fellowship. At the conclusion of the fellowship, there is no employment obligation on the part of the host department or agency. Application due: • Princeton seniors: November 6, 2017 • MPAs: December 15, 2017

SINSI

Over the past 10 years, SINSIs have been placed with the following federal agencies or departments: State (including U.S. Embassies) Defense Treasury Agriculture Health and Human Services Education Housing and Urban Development The Intelligence Community NASA Environmental Protection Agency U.S. Agency for International Development Fish and Wildlife Service U.S. Army Corp of Engineers U.S. Joint Chiefs of Staff Council of Economic Advisers Office of Management and Budget The White House


POLICY WORKSHOPS

Policy workshops are an important component of the graduate curriculum. They are required for MPA students during the fall of their second year, and optional for MPP students. Emphasizing policy analysis and implementation, these small seminars provide students with hands-on learning opportunities where they can apply their analytical skills to complex policy issues. Each workshop consists of eight to 10 students who work in teams to research and evaluate a timely domestic or international policy issue, often for a real-world client or expert group. Most students also engage in field-based research around the globe during the University’s fall break. Teams work together to create an in-depth report, which they formally present to the client at the conclusion of the semester.

Recent Policy Workshops

• Reforming the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey • Managing Elections in Fragile States (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, and Serbia) • The Middle East Peace Process • State-Level Policies on Renewables in the Energy Sector • Policy, Operational, and Political Implementation Challenges of the Affordable Care Act • Ensuring the Long Run Impact of Millennium Challenge Corporation Country Compacts • Current Issues of Health Policy in India


Policy Workshops in the Field


Admissions MPA JOINT DEGREE PROGRAMS SINSI

POLICY WORKSHOPS

MPP Ph.D.

# of Students (2017-18):

17

Master in

PUBLIC POLICY The School’s one-year Master in Public Policy (MPP) program is designed for mid-career professionals who are rising leaders in international and domestic public policy. The residential program should not be viewed as a stepping stone to a Ph.D. program. Rather, it is a valuable opportunity for those embedded in public service for seven-plus years to reflect on their experiences, expand their knowledge, and further develop or refine their analytical skills in relation to their chosen professional path. Since its launch in 1997, the MPP program has provided a year of reflection and intellectual and personal growth for several hundred emerging leaders from the public and nonprofit sectors. MPP graduates return to their careers with the intellectual breadth and self-confidence necessary to assume impactful positions in public policy.

“Getting my Master in Public Policy degree from WWS was one of my best career choices. To dive deep in an academic setting on environmental policy issues from more of a practical applied level was incredibly valuable.” - Jonathan Goldstein, MPP ’11 Director, Regulatory and Legislative Affairs, Environmental Defense Fund


Average Enrolled 2015-2017

Female

Male

39%

61%

International 32%

United States 68%

Curriculum Required: 8 courses from 75+ electives, such as: The Management of Organizations Psychology and Inequality Gender in the World Economy Negotiation Great Leadership in Historical Perspective Terrorism, Civil Wars and Non-State Threats International Justice International Strategy The Federal Budget International Economics Leadership, Management and Decisionmaking Program and Policy Evaluation National Security Policy

Fields of Concentration International Relations International Development Domestic Policy Economics and Public Policy

Optional Certificate Programs

Demography Health and Health Policy Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy Urban Policy Urban Policy and Planning U.S. Students of Color

31%


Getting in: Prior Work Experience

MPP

15+ years

16% 57%

10-14 years

7-9 years

27%

Public Sector Nonprofit

Private Sector

74% 23% 3%


Admitted MPP Student Average from 2015-2017

Grade Point Average

29%

3.7 - 4.0

37%

3.4 - 3.6 3.0 - 3.3 <3.0

21% 13%

GRE Average QUANTITATIVE 90% - 99% 80-89% 70-79% 60-69% <60%

7%

ANALYTICAL WRITING 6.0

12%

5%

30% 10% 41%

90-99% 33%

5.0-5.5 4.0-4.5

VERBAL

49%

80-89%

58% 18%

70-79%

7% 7%

3.0-3.5

5%

60-69%

<3.0

8%

<60%

10%


Admissions MPA JOINT DEGREE PROGRAMS SINSI

POLICY WORKSHOPS

MPP

Ph.D.

“It’s hard to put into words what the Woodrow Wilson School means to me. My studies, my research, and most importantly, the people I met along the way have completely reshaped how I see the world and my place within it.” - David Kanter, Ph.D. ’14 Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies, New York University

# of Students (2017-18):

33

Ph.D. in

PUBLIC AFFAIRS The Doctor of Philosophy in Public Affairs is a five-year program in which students concentrate on one of two research areas: Security Studies; or Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy (STEP). Under the guidance of faculty who are scholars in these policy areas, students analyze serious policy challenges from multidisciplinary perspectives and emerge with highquality research skills. Ph.D. recipients depart the Wilson School prepared for top analytical positions in government and nongovernmental organizations, as well as tenure-track positions in academic institutions. Each cluster aims to enroll three new students per year.


Curriculum Average Enrolled 2015-2017

Security Studies

The Security Studies cluster is designed to prepare Ph.D. students for rigorous research of the major threats to international and national security and the relevant forces that will confront those threats. 12 Courses Areas of Concentration:

Female

Male

44%

56%

International United States 44%

56%

Grand Strategies Great Powers and Stability Civil-Military Relations Humanitarian Intervention Insurgency

Arms Control and Proliferation The Threat and Use of Force Cyber Warfare Biological and Chemical Weapons Terrorism and Civil Conflict

Recent Dissertations • “Tides of Fortune: The Rise and Fall of Great Militaries” • “The Day After: Lessons in U.S. Postwar Planning” • “The Half-Lives of Others: The Democratic Advantage in Nuclear Intelligence Assessment”

Science, Technology, and Environmental Policy (STEP)

The STEP cluster focuses on applications of natural and social science methodology in the policy arena, as well as the interactions among natural and social science in policy analysis. 8 Courses Areas of Concentration: Global Climate Change Air Pollution Conservation Biology Tropical Disease Transmission

U.S. Students of Color

22%

Information Technology Nuclear Power Renewable Energy

Recent Dissertations • “Returning to the Planetary Boundary for Nitrogen: A Multidisciplinary Assessment” • “Policy Diffusion of Emission Regulations for On-Road Vehicles: Causes and Benefits for Air Quality” • “Contesting Authority: China and the New Landscape of Power Sector Governance in the Developing World”


Getting in: Prior Work Experience

Ph.D.

3 years

10%

2 years 1 year

17%

4 years

7% 3%

None

13% 5+ years

50%

Public Sector

37%

Nonprofit

60% 3%

Private Sector


Admitted Ph.D. Student Average from 2015-2017

Grade Point Average

63%

3.7 - 4.0 3.4 - 3.6 <3.4

20% 17%

GRE Average QUANTITATIVE 90-99% 80-89% 70-79% <70%

47% 23% 17% 13%

ANALYTICAL WRITING 6.0

7%

4.0-4.5 3.0-3.5

90-99% 56%

5.0-5.5 20% 17%

VERBAL 83%

80-89%

7%

70-79%

3%

<70%

7%


Beyond the

CLASSROOM Learning at the Wilson School is not limited to the classroom. Students attend lectures by leading policymakers and practitioners, participate in student-run organizations, and gain professional experience in the field in countries around the globe.


WOOS Serve

The Woodrow Wilson Action Committee is the graduate student government body that provides students a voice in the governance of the School and a formal channel of communication between the student body and the faculty and administration. Committee members also plan social activities and coordinate volunteer and community-service activities. The Gender and Policy Network, comprised of students, faculty, and alumni, aims to promote the integration of gender into the curriculum of the Woodrow Wilson School and promote the engagement of these issues in the Princeton University community. The Graduate Consulting Group is made up of students who participate in pro bono, short-term consulting projects throughout the academic year. Past projects range from microfinance and entrepreneurship to charter school development. The Journal of Public and International Affairs is a premier student-run journal of policy studies, publishing both scholarly and expository articles on a range of subjects covering the areas of international affairs, development studies, and domestic policy. Students and Alumni of Color (SAOC) Symposium provides opportunities for students and alumni to discuss the social and political issues related to the professional development of students of color. Each year, they host the SAOC Symposium, where alumni, prominent guests, and students can share their experiences, successes, and challenges. The Woodrow Wilson Political Network is a studentalumni initiative that aims to help students become effective agents of social change in the political world.


Throughout the academic year, students plan a number of social events. Some engage faculty and staff, such as an annual BBQ/ square dance, a service auction and skit night, and an annual softball game and cookout.

WOOS

Are Social



Career Services The Woodrow Wilson School’s resources and alumni network are invaluable assets to graduates seeking to launch or continue their careers in public policy and international affairs.

OGCS Workshops Cover letter-writing ’ ’ Effective resume-building The international job search Job searching 101 Salary and job offer negotiating Personality assessments And more!

Office of Graduate Career Services and Alumni Relations (OGCS)

The Office of Graduate Career Services and Alumni Relations has four dedicated team members who work with students throughout every stage of their job search. Starting on day one, the OGCS prepares students for interviews and networking opportunities and serves as a bridge between alumni and students. The OGCS brings employers to campus for interviewing and information sessions and helps coordinate off-campus interviews.

MPA Summer Internships

Full-time summer internships between the first and second year are an academic requirement of the MPA program. Students choose the sector in which they would like to work, and those who secure an unpaid internship with a nonprofit organization, public foundation, or within the public sector will be funded by the School. The Office of Graduate Career Services works with students and employers to encourage relationshipbuilding, especially during the time when students are seeking employment.


MPA Summer Internships – Average from 2014-2017

Public Sector

Private Sector

Nonprofit/ NGO/ Foundation

Domestically Focused 44%

46%

2%

52%

Internationally Focused 56%


Alumni

NETWORK Affectionately known as “Woos,” the 4,000-plus alumni of the Woodrow Wilson School stay connected and engaged well after leaving Princeton, and are usually willing to talk with new Woos about their experiences. The School hosts networking events in cities around the country for alumni and current students. Support doesn’t stop with graduation: The OGCS assists alumni seeking new employment or transitioning to a new field at any point throughout their careers.

First Destinations

OGCS tracks the “first destinations” — initial positions that graduates attain after earning their degrees.


MPA First Destinations – Average from 2014-2017 Nonprofit/ NGO/ Foundation Sector

38%

Public Sector

37%

Private Sector

15%

Further Graduate Study Still Seeking

Domestically Focused

4% 6%

Still Seeking

Internationally Focused

45%

48%

1%

6%

Domestic and International Issues

MPP First Destinations – Average from 2014-2017 Public Sector

56%

Nonprofit/ NGO/ Foundation Sector

19%

Private Sector

11%

Further Graduate Study

3% 11%

Still Seeking

Domestically Focused 28%

Internationally Focused 59%

Still Seeking 2% Domestic and International Issues

11%


ANTONY BUGG-LEVINE, MPA ‘01

KAVITA RAMDAS, MPA ‘88

CARLA MARTINEZ, MPP ‘12

• •

• •

CEO, Nonprofit Finance Fund Co-founder and Board Member, Global Impact Investing Network Managing Director, The Rockefeller Foundation Country Director, TechnoServe Kenya and Uganda

• • • •

Founder, KNR Sisters and Strategy Advisor, MADRE Senior Advisor and Representative, Ford Foundation Executive Director, Program on Social Entrepreneurship; and Visiting Scholar, Stanford University Senior Advisor; and President and CEO, The Global Fund for Women Program Officer, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

Princeton in the

MINH-THU PHAM, MPA ‘03 • • • • •

Executive Director of Global Policy, United Nations Foundation Chief of Staff, Office of the U.N. Special Envoy for Malaria Policy Adviser for Strategic Planning, Executive Office of the U.N. Secretary-General 92Y Women inPower Fellow Fellow of the Truman National Security Project

• • •

• • •

Nation’s Service

~ JOSE` QUINONEZ, MPA ‘98 • •

Head of the Middle East Unit, Médecins Sans Frontières Senior Political Affairs Officer, Department of Political Affairs of the United Nations Emergency Specialist, UNICEF Head of the Emergency Department, MSF Spain Head of Darfur Operations, International Organization for Migration

CEO, Mission Asset Fund Policy Director, Asset Policy Initiative of California California Outreach Director, Center for Responsible Lending Chair, Consumer Advisory Board of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau 2016 MacArthur Fellowship Award

NUSRAT CHOUDHURY, MPA/J.D. ‘06 • • • • • •

Senior Staff Attorney, Racial Justice Program, American Civil Liberties Union Staff Attorney, ACLU’s National Security Project Clerk for Judge Barrington D. Parker and Judge Denise L. Cote Recipient and Former Trustee, Paul and Daisy Soros Fellowships for New Americans Recipient, South Asian Bar Association of NY Access to Justice Award Recipient, Edward P. Bullard Distinguished Alumnus Award, Princeton University’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs


LISETTE NIEVES, MPA ‘01

AARON D. LEVINE, PH.D. ‘07

LARRY HANDERHAN, MPA ‘12

• •

• Associate Professor and Director of Graduate Studies, School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology • Guest Researcher, Division of Reproductive Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention • National Science Foundation Early Career Faculty Award

• Chief of Staff, D.C. Department of Human Services • Senior Adviser, Office of the Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development • Scheduling Coordinator, San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom • Member, Princeton Fund for Reunion (LGBT Alumni Association Board) • Donald E. Stokes Prize for Leadership

• • •

Partner, Lingo Ventures Executive Director, Year Up New York Chief of Staff, Department of Youth and Community Development, New York Board Member, White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for Hispanics Truman Scholar, Rhodes Scholar, Aspen Pahara Fellow

and the

Service of Humanity

ERIC JOHNSON, MPA/J.D. ‘03

DOUG MERCADO, MPP ‘07

DARCI VETTER, MPA ‘00

• • • • • •

Congressman, Texas House of Representatives Fifth Term in the Texas House of Representatives House Ways and Means and Investments and Financial Services Committees One of the Texas Junior Chamber of Commerce’s “Five Outstanding Young Texans” Council on Foreign Relations Marshall Memorial Fellowship Aspen Institute Rodel Fellow

• • •

Senior Humanitarian Adviser, USAID Deputy Country Director, U.N. World Food Programme Visiting Lecturer, Wilson School Team Leader, USAID’s Disaster Assistance Response Team for the West Africa Ebola Outbreak

• • • •

Diplomat in Residence, University of NebraskaLincoln Chief Agricultural Negotiator, Office of the U.S. Trade Representative Deputy Under Secretary, Farm and Foreign Agricultural Services, USDA International Trade Adviser, U.S. Senate Committee on Finance Civil Servant, Office of the U.S. Trade Representative


The WWS Network

Upon graduating, our alumni go to work in all corners of the globe. You will never be far from a fellow Woo!

Where

WE ARE The town of Princeton is friendly and active, with the University campus abutting a downtown area full of shops, restaurants, services, and parks. The vibrant community is home to prominent organizations in the arts, education, philanthropy, and industry.

Our Virtual Network

Twitter | @WilsonSchool Facebook | WilsonSchool Instagram | @wilson_school YouTube | WilsonSchool

United States Afghanistan Albania Angola Argentina Australia Austria Azerbaijan Bangladesh Barbados Belgium Belize Benin Bolivia

Botswana Brazil Bulgaria Cameroon Canada Chad Chile People’s Republic of China Colombia Democratic Republic of the Congo Costa Rica Cote d’Ivoire >

The Woodrow Wilson School is located in Princeton, New Jersey, roughly midway between New York City and Philadelphia. Train travel to Washington, D.C., takes just two-and-a-half hours.

Cyprus Czech Republic Denmark Dominican Republic Ecuador Egypt El Salvador Ethiopia Fiji Finland France Georgia Germany


183 Miles to Washington, D.C.

45 Miles to Philadelphia

Ghana Greece Guatemala Guyana Haiti Honduras Hong Kong Hungary India Indonesia Iran Iraq Ireland Israel

Italy Japan Jordan Kenya Republic of Korea Kuwait Kyrgyzstan Laos Lebanon Liberia Luxembourg Madagascar Malawi Malaysia

Mali Mexico Micronesia Republic of Moldova Mozambique Myanmar Nepal Netherlands New Zealand Nigeria Norway Oman Pakistan Republic of Panama

13 Miles to

51 Miles to

Trenton

New York City

Peru Philippines Poland Portugal Puerto Rico Qatar Romania Russia Rwanda Saudi Arabia Senegal Republic of Serbia Sierra Leone Singapore

Slovakia Slovenia South Africa Spain Sri Lanka Sudan Sweden Switzerland Taiwan Tanzania Thailand Trinidad and Tobago Tunisia Turkey

Uganda United Arab Emirates United Kingdom Uzbekistan Venezuela Zimbabwe


Connect with us: Have questions about the admissions process, or simply want to get a feel for life at the Woo? Connect with us!

Graduate Admissions Office wwsadmit@princeton.edu 609.258.4836 WWS Blog wws.princeton.edu/admissions/wws-blog The WWS Blog publishes stories that showcase life at the School, from alumni profiles and podcasts featuring faculty experts to recaps of policy workshops and op-eds written by students. The admissions team also uses the blog to share application tips and deadlines.


Acknowledgments Editors Elisabeth Hirschhorn Donahue Melissa A. Lee Graphic Designer Egan Jimenez Project Manager Sarah M. Binder Copy Editors Kelly Lorraine Andrews Sarah M. Binder Writers Sarah M. Binder Elisabeth Hirschhorn Donahue B. Rose Kelly Emily Sharples Photographers Katherine K. Elgin Egan Jimenez Melissa McGinnis

Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs Princeton University Robertson Hall Princeton, NJ 08544-1013 Graduate Admissions Office P: 609.258.4836 F: 609.258.2095 wwsadmit@princeton.edu www.princeton.edu/admissions CopyrightŠ 2017 by The Trustees of Princeton University



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