2009-10 CISAC Fellows and Visiting Scholars
CISAC is pleased to announce fellows and visitors in residence at the Center during the 2009-10 academic year.
Max Abrahms
University of California, Los
Angeles, Department of Political Science
Strategic Logic of
Terrorism
Undraa Agvaanluvsan
Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory Nuclear Experimental Group
Energy, Security, and
Economic Implications of Nuclear Industry Development in Mongolia
Chaim Braun
CISAC
Nuclear Power Growth and
its Nonproliferation Implications in India, the Middle East, the Korean
Peninsula, and South America
Sarah Zukerman Daly
Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, Department of Political Science
Guns, Politics or
Bankruptcy: Disentangling the Determinants of Armed Organizations Post-war
Trajectories
Matthias Englert
Darmstadt University of
Technology, Interdisciplinary Research Group in Science Technology and Security
Managing the Proliferation
Risks of Gas Centrifuges - Technical and Political Measures
Andrea Everett
Princeton University,
Department of Politics
Responding to Catastrophe:
Democratic Society and the Origins of Humanitarian Intervention
Kelly Greenhill
Tufts University and Research Fellow, Harvard University
Fear Factor: Understanding the Origins and Consequences of Beliefs about National Security and the Threats We Face
Tom Isaacs
Director, Office of Planning
and Special Studies, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
Internationalization of
the Nuclear Fuel Cycle and the Role of the U.S.
Joseph Martz
Los Alamos National
Laboratory
Katherine Marvel
University of Cambridge, Department
of Applied Mathematics and Theoretical Physics
Nuclear Energy in Africa:
Utility, Feasibility, and Security
Emily Meierding
University of Chicago,
Department of Political Science
Fueling Conflict,
Facilitating Peace: Oil & International Territorial Disputes
Eric Morris
Ford Dorsey Program in
International Policy Studies
Civilian Capacity for
Peace Operations
Charles Perrow
Yale University, Department
of Sociology
Brenna Powell
Harvard University,
Department of Government and Social Policy
Normalizing Security After
Conflict: Jobs for the Boys and Justice for the Hoods
Arian Pregenzer
Sandia National Laboratories,
Department of Cooperative International Programs
International Technical
Cooperation to Support Arms Control and Nonproliferation: Review of Past
Approaches, Identification of Lessons Learned, and Recommendations for the Future
William Reckmeyer
San Jose State University,
Department of Anthropology
Systemic Connections:
Developing an Integrated National Strategy to Promote International Security
and Cooperation
Jefferey Richardson,
Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory
Science as a Tool for
International Engagement
Robert Rosner
University of Chicago,
Distinguished Service Professor, Departments of Astronomy & Astrophysics
and Physics, and Laboratory Director, Argonne National Laboratory
Jan Stupl
University of Hamburg, Institute
for Peace Research and Security Policy
Missile Technology Control
Regime
Michael Sulmeyer
Stanford Law School
Phil Taubman
Former Associate Editor and
Reporter, The New York Times
Jianqun Teng
China Arms Control and
Disarmament Association
Nuclear Free World
Initiative in the Context of Sino-U.S. Relations
John Vitacca
United States Air Force
Nuclear Policy Issues
Gang Zhao
Chinese Academy of S & T
for Development (CASTED)
Deepening the China-U.S. Relationship through Collaboration in Science and Technology with Particular
Attention to Alternative Energy Solutions
Yunhua Zou
General Armaments Department,
People's Liberation Army, China
Space Arms Control;
Security Cooperation with China; U.S.-China Relations


