Visiting Fellows

Dickey Fellows are selected to spend a minimum of one term and up to a year in residence at Dartmouth, researching and writing about international issues related to one of the Centers research areas. For 2012-13 we are pleased to announce a collaboration with the Dean of Faculty office at Dartmouth to launch the Dartmouth Fellows Program in US Foreign Policy and International Security.  Applicants from all disciplines working on research that bears directly on US Foreign Policy and International security are welcome to apply. While scholars at any stage of their career are eligible, applications from recent recipients of the PhD or eqivalent degree are especially encouraged to apply. Fellows must be in residence during their fellowship and are asked to participate in Dickey Center seminars and events and invited to take advantage of other Dartmouth activities.

The Dickey Center Visiting Fellows program is made possible in part by the generous support of William M. Glovsky and the Glovsky Family Fund in memory of Ruth and Abraham Glovsky, created to encourage academic research in and teaching of alternative dispute resolution through interdisciplinary study of the differences among peoples and the motivations, consequences and possible resolutions of conflict between them.

The call for applications for the academic year 2012-13 is closed. The deadline for applications, including letters of recommendation, was Tuesday, January 17, 2012 . Applications are being reviewed and applicants will be contacted by Feb 29, 2012. Please direct inquiries to Sharon Tribou-St.Martin at This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Current Dickey Fellows:

Benjamin Appel

Benjamin Appel is a political scientist coming to us from the University of Maryland. His work demonstrates how the legitimacy of international law, as a normative standard, shapes the incentives of leaders in international crises.  At Dartmouth he will expand on his research into the pacifying force of international law in conflict, and the relationship between international law and international organizations in the use of force and escalation of international crises.

 
Medeia Csoba-DeHass

Medeia Csoba-DeHass is the recipient of an NSF Post-doctoral Research Fellowship on Lower Kenai Sugpiaq people in collaboration with community members at her fieldwork site in Nanwalek, Alaska. The community is interested in documenting their Sugpiaq heritage for future generations. DeHass has a PhD in anthropology from the University of Alaska, Fairbanks and will be working with Dartmouth professor of anthropology Sergei Kan, an expert in ethno-historical research. She is being co-sponsored by the Institute of Arctic Studies and Native American Studies at Dartmouth.

 
Andrea Everett

Andrea Everett, a recent PhD in Politics from Princeton, studies international responses to severe civilian suffering associated with mass atrocities and large-scale violence, correlating this research with the design of peace operations. While at Dartmouth she will be focusing on the role of ordinary civilians and civil society in influencing Western democracies to support and deploy peace operations to aid vulnerable populations.

 
Kevin Grove

Kevin Grove (joint with Geography) recently completed a PhD in Geography at the University of Oregon. His research interests focus on the environment – its security, vulnerability, adaptation and resilience. His dissertation dealt with social and ecological contingency in the policy and practice of disaster management in Jamaica.  At Dartmouth, he will offer courses in Geography during the winter term.

 
Jennifer Miller

Jennifer Miller- is a pre-doctoral fellows completing a dissertation in History at the University of  Wisconsin, Madison. Her research examines connections between the economic, military, political, cultural, and social elements of the U.S.-Japanese alliance that constructed their post-occupation relationship and contributed to the construction of the Cold War state from 1952 to 1963.

 
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