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January 2012<br />

<strong><strong>SIPA</strong>NewS</strong><br />

national<br />

identity and<br />

the power of<br />

perception


<strong>SIPA</strong>NEWS<br />

VOLUME XXV No. 1 JaNUary 2012<br />

Published semiannually by <strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong>’s School of International and Public affairs<br />

From the Dean<br />

The quickening pace of globalization over the past two decades has undermined traditional national<br />

identities and helped to promote ethnic, social, cultural, and even transnational solidarities that compete<br />

for primacy. More than 200 million people worldwide now reside outside their country of birth.<br />

Most of the rest of the world’s population now live in cities that are becoming more and more diverse.<br />

As the essays in this issue of <strong>SIPA</strong> News demonstrate vividly, individual identities and attachments are<br />

changing on a vast scale. In some places, of course, economic crises and political tensions have fueled a<br />

revival of nationalist sentiment against outsiders, but in most of the world, urbanization, education, and<br />

rising consumption are making people more cosmopolitan.<br />

In many places, identity formation has become an object of policymaking for national as well as local<br />

governments and of lobbying (or marketing) by social entrepreneurs of all kinds. Governments seek to<br />

reshape the attitudes of potential foreign investors and end up creating or perpetuating national or local<br />

mythologies, while cultural symbols and achievements, from ancient ruins and transnational religiosity<br />

to pop music and football (soccer), are being deployed by governments and non-state actors alike to<br />

create a sense of community (or of tension and confrontation) where it did not exist before. These are<br />

powerful trends, pushed along by the rapid proliferation of new means of social communication.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong>, for example, is working hard to enhance and expand its own community of more than 18,000<br />

alumni in 153 countries. A record number of <strong>SIPA</strong> alumni volunteered to serve on an enlarged Alumni<br />

Council that now includes active alumni representatives from around the world. You can find <strong>SIPA</strong> via<br />

Facebook, YouTube, Twitter, and LinkedIn, in addition to the Morningside Post (the student run blog<br />

space) and the <strong>SIPA</strong> web page, with its videos of timely lectures and conferences on the great public<br />

policy challenges of our times.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> graduates are also playing key roles in reaching out to all <strong>Columbia</strong> alumni. Karen Poniachik<br />

(MIA ’90), for example, now heads the new <strong>Columbia</strong> Global Center in Santiago, Chile. Karen is<br />

Chile’s former minister of energy and minister of mining. Ipek Cem-Taha (MIA ’93, BUS ’93), a wellknown<br />

media personality in Turkey, directs the new Global Center in Istanbul. <strong>SIPA</strong> graduates also<br />

play leading roles in <strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong> Clubs from Beijing to Bogotá. Whether you are a <strong>SIPA</strong> grad<br />

or not, don’t hesitate to get connected.<br />

John H. Coatsworth<br />

Dean, School of International and Public Affairs<br />

Interim Provost, <strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong>


FEATURES InSIdE SIpA<br />

p. 2<br />

Nationalism 2.0<br />

By Ethan Wilkes<br />

p. 4<br />

Marketing Macedonia<br />

By Sara Ray<br />

p. 7<br />

Branding a Global<br />

City, One Campaign<br />

at a Time<br />

By Andrea Moore<br />

p. 10<br />

Rebranding Murder<br />

City: Mexico’s<br />

Fight to Change the<br />

Image of a Battered<br />

Border Town<br />

By Nathaniel Parish Flannery<br />

p. 13<br />

An Island of Open<br />

Identity: Singapore<br />

and Long-Distance<br />

Nationalism<br />

By Priyam Saraf<br />

p.16<br />

An Identity to Call Their<br />

Own: Singaporeans<br />

and the Question of<br />

Immigration<br />

By Crystal Neo<br />

p.18<br />

Nation for Sale:<br />

Selling Sierra Leone<br />

By Jennifer Wilmore<br />

p.20<br />

Post-Soviet Identity<br />

and Foreign Policy<br />

Formation in Ukraine,<br />

Estonia, and Latvia<br />

By Tim Sandole<br />

p.22<br />

Reconstructing the<br />

Chinese Farmer<br />

By David Borenstein<br />

p.25<br />

Forever Young:<br />

China’s Belief<br />

in Its Own<br />

Benevolent Rise<br />

By Rebecca Chao<br />

p.28<br />

Development through<br />

Football: A Vision<br />

for the Balkans<br />

By Behar Xharra and<br />

Martin Waehlisch<br />

p.31<br />

Faculty Honors<br />

and Awards<br />

By Alex Burnett<br />

p.32<br />

Leaders in Global<br />

Energy: Seeking<br />

Solutions to<br />

Sustainable Energy<br />

By Alex Burnett and<br />

Michelle Chahine<br />

p.33<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> Events<br />

Highlight Emerging<br />

Economies and<br />

Economic Priorities<br />

p.34<br />

From Recipients to<br />

Donors: Brazilian<br />

Students Turn<br />

Classwork into<br />

Real-world Policy<br />

By Michelle Chahine<br />

contents<br />

p.35<br />

Witnesses to History:<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> Interns around<br />

the World<br />

By Michelle Chahine<br />

p.36<br />

PhD Students Connect<br />

Climate Change and<br />

Civil War<br />

By Alex Burnett<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> Alumnae Direct<br />

New Global Centers<br />

p.37<br />

From <strong>SIPA</strong> to Iraq to<br />

Afghanistan: An Interview<br />

with Carlos Terrones<br />

by Michelle Chahine<br />

p.38<br />

Class Notes<br />

Compiled by Pat Jones<br />

p.39<br />

Donor List


nationalism 2.0<br />

2 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

By Ethan WilkEs


identity matters in international affairs. how political, economic, or<br />

military power moves the affairs of state is easy to see. But it is what<br />

people believe and hold to be true—their identities—that underpins<br />

these power resources and defines their use.<br />

From transnational movements to nation brands and even new nationhood,<br />

national identities are increasingly vying for international influence.<br />

they are being packaged for global consumption and exist inasmuch as<br />

they earn international recognition. these identities represent a new form<br />

of nationalism—what we might call “nationalism 2.0”—that is externally<br />

oriented, inclusive, and participatory.<br />

Traditionally, the notion of a “national” identity<br />

was wedded to the nation-state. It was an identity<br />

rooted in the common bonds that defined and united<br />

a national constituency, such as ethnicity, religion,<br />

and language. It was an identity that came as<br />

a birthright, produced patriots, and fought “for God<br />

and country.” It served as the je ne sais quoi that<br />

made Frenchmen French and Germans German.<br />

But anyone with an Internet connection is no longer<br />

a prisoner of geography; identities are no longer<br />

accidents of origin. The ease of access to information<br />

and international experiences has replaced the traditional<br />

notion of a national identity with something<br />

more of our own choosing. For those of us who have<br />

come of age with this exposure, our self-selected<br />

identities are increasingly wedded to nations of likeminded<br />

individuals rather than to nation-states. We<br />

are defined and united less by the national identities<br />

we are born into than by the transnational identities<br />

in which we choose to believe. We are becoming<br />

advocates rather than patriots. Our fight is increasingly<br />

for cause before country.<br />

Nowhere is this reality more apparent than in<br />

transnational movements like Free Tibet and Save<br />

Darfur. That there is scarcely an elected official<br />

in the United States who would openly argue<br />

against either of these movements is indicative<br />

of the extent to which the electorate has internalized<br />

these transnational identities as part of the<br />

American national fabric.<br />

According to a 2010 CNN/ORC poll, 73<br />

percent of Americans believed that “Tibet<br />

should be an independent country.” A 2006<br />

WorldPublicOpinion.org poll, conducted at the<br />

height of the Save Darfur campaign, found that<br />

62 percent of Americans believed that the United<br />

States “has a responsibility to help stop the killing<br />

in the Darfur region.” Interestingly, according to<br />

a CBS News/New York Times poll conducted this<br />

past fall, only 43 percent “agree with the views of<br />

Occupy Wall Street,” a movement that ostensibly<br />

represents 99 percent of Americans and concerns<br />

issues far closer to home than Tibet or Darfur.<br />

What Free Tibet and Save Darfur represent, in<br />

contrast to Occupy Wall Street, is the key tenet of<br />

nationalism 2.0: identities that appeal to individuals’<br />

aspirations for advocacy and provide a coherent<br />

platform in which many can participate might have<br />

a discernable impact on policy. Save Darfur proved<br />

instrumental in securing Congressional support for<br />

putting UN peacekeepers on the ground in Sudan.<br />

U.S. presidents continue to chide China over treatment<br />

of Tibetans, to the great ire of Beijing.<br />

More than a few countries have recognized the<br />

power of nationalism 2.0 and are making conscious<br />

efforts to package a coherent, consistent,<br />

and well-communicated identity to the outside<br />

world through the use of a nation brand.<br />

Some nation brands are small and product<br />

focused, such as the Bahamas’ promotion of great<br />

tropical holidays, while others encapsulate an entire<br />

national idea like those for India and South Africa.<br />

They might be used to raise reputations, as in the<br />

cases of Ghana and South Korea, or change them,<br />

such as with the states of former Yugoslavia. They<br />

may be as explicit as China’s “Made-in-China”<br />

Times Square advertising blitz or as subtle as<br />

Dubai’s steady drumbeat of positive, well-placed<br />

business news stories positioning the city-state as an<br />

oasis of stability and opportunity in a volatile region.<br />

These diverse nation-branding campaigns all seek<br />

to project an internationally appealing and participa-<br />

A Libyan woman poses with her face decorated with the French flag (left) and Libyan revolution’s colors<br />

during a march in Benghazi to support the international coalition on March 24, 2011.<br />

tory identity that can work in support of policy objectives.<br />

Many do so through the explicit connection of<br />

a product or experience with its country of origin.<br />

While not everyone can call Cape Town, Seoul,<br />

or Mumbai home, many can go on safari, own a<br />

Samsung phone, or learn yoga. The greater the<br />

appeal of these products and experiences, and an<br />

individual’s awareness of their origins, the more likely<br />

that individual might be favorably predisposed to supporting,<br />

or even advocating on behalf of, a World Cup<br />

bid for South Africa, a free trade agreement for South<br />

Korea, or a UN Security Council seat for India.<br />

Where the stakes are particularly high, countries<br />

foster nationalism 2.0 less through links with<br />

engaging products and experiences than through<br />

appeals to the values of their intended audiences.<br />

In particular, new states such as Kosovo,<br />

South Sudan, and potentially Palestine have<br />

sought to win support for nationhood by projecting<br />

identities that appeal to an American sense of<br />

Wilsonian idealism. By casting their struggle for<br />

self-determination in a familiar ideational context,<br />

they have succeeded in engaging significant levels<br />

of public advocacy in the United States to support<br />

their aspirations for independence.<br />

These examples stand in stark contrast to the<br />

no less deserving independence-minded region of<br />

Kurdistan. There are many reasons a Kurdish state<br />

has not materialized, not the least of which are the<br />

geopolitical ramifications for Turkey, Syria, Iraq,<br />

and Iran. But Kurdistan, like Occupy Wall Street,<br />

has also failed to project enough of an externally<br />

oriented, inclusive, and participatory identity to<br />

capture a transformative level of global advocacy<br />

for its cause.<br />

Identity, indeed, matters in international affairs.<br />

An identity that cannot travel, one that remains<br />

restricted to its national boundaries, becomes the<br />

tree that no one heard fall in the forest; its ability<br />

to affect policy will be minimal. In a world where<br />

national identities are increasingly of our own<br />

choosing, the ability of a country or cause to influence<br />

events will hinge on its capacity to cultivate<br />

nationalism 2.0. This is a world in which success<br />

will depend less on the degree of blind patriotism<br />

already existing at home, than on the extent of<br />

dedicated advocacy achieved at home and abroad.<br />

Ethan Wilkes, <strong>SIPA</strong> News coeditor, is a secondyear<br />

MIA candidate concentrating in International<br />

Finance and Economic Policy. He is editor in chief<br />

of The Morningside Post and marketing director of<br />

the Journal of International Affairs.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 3


A 12-meter-high bronze statue of<br />

Alexander the Great stands on the<br />

central square in Skopje, Macedonia’s<br />

capital. Alexander the Great was born<br />

in northern Greece. Macedonia is<br />

striving to prove that it has the right<br />

to claim the warrior king as part of<br />

its ancient heritage, which Greece refutes.<br />

The installation of this massive<br />

sculpture is part of a cultural project<br />

“Skopje 2014.”<br />

Marketing<br />

Macedonia By Sara Ray<br />

4 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS


When I was with other Peace Corps volunteers<br />

in Macedonia, we played a game we called<br />

Balkan RISK. Styled after the board game RISK,<br />

Balkan RISK pitted the Byzantine, Italian,<br />

Greek, Balkan, and Austro-Hungarian empires<br />

against each other for total control of Eastern Europe. Marching my<br />

sunflower seed armies across the map provided visual evidence of a<br />

simple fact: the Balkans were a profound crossroads of empires.<br />

For centuries, the Balkan cultures have<br />

absorbed the influences of empires north and<br />

south, east and west. As a result, the nation that<br />

is now the Republic of Macedonia has a culture<br />

that seems at once Turkish and Hellenistic,<br />

Slavic and European, Christian and Islamic.<br />

While this fermenting of influences has produced<br />

a varied national identity and an anthropologically<br />

fascinating culture, the Macedonians<br />

of today are faced with a curious issue: how does<br />

a culture of such diverse influence market itself<br />

to the rest of the world?<br />

In the 20 years since the breakup of Yugoslavia,<br />

many of its newly independent states have dusted<br />

off the scars of war and made themselves attractive<br />

tourist destinations: Slovenia, Croatia, and<br />

even Bosnia’s war-ravaged capital—Sarajevo—<br />

bustle with Western Europeans in the summer<br />

months. Further south, however, Macedonia’s<br />

sprawling vineyards, craggy mountains, and clear<br />

lakes are glaringly empty of tourists.<br />

In December 2008, the Macedonian government<br />

debuted a commercial campaign marketing<br />

Macedonia across Western Europe, Russia, Turkey,<br />

and the United States. “Macedonia: Timeless” was<br />

a visually stunning series depicting the natural,<br />

historical, and cultural beauty of this Vermontsized<br />

republic in the southern Balkans. But the<br />

Macedonia: Timeless campaign didn’t match up to<br />

the Macedonia of my experience. What stood out<br />

most was not the rich display of Hellenistic and<br />

Christian influences, but the total and resounding<br />

absence of Macedonia’s Eastern and Islamic<br />

heritage. The Macedonia I knew was not nearly as<br />

homogenous as Macedonia: Timeless suggested,<br />

and I wondered why the government chose to<br />

present such a one-sided view of its country.<br />

Apparently, I was not alone. Macedonia:<br />

Timeless drew harsh criticism from two camps:<br />

the Muslims and the Greeks. Both contested the<br />

video’s historical accuracy, but for interestingly<br />

disparate reasons. The Muslims of Macedonia—<br />

Albanians, Roma, and Turks who, together, comprise<br />

about one-third of the population—decried<br />

their utter lack of representation. Where were the<br />

mosques? The major Albanian cities? Allusions to<br />

the 500 years of Turkish rule?<br />

The Greeks, on the other hand, accused<br />

Macedonia of overusing Hellenistic culture.<br />

Over the past several decades, the Greeks have<br />

become increasingly sensitive about Macedonia’s<br />

use of traditional Greek (or Hellenistic) imagery<br />

and nomenclature. So when one installment of<br />

Macedonia: Timeless featured a woman feeding<br />

grapes to a man in a toga as he lounged in<br />

a pavilion with Ionic columns and nude statues,<br />

Greece’s outrage was quick and pointed. Surely<br />

the Macedonian government, when funding the<br />

ad campaign, knew this imagery would be inflammatory<br />

to its southern neighbors. So why did it<br />

figure so prominently in the way they represented<br />

themselves to the world?<br />

The mountain lake Labunicko in Macedonia.<br />

These two sets of questions stem from<br />

Macedonia’s post-Yugoslavian quest for a cohesive<br />

national character in the face of ongoing<br />

ethnic tension. In 2001, Macedonia erupted<br />

in a violent conflict between ethnic Albanians<br />

and ethnic Macedonians. Religious, cultural, and<br />

political issues hit a boiling point, resulting in a<br />

conflict that functionally segregated the country<br />

and left the issue of Macedonian cultural identity<br />

simmering. What is a Macedonian? Can ethnic<br />

Albanians living in Macedonia call themselves<br />

Macedonians? Are Macedonians exclusively<br />

Orthodox Slavs? What determines one’s identity—ethnic<br />

culture or national citizenship?<br />

With Macedonia: Timeless, the Macedonian<br />

government walked squarely into this quagmire.<br />

The commercial series unequivocally shows<br />

Macedonia as a Christian and Western nation.<br />

Strong Hellenistic undertones, paintings of<br />

Orthodox saints, and ancient hillside churches are<br />

significant and ubiquitous elements of Macedonian<br />

culture. But the absences speak volumes. Save for a<br />

brief flash of Turkish writing, there is not a single<br />

cultural fragment of the Albanians, the Turks, or<br />

the Roma. Mother Teresa, an ethnic Albanian<br />

born in Macedonia’s capital, is completely absent.<br />

The video captures none of the vibrant imagery<br />

of Tetovo’s 600-year-old Painted Mosque. No traditional<br />

Turkish dress, no smiling Albanian grandmothers,<br />

no Bajram feasts. The government-funded<br />

Macedonia: Timeless campaign not only alienates a<br />

cultural segment of the country, it in effect erases it.<br />

Macedonia: Timeless was not designed as a<br />

political piece but rather to attract tourists to<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 5


Left: Muslim men bow in prayer during the month of Ramadan inside the Isa Beg Mosque in Skopje, Macedonia, in 2010. Right: A young woman in traditional western Macedonian<br />

dress prepares to participate in a wedding procession the night before the Galicnik Wedding on July 14, 2007, in Macedonia’s western village of Galicnik. The traditional Galicnik<br />

Wedding is held every year on the Orthodox St. Peter’s Day.<br />

Macedonia in the same way they’d been attracted<br />

to Croatia and Slovenia. But unlike those nations,<br />

Macedonia’s crisis of identity, particularly that of<br />

ethnic identity, is still recent, fresh, and unhealed.<br />

For ten years, Macedonia has struggled to unite<br />

two cultural spheres whose history has been tense<br />

at best and violent at worst into one cohesive<br />

national identity.<br />

While the government (currently, the ethnic<br />

Macedonian–dominated VMRO-DPMNE) promotes<br />

ethnic integration, its actions are less committed.<br />

Macedonia: Timeless’ representation of a<br />

Western, Christianized nation is VMRO’s vision<br />

for Macedonia, not the country’s reality. Though<br />

the government denied any ill intent in neglecting<br />

Eastern and Islamic influences from the video,<br />

it is interesting to note how closely the release<br />

of this tourism campaign coincided with another<br />

government effort known as “Skopje 2014.”<br />

Skopje 2014 is a government-funded project<br />

whose aim is to give the nation’s capital, Skopje,<br />

a much needed facelift. As the nation’s largest<br />

city, Skopje is competing against the likes of<br />

Dubrovnik, Zagreb, Sarajevo, and Ljubljana—<br />

all cities with an attractive mix of Balkan and<br />

European styles. Skopje 2014 is Macedonia’s<br />

effort to put itself onto equal footing. Since<br />

2010, statues, museums, and monuments have<br />

6 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

slowly cropped up across the city center, transforming<br />

Skopje from a drab, Yugoslavian-era city<br />

into what it truly is: a European capital.<br />

Skopje 2014, however, falls prey to the same<br />

criticism as Macedonia: Timeless. The capstone<br />

statue of the project is a 12-meter rendering of<br />

Alexander the Great, a figure whose birthplace<br />

is a fiercely divisive issue between Macedonia<br />

and Greece. Other statues include leaders of the<br />

Macedonian revolution against Turkish rule, Saints<br />

Cyril and Methodius (the inventors of the Cyrillic<br />

alphabet), and a 17th-century revolutionary killed<br />

by the Turks. In a nearby park, there is a monument<br />

to the soldiers and police killed in the 2001<br />

armed conflict with ethnic Albanian militants.<br />

It is easy to attribute these omissions to a<br />

transparent political game and to cast VMRO<br />

as an ethnically homogonous villain, but this<br />

oversimplifies the issue. Macedonia: Timeless<br />

and Skopje 2014 are not fundamentally political<br />

tools: they are incentives aimed at revitalizing<br />

Macedonia’s economy and putting the country on<br />

the map for adventurous travelers. Regardless of<br />

underlying political mentalities, any government<br />

should understand that ethnic tension or violence<br />

serves only as a repellant to tourists and investors.<br />

It seems unlikely, therefore, that the Macedonian<br />

government would invest in these tourism proj-<br />

ects by intentionally using provocative methods<br />

that have every potential to reopen old wounds.<br />

The issue, then, is the validity of a consciously<br />

formed national identity. Macedonia’s beautiful<br />

landscape has been occupied for thousands of years,<br />

has seen the rise and fall of dozens of empires. It has<br />

absorbed baklava from the East and pizza from the<br />

West. But Macedonia is a young nation still tasting<br />

true independence for the first time. This newfound<br />

freedom has forced the nation to ask itself: Who am<br />

I? Who are we? And perhaps most provocatively,<br />

who has the authority to answer these questions?<br />

With the goal of increasing tourism, revitalizing the<br />

country, and bringing Macedonia squarely into a<br />

European future, the Macedonian government has<br />

granted itself that authority. Macedonia: Timeless<br />

and Skopje 2014 are the government’s answer to<br />

the question of national identity: whether they will<br />

bring the nation into a new future of economic and<br />

social prosperity remains to be seen.<br />

Sara Ray is an administrative assistant in <strong>SIPA</strong>’s<br />

Office of Communications and External Relations. While<br />

in the Peace Corps, she lived and worked in Macedonia as<br />

the programming coordinator of an interethnic and interfaith<br />

leadership program for young women.


Branding a Global city,<br />

one campaign at a time<br />

By andrea Moore<br />

The Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain.


throughout its colonial history, hong Kong was<br />

known as the gateway to asia. But with the rise<br />

of other global cities in its region like Singapore,<br />

Shanghai, and Seoul, hong Kong faced new competition<br />

to its established identity. in response, the<br />

city launched Brand hong Kong in 2001 to secure<br />

its place as “asia’s world city.”<br />

Hong Kong is not alone. Increasingly, cities<br />

are making explicit efforts to employ the strategic<br />

branding tactics of companies to stake their claim<br />

on the world stage. This rising trend is indicative<br />

of a new urban era and is due to two major shifts<br />

that are making the global identity of a city more<br />

important than ever before.<br />

First, there are simply more people moving<br />

to cities. In 2008, more than half of the world’s<br />

population lived in urban areas for the first time<br />

in history. By 2050, the United Nations projects<br />

that the proportion of urban dwellers will reach<br />

nearly 70 percent. This migration has been<br />

called the most important since the rise of agriculture<br />

and the decline of nomadic living.<br />

Second, most of these new urban centers will<br />

not be in the traditional developed economies.<br />

In March 2011, the McKinsey Global Institute<br />

published a report that estimated that 600 urban<br />

centers generate about 60 percent of global GDP.<br />

McKinsey predicts that this proportion will still hold<br />

by 2025, but the location of these 600 cities will be<br />

markedly different. One hundred thirty-six new cities<br />

from the developing world are predicted to enter this<br />

group of 600, with 100 from China alone.<br />

Furthermore, the 2010 Global Cities Index<br />

(a collaboration between Foreign Policy, A. T.<br />

Kearney, and The Chicago Council on Global<br />

Affairs) ranked 65 cities with populations greater<br />

than a million according to “its influence on<br />

and integration with global markets, culture, and<br />

innovation.” Although traditionally global cities<br />

like New York, London, and Tokyo still top the<br />

list, other emerging market cities like Beijing,<br />

Shanghai, and Buenos Aires now rank in the top<br />

25, and the authors expect the rankings to skew<br />

from the West to the East in coming years.<br />

As these simultaneous shifts occur—increasing<br />

urbanization and greater influence of the developing<br />

world—up-and-coming cities are making<br />

conscious efforts to compete for investment,<br />

human capital, and prestige on the global stage.<br />

Many cities have always had a particular<br />

ethos or identity that required no formal effort to<br />

develop. In their book, The Spirit of Cities: Why<br />

the Identity of a City Matters in a Global Age,<br />

Daniel Bell and Avner de-Shalit examine nine<br />

modern cities and their individual “spirits”—<br />

for example, religion in Jerusalem, learning in<br />

Oxford, and ambition in New York. But in recent<br />

years, cities are increasingly moving beyond<br />

organic identity development to adopt formal<br />

branding campaigns. Hong Kong launched its<br />

formal brand in 2001, and other well-established<br />

global cities have long pursued branding campaigns<br />

of their own, such as the ubiquitous “I<br />

Love New York” campaign.<br />

There are different approaches to the strategic<br />

creation of a city’s brand. Some cities are pursuing<br />

the “Bilbao effect” by building landmark<br />

cultural destinations to remake their international<br />

urban identity. Before the Guggenheim Museum<br />

opened in Bilbao in 1997, this Spanish city<br />

of less than a million people had a struggling,<br />

industrial-based economy. The arrival of the<br />

museum was a lynchpin in its strategic international<br />

transformation. In 2010, the Guggenheim<br />

estimated that it contributed almost 200 million<br />

euros to Bilbao’s GDP directly and indirectly, as<br />

well as maintained almost 4,000 jobs. Perhaps


just as significantly, Bilbao was a finalist for the<br />

World Design Capital in 2014, along with Cape<br />

Town and Dublin. In less than two decades,<br />

Bilbao has remade—even created—its global<br />

identity. Notably, another Frank Gehry-designed<br />

Guggenheim museum is slated to open in Abu<br />

Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, in 2014, bringing<br />

worldwide attention to the Middle Eastern art<br />

scene and to Abu Dhabi as a global city.<br />

Other cities are taking advantage of major<br />

international events to catapult them onto the<br />

global stage. Rio de Janeiro is using this tactic<br />

to the extreme, with the Catholic World Youth<br />

Day in 2013, the FIFA World Cup in 2014, and<br />

the Summer Olympics in 2016. Rio’s bid for the<br />

Olympics, the first to be held in South America,<br />

was—as its website proclaims—built around the<br />

theme of “passion and transformation of a city and<br />

an entire country, fuelled by the renovation of the<br />

Olympic spirit, to project Brazil and Rio de Janeiro<br />

to the world.” Rio is using these international<br />

events to broaden its global image and become one<br />

of the urban gateways to the southern hemisphere.<br />

As successful as some cities’ efforts<br />

have been, the creation of an aspiring city’s<br />

global brand can still be precarious. In March<br />

2011, more than 130 artists promised to<br />

boycott the developing Guggenheim Museum<br />

in Abu Dhabi because of labor conditions for<br />

foreign workers. Such a controversy could very<br />

well offset any effort to make Abu Dhabi a new<br />

global cultural center.<br />

Beijing also famously used its 2008<br />

Summer Olympics to boost its international<br />

identity. However, in their 2009 paper, “City<br />

Branding and the Olympic Effect: A Case Study<br />

of Beijing,” Li Zhang of Fudan <strong>University</strong> and<br />

Simon Xiaobin Zhao of the <strong>University</strong> of Hong<br />

Kong conducted a survey about citizens’ attitudes<br />

before and after the Olympics. They found<br />

that the top-down branding effort by the city<br />

government, which emphasized its vision for<br />

Beijing’s development as a global city, was<br />

mismatched with the vision of the city’s residents<br />

and had little to do with grassroots initiatives.<br />

“The city values and branding projects were<br />

selected more for their relevance to Western<br />

tourists than for their representation of actual<br />

ways of life of local residents,” Zhang and Zhou<br />

write. Just as in the business world, building a<br />

city’s global brand must still be consistent with<br />

the city’s core values to achieve a long-lasting<br />

and successful outcome.<br />

Moreover, a city’s global bra nd does not necessarily<br />

have to reflect the core values of its home<br />

nation. Discussing Amsterdam, de-Shalit emphasizes<br />

that “It was an intention of the city several<br />

times, most recently in the 1910s and 1920s, to<br />

allow as many people who wanted to live there,<br />

no matter their religion [or] color,” despite the<br />

continued conservatism of Holland. Today, when<br />

a city isn’t limited by its national identity, it has<br />

greater latitude to build a competitive advantage.<br />

Notably, despite its location in a politically conservative<br />

region of the United States, Las Vegas has<br />

successfully built a global brand as “Sin City” with<br />

gambling, clubs, and other adult entertainment.<br />

While in the past city branding may have<br />

been primarily about attracting inward investment<br />

and tourism, today’s efforts are increasingly<br />

about positioning cities as active political<br />

actors on the international stage. On issues<br />

from terrorism to climate change, the leaders of<br />

world cities are engaging other mayors and even<br />

national leaders in direct diplomacy to meet their<br />

most pressing challenges. Former Chicago mayor<br />

Richard M. Daley launched the Chicago-China<br />

Friendship Initiative during a two-week visit in<br />

March 2011, improving the international profile<br />

of Chicago’s economy with the explicit goal of<br />

making Chicago the most “China-friendly” city<br />

in the United States. Other initiatives, like the<br />

C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, provide an<br />

international forum for city leaders to gather and<br />

engage on global challenges outside national-level<br />

discussions. While the C40 is currently chaired<br />

by New York’s mayor Michael Bloomberg, the<br />

steering committee also includes emerging global<br />

cities like Jakarta, Johannesburg, and São Paulo,<br />

which is further evidence that major cities of the<br />

developing world already recognize the diplomatic<br />

opportunities that globally branded cities enjoy.<br />

As the world continues to urbanize, one thing<br />

is clear: cities are actively using branding and<br />

diplomacy for their own political and economic<br />

gain. How successful these efforts are will depend<br />

in part on the degree of independence and latitude<br />

that cities are granted by their state, regional, or<br />

federal governments. But as Hong Kong’s branding<br />

plan to become “Asia’s World City” attests, cities<br />

can increasingly present themselves on the international<br />

stage to tell the world what they are and<br />

what they want—and not have to wait for national<br />

governments to keep up with them.<br />

Andrea Moore is a second-year MIA candidate<br />

concentrating in International Finance and<br />

Economic Policy. She is managing editor of the<br />

Journal of International Affairs.<br />

While in the past city branding may have been primar-<br />

ily about attracting inWard investment and tourism,<br />

today’s efforts are increasingly about positioning cities<br />

as active political actors on the international stage.


10 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS


A volunteer rolls up a<br />

photograph during an<br />

open-air exhibition near<br />

the U.S.-Mexico border<br />

at Rio Bravo, in Ciudad<br />

Juárez, October 29, 2011.<br />

The exhibition, which<br />

is part of the global art<br />

movement “Inside Out”<br />

and shows thousands of<br />

photographs of smiling<br />

people living in Juárez,<br />

is meant to promote<br />

a positive image of<br />

Cuidad Juárez.<br />

RebRanding<br />

MuRdeR City:<br />

Mexico’s Fight to Change the Image of a Battered Border Town<br />

BY NATHANIEL PARISH FLANNERY<br />

Mary Korthuis, a senior executive at Genpact, a business process-exporting<br />

firm, gave me a ride from El Paso, Texas, over to her office in Ciudad<br />

Juárez—a place that is now considered to be the world’s most violent city.<br />

It sits at the center of one of Mexico’s most lucrative drug smuggling routes<br />

and has become a key battleground in the drug war. At night rival gangs and<br />

cartel assassins kill each other in the streets. Even during the middle of the<br />

day, there is no guarantee of safety. Hit men have summarily killed police<br />

officers underneath the afternoon sun. As we drove towards Juárez, Mary was<br />

calm. There were only a few cars ahead of us at the border crossing. “There’s<br />

a built-up anxiousness [about crossing into Juárez], but after you’ve done it<br />

for a while, it’s really no big deal,” she told me.<br />

As we drove over the smooth highway overpasses,<br />

I could see the billboards for OfficeMax,<br />

Applebee’s, and other international chains that<br />

have come to Juárez’s modern shopping malls.<br />

The streets were quiet, and it was hard to imagine<br />

that eight people had been killed the day<br />

before, including a shoe shiner who was shot<br />

in front of one of the city’s main supermarkets.<br />

It was harder still to imagine that in 2010 more<br />

than 3,000 people were killed in Juárez.<br />

At a recent event promoting Juárez<br />

Competetiva, the city’s main economic development<br />

initiative, Cesar Duarte, the state governor,<br />

told the crowd that changing the public’s<br />

negative perception of Juárez is one of the main<br />

goals of his administration. “Beating this stigma<br />

is one of the government’s priorities, because<br />

Chihuahua is not a violent state, and its people<br />

are peaceful and hardworking,” he said.<br />

The next day, however, armed men toting<br />

AK-47 assault rifles shot and killed Mr. Duarte’s<br />

main medical adviser while he was driving his<br />

pickup truck in Juárez. The doctor’s elderly<br />

father was also killed in the attack.<br />

In Juárez, proximity to the United States has<br />

brought immense foreign investment and also a<br />

rising wave of drug cartel-related violence. For<br />

both legal and illegal trade, Juárez is the perfect<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 11


Top: Workers of an electronic assembly plant ride on a bus to their work place in Ciudad Juárez. Bottom: A man holds<br />

a bullet casing in his hand at a crime scene in Ciudad Juárez on February 24, 2011. Three girls, ages 12, 14, and 15,<br />

were shot dead by hitmen on February 23 while standing on a sidewalk, according to the local media.<br />

point of access. A border city that provides lowwage<br />

labor and unparalleled access to the world’s<br />

largest consumer market, Juárez has become a<br />

city of stark contrasts. Gruesome murders have<br />

captured the attention of the international media,<br />

but Juárez’s business community is arguing that<br />

there’s more to the city than cartel violence.<br />

At a national level, Mexico faces the same challenge.<br />

“Restoring Mexico’s International Reputation,”<br />

a recent report from the Woodrow Wilson Mexico<br />

Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based think tank,<br />

explains that in 2010, more than 80 percent of the<br />

stories about Mexico in the Wall Street Journal and the<br />

New York Times related to crime and corruption. Many<br />

of Mexico’s leaders think that the shortage of stories<br />

about topics other than the violence is contributing<br />

to a perception that Mexico is a failing state. In<br />

Juárez, the problem is even more acute.<br />

Especially since 2008, when the global recession<br />

caused many local employers to cut production<br />

and trim their payrolls, city officials have<br />

worked tirelessly to rebrand the city, stressing the<br />

investment opportunities it offers.<br />

12 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

Local political leaders in Juárez have launched<br />

a public campaign, often echoing statements from<br />

the country’s president, Felipe Calderón, in order to<br />

calm international investors and help build “Brand<br />

Mexico.” They want to highlight the fact that in<br />

spite of the violence, Juárez is open for business.<br />

When I met Hector Murguia, the city’s affable<br />

mayor, he was seated comfortably in his dark,<br />

wood-paneled office, a luxurious corner on an upper<br />

floor of Juárez’s hulking, cement city hall building.<br />

He slipped quickly into his sales pitch. “In Juárez<br />

we have the best labor force in the world,” he said.<br />

He focused mainly on telling me about the<br />

city’s universities and the high-tech skills of the<br />

factory workers. He chose his words carefully<br />

when talking about the violence. “The root cause<br />

of the insecurity is the absence of opportunities<br />

[and] jobs,” he said. The important thing,” he<br />

said, “is implementing policies that strengthen<br />

the businesses. ”At the national level, Calderón’s<br />

branding campaign was captured in the government-produced<br />

documentary film, Mexico: The<br />

Royal Tour, which was released earlier this year.<br />

It follows President Calderón as he gives an<br />

American journalist a seven-day tour of various<br />

tourist attractions in Mexico.<br />

“We need to change the perception about<br />

Mexico,” Calderón says to the camera.<br />

As we drove through the security checkpoint<br />

at the border, Mary, the executive from Genpact,<br />

told me, “I come over every single day; there’s<br />

no reason to be nervous.” She took me on a tour<br />

of Genpact’s facility, through rooms filled with<br />

young people working at computer stations.<br />

The violence, after all, has devastated the<br />

city’s small business community, but so far it has<br />

left the export sector and the multinationals relatively<br />

unscathed.<br />

Sylvia Longmire, a former Air Force intelligence<br />

analyst and author of a recently published<br />

book on Mexico’s cartels, told me, “a lot of U.S.<br />

businesses are operating in Mexico without problems<br />

. . . business is flourishing.”<br />

“Mexico is not a failed state,” she said.<br />

On another day, I passed through a security<br />

gate and met with Miguel Hidalgo, a senior<br />

executive at ACS, a Business Process Outsourcing<br />

company that employs 3,000 people in Juárez. He<br />

took me on a tour of the brightly painted red and<br />

yellow building, through a massive room filled<br />

with employees in their twenties, dressed like typical<br />

college students in casual attire, wearing stylish<br />

t-shirts and new sneakers. Some of the young<br />

men and women had tattoos on their arms and<br />

hands. One tough looking young man, with short<br />

cropped hair and an olive green dress shirt opened<br />

at the collar to reveal a number of neck tattoos,<br />

stood confidently in front of his work station. “Sir,<br />

what I’m going to need you to do is go ahead and<br />

click,” he said calmly into the microphone on his<br />

headset in an impeccable Midwestern American<br />

accent. Outside ACS’s office, I saw white corporate<br />

buses driving by, one after another, picking<br />

up and dropping off workers at other corporate<br />

campuses and factories. Trucks rumbled by to line<br />

up to cross the border into the United States.<br />

By late 2011, foreign companies had signed deals<br />

to invest $17 billion in Mexico, and Juárez itself has<br />

attracted almost $600 million worth of investment<br />

from foreign companies. Mexico’s economy is projected<br />

to grow by as much as 4.8 percent in 2012.<br />

In spite of the violence, the factories that line<br />

the southern bank of the Rio Grande are expanding<br />

production, and multinational corporations<br />

are opening new facilities in Juárez. This is the<br />

image the city is trying to promote.<br />

“Juárez continues to be a magnet for investment,”<br />

Mayor Murguia told me.<br />

Nathaniel Parish Flannery is a first-year MIA<br />

candidate.


An Island of Open Identity:<br />

Singapore and Long-Distance Nationalism<br />

Bhaskar still remembers the day when the phone rang in his old family home in the north of Kolkata. “We are pleased<br />

to offer you a tuition grant to come study in Singapore,” said the dean of Singapore Management <strong>University</strong>. The<br />

grant came with a contract to work in a Singapore-based company for three years after graduation.<br />

The decision was not an easy one. India was the only home Bhaskar had ever known—Indian his only national<br />

identity. No one in his family held a passport, had boarded an airplane, or traveled abroad. If he accepted the grant, he<br />

would commit to spending at least seven years in a very foreign country; if he rejected it, he might miss the opportunity<br />

of a lifetime.<br />

Bhaskar doesn’t like missing opportunities.<br />

NOTE: The names in this article have been changed at the request of the interviewees.<br />

Shoppers browsing through a market<br />

specially set up for Deepavali in<br />

Little India, Singapore.<br />

By PrIyAM SArAf<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 13


People look out over the central business<br />

district skyline in Singapore.<br />

14 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

For Bhaskar, and countless other Indian<br />

immigrants to Singapore, life in the city-state<br />

is an experiment in open identities. A person<br />

can be Indian in his cultural habits, cuisine<br />

preferences, and choice of partner, but still<br />

very Singaporean in how they approach a problem,<br />

their predisposition for efficiency, and<br />

their views on the government’s role in development.<br />

This is a place where long-distance<br />

nationalism thrives.<br />

“Singapore opened doors for me, while letting<br />

me keep my links to India,” says Bhaskar, now a<br />

graduate student at the Fletcher School of Law and<br />

Diplomacy near Boston. “I remember celebrating the<br />

Indian Independence Day while working on a policy<br />

paper for a government agency in Singapore.”<br />

But when asked where he considers home,<br />

Bhaskar pauses before answering. “I feel connected<br />

to Singapore where my friends are,<br />

but I go back to India often.” He discusses<br />

Singaporean politics with as much ease as he<br />

analyzes the pros and cons of the education reservation<br />

system in India.<br />

After years of liberal immigration policies,<br />

Singapore has emerged as a pioneer in both<br />

practicing and defining open identities. It is an<br />

interesting strain of nationalism that is a product<br />

of the city-state’s historical origins. With limited<br />

human and natural resources at independence<br />

in 1965, Singapore determined that economic<br />

success would hinge on its ability to attract the<br />

skilled labor necessary for multinational companies<br />

to consider relocating to the island. This in<br />

turn would boost employment, driving the citystate’s<br />

economy.<br />

This is where talented immigrants like<br />

Bhaskar fit into Singapore’s impressive growth<br />

story from a Southeast Asian backwater to a<br />

global financial powerhouse. A good part of that<br />

success can be attributed to Singapore’s open<br />

attitude toward what it means to be Singaporean.<br />

A long-time resident and taxpayer of Singapore,<br />

Bhaskar felt he could choose whether to take<br />

up Singaporean citizenship or not. There was<br />

no pressure. He preferred to retain his Indian<br />

nationality, which he views as a ticket to participate<br />

in Indian politics in the future, should<br />

he choose to do so. And he is hardly alone.<br />

According to the 2011 census, Singapore counts<br />

62 percent of its population of approximately 5.1<br />

million as citizens of other countries.<br />

Some Indian immigrants have chosen different<br />

paths. Padmini came to Singapore to study<br />

engineering on a Singapore Airlines scholarship<br />

at the age of 17 and has lived there since. Unlike<br />

Bhaskar, Padmini decided to take the Singaporean<br />

citizenship available to her. Her reasons were both<br />

personal and professional. “I really like Singapore,


and my entire social network is in Singapore,” she<br />

says. “Plus, I want to work in development, and<br />

having a strong passport like Singapore helps.” She<br />

explains that as a Singaporean she does not face<br />

the same visa requirements that Indian nationals<br />

do for most countries.<br />

Still, she retains firm ties to her native India.<br />

This past October, she married Abhishek, a PhD<br />

student in metaphysics from her hometown of<br />

Madurai in Southern India.<br />

The stories of Bhaskar and Padmini demonstrate<br />

the interesting interplay between personal<br />

choice and the extent of affiliation to Singapore.<br />

Highly skilled immigrants who live and work in<br />

Singapore for years may or may not be inclined<br />

to become Singaporean citizens, which mandates<br />

two years of compulsory military service for their<br />

children. But this has not deterred Singapore from<br />

promoting an open door policy that continues to<br />

attract human capital from around the world to<br />

meet its own developmental ends.<br />

The result of this policy has been a population<br />

that is overwhelmingly pluralistic in terms of the<br />

composition of its citizenships and a decidedly<br />

21st-century view of national identity. Unlike in<br />

the past, where the state could assume the affiliation<br />

of those born within its borders, immigrants<br />

to Singapore like Bhaskar and Padmini are able<br />

to define new identities individually, which are<br />

characterized more by the sum of their parts than<br />

any accident of origin. As their stories attest—<br />

Indian upbringings and Singaporean educations,<br />

a Singaporean passport and an Indian husband,<br />

Singaporean profession and Indian political<br />

ambitions—multiple identities and long-distance<br />

nationalism are a reality they have selected for<br />

themselves.<br />

In purely economic terms, Bhaskar and<br />

Padmini faced an unconstrained optimization<br />

problem: which national affiliation to choose while<br />

optimizing for multiple needs? How to define an<br />

identity while discounting factors of initial endowment,<br />

family status, ethnicity, race, religion, and,<br />

perhaps, even caste?<br />

Singapore has been smart to let them answer<br />

these questions on their own. As an island of<br />

open identities, Singapore implicitly recognizes<br />

the weakness of geographic lock-in and the fickle<br />

nature of national affiliation stemming from<br />

this reality, especially among the small segment<br />

of highly skilled and mobile workers. Allowing<br />

those who arrive in Singapore to obtain work and<br />

residence permits easily and define their level of<br />

“Singaporean-ness” on their own terms makes<br />

immigrants feel at home—and prolongs their stay<br />

in the city-state as productive contributors to the<br />

local economy. They become both inputs and<br />

outputs of the local culture and norms.<br />

But not all Singaporean citizens are keen<br />

on keeping Singapore such an open place for<br />

immigrants or a haven for long-distance nationalism.<br />

They feel this culture of open identities<br />

undermines the building of a unique Singaporean<br />

identity and cultivating patriotism. “Immigrants<br />

take away our jobs, but shy away from taking<br />

on responsibilities that come with citizenship,”<br />

complains Allen, a second-year Singaporean engineering<br />

student. ”Why is there a tradeoff between<br />

growth and patriotism for our country? It’s unfair,”<br />

says Allen decidedly.<br />

Visitors check out one of the immigration halls at Changi airport’s new Terminal 3 in Singapore.<br />

Little India, Singapore<br />

Allen is not alone in his views. But while<br />

such concerns may yield political dividends, as<br />

evidenced by some of the anti-immigration sentiment<br />

surrounding the May 2011 general election,<br />

the emergence of an insular or exclusive<br />

nationalism in Singapore could prove not only<br />

damaging to the island’s growth model, but also<br />

distance it from the city-state’s founding principles<br />

of meritocracy.<br />

That fateful day Bhaskar received a phone<br />

call from the dean of Singapore Management<br />

<strong>University</strong>, he was faced with a choice. Would he<br />

enter into long-distance nationalism with India or<br />

not, even if for a measurable period of time? But<br />

as the experiences of both Bhaskar and Padmini<br />

show, this is a question many students in developing<br />

countries face today. By placing few burdens<br />

on students, Singapore makes answering<br />

this question easier. Singapore is a place where<br />

those who cross its path can feel a sense of<br />

belonging and affiliation, while retaining strong<br />

connections with where they originated.<br />

The world has much to gain from Singapore’s<br />

pioneering example of open identities. By leaning<br />

toward a tried and turbulent form of ethnocentric<br />

nationalism, Singapore has much to lose.<br />

Priyam Saraf is a second-year MPA candidate<br />

concentrating in Economic and Political Development.<br />

She is MPA president for the class of 2012.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 15


An Identity to Call Their Own:<br />

Singaporeans and the<br />

Question of Immigration<br />

By Crystal Neo<br />

Internationally, Singapore projects the<br />

identity of a diverse country with an<br />

open immigration policy and a multiethnic<br />

population. A survey by HSBC<br />

bank in 2010 ranked Singapore as the top<br />

country overall for expatriates—ahead of Hong<br />

Kong, the United Arab Emirates, and Canada. But<br />

domestically, the results of the general election<br />

in May 2011 and activity on social media suggest<br />

Singaporeans may be yearning for a more unified<br />

national identity to call their own.<br />

This rift between Singapore’s international image<br />

and domestic realities may have its roots in the citystate’s<br />

politicization process. In the past, a combination<br />

of depoliticization and aggressive hard sell by<br />

the government fostered the view of Singapore as an<br />

island of open identities. With the largest number of<br />

contested seats since independence, this most recent<br />

general election saw a rise in the politics of identity<br />

about who is—and can become—Singaporean, as<br />

opposition parties vied for support.<br />

Immigration has long been an important<br />

aspect of Singapore’s population and economic<br />

strategy. Since 1987, immigration has proved a<br />

viable solution to declining birth rates and an<br />

ageing workforce. The failure of other incentives<br />

such as tax breaks, subsidies, and cash bonuses<br />

offered to address the demographic decline<br />

resulted in an even more pressing need to increase<br />

the population replacement rate.<br />

But a surge in immigration during the boom<br />

years of 2004 to 2007 affected many Singaporeans<br />

when the economic crisis hit in 2008. Since the<br />

end of 2005, the population ballooned by about<br />

810,000, bringing the total to 5.1 million. Many<br />

Singaporeans say this liberal immigration policy<br />

resulted in crowded public transportation, more<br />

competition with new arrivals for jobs, and fewer<br />

places in choice schools for their children, as well<br />

as rising costs of public housing.<br />

The increasing voter discontent over immigration<br />

in the nation was best epitomized by<br />

16 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

the furor generated by a disagreement between<br />

a local family and their immigrant neighbors.<br />

Local news reports on an immigrant family from<br />

China complaining about the smell of curry from<br />

a Singaporean Indian neighbor’s home led to the<br />

creation of a Facebook page that attracted more<br />

than 57,600 members. As a demonstration of support<br />

for the Indian family, many said they were<br />

cooking curry the following Sunday.<br />

With more than a third of Singapore’s total population<br />

made up of foreigners and permanent residents,<br />

immigration became a hot button issue that enabled<br />

opposition parties to garner record levels of support<br />

during the May general elections. Although the ruling<br />

People’s Action Party won a landslide victory,<br />

the reduction in its winning margin revealed that<br />

the influx of immigrants was a sore point for many<br />

Singaporeans who remain unhappy over the consequences<br />

of the liberal immigration policies.<br />

This comes as no surprise.<br />

The unhappiness over the influx of immigrants<br />

had already begun to feature in the government’s<br />

policy agenda prior to the election.<br />

A report released by the Singapore Department<br />

of Statistics in 2010 details how the government<br />

has tightened immigration policies and started<br />

to calibrate the inflow of new immigrants since<br />

the last quarter of 2009. There were 59,460 new<br />

permanent residents and 19,928 new citizens in<br />

2009, in contrast to the 79,167 new permanent<br />

residents and 20,513 new citizens in 2008.<br />

A 2010 survey conducted by the Institute of<br />

Policy Studies also indicates discontent over immigration.<br />

According to the National Orientations<br />

of Singaporeans survey, 63 percent of respondents<br />

or two out of three, agreed or strongly<br />

agreed that national unity would be affected by<br />

the policy to attract more foreign talent. This<br />

contrasted sharply with the 38 percent who<br />

agreed or strongly agreed that such a policy could<br />

be a threat to national unity when a similar study<br />

was conducted in 1998.<br />

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong addressed<br />

these concerns in a speech following the general<br />

election. During his annual National Day Rally<br />

speech in August, the prime minister promised to<br />

slow the pace of immigration by tightening curbs<br />

on some foreign workers. New immigration policies<br />

will require potential immigrants to possess<br />

better educational qualifications as well as belong<br />

to higher income brackets.<br />

This is in stark contrast to previous years’<br />

National Day Rally speeches, when the government<br />

had tried to convince citizens to accept<br />

more immigrants into the country for the sake of<br />

economic growth. Political leaders have often publicly<br />

acknowledged multiculturalism and diversity<br />

as pillars of Singapore’s identity. In the January<br />

2011 book, Lee Kuan Yew: Hard Truths to Keep Singapore<br />

Going, former minister mentor Lee Kuan Yew<br />

described the openness of the Singaporean identity<br />

as accepting “that whoever joins us is part of<br />

us.” Chief Justice Chan Sek Keong has also spoken<br />

of the multicultural nature of Singapore’s identity<br />

as defined by the country’s constitution.<br />

Yet, this form of identity hasn’t resonated with<br />

Singapore’s citizens. Instead, they have rejected<br />

the government-driven narrative of Singapore’s<br />

identity and are beginning to assert their own<br />

ideas of what it means to be Singaporean. As the<br />

“curry incident” suggests, this newfound anti-immigration<br />

stance reflects a desire by Singaporeans to<br />

differentiate themselves from non-Singaporeans.<br />

This process appears to be at odds with prior<br />

government-driven initiatives to promote an open<br />

identity, suggesting that national identities cannot<br />

be dictated in a top-down fashion. Rather, they<br />

must be desired and driven by the people.<br />

As a young nation with 46 years of independence<br />

behind it, then, it is normal for Singaporeans<br />

to desire a national identity they can call their own.<br />

Crystal Neo is a second-year MPA candidate concentrating<br />

in Economic and Political Development.


Top: Nicole Seah, a candidate<br />

from the opposition National<br />

Solidarity Party (NSP)<br />

for the Marine Parade group<br />

representation constituencies<br />

(GRC), speaks to supporters<br />

at an election rally<br />

in Singapore May 4, 2011.<br />

Bottom: Organizers of “Cook<br />

a Pot of Curry” Facebook<br />

event Stanley Wong (2nd<br />

left), Florence Leow (3rd<br />

left) and Gabriel Yeap (center)<br />

eat curry with friends, at<br />

Leow’s home in Singapore<br />

August 21, 2011. The group<br />

organized the gathering in<br />

response to a media report<br />

about a mainland Chinese<br />

family who could not stand<br />

the smell of their local<br />

Indian neighbors cooking<br />

curry, in an effort to promote<br />

understanding, awareness<br />

and respect between different<br />

cultural groups.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 17


Nation for Sale: Selling<br />

perched atop a lush hillside overlooking<br />

colorful rooftops, bustling traffic, and warm<br />

Atlantic waters sits a billboard with a simple<br />

statement: “Na wi country.” This is our country.<br />

Signs like this cover the ground all throughout<br />

Sierra Leone. What remains unclear, however, is<br />

how widespread this sense of national pride actually<br />

is in this West African nation.<br />

The country has come to be defined by the<br />

11-year civil war it endured in the 1990s and<br />

the devastation left in its wake. And although the<br />

conflict ended nearly a decade ago and peace has<br />

since taken hold, for many, the idea that Sierra<br />

Leone is a dangerous place still remains.<br />

As a result, when it comes to its national identity,<br />

Sierra Leone seems to have developed a bit<br />

of an inferiority complex. With nearly every news<br />

article written about their country highlighting the<br />

war, and considering Hollywood’s depiction of the<br />

conflict in the 2006 film Blood Diamond, citizens<br />

have become very mindful of how they must<br />

appear to the rest of the world.<br />

None more so than President Ernest Bai<br />

Koroma, who is keen to change the perception<br />

that the country is dangerous. He now claims<br />

18 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

that it is so safe, he walks the streets and personally<br />

drives himself around. But he also realizes<br />

that the media’s constant description of<br />

Sierra Leone as a war-devastated country is not<br />

a misnomer.<br />

The war destroyed critical infrastructure and<br />

chased away both investors and tourists, and<br />

the economy has still not fully recovered. In<br />

response, Koroma’s administration has prioritized<br />

attracting foreign direct investment as the key to<br />

economic growth. And the president understands<br />

that to do so, Sierra Leone needs to undergo<br />

some serious rebranding.<br />

The government has begun promoting Sierra<br />

Leone as a “land of opportunity,” as one of the<br />

most attractive destinations for investment in<br />

Africa, with untapped resources, a growing economy,<br />

fiscal incentives, a natural harbor, and hospitable<br />

people. The government has also embarked<br />

on ambitious infrastructure projects—building<br />

and repairing roads and investing in electricity<br />

production—and has focused on removing further<br />

barriers to investment by creating the Sierra<br />

Leone Investment and Export Promotion Agency<br />

(SLIEPA), which offers free advice to prospective<br />

investors and exporters and a joint chamber of<br />

commerce with the United States.<br />

What’s more, the government has cooperated<br />

with the establishment of a special economic<br />

opportunity zone by a private nonprofit organization,<br />

which might represent the most promising<br />

model for attracting investors yet. Aptly named<br />

“First Step,” this industrial park, located just outside<br />

the capital city, Freetown, aims to facilitate<br />

foreign investment in Sierra Leone by reducing<br />

the risks and costs for international businesses to<br />

set up export processing industries. The government<br />

has committed to providing incentives for<br />

these businesses, including exemptions on import<br />

and export duties, expedited customs services,<br />

and corporate tax holidays.<br />

Not everyone is happy with the government’s<br />

policies of attracting foreign investment, however.<br />

Civil society groups accuse the government of<br />

essentially selling Sierra Leone to investors and<br />

sacrificing the interests and needs of ordinary<br />

Sierra Leoneans in favor of pleasing foreign companies,<br />

particularly those interested in the country’s<br />

vast mineral resources.<br />

“There is no point in throwing away your


natural resources just because you’re in a hurry<br />

to develop,” says Abu Brima, director of the<br />

Network Movement for Justice and Development,<br />

a civil society watchdog organization. Brima, like<br />

many civil society actors, thinks Sierra Leone<br />

is needlessly missing out on huge amounts of<br />

potential government revenue by granting financial<br />

concessions to companies.<br />

“Sierra Leone has decided to give a lot of<br />

incentives because we think we have to encourage<br />

corporations to come. We don’t need that,” he<br />

says. “Because whether we give incentives or not,<br />

they will come. They need the resources.”<br />

And in countries with weak government ability<br />

to provide oversight and regulation, investments<br />

by foreign companies almost inevitably carry with<br />

them concerns of corporate human rights abuses.<br />

One foreign diamond mining company, Koidu<br />

Holdings, has been heavily criticized by human<br />

rights groups for improper resettlement of local<br />

communities, environmental destruction, and even<br />

the shooting deaths of two local men by security<br />

forces hired by the company.<br />

Amid concerns of food insecurity in a society<br />

where most people are subsistence farmers,<br />

accusations of “land grabbing” have also begun<br />

to spread, touching nearly any investment venture<br />

in the country. For example, land leases to a<br />

Swiss-owned company for a sugarcane plantation<br />

and bioethanol production plant have come under<br />

fire this year by the Sierra Leone Network on the<br />

Right to Food and by others. They accuse local<br />

government officials of diverting poor farmers’<br />

land to corporate activities without adequate local<br />

community consultation and claim that the company<br />

has destroyed local water sources.<br />

In light of these concerns, it is worth asking<br />

whether the government’s attempts at selling<br />

Sierra Leone to foreign investors are working.<br />

Over the past few years, the amount of foreign<br />

investment in the country has indeed been higher<br />

than ever. Inflows of foreign direct investment<br />

exceeded $86 million last year, compared with<br />

just $10 million in 2002, when the war ended.<br />

The fact that ground was recently broken on construction<br />

of a Hilton Hotel in Freetown may also<br />

be a sign not only of an improving tourism industry,<br />

but also of the number of wealthy investors<br />

coming to the country. Any visitor to one of the<br />

white sand beaches near the capital city will tell<br />

Left: Soldier standing in front of Ministry<br />

of Tourism and Culture sign. Right: A general<br />

view of the countryside just outside<br />

Freetown, Sierra Leone.<br />

Sierra Leone By Jennifer Wilmore<br />

you that the place is once again crawling with an<br />

increasing number of foreign contractors.<br />

But despite these trends, the most recent<br />

Investment Climate Statement from the U.S.<br />

Embassy in Freetown indicates that Sierra Leone<br />

has not yet escaped the stigma of war. According<br />

to the report, “the devastation of the decade-plus<br />

civil war and the daunting challenge of extreme<br />

poverty continue to impact fundamentally almost<br />

all aspects of Sierra Leone society,” including<br />

governance, institutions, and critical infrastructure<br />

like energy and communications.<br />

To overcome these challenges, huge leaps are<br />

still required not only in nominally rebranding the<br />

country among the international community, but<br />

also in improving infrastructure, education, job<br />

training, and fiscal management. Tackling corruption<br />

and putting in place protections for local<br />

populations and environments affected by investments<br />

are also necessary to ensure that by selling<br />

itself to investors, Sierra Leone doesn’t end up<br />

selling itself out for good.<br />

Jennifer Wilmore is a second-year MIA candidate<br />

concentrating in Human Rights.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 19


Supporters of Ukrainian<br />

opposition leader Viktor<br />

Yanukovych display his<br />

party flags, with a statue<br />

of Soviet state founder<br />

Vladimir Lenin in the<br />

background, at a campaign<br />

rally in the Crimean capital<br />

Simferopol, Ukraine, in<br />

December 2009.<br />

Post-Soviet Identity and Foreign Policy Formation<br />

in Ukraine, Estonia, and Latvia By Tim Sandole<br />

Ukraine, Estonia, and Latvia have two<br />

geopolitical similarities: each was a<br />

subject of the Soviet Union, and each<br />

shares a border with Russia. Yet despite<br />

their proximities to Russia and their respective<br />

experiences with Communism, the two Baltic states<br />

differ remarkably from Ukraine in their policy of<br />

engagement with Russia and the West. Upon the<br />

Soviet Union’s disintegration, Estonia and Latvia<br />

aggressively looked west and embraced NATO,<br />

while Ukraine looked west and continued looking<br />

east, maintaining ties with its former master while<br />

attempting to create a new relationship with the<br />

United States and Western institutions. Why did<br />

these three countries, which were geographically<br />

similar from the outset of the post-Cold War era, differ<br />

so remarkably in their foreign policy orientation?<br />

Their disparate foreign policies are a direct result of<br />

20 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

their respective national identities, all of which came<br />

to fruition during the Soviet Union’s disintegration.<br />

Ukraine’s “Middle-of-the-Road”<br />

Approach<br />

Ethnic Russians formed the largest minority in<br />

Ukraine, making up 22 percent of the population<br />

according to the 1989 census. Throughout the<br />

Soviet period, it was common for Russians to traverse<br />

various Soviet Socialist Republics because<br />

of favorable opportunities provided to them by<br />

the Communist Party. And even after Ukrainian<br />

independence, ethnic Russians had no reason to<br />

fear for their well-being, because Ukraine took<br />

a “middle ground” approach to policy formulation,<br />

where ethnic Russians and Ukrainians<br />

would be on an equal legal footing. <strong>Columbia</strong><br />

<strong>University</strong> professor Alfred Stepan explains that<br />

Ukraine “decided to recognize and institutionally<br />

give support to more than one cultural identity,<br />

even a national identity, in the state.” This<br />

moderate approach stemmed from the makeup<br />

of Ukrainian regional identity. Nationalist and<br />

anti-Russian sentiments have historically characterized<br />

western Ukrainian regions, notably in<br />

Galicia, where the Austrian Hapsburg Empire<br />

once ruled. This left a Western-oriented legacy<br />

in western Ukraine. Pro-Russian political values<br />

have been historically codified in eastern<br />

Ukraine, notably in Donetsk, as a consequence of<br />

many years of Russian Czarist rule. This regional<br />

dichotomy spawned three political ideologies in<br />

the Ukrainian parliament (Verkhvna Rada) at the<br />

outset of Ukrainian independence.<br />

The political left embraced the Soviet idea<br />

of Ukrainian origin belonging to an East Slavic


fraternity with Russia. The right trumpeted the<br />

uniqueness of Ukrainians from the Russians and<br />

was determined to break through to the West. But<br />

the ideologically amorphous center, or the “Party<br />

of Power,” eventually came to represent the popular<br />

view and defined Ukrainian foreign policy. Any<br />

time the political conversation veered too heavily<br />

to the right or left, the Party of Power would eventually<br />

bring politics back to the middle ground.<br />

Leonid Kravchuk, elected in 1991 as the first<br />

president of independent Ukraine, incorporated<br />

many of the ideological facets of the Ukrainian<br />

national revival into his foreign policy. Kravchuk<br />

allowed Ukraine to become part of NATO’s<br />

Partnership for Peace Program (PfP) in 1994, an<br />

initiative that allows partner countries to build a<br />

relationship with full NATO members. Ukraine<br />

was then able to participate in NATO activities—<br />

from defense reform to civil-military relations,<br />

education and training, military-to-military cooperation<br />

and exercises, civil emergency planning,<br />

and cooperation on scientific and environmental<br />

issues. As a PfP member, Ukraine was on the fast<br />

track to becoming a full NATO member.<br />

However, the net effect of Kravchuk’s policies<br />

made the Ukrainian left nervous. His right-ofcenter<br />

foreign policy contributed to his defeat in<br />

the 1994 election, giving rise to Leonid Kuchma,<br />

the favorite of eastern Ukraine. “However, the new<br />

president did not lead Ukraine back to the USSR<br />

and the dominance of Russia as many had expected,”<br />

explains Volodymyr Kulyk, visiting scholar at<br />

<strong>Columbia</strong>’s Harriman Institute. In fact, Kuchma<br />

maintained a moderate foreign policy course that<br />

allowed Ukraine to keep a foothold in Russia<br />

while simultaneously raising its international status<br />

and profile by engaging with NATO. Ukraine<br />

maintained its status as a de facto participating<br />

member of the Eastern-friendly Commonwealth<br />

of Independent States (CIS), which Ukraine had<br />

joined in 1991, but Ukraine never ratified the<br />

CIS charter. This was advantageous because the<br />

country benefitted economically from the organization<br />

without appearing to be too close to Russia.<br />

Similarly, the PfP strategy with NATO enabled<br />

Ukraine to receive inclusive security guarantees<br />

without being a NATO member. Therefore, the<br />

dual identity that became foreign policy reconciled<br />

both sides of the political spectrum.<br />

While Ukraine pursued inclusive policies at<br />

the outset of independence, the two Baltic states<br />

pursued an exclusive policy, energetically choosing<br />

NATO and completely jettisoning a security<br />

relationship with Russia.<br />

Baltic National Security Arrangements<br />

During the interwar period, Estonia and Latvia<br />

established a strong Baltic identity as a result<br />

of independent statehood and retention of their<br />

respective native languages. Thus, a strong anti-<br />

Russian sentiment developed during the Soviet<br />

Union’s annexation of the Baltic states in 1940,<br />

where the Soviets were perceived as an aggressive<br />

foreign occupier. When the Baltic states<br />

regained independence in 1991, Estonia and<br />

Latvia had especially large ethnic Russian minorities<br />

due to migrations from Russia during the<br />

Soviet era. In the late 1980s, Russians made up<br />

a third of the population in Estonia, and half<br />

of the population in Latvia. Eager to maintain<br />

their newfound strength, Estonians and Latvians<br />

created exclusionary laws, ranging from discriminatory<br />

language policies and citizenship laws,<br />

to discriminatory hiring polices that effectively<br />

barred the Russian minority. This was the result<br />

of the traumatic collective memory Estonians and<br />

Latvians internalized during the Soviet reign.<br />

They saw independence as a restoration of historical<br />

justice, a return to Europe from which they<br />

had been brutally cut off since 1940.<br />

With a strong identification with Western<br />

Europe, Estonians and Latvians were eager to<br />

seize any opportunity to move further away from<br />

Russia. The economic chaos that characterized<br />

post-Soviet states strengthened Baltic enthusiasm<br />

for joining what they perceived as the stable<br />

and secure environment of Western institutions.<br />

However, Estonia and Latvia were roundly criticized<br />

by the very Western alliances they were<br />

trying to join because of their exclusionary laws.<br />

NATO leadership, in particular, made the two<br />

countries’ membership contingent upon their<br />

changing course. Estonia and Latvia faced a<br />

dilemma: while greater European integration and<br />

NATO membership were cherished goals, so was<br />

individual Latvian and Estonian identity. They<br />

feared that by allowing Russians more rights, they<br />

were putting in jeopardy their revitalized identities,<br />

which had been suppressed for so long.<br />

Merje Kuus of George Mason <strong>University</strong><br />

argues, “it [was] because of the Russian threat<br />

that it is possible to represent European integration<br />

as a measure for strengthening state sovereignty.<br />

Conversely, and paradoxically, it [was]<br />

also through the notion of the Russian threat that<br />

European integration is constructed as dangerous<br />

to Estonian [and Latvian] national identity.”<br />

Eventually, NATO and the EU helped mollify<br />

the strong nationalistic identity feeling in Estonia<br />

and Latvia. The West convinced the two countries<br />

that the security of Baltic identity was not<br />

zero-sum. Swayed by this, Estonia and Latvia<br />

introduced major inclusionary changes to their<br />

original legislation, a move that was viewed favorably<br />

by NATO and the EU. Estonians and Latvians<br />

became convinced they could join Western associations<br />

without risking their national identity and<br />

together entered NATO in 2004.<br />

In sum, while all three nations are contiguous<br />

with present-day Russia, Ukraine has deviated<br />

significantly in its foreign policy approach<br />

compared to the two Baltic states. Ukraine’s<br />

dichotomous national identity has allowed it to<br />

engage with Russia and the West simultaneously.<br />

However, this simultaneous engagement has prevented<br />

Ukraine from becoming a full NATO<br />

member. The strong Western-oriented identities<br />

of Estonia and Latvia, on the other hand, prompted<br />

them to energetically join Western alliances,<br />

namely NATO, in order to mitigate the influence<br />

of Russia to the furthest extent possible.<br />

Timothy Sandole is a second-year MIA candidate<br />

concentrating in International Security Policy. He has<br />

extensive experience working in Bosnia-Herzegovina with<br />

the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe<br />

(OSCE) as well as the Commission on Security and<br />

Cooperation in Europe (U.S. Helsinki Commission) in the<br />

U.S. Congress.<br />

NATO heads of state and government pose for an official photo at the NATO summit in Riga, Latvia, November 29,<br />

2006. Heads of state and government from the 26 NATO countries met for a discussion on transatlantic issues at the<br />

highest level.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 21


22 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

Jia Ruiming is yet another college-educated person who<br />

has returned to rural roots to start an organic farm. He<br />

studied at an agricultural college, but illustrating just<br />

how few young people are going into farming, every<br />

person in his graduating class has gone onto another<br />

city-oriented profession. Even he worked for many years<br />

as a teacher before deciding to give farming a try.


Reconstructing<br />

the Chinese Farmer<br />

The Gao family lives in Anlong Village in<br />

Sichuan Province. Their home is filled<br />

with potted plants, orchards, drying produce,<br />

and the experiments they conduct<br />

to make their home greener and more sustainable.<br />

They have developed a manmade wetland water<br />

filtration system, make their own compost, and use<br />

rice husks instead of soap to clean dishes. They support<br />

themselves by selling organic vegetables directly<br />

to consumers in cities. Unlike peasants elsewhere in<br />

China, they have eliminated the need to migrate to<br />

cities and work in coastal factories. Their lifestyle is<br />

part of Anlong Village’s collective effort to create a<br />

new way of living in the Chinese countryside.<br />

However, China’s unequivocal embrace of urbanization<br />

in the mid-1980s has not only caused disproportionate<br />

investment and reform in urban areas and<br />

economic disparity between the city and the countryside,<br />

but has also perpetuated a negative image<br />

of the village or peasant as backward and unmodern<br />

and of the countryside as needing urbanization.<br />

Pervasive national discourse creates extreme<br />

prejudice against the rural population. The cos-<br />

By David Borenstein<br />

mopolitan, trendy urbanite is often considered of<br />

high “suzhi” or quality, while the old-fashioned<br />

farmer is almost always considered low “suzhi.”<br />

The pervasiveness of this stereotype was apparent<br />

in a traditional rural township in Sichuan province,<br />

where peasants said they were too embarrassed to<br />

be interviewed because of their low “suzhi.”<br />

Policymakers, academics, and officials have promoted<br />

temporary rural migration to the cities to<br />

bring capital into the countryside and to “civilize”<br />

villagers. The theory, as explained by the party<br />

secretary of the township in Sichuan province, is<br />

that the farmers can learn from urbanites and then<br />

return to the countryside and improve their community’s<br />

“suzhi.”<br />

Unbalanced development and a decline in farming<br />

revenues have created a countryside where peasants<br />

usually have no choice but to migrate. Reinforcing this<br />

trend is a national culture that equates the urban with<br />

the civilized. As a result, most rural Chinese believe<br />

that migration is a necessary way of life—both for the<br />

economic opportunities it offers and the chance to<br />

improve their “suzhi.”<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 23


This scenario has created a vicious negative<br />

cycle. In many villages most people of working<br />

age have left to work in cities, turning communities<br />

into ghost towns with virtually only young<br />

children and the elderly remaining. Some villagers<br />

unable to migrate commonly join crime networks<br />

because of the few other local economic opportunities.<br />

In many villages, sanitation and waste<br />

are growing increasingly serious because many of<br />

those who remain plan to leave as soon as possible<br />

and neglect their community. As villages slowly<br />

deteriorate, it only reinforces the perception that<br />

rural life is inferior and, again, furthers the neglect.<br />

However, peasants like the Gaos have developed<br />

a method of economic production and conception<br />

of progress that are powerful challenges<br />

to China’s status quo.<br />

The Gaos operate an organic farm in Anlong<br />

Village. Working in a co-op with seven other<br />

families, they run an enterprise they have come<br />

to call “Jiankang Shucai Peisong,” or Healthful<br />

Vegetable Delivery. It involves selling produce<br />

directly to consumers while incorporating only<br />

sustainable and organic farming techniques. Once<br />

a week the Gaos’ eldest son, Gao Yicheng, delivers<br />

produce from the co-op to multiple drop offpoints<br />

in Chengdu, 30 kilometers away.<br />

The co-op uses the term “cheng xiang hu zhu”<br />

or urban-rural mutual aid to describe its operation.<br />

The Gaos explain this concept as a method<br />

of economic production that benefits both rural<br />

and urban areas. The model has proved successful.<br />

The Gaos are able to support themselves through<br />

their operation, circumnavigating the social and<br />

economic disincentives of family farming.<br />

A highly iconoclastic culture and discourse<br />

have developed in the co-op. Several of the Gaos<br />

explained that progress should not be measured<br />

in urbanization or increasing incomes. According<br />

“Our media and culture<br />

dupe us into believing<br />

we don’t want to farm,<br />

which creates bad farms<br />

and bad farmers. But we<br />

can think for ourselves<br />

and set our own path.<br />

I don’t need to migrate.”<br />

24 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

—GAO QINGRONG<br />

A farmer and his daughter carry buckets of water to their drought-affected crops in a field near the village of Zhudong<br />

in Hongchang County, Henan province. The severe drought in China has added to the hardship of millions of migrant<br />

workers who every year travel from rural China to the cities seeking work. The economic downturn that has dramatically<br />

effected exports has meant that job prospects are much harder and as a result, the extra income rural families have<br />

enjoyed during the last few years will not be possible.<br />

to Gao Yicheng, “progress should be defined by<br />

the villages themselves.”<br />

Central to the Gaos’ vision of progress is a<br />

respect for their community. They have educated<br />

themselves on sustainable agricultural practices<br />

by seeking assistance from environmental NGOs<br />

and self-study. For example, instead of using a<br />

conventional toilet, they have installed an “ecological<br />

urine-diverting dry toilet.” According to<br />

So-Han Fan, a Chengdu-based NGO professional<br />

who has worked with the Anlong co-op, the toilet<br />

promotes healthy aerobic composting by separating<br />

urine and feces so that they can be converted<br />

separately into different forms of fertilizer. The<br />

Gaos also created artificial wetlands around their<br />

farm. The wetlands purify wastewater from the<br />

house, which is then released into nearby rivers<br />

or stored in fishponds.<br />

Gao Qingrong, 32, the eldest daughter of the<br />

Gaos, was once a migrant laborer in southern<br />

China, just one of more than 230 million others.<br />

But when she came home in 2007 for the Chinese<br />

Lunar New Year, also known as the Spring<br />

Festival, and saw how difficult it was for her family<br />

to tend the farm alone, she decided to stay.<br />

She returned to Anlong just in time to attend<br />

a sustainable farming workshop conducted by a<br />

Chengdu-based environmental NGO. Something<br />

about the workshop inspired her deeply. Since<br />

then, Qingrong has devoted herself to developing<br />

sustainable, community-oriented farming practices.<br />

In 2010, her efforts caught the eyes of PeaceWomen<br />

Across the Globe, a Nobel prize-winning Swiss<br />

organization that assists women involved in activities<br />

that promote peace. The organization named<br />

Qingrong one of its 1,000 PeaceWomen fellows<br />

and provided funding for her to attend workshops<br />

on sustainable farming practices.<br />

Qingrong believes that prevailing attitudes<br />

toward the countryside hurt villages. “Our media<br />

and culture dupe us into believing we don’t want<br />

to farm, which creates bad farms and bad farmers,”<br />

she said. “But we can think for ourselves and<br />

set our own path. I don’t need to migrate.”<br />

And Qingrong remains positive about the future.<br />

“There are plenty of possibilities for sustainable<br />

farming to continue expanding in China,” she said.<br />

“People will come to learn about the environmental<br />

and health dangers of conventional farming. Once<br />

people know about them, they’ll make a change.”<br />

The model the Gaos operate is not a solution<br />

to all of China’s rural problems. However, it is a<br />

first step in fighting the national prejudice toward<br />

the countryside and has turned an enclave in<br />

Anlong Village into not only a more desirable but<br />

also a more sustainable place to live.<br />

David Borenstein is a first-year MIA candidate concentrating<br />

in Economic and Political Development. He<br />

has conducted extensive ethnographic research on Chinese<br />

rural development. From 2009 to 2010, David conducted<br />

fieldwork in the Sichuan countryside as a Fulbright fellow<br />

researching peasant resistance to rural development policies.


Forever Young:<br />

china’s Belief in Its own Benevolent Rise By ReBeccA chAo<br />

Chinese soldiers march, with a skyline<br />

of Pudong in the background.<br />

In 850 A.D., an unknown Chinese alchemist sought to produce an elixir that would grant eternal life<br />

and unwittingly discovered gunpowder. The combination of saltpeter, charcoal, and sulfur that he<br />

thought would keep him forever young succeeded only in burning down part of his house.<br />

Though some scholars disagree, China contends that this mild explosive was developed for use in<br />

firecrackers to scare away evil spirits during its New Year’s celebrations. China prefers to focus on the<br />

spread of gunpowder to Europe in the 13th century and how Europeans developed canons and guns to<br />

conquer other nations, eventually adding China to its list in the mid to late 1800s.<br />

Regardless of the facts, China believes in its own benevolence. Further, how China sees itself reflects<br />

how it views the world and the manner in which it makes foreign policy decisions. These perceptions have<br />

affected China’s foreign policy outlook in at least one way—it does not view the United States or the rising<br />

developing world, for that matter, as threats but as indispensable partners in its rise.


A Chinese military honor guard stands at<br />

attention in front of a mural depicting the<br />

Great Wall during a welcoming cereony<br />

for President Barack Obama in Beijing on<br />

November 17, 2009. Obama and President<br />

Hu Jintao of China met in a session<br />

that signaled the central role of China on<br />

the world stage and highlighted the different<br />

approaches that it and the United<br />

States are taking on urgent problems<br />

around the globe.<br />

26 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

Partners, Not Rivals<br />

Take, for example, global attitudes towards China’s<br />

rise. The Pew Global Attitudes Project reports<br />

that among the 18 countries surveyed in 2009 and<br />

2011, the median percentage that believes China<br />

will or has already dethroned the United States as<br />

the leading superpower increased from 40 to 47<br />

percent in those two years. This adversarial position<br />

assumes that the United States and China are<br />

in competition for leadership.<br />

Yet China perceives its own rise as occurring in<br />

a multipolar world. Bonnie Glaser, a senior fellow<br />

at the Center for Strategic and International Studies,<br />

argues in a 2009 paper, that “The vast majority [of<br />

Chinese scholars and experts maintain] that the<br />

prevailing international structure of power will not<br />

last; it eventually will give way to a multipolar era in<br />

which China and other emerging economies have<br />

an increasing say about issues of global importance.”<br />

Susan L. Craig, a scholar at the United States<br />

Army War College’s Strategic Studies Institute,<br />

issued a study in March 2007 that examined<br />

China’s perception of traditional and nontraditional<br />

security threats. In it, she contends that throughout<br />

history, China has viewed itself as exceptional<br />

from all other states precisely because of its long


history of peace and anti-imperialism. As such,<br />

China behaves defensively and rarely, if ever,<br />

offensively.<br />

China does not appear to actively challenge<br />

the United States on contentious issues nor does<br />

it seem to have any desire to recreate a Cold War<br />

standoff. Rather, it has sought primarily to allay<br />

the negative influence of Western criticisms, such<br />

as attacks on its poor human rights records or accusations<br />

of currency manipulation. China’s criticism<br />

of Western media, for example, has focused not<br />

only on its inherent contradictions but has also<br />

emphasized that the West is flawed just like China<br />

and therefore not culturally or politically superior.<br />

When the U.S. debt deliberation nearly led to<br />

a government shutdown, China used the opportunity<br />

to point out the weaknesses of democracy.<br />

Niall Fergusson, a professor of history at Harvard<br />

<strong>University</strong>, reported in Newsweek that, viewed from<br />

China, the debate over the debt ceiling confirmed<br />

that “Western democracy is a form of institutionalized<br />

chaos to be avoided by all sane Asians.”<br />

Daily Beast reporter Isaac Stone Fish followed the<br />

Chinese media’s critique of the Rupert Murdoch<br />

wiretapping scandal in the summer of 2011. The<br />

Chinese press agency Xinhua ran an article chastising<br />

the West for unethical reporting. The Shanghai<br />

Communist Party newspaper Liberation Daily questioned<br />

whether, in fact, a free press was such a<br />

prized and universal goal. The People’s Daily, considered<br />

the official mouthpiece of the Communist<br />

Party, took it further by saying, “Western media<br />

doesn’t care about social morality.” Fish also spoke<br />

with Michael Anti, a Chinese media commentator,<br />

who warned that when Western media slams<br />

Chinese media for bogus reporting or propaganda,<br />

an average Chinese reader may now think, “Well,<br />

Western media is also very rotten.”<br />

This view is not exclusive to residents of<br />

China. A 2006 article by Li He in Asian Perspectives<br />

reveals that Chinese students studying in the West<br />

(liuxuesheng), who were exposed to Western media’s<br />

views on China, did not significantly alter their<br />

opinions about their homeland. A large number of<br />

the returnees Li interviewed believe that though<br />

Western democracy is good, it is not appropriate<br />

for China today. While political reform is necessary<br />

within the Communist Party, the returnees<br />

advocated for greater efficiency and rule of law<br />

rather than democratization. A group known as the<br />

“New Left,” comprising leading academics, most of<br />

whom are returned liuxuesheng, has also emerged in<br />

China to voice its disenchantment with the West.<br />

Li writes, “They are challenging China’s unique<br />

system of state-controlled capitalism with a simple<br />

message: What they call China’s failed 20th-century<br />

experiment with communism cannot be undone in<br />

the 21st century by embracing a 19th-century style<br />

of laissez-faire capitalism.”<br />

Friend, Foe, or Just Trying to Grow?<br />

Those who view China’s rise as a threat—mostly in<br />

the West—emphasize China’s rapid military buildup.<br />

Top U.S. defense officials released a report<br />

in August 2011 cataloguing China’s impressive<br />

military expenditures. While Pentagon officials<br />

expressed concerns about China’s military intentions<br />

in the Pacific, Michael Schiffer, the deputy<br />

assistant secretary of defense for East Asia, said<br />

that there was no particular increase that led him<br />

to describe China’s overall arms buildup as “potentially<br />

destabilizing.” Schiffer instead accused China<br />

of being opaque about its military intentions.<br />

Even if Schiffer is correct, the United States<br />

responded in November 2011 by announcing a<br />

decision to deploy 2,500 marines to Australia. It<br />

seems U.S. officials share the view, as Glaser argues,<br />

that “If Beijing were to perceive the U.S. position<br />

as weakening, there could be fewer inhibitions for<br />

China to avoid challenging the United States where<br />

American and Chinese interests diverge.”<br />

However, U.S. officials and scholars like Glaser<br />

overlook China’s perceived threats in the Pacific<br />

and thus dismiss China’s arms buildup as a defensive<br />

tactic. Despite spats with Japan and China over the<br />

South China Sea, China’s threat has been economic,<br />

not military. During a nine-day visit to China in<br />

November 2011, President Obama praised Beijing<br />

for its cooperation on South China Sea disputes.<br />

While it is difficult to assess whether China’s<br />

military spending is defensive in nature—it becomes<br />

an impossible question of who started what—<br />

China’s definition of its own borders is another<br />

example of how China perceives itself as nonimperialistic<br />

and benign. China sees its claims over<br />

Tibet and Taiwan as a question of national unity,<br />

which Craig attributes to China’s colonization by<br />

the West in the 19th century. She cites a speech<br />

given by Lieutenant General Li Jijun of the Chinese<br />

Peoples’ Liberation Army at the U.S. Army War<br />

College in 1997, in which he points to a “unifying<br />

consciousness” in China, committed to “maintaining<br />

the unity of the country and its territorial integrity<br />

and sovereignty.” Craig ascribes China’s distaste<br />

for interventionism and its insistence on respecting<br />

national integrity to that period of colonization,<br />

known in China as a “century of humiliation.”<br />

China may view itself as a friendly giant,<br />

while others question whether it is just a guise.<br />

After 5,000 years of uninterrupted civilization and<br />

impressive cultural continuity, it is not unlikely that<br />

China still sees itself as wielding a firecracker, not a<br />

gun. But even at 5,000 years of age, China has not<br />

fully matured as a modern nation. It remains to be<br />

seen whether China will upgrade from firecracker<br />

to firepower as it tries to figure itself out.<br />

Rebecca Chao, <strong>SIPA</strong> News coeditor, is a second-year<br />

MIA candidate concentrating in International Security<br />

Policy and specializing in media. She is currently the features<br />

editor of the Journal of International Affairs and<br />

also writes for Asia Society.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 27


In Kosovo, sport is all about<br />

politics, and Uliks Emra, one of<br />

the best footballers in the country,<br />

has been facing it throughout his<br />

career. Although Kosovo declared<br />

independence in 2008, it does not<br />

have an internationally recognized<br />

team. “It’s a pity that because of<br />

politics, we are not able to play<br />

internationally,” Emra said.<br />

28 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS


Development<br />

through Football:<br />

A Vision for<br />

the Balkans<br />

BY BEHAR XHARRA AND MARTIN WAEHLISCH<br />

When Dinamo Zagreb and Red Star Belgrade entered the green of<br />

Maksimir stadium in Zagreb, no one could have foreseen that their<br />

game would change the world. On May 13, 1990, their football<br />

match turned into a battlefield between Croats and Serbs, helping<br />

to trigger the beginning of the war and the end of Yugoslavia. Fans<br />

of Dinamo, known as the Bad Blue Boys, and Red Star, called Delije<br />

(“heroes”), took over the stadium in one of the most brutal football<br />

riots the region had ever seen. Symbolically, their clash expressed<br />

the ethnic tensions reflecting a revival of nationalism in the Balkans.<br />

As elsewhere in the world, football (soccer<br />

to Americans) has both torn people apart and<br />

brought them together. In the Balkans, sports<br />

help to shed light on the past and ongoing<br />

struggles of the region. The war in the former<br />

Yugoslavia lasted nearly a decade. What previously<br />

had been one entity now comprises<br />

eight countries—with Montenegro and Kosovo<br />

emerging as the newest independent republics.<br />

Given the region’s past, could football reconcile<br />

former factions and reverse the Balkans’<br />

negative image abroad? Could, for instance, a<br />

World Cup 2030 organized in southeast Europe<br />

make a difference? Though this vision has challenges,<br />

the resulting benefits are even greater.<br />

Emerging out of decades of conflict, the Balkans<br />

are still characterized by negative perceptions:<br />

violence, crime, nationalism, and hate. And<br />

football continues to reveal misperceptions and<br />

political divergence in the region.<br />

Hooliganism and nationalism have been<br />

nurtured in the stadiums of the Balkans.<br />

Partizan Belgrade was disqualified from the<br />

UEFA Cup 2007/2008, after violence broke<br />

out among the fans in Mostar, Bosnia and<br />

Herzegovina. In September 2009, a French<br />

fan of Toulouse died from attacks by hooligans<br />

in Belgrade. In October 2010, the Italy<br />

vs. Serbia EURO 2012 qualifying match in<br />

Genoa was cancelled due to riots. In February<br />

2011, Serbia’s president Boris Tadić publicly<br />

acknowledged that hooliganism is a security<br />

problem and asked for a stop to the violence.<br />

Additionally, according to the 2010 Gallup<br />

Balkan Monitor survey, more than 40 percent of<br />

people in the region regard at least one of their<br />

neighbors as hostile. One notable example is<br />

Macedonia’s dispute with Greece over its official<br />

name, which has heightened nationalistic<br />

frictions. The stadiums in Skopje and Athens<br />

are arenas for hostilities, where both Greek<br />

and Macedonian flags burn when the opposing<br />

teams meet.<br />

Another notable example occurred during the<br />

Euro qualifying matches in Albania, when fans<br />

of Albanian descent from across the Balkans<br />

gathered in the stadium to express their feelings<br />

of national unity. When the Albanian and Greek<br />

teams played, fans covered the stadium with a<br />

large Albanian red-black, double-headed eagle<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 29


Dinamo Zagreb’s captain, Zvonimir Boban, attacks a police officer during soccer fan riots, prior to the<br />

match against Red Star Belgrade, Zagreb, Croatia, May 13, 1990.<br />

national flag. After Albania’s win over Belarus in<br />

March 2011 for the EURO 2012, the vice-captain<br />

of the national team took the microphone to address<br />

the exuberant fans. He warned that Albanians<br />

should not attempt to gain Greek citizenship, as<br />

many have tried, in the hope of greater social benefits<br />

and a Greek pension.<br />

Lastly, Kosovo does not even have an internationally<br />

recognized team, which is indicative of the<br />

debates surrounding its newfound statehood. In<br />

October 2008, FIFA rejected the application of the<br />

Football Federation of Kosovo based on Article 10<br />

of the FIFA statutes, which stipulates that only “an<br />

independent state recognized by the international<br />

community” may be admitted (Kosovo, which<br />

declared its independence in 2008, is recognized<br />

as a state by only 85 countries). Meanwhile, leading<br />

football players from Kosovo represent Albania,<br />

Switzerland, Finland, Montenegro, and Sweden.<br />

A Kosovar refugee, Fatmire Bajramaj, is now representing<br />

the German Women’s National Football<br />

Team. She was placed as one of the three top<br />

players for the 2010 FIFA Ballon d’Or, an annual<br />

award presented to the best player in the world.<br />

Though football has added to a negative image<br />

30 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

of the Balkans, the chances to impact development,<br />

diplomatic ties, and exposure through this<br />

sport are immense. In addition to those players<br />

from Kosovo, the Western Balkans have produced<br />

world-renowned football players and strategists,<br />

including the Croatian former mid-fielder Zvonimir<br />

Boban, who played for Milan; the Serbian<br />

Nemanja Vidić, captain of the English Premier<br />

League club Manchester United; the Bosnian<br />

Edi Dzeko, striker of Manchester City; and the<br />

Montenegrin player and former sports director of<br />

Real Madrid, Pedrag Mijatović, to name a few.<br />

The experiences of these leading athletes<br />

playing for other international teams demonstrate<br />

the powerful impact football can have on forging<br />

bonds. “The magic of football is that it has the<br />

power to bring people traveling beyond borders<br />

and continents,” commented Dragan Stojkovic<br />

at a ministerial conference on peace consolidation<br />

and economic development of the Western<br />

Balkans in 2004. Stojkovic, who had been the<br />

captain of Red Star Belgrade during the incident<br />

in 1990, rightfully noted that “football” is a word<br />

understood in all languages of the Balkans.<br />

Indeed, football can be an effective tool for<br />

public diplomacy, peace building, and economic<br />

development. Sports are strong catalysts for change<br />

in all countries of former Yugoslavia—just as<br />

proven elsewhere. South Korea and Japan cohosted<br />

the World Cup in 2002, despite resentment over<br />

a number of unsettled Japanese-Korean disputes,<br />

stemming from Japan’s occupation and annexation<br />

of Korea in the 20th century. The FIFA World Cup<br />

2010 in South Africa allowed Africans to show the<br />

world new insights into their lives, progress, and<br />

achievements. The 2012 UEFA European Football<br />

Championship will be organized jointly by Poland<br />

and Ukraine. The tournament’s official logo combines<br />

the traditional art of paper cutting practiced<br />

in Poland and rural areas of Ukraine; the competition’s<br />

slogan is “Creating History Together.” Its<br />

opening will be in Warsaw, the finals in Kiev.<br />

Imagine then the opening of a peaceful World<br />

Cup 2030 in Zagreb’s Maksimir Stadium, quarterfinals<br />

with a view of the reconstructed skyline of<br />

Sarajevo, and semifinals in Pristina and Skopje,<br />

with a team bus leaving to the finals in Belgrade.<br />

Could this plan close the cycle of the Balkans’<br />

volatile history and bring an end to the strains<br />

and prejudices of the postwar legacy? Of course,<br />

political changes will depend on more than a joyful<br />

match between 22 players, kicking a ball over<br />

the green. But football is an incredible means for<br />

mobilizing internal and external support towards a<br />

common goal. In particular, football could influence<br />

the notion of how national teams confront each<br />

other: rule-based, fair, controlled, and with respect.<br />

Football can teach governments a lesson, bringing<br />

the Balkans beyond their current stalemate.<br />

A World Cup 2030 jointly organized by previously<br />

rivaling neighbors could create the conditions<br />

for a new momentum of cooperation in southeast<br />

Europe. Football could revise the way the region<br />

is seen by the rest of the world and also help to<br />

enhance the mutual understanding of Croats,<br />

Serbs, Bosniaks, Kosovar Albanians, Macedonians,<br />

and other ethnic groups of the Western Balkans.<br />

Realizing such a vision would be a valuable investment<br />

in the region’s future.<br />

Behar Xharra, junior fellow of <strong>Columbia</strong>’s<br />

Harriman Institute, is a 2012 MIA candidate at<br />

<strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong>’s School of International and<br />

Public Affairs. Being a Kosovar, he previously worked<br />

for governmental agencies in Pristina and also served<br />

as a UNDP expert at the Kosovo Assembly and the<br />

Bangladesh Parliament.<br />

Martin Waehlisch, an international lawyer, has<br />

been working on governmental and nongovernmental<br />

projects in Kosovo. He is a visiting scholar<br />

at the Harriman Institute. Both were authors of<br />

the first study on Kosovo’s Public Diplomacy,<br />

published in 2011 with the USC Center on Public<br />

Diplomacy at the <strong>University</strong> of Southern California.


Faculty Honors and Awards By Alex Burnett<br />

From left to right: Douglas Almond, Michael Doyle, Suresh Naidu<br />

Congratulations to <strong>SIPA</strong> Professor Michael<br />

Doyle, who received the 2011 Hubert<br />

H. Humphrey Award from the American<br />

Political Science Association (APSA).<br />

The Hubert H. Humphrey Award is presented<br />

annually in recognition of notable public service by<br />

a political scientist. The 2010 recipient was David<br />

Petraeus, former commanding general of U.S.<br />

forces in Iraq and Afghanistan and director-designate<br />

of the Central Intelligence Agency. Previous<br />

honorees include former <strong>SIPA</strong> dean John Ruggie,<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> alumna Madeleine Albright, Richard Cheney,<br />

Daniel Patrick Moynihan, and Brent Scowcroft.<br />

Professor Doyle is the Harold Brown Professor<br />

of U.S. Foreign and Security Policy. He<br />

specializes in international relations theory,<br />

international security, and international organizations.<br />

Previously, Doyle served as assistant<br />

secretary-general and special adviser to UN<br />

Secretary-General Kofi Annan.<br />

Professor Douglas Almond received the 2011<br />

Garfield Economic Impact Award. Professor Almond<br />

and his coauthors, Joseph J. Doyle Jr., Amanda E.<br />

Kowalski, and Heidi Williams shared the award for<br />

their paper “Estimating Marginal Returns to Medical<br />

Care: Evidence from At-Risk Newborns.”<br />

Evaluating the lifesaving benefits of advanced,<br />

research-based medical care, they found evidence<br />

that such care enables very low birth weight babies<br />

to “beat the odds,” surviving at greater rates than<br />

would be expected based on birth weight alone.<br />

Professor Almond focuses on health and applied<br />

microeconomics, with a particular interest in<br />

infant health and the environment. He previously<br />

served as a staff economist at the Council of Economic<br />

Advisers during the Clinton administration<br />

and studied the health effects of air pollution in<br />

China as a Fulbright scholar.<br />

Professor Suresh Naidu was awarded a<br />

two-year junior fellowship from the Canadian Institute<br />

for Advanced Research (CIFAR). The fellowships are<br />

intended to help young and gifted scholars build their<br />

research and leadership capacity early in their careers.<br />

CIFAR junior fellows are embedded in one of<br />

12 interdisciplinary research programs. Professor<br />

Naidu will work as a program member within<br />

“Institutions, Organizations, and Growth.”<br />

SAVE<br />

THE<br />

DATES<br />

INSIDE <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Professor Naidu teaches economics, political<br />

economy, and development at <strong>SIPA</strong>. His research<br />

focuses on the relationships between politics and<br />

economics—particularly the history of slavery and<br />

economic development in the U.S. South.<br />

Professor John Micgiel was awarded the Commander’s<br />

Cross of the Order of Merit of the Republic<br />

of Poland. President Bronisław Komorowski bestowed<br />

state decorations on 27 distinguished people at the<br />

Polish Consulate while on a visit to New York City.<br />

The medals recognize those who have rendered<br />

great service to the Polish-American community in<br />

science, culture, business, and politics, as well as<br />

their contribution to the Polish-Jewish dialogue.<br />

In addition to teaching at <strong>SIPA</strong>, Professor<br />

Micgiel is director of <strong>Columbia</strong>’s East Central<br />

European Center.<br />

Alex Burnett is communications manager<br />

in <strong>SIPA</strong>’s Office of Communications and<br />

External Relations.<br />

Thursday, april 26, 2012<br />

Twelfth annual Global leadership awards dinner<br />

Honoring<br />

Lisa Anderson<br />

President, The American <strong>University</strong> in Cairo<br />

Dean Emerita, <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Howard G. Buffett<br />

President, The Howard G. Buffett Foundation<br />

Peter G. Peterson<br />

Founder and Chairman, the Peter G. Peterson Foundation<br />

Co-Founder and Chairman Emeritus, the Blackstone Group<br />

Mandarin Oriental, New York<br />

saTurday, april 28, 2012<br />

sipa alumni day<br />

Featuring in-depth discussions with faculty and alumni<br />

on topics in international and public affairs, with a special<br />

celebration of the 20th anniversary of the Program in<br />

Economic Policy Management (PEPM).<br />

More information on both events will be available at<br />

www.sipa.columbia.edu<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 31


INSIDE <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Leaders in Global Energy: Seeking Solutions to Sustainable Energy<br />

By Alex Burnett and Michelle Chahine<br />

“I’m not concerned about the future, but the<br />

transition to the future is what I worry about.”<br />

–Eduardo Souto de Moura, 2011 Pritzker<br />

Architecture Prize Laureate<br />

Portuguese architect and Pritzker Prize<br />

Laureate Eduardo Souto de Moura was one<br />

of several distinguished guests to address<br />

the <strong>SIPA</strong> community during the school’s<br />

2011 Leaders in Global Energy series.<br />

Souto de Moura highlighted his most recent<br />

design of a home, innovative use of natural light<br />

in a museum, intelligent and cost-efficient use of<br />

new materials in a skyscraper, and a new approach<br />

to the construction of a soccer stadium within its<br />

natural surroundings.<br />

“If we learn the rules of nature and approximate<br />

them, we get something fantastic,” he said. “Architecture<br />

is like an iceberg,” implying that we have<br />

seen only the tip of intelligent, sustainable design.<br />

Leaders in Global Energy is the centerpiece of<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong>’s initiative to identify solutions to the challenge<br />

of creating sustainable energy while protecting the<br />

environment and reaffirming corporate citizenship.<br />

Throughout the fall, <strong>SIPA</strong> welcomed thought leaders<br />

in energy from across the government, corporate,<br />

and NGO sectors. In addition to sustainable design,<br />

they addressed topics such as energy policy in Latin<br />

America, the electricity grid, the European approach<br />

to sustainability, and wind energy.<br />

“I think we have an obligation to educate folks<br />

on the complexities we’re dealing with and try to<br />

put into context what goes into your electricity<br />

bill,” said Gordon van Welie, CEO of ISO New England,<br />

the region’s primary power provider.<br />

“You know, people hear and talk about climate<br />

change and environmental issues,” said van Welie.<br />

“The question is: How do you actually engineer<br />

a system that will achieve those policy goals and<br />

keep the lights on?”<br />

Solutions will require collaboration by government,<br />

corporate, and NGO leaders; the adoption of<br />

new technologies; and the cultivation of a new generation<br />

of thinkers who can overcome the historical<br />

barriers to socially responsible energy policymaking.<br />

“Keep interested in energy,” said Rui Cartaxo,<br />

CEO of Portugal’s Redes Energéticas Nacionais<br />

during an examination of the electricity grid and<br />

32 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

Eduardo Souto de Moura shows his design for the Municipal Stadium in Braga, Spain.<br />

power distribution. “In the next 20 years, energy<br />

will be a big part of the issues.”<br />

Edison Lobão, minister of mines and energy<br />

in Brazil, the globe’s sixth largest consumer of<br />

energy, emphasized the world’s continued dependence<br />

on fossil fuels.<br />

“To counter these trends, it will be necessary<br />

to get agreement from all stakeholders to achieve<br />

what has already been agreed to in the Kyoto<br />

Protocol,” he said. “Technological developments<br />

create expectations that this will happen.”<br />

“Yes, we can alter significantly the balance between<br />

fossil fuels and alternative energy,” he noted.<br />

In a discussion dedicated to wind energy,<br />

Gabriel Alonso, CEO of Horizon Wind Energy, said<br />

innovation is improving productivity. That has reduced<br />

the cost of wind drastically, and wind power<br />

is growing worldwide. In 2010, China became the<br />

largest producer of wind power and working aggressively<br />

to develop its offshore wind power generators.<br />

“Wind is free,” said Alonso. “Our success lies<br />

in our hands.”<br />

Energy was also the topic of <strong>SIPA</strong>’s Gabriel<br />

Silver Memorial Lecture on November 1. Yukiya<br />

Amano, director general of the International Atomic<br />

Energy Agency (IAEA), spoke about nuclear<br />

energy and the crisis that followed last year’s<br />

earthquake in Japan. The event was cosponsored<br />

by <strong>Columbia</strong>’s World Leaders Forum.<br />

“What is most damaged by this accident is<br />

confidence,” said Amano. “So we need tangible<br />

results to restore it.”<br />

“In light of recent projections, I am very confident<br />

this is not the end of nuclear power,” he noted.<br />

In addition to the Leaders in Global Energy series,<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> is developing new course work, fieldwork, and<br />

research through the Energy and Environment concentration,<br />

which provides students with the knowledge<br />

base and analytical tools needed to address the<br />

challenge of sustainably and responsibly powering the<br />

developed and developing nations of the world.<br />

Leaders in Global Energy is sponsored by<br />

EDP–Energias de Portugal, S.A. EDP’s interests in<br />

conventional and renewable power extend across<br />

11 countries on four continents, including the<br />

United States.<br />

Michelle Chahine is a program assistant in <strong>SIPA</strong>’s<br />

Office of Communications and External Relations.


<strong>SIPA</strong> Events Highlight Emerging Economies and Economic Priorities<br />

Representing more than 40 percent of the<br />

world’s population, Brazil, Russia, India,<br />

and China, the “BRICs,” have emerged as<br />

economic powers and significant actors in<br />

the international arena.<br />

On December 2, 2011, <strong>SIPA</strong> convened the<br />

Inaugural BricLab Conference, a half-day event<br />

that examined their rising influence on global<br />

policymaking.<br />

The conference, which took place in<br />

<strong>Columbia</strong>’s Low Rotunda, brought together<br />

leading experts to discuss the strategic, political,<br />

environmental, economic, and financial<br />

consequences of their rise. Speakers included<br />

Michel Temer, vice president of Federative<br />

Republic of Brazil; Stephen King, chief economist<br />

of HSBC; Sergei Guriev, rector of the New<br />

Economic School of Moscow; Stefan Wagstyl,<br />

Emerging Markets editor of the Financial<br />

Times; Marc Uzan, executive director of the<br />

Reinventing Bretton Woods Committee; Marcelo<br />

Odebrecht, chairman and CEO of Odebrecht;<br />

INSIDE <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Left: Michel Temer, vice president of the Federative Republic of Brazil, being interviewed at the BRICLab conference. Right: Brazil as a Rising Power: Mario Garnero, chairman,<br />

Brasilinvest, speaks about the changing power and business dynamics brought about by the rise of Brazil. Seated from left: Thomas Trebat, executive director, Institute of Latin<br />

American Studies, <strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong>; Sergio Cabral Filho, governor, Brazilian State of Rio de Janeiro; and Marcelo Odebrecht, chairman and CEO, Odebrecht.<br />

Sergio Cabral Filho, governor of Brazilian State<br />

of Rio de Janeiro; and <strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

professors Merit Janow, Arvind Panagariya, and<br />

Thomas Trebat.<br />

The BricLab Conference was sponsored by<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong>, HSBC, and Fórum das Américas and organized<br />

by BRICLab co-directors and <strong>SIPA</strong> adjunct<br />

professors Christian Deseglise (MIA ’90) and<br />

Marcos Troyjo.<br />

lawrence h. summers, Charles W. Eliot <strong>University</strong> Professor<br />

at Harvard <strong>University</strong>, former director of the White House National Economic<br />

Council, and former U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, delivered the Gabriel Silver<br />

Memorial Lecture at <strong>SIPA</strong> on December 1. Mr. Summers shared his views on<br />

the current economic situation and how to achieve growth: “If the private sector<br />

is unable or unwilling to enable and increase its spending, there is no alternative<br />

but for a government to be prepared on a temporary basis to expand its<br />

borrowing and expand its spending.”<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 33


INSIDE <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

From Recipients to Donors: Brazilian Students Turn Classwork into<br />

Real-World Policy By Michelle Chahine<br />

Three Brazilian students, each attending<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> on a Lemann Fellowship, are taking<br />

the spirit of their fellowship to heart. Established<br />

by Brazilian entrepreneur Jorge Paulo<br />

Lemann, the fellowships are intended to promote<br />

student exchange between <strong>SIPA</strong> and Brazil.<br />

The three students—Karin Vazquez, Andres<br />

Lalinde, and Tatiana Cabral Schnurr (MIA ’12)—<br />

turned their final project for a management course<br />

into a strategy paper for the Brazilian government.<br />

Fellow <strong>SIPA</strong> student Xheni Shehu (MIA ’11)<br />

cowrote the project.<br />

The paper, “From a Fledgling Donor to a Powerhouse:<br />

Improving Brazil’s Development Cooperation<br />

Framework and Institution Settings,” was<br />

distributed to various government officials at ABC,<br />

the Brazilian Cooperation Agency; EMBRAPA, the<br />

Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation; and<br />

Caixa Econômica Federal (CAIXA), the public bank.<br />

“The Lemann Fellowship is awarded to individuals<br />

passionate about creating a better future<br />

for Brazil, either internally or externally,” explained<br />

Lalinde. “Since the project focused on Brazil’s exportation<br />

model for development and cooperation<br />

knowledge transfers, analyzing ABC’s strengths<br />

and weaknesses from a consulting perspective<br />

was an excellent avenue for three Lemann Fellows<br />

(and one non-Fellow), to recommend changes that<br />

would ultimately improve external relations abroad.<br />

The ABC project was by far the most rewarding<br />

academic endeavor I had ever accomplished.”<br />

34 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

The topic of the paper was the brainchild of<br />

Vazquez, who worked in the Brazilian government<br />

before attending <strong>SIPA</strong>.<br />

“Because I was already working in the area,”<br />

she said, “I was very interested in how emerging<br />

countries are increasingly becoming donors of<br />

international aid and less recipients of international<br />

aid.”<br />

“There’s this momentum around aid effectiveness,”<br />

she added, “a South-South cooperation<br />

agenda that is increasingly being seen as an alternative<br />

to the North-South model of development<br />

cooperation, possibly the future of development<br />

cooperation.”<br />

Vazquez was interested in looking at Brazil and<br />

the Brazilian Agency for Development Cooperation<br />

(ABC), to see how, given this new role that Brazil<br />

was playing, the agency could improve its strategic<br />

focus and the effectiveness of its operation.<br />

The team conducted interviews with current<br />

and former employees at ABC. With the raw data<br />

they gathered, they used the frameworks they<br />

were learning in their “Strategic Thinking for<br />

General Managers” course with Professor Paul<br />

Thurman to analyze the agency’s problems and<br />

develop recommendations.<br />

“It was interesting because our problem tree<br />

was huge,” laughed Vazquez. One major problem<br />

the team found was the limited communication<br />

between the agency and other parts of the Brazilian<br />

government.<br />

“We actually tried to suggest a mechanism for<br />

these actors to interact more efficiently as well,”<br />

said Vazquez. “Even though the main focus was<br />

more internal to ABC, this communication channel<br />

with others was a mid- to-long-term recommendation<br />

. . . We also later found that other agencies in<br />

the government had similar problems at well.”<br />

“It was a pleasant surprise to receive the report<br />

from [the] students,” said Antonio Prado, coordinator<br />

of international cooperation at EMBRAPA,<br />

via e-mail. “This report is very useful because it<br />

contributes to the necessary reflection on how the<br />

Brazilian cooperation for development is structured,<br />

what its bottlenecks are, and how institutions<br />

such as EMBRAPA may help improve Brazil’s<br />

cooperation.”<br />

According to Prado, the report was e-mailed to<br />

all the employees of EMBRAPA’s Secretariat for<br />

International Affairs, which is responsible for the<br />

operational management of international agricultural<br />

projects.<br />

“It was such a great experience to work on<br />

a project with other Lemann Fellows because it<br />

highlighted our diversity and individual strengths,”<br />

said Cabral Schnurr. “The common denominator<br />

was a passion for the development of Brazil, which<br />

made the commitment towards finding sustainable<br />

and feasible solutions even stronger. I think the<br />

project was one of the most personally gratifying<br />

works in each of our academic careers.”<br />

JorGe paulo lemann cofounded the investment banking firm Banco Garantia and helped grow it<br />

into one of Brazil’s most prestigious and innovative investment banks. In 2001, Lemann founded the Lemann<br />

Foundation, a nonprofit organization that aims to improve education quality and opportunities in Brazil. Projects<br />

to achieve this goal include different scholarship programs, research and dissemination about best practices in<br />

education management, and training programs for educational leaders.<br />

Lemann Fellowships provide support to students participating in the School’s dual-degree program with<br />

Fundação Getulio Vargas Escola de Administração de Empresas de São Paulo, to students who live or have lived in<br />

Brazil, and for students to engage in study, research, and internships in Brazil.<br />

Visit <strong>SIPA</strong>’s Lemann Fellows webpage at http://lemannfellows.sipa.columbia.edu


Witnesses to History: <strong>SIPA</strong> Interns around the World By Michelle Chahine<br />

It is a rite of passage—second-year <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

students return for the fall semester and<br />

share the incredible experiences they had<br />

traveling around the globe for their summer<br />

internships.<br />

Christopher Reeve (MIA ’12) spent last<br />

summer interning at a Cairo newspaper, in line<br />

with his specialization in International Media,<br />

Advocacy, and Communications. He worked as<br />

a reporter at Al-Masry Al-Youm, Egypt’s leading<br />

independent newspaper, which had just launched<br />

an English edition.<br />

“There was so much news happening. News<br />

happened every day,” Christopher said. “Even<br />

when I wasn’t reporting, I was experiencing something<br />

major and consequential to the world.”<br />

It wasn’t just editorial and reporting experience<br />

that he gained from his internship. He had a<br />

front-row seat to history.<br />

“There was a happiness in the street, in the<br />

air. Everyone has hope now,” he said. “I have<br />

much more hope than I did previously.”<br />

Juontel White (MIA ’12) spent three months in<br />

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. She worked for UNESCO<br />

as a research assistant for a large conference on<br />

teacher migration and mobility. Juontel engaged<br />

with ministers of education throughout Africa and<br />

the Commonwealth and traveled to rural areas to<br />

interview students and teachers at adult literacy<br />

centers.<br />

“It was inspiring because in marginalized<br />

communities, they don’t see the importance of<br />

education (for themselves and their children)<br />

until they’re invited to these centers,” she said.<br />

Jonathan Roose (MIA ’12) spent his summer<br />

in Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan. He interned in<br />

Almaty, Kazakhstan, for the Eurasia Foundation<br />

of Central Asia (EFCA), where he edited and assisted<br />

in proposal writing.<br />

“The experience was truly great,” he said.<br />

“I learned a ton about the developing world,<br />

Kazakhstan, Central Asia, and the post-Soviet<br />

world.” Jonathan also taught English in Almaty<br />

and Kyrgyzstan.<br />

Homa Hassan (MIA ’12) served with the<br />

United Nations Development Programme in Pristina,<br />

Kosovo, where she helped implement the<br />

five-year Common Development Plan and create<br />

an interagency knowledge portal to compile and<br />

map data, statistics, and studies.<br />

“Working in Kosovo was one of the highlights<br />

of my life,” said Homa. “I gained a huge appreciation<br />

by watching one of the world’s newest<br />

nations grapple with the challenge of overcoming<br />

recent carnage with resiliency and optimism.”<br />

Nadia Hasham (MIA ’12) was in Kurnool,<br />

Andhra Pradesh, India, working on a pilot study<br />

for an SMS-based vaccination reminders project<br />

for mothers with newborns. It was a joint project<br />

between the India-based NGO Developmental<br />

Medical Foundation and the U.S.-based company<br />

Medic Mobile.<br />

“I was able to liaise with key players in the<br />

region, including UNICEF, district and state<br />

governments, the World Bank, and others,” said<br />

Nadia. “I have enjoyed this project so much that<br />

I have decided to stay on board until its completion<br />

18 months from now.”<br />

Ethan Wilkes (MIA ’12) had not one, but two,<br />

internships in China and got to rub shoulders<br />

with the number two man at the White House.<br />

Ethan began by working at Aureos Capital in<br />

Qingdao, a small provincial city in the northeast<br />

part of the country. There he put together communications<br />

material for investors and worked in<br />

fundraising.<br />

He then moved to the International Trade<br />

Administration at the American Embassy in Beijing,<br />

working on a research project looking into<br />

Chinese state-owned enterprises. Ethan said <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

made this opportunity possible—he found it on<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong>Link, the career portal for students.<br />

“We had a lot of delegations coming through,<br />

too,” he said. “As an intern, you get to sit in on<br />

these massive trade relation meetings as a fly on<br />

the wall. It’s fascinating.”<br />

One of these delegations was that of U.S. Vice<br />

President Joseph Biden. Wilkes met the vice president<br />

at an embassy meet-and-greet.<br />

“Rarely do you get the opportunity to be<br />

exposed to people of that level and listen to their<br />

thoughts,” he added.<br />

Michelle Chahine is a program assistant in<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong>’s Office of Communications and External<br />

Relations.<br />

INSIDE <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

From top: Cairo’s Tahrir Square; Juontel White;<br />

Nadia Hasham (far right); Ethan Wilkes with Vice<br />

President Biden.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 35


INSIDE <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

PhD Students Connect Climate Change and Civil War By Alex Burnett<br />

El Niño can help spark civil war, according to<br />

research by <strong>SIPA</strong> and The Earth Institute’s<br />

PhD program in sustainable development.<br />

Kyle Meng, a PhD candidate in the<br />

program, and Solomon Hsiang, a 2011 graduate,<br />

coauthored the study in the journal Nature,<br />

detailing their research linking the climate cycle to<br />

increases in warfare. Mark Cane, a climate scientist<br />

at <strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong>’s Lamont-Doherty Earth<br />

Observatory, was the third coauthor.<br />

The study found that the arrival of El Niño,<br />

which every three to seven years boosts temperatures<br />

and cuts rainfall, doubles the risk of civil<br />

wars across 90 tropical nations. It says El Niño<br />

may have played a role in a fifth of all worldwide<br />

conflicts during the past 50 years.<br />

36 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

This is the first study of its kind, linking global<br />

weather observations and documented violence,<br />

to point to climate as a possible cause of future<br />

destabilization. The study does not blame specific<br />

conflicts on El Niño nor address long-term climate<br />

change. But it does point to how a warming<br />

climate could contribute to existing conflicts in<br />

places like Somalia.<br />

“The most important thing is that this looks at<br />

modern times, and it’s done on a global scale,”<br />

says Hsiang.<br />

“We can speculate that a long-ago Egyptian<br />

dynasty was overthrown during a drought,” he<br />

continues. “That’s a specific time and place,<br />

which may be very different from today, so people<br />

might say, ‘OK, we’re immune to that now.’ This<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> Alumnae Direct New Global Centers<br />

<strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong> launched two new<br />

Global Centers in fall 2011, each directed<br />

by a <strong>SIPA</strong> alumna: Karen Poniachik (MIA<br />

’90) in Santiago, Chile, and Ipek Cem-<br />

Taha (MIA ’93, BUS ’93) in Istanbul, Turkey.<br />

In September, Poniachik joined <strong>University</strong><br />

President Lee C. Bollinger, Andronico Luksic, vice<br />

chairman of Banco de Chile, and Kenneth Prewitt,<br />

vice president of <strong>Columbia</strong> Global Centers, at a<br />

signing ceremony hosted by <strong>SIPA</strong> dean John H.<br />

Coatsworth. Her new role, directing the <strong>University</strong>’s<br />

first center in Latin America, adds to an<br />

impressive career in government and business.<br />

After graduating from <strong>SIPA</strong>, Poniachik served<br />

as director of business and financial programs<br />

at the Council of the Americas in New York from<br />

1995 to 2000. She moved to Chile to serve as<br />

executive vice president of the Foreign Investment<br />

Committee (2000–2006), minister of energy<br />

(2006–2007), and minister of mining (2006–<br />

2008). Her last role with the Chilean government<br />

was as special envoy in charge of negotiating<br />

Chile’s ascension to the OECD, achieved in January<br />

2010.<br />

The <strong>University</strong> launched its sixth Global Center<br />

in Istanbul in early November with a series of<br />

events and scholarly panels attended by President<br />

Bollinger, Dean Coatsworth, newly appointed<br />

interim director Ipek Cem-Taha, several <strong>Columbia</strong><br />

faculty and deans, and scholars from the region.<br />

Cem-Taha is a Turkish businesswoman, journalist,<br />

and leading member of several communitybased<br />

and international organizations. From 2005<br />

to 2011, she produced and hosted the program<br />

“Global Leaders” in association with NTV, Turkey’s<br />

leading news channel. She has also served as a<br />

newspaper columnist, commenting on international<br />

trends, politics, and economics. Cem-Taha<br />

is also a co-founder and director of Melak Investments,<br />

which provides strategic advice to funds<br />

and companies looking to invest in Turkey. Previously,<br />

she was a co-founder and managing partner<br />

of Netwise/IKC Communications, an Internet<br />

services company.<br />

study shows a systematic pattern of global climate<br />

affecting conflict, and it shows it right now.”<br />

The PhD in Sustainable Development combines<br />

elements of a traditional graduate education in<br />

social science, particularly economics, with a<br />

significant component of training in the natural<br />

sciences. Students in <strong>SIPA</strong>’s Sustainable Development<br />

PhD program come from a wide variety of<br />

backgrounds and are working on a diverse set<br />

of research topics, including poverty and water<br />

resources, green building, climate uncertainty and<br />

policy, disaster risk reduction, low-resources health<br />

systems, and sustainable design. The program’s<br />

graduates are uniquely situated to undertake serious<br />

research and policy assessments with the goal<br />

of sustainable development.<br />

Ipek Cem-Taha with President Bollinger at the launch<br />

of the Global Center in Istanbul.


From <strong>SIPA</strong> to Iraq to Afghanistan: An Interview with Carlos Terrones<br />

By Michelle Chahine<br />

After his graduation from <strong>SIPA</strong>, Carlos<br />

Terrones (MPA ’08) left New York City<br />

for Iraq and Afghanistan. In Iraq, he<br />

worked for the U.S. Department of State<br />

in governance and reconstruction-development<br />

efforts. He was then asked to assist with similar<br />

work in Afghanistan.<br />

What is your work currently in Afghanistan?<br />

How long have you been there, and how long<br />

will you remain?<br />

I am currently the civilian team leader for the<br />

District Support Team in the District of Maiwand. I<br />

am the State Department representative and lead<br />

governance adviser. I lead a team of USAID and<br />

U.S. Army officers in charge with governance and<br />

reconstruction-development. I’ve been in Afghanistan<br />

for almost a year and will end my tour at the<br />

end of January 2012. I came to Afghanistan after<br />

working in Iraq from 2008 to 2010.<br />

What has your experience been, both personal and<br />

professional?<br />

On the personal level, working in conflict zones<br />

in Iraq and Afghanistan has increased my<br />

mental and physical strength. I spent my tours<br />

in Iraq and Afghanistan embedded with the U.S.<br />

military in combat areas far away from the large<br />

cities in Iraq and Afghanistan. Life was lonely,<br />

and I discovered encouragement through my<br />

friendship with my U.S. military counterparts,<br />

friends, and family. I almost lost my life once in<br />

Iraq and once in Afghanistan. I’ve learned how<br />

to take care of myself because I have dealt with<br />

uncertainty and violence.<br />

Despite the violence and uncertainty that<br />

I have been exposed to professionally, I have<br />

learned a lot and gained substantial experience<br />

from both the international coalition and Afghan<br />

side. I’ve learned the importance of being streetwise<br />

and how to adapt to the culture’s tribal norms<br />

and expectations.<br />

My prior military experience as a marine and<br />

in international development in Latin America, the<br />

Middle East, and Asia provided me with the tools<br />

to work in conflict zones. Working in tough situations<br />

has brought about my critical thinking to go<br />

outside the box, always seek self-improvement,<br />

and provide the best alternatives to assist the local<br />

communities and subnational governments.<br />

I have really enjoyed assisting in the development<br />

of the Afghan subnational government that<br />

is trying to become self-sufficient, transparent, accountable,<br />

and capable of identifying, prioritizing,<br />

and servicing the needs of the Afghan people. As I<br />

am coming to the end of my tour in Afghanistan, I<br />

am proud to have been able to turn around one of<br />

the most war-torn districts in Afghanistan, which<br />

was known as one of the birthplaces of the Taliban,<br />

into one of the most supportive and engaged<br />

districts in governance and development activities.<br />

Although much work remains to be done to<br />

destabilize the Taliban shadow government, the<br />

mentorship and perseverance working side by side<br />

with our Afghan local officials are finally showing<br />

positive signs whereby local leaders and villagers<br />

are becoming active agents in their communities.<br />

How do you feel <strong>SIPA</strong> prepared you for this?<br />

My <strong>SIPA</strong> education was essential to this work.<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> provided me with strong analytical tools<br />

that I have applied to development strategies in a<br />

district west of Kandahar City, which is recovering<br />

from the Taliban insurgent activity. I have a Master<br />

in Public Administration with a concentration in<br />

Economic and Political Development.<br />

Do you have advice for students who may want to<br />

work in conflict zones post-<strong>SIPA</strong>?<br />

For those interested in working in conflict zones,<br />

I recommend that they take management classes<br />

while they are at <strong>SIPA</strong>. Having a basic knowledge<br />

of management is important because of the rapidly<br />

changing policies that we continue to have and<br />

adapt. With good management they will be able to<br />

adapt to crises and create solutions for their work<br />

with colleagues and local counterparts.<br />

INSIDE <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

“ I’ve learned the importance<br />

of being streetwise and how<br />

to adapt to the culture’s tribal<br />

norms and expectations.”<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 37


CLASS NOTES <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Class Notes Compiled by Pat Jones<br />

1974<br />

James Bruno, MIA<br />

James Bruno has published a political<br />

thriller centering on Afghanistan. Tribe is<br />

an American take on John Le Carré’s gray<br />

world of espionage, a meditation on the<br />

bigger issues of trust and betrayal and how<br />

to find room for patriotism or integrity in<br />

a world of runaway egos and ambition.<br />

James’ previous two novels, Permanent Interests<br />

and Chasm, have been steady Amazon<br />

Kindle bestsellers since late 2010. James<br />

was a Foreign Service officer with the U.S.<br />

Department of State, where he worked on<br />

Afghanistan for nearly five years.<br />

1982<br />

Kary Moss, MIA<br />

Kary Moss was inducted into the Michigan<br />

Women’s Hall of Fame at an awards dinner<br />

in East Lansing, Michigan on October 27.<br />

The State Bar of Michigan presented her<br />

with a 2011 Champion of Justice Award on<br />

September 14. She is the first female executive<br />

director of the ACLU of Michigan.<br />

1984<br />

Brent Feigenbaum, MIA<br />

Brent Feigenbaum has joined Centerline<br />

to head its corporate marketing<br />

communications and investor relations<br />

departments, reporting to Robert L. Levy,<br />

president and CFO. Brent is a 25-year<br />

veteran in strategic marketing communications.<br />

At Centerline he will focus on<br />

raising the firm’s visibility by elevating its<br />

marketing, public relations, and investor<br />

relations initiatives, as well as enhancing<br />

the firm’s overall internal employee<br />

communications. He is a noted expert in<br />

developing high impact integrated marketing<br />

communications programs in the<br />

financial services arena, with a particular<br />

focus on corporate banking, private<br />

banking, and commercial real estate.<br />

1986<br />

David R. Claussenius, MIA<br />

David R. Claussenius has been named<br />

Peace Corps country director of Thailand.<br />

38 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

David joined Save the Children/U.S. as<br />

deputy director for Asia Pacific region<br />

in 1988 and has held several leadership<br />

positions with the organization. David<br />

served as director of the Philippines and<br />

Asia and Middle East programs, headed<br />

the program in Vietnam, and worked as<br />

regional director for South and Southeast<br />

Asia. Most recently, he was the lead project<br />

manager of an international program<br />

unit of Save the Children, implementing<br />

programs in 72 countries.<br />

Ranjini Pillay, MIA<br />

Ranjini Pillay was honored this past<br />

October at the 19th Annual Women of<br />

Distinction Breakfast, presented by the<br />

Girl Scouts of Greater New York.<br />

1991<br />

Mikel Herrington, MIA, IF<br />

Mikel Herrington has been named Peace<br />

Corps country director of Bulgaria.<br />

Mikel worked for almost 14 years with<br />

the Corporation for National and Community<br />

Service, where he spent most<br />

of his time in the AmeriCorps National<br />

Civilian Community Corps (NCCC)<br />

program. Mikel has directed English<br />

language and U.S. cultural programs in<br />

China, led a team of graduate students<br />

from <strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong> on a maternal,<br />

infant, and child health care project<br />

in Belize, and served as a research fellow<br />

at the Centre for Strategic and International<br />

Studies in Jakarta, Indonesia.<br />

1992<br />

Dan Viederman, MIA<br />

Dan Viederman was named Social<br />

Entrepreneur of the Year in the United<br />

States by the Geneva, Switzerland–<br />

based Schwab Foundation for Social<br />

Entrepreneurship for his work as CEO<br />

with Verité. Verité is an international<br />

nonprofit consulting, training, and<br />

research organization that has been a<br />

leader in supply social responsibility and<br />

sustainability for 15 years. Verité solves<br />

the most difficult supply chain human<br />

rights problems to help the most vulnerable<br />

workers around the world.<br />

1997<br />

Akiko Sugaya, MIA<br />

Akiko Sugaya received a Nieman Fellowship<br />

at Harvard for 2011–2012 from<br />

the Nieman Foundation for Journalism.<br />

The Nieman Fellowship is a prestigious<br />

award that gives fellows the opportunity<br />

to study and explore research topics at<br />

Harvard <strong>University</strong> for one year.<br />

2000<br />

Juan Pablo Jimenez, MIA<br />

Juan Pablo Jimenez is co-author of<br />

“Macroeconomic Challenges of Fiscal<br />

Decentralization in Latin America in the<br />

Aftermath of the Global Financial Crisis,”<br />

published by the Economic Commission<br />

for Latin America and the Caribbean<br />

(ECLAC). The paper discusses how fiscal<br />

decentralization is affecting macroeconomic<br />

management in the main Latin<br />

American countries and which reforms in<br />

the existing intergovernmental systems<br />

could help strengthen their fiscal sustainability<br />

and create fiscal space for active<br />

countercyclical responses to economic<br />

shocks. The paper was prepared within<br />

the project entitled “Decentralization and<br />

Governance” executed by ECLAC and<br />

the German Cooperation (GIZ), where<br />

Juan is the coordinator.<br />

2002<br />

Dana Curran Mortenson, MIA<br />

Madiha Murshed, MIA<br />

Dana Curran Mortenson and Madiha<br />

Murshed are the cofounders of World Savvy,<br />

an education nonprofit in the United<br />

States. World Savvy educates and engages<br />

youth in community and world affairs<br />

to learn, work, and live as responsible<br />

global citizens in the 21st century. Since<br />

its founding, World Savvy has grown to<br />

serve more than 10,000 youth and 1,400<br />

teachers from three offices nationally.<br />

Dana and Madiha recently secured a grant<br />

from the U.S. Department of State for an<br />

exchange program for students from the<br />

U.S. to visit Bangladesh to learn about<br />

climate change issues. Bangladesh is a<br />

country on the frontlines of the climate<br />

change threat. Through World Savvy’s<br />

programs, students from the United States<br />

will study climate change issues in partnership<br />

with students in Bangladesh, who<br />

will be recruited from Scholastica, a large,<br />

private English middle school in Dhaka,<br />

Bangladesh, of which Madiha Murshed is<br />

the managing director. The co-founders of<br />

World Savvy would be delighted to hear<br />

from any <strong>SIPA</strong> alums who want to learn<br />

more about World Savvy or the student<br />

exchange program. For more information<br />

about World Savvy, visit http://www.<br />

worldsavvy.org/ www.worldsavvy.org.<br />

2006<br />

Veronica Conforme, MPA<br />

Veronica Conforme has been appointed<br />

by NYC Schools Chancellor Dennis<br />

M. Walcott as chief operating officer of<br />

the Department of Education (DOE).<br />

Veronica, who joined the DOE in 2003,<br />

has served as chief financial officer since<br />

December 2010. Her new position was<br />

effective as of November 1, 2011.<br />

Nathaniel Hurd, MIA<br />

Nathaniel Hurd has become the<br />

Washington, D.C.-based policy adviser<br />

for Conflicts and Disasters, World Vision<br />

U.S. World Vision is a leading Christian<br />

international relief and development organization,<br />

responding to disasters, conflict,<br />

poverty, and disease in more than 100<br />

countries. Nathaniel advises World Vision<br />

and represents the agency with Congress<br />

and the U.S. government, on areas such as<br />

breaking disasters, Afghanistan, Pakistan,<br />

Haiti, civil-military relations, and more.<br />

2010<br />

Andrew Kessinger, MIA, IF<br />

Andrew Kessinger is now living in Paris,<br />

after having worked for a women’s empowerment<br />

project in Sierra Leone. He<br />

is currently a communications manager<br />

in the Science, Technology, and Industry<br />

directorate at the Organization for Economic<br />

Co-operation and Development.<br />

Pat Jones is an administrative assistant in <strong>SIPA</strong>’s<br />

Office of Communications and External Relations.


Donor List July 1, 2010, to June 30, 2011<br />

“CERT” followed by year = graduate with certificate from a Regional Institute<br />

“IF” followed by year = graduate of the International Fellows Program<br />

“MIA” followed by year = graduate with a Master in International Affairs<br />

“MPA” followed by year = graduate with a Master in Public Administration<br />

$500,000+<br />

Anonymous<br />

EDP—Energias de Portugal, S.A.<br />

Vladimir V. Kuznetsov, MIA ’91, IF ’90<br />

Jorge Paulo Lemann<br />

Andronico Luksic/E. Abaroa Foundation<br />

John Templeton Foundation<br />

$100,000–$499,999<br />

Estate of Julius G. Blocker<br />

Arminio Fraga<br />

Irish Aid<br />

Henry Luce Foundation<br />

Brett A. Olsher, MIA ’93<br />

David B. Ottaway, IF ’63<br />

Smith Richardson Foundation<br />

David John Sainsbury/The Gatsby<br />

Charitable Foundation<br />

Jeffrey L. Schmidt, IF ’79, CERT ’79/<br />

Jeffrey L. Schmidt Fellowship<br />

Charitable Trust<br />

The Spencer Foundation<br />

Maurice Samuels, MIA ’83<br />

Veolia Environnement<br />

$25,000–$99,999<br />

Amy Levine Abrams, MIA ’81, IF ’81/<br />

Abrams Foundation<br />

Georgia Adams, MIA ’83 and Charles<br />

Adams, MIA ’83<br />

William Vincent Campbell<br />

Carnegie Corporation of New York<br />

Alexander Georgiadis, MIA ’85/Krinos<br />

Foods Canada Ltd.<br />

A. Michael Hoffman, MIA ’69, IF ’69<br />

Nemir Kirdar/Investcorp<br />

Marc St. John, MIA ’84, IF ’84 and Julie<br />

Newton St. John, MIA ’85<br />

Ipek Nur Cem Taha, MIA ’93 and Shwan<br />

I. Taha<br />

$10,000–$24,999<br />

Anonymous<br />

Reed David Auerbach, MIA ’81, IF ’81<br />

and Adrienne Petite Auerbach<br />

Roger R. Baumann, IF ’84, MIA ’85 and<br />

Julie Baumann<br />

Matthew Boyer, MIA ’94<br />

Kim Christopher Bradley, MIA ’83<br />

Michael James Brandmeyer, MIA ’95,<br />

IF ’95<br />

Brazilian-American Chamber of<br />

Commerce<br />

Edward T. Cloonan, MIA ’77 and Linda<br />

Cloonan<br />

Financial Women’s Association of NY<br />

Educational Fund<br />

Sonia Gardner/Avenue Capital<br />

Management<br />

Richard S. Goldberg<br />

Donald Loyd Holley, MIA ’59<br />

Anuradha T. Jayanti/Rev Trust of<br />

Anuradha Jayanti<br />

Robert I. Kopech, MIA ’77<br />

Sidney & Robert Katzman Foundation<br />

Harley L. Lippman, MIA ’79/Genesis 10<br />

The Lucius N. Littauer Foundation<br />

James Luikart, MIA ’72 and Amira Luikart<br />

Peter Neill Marber, MIA ’87/Marber<br />

Family Charitable Fund/HSBC Global<br />

Asset Management<br />

Juan Navarro/Supermarkets Norte<br />

Investments<br />

Barbara Helen Reguero, MIA ’86<br />

Alejandro Santo Domingo<br />

Mary and David M. Solomon<br />

Joan E. Spero, MIA ’68<br />

The Starr Foundation<br />

Mana Nabeshima Tokoi, MIA ’91<br />

Michael D. Tusiani/Poten & Partners, Inc.<br />

Jens Ulltveit-Moe, MIA ’68<br />

$5,000–$9,999<br />

Magzhan Muratovich Auezov, MIA ’98<br />

James L. Broadhead, IF ’63<br />

Pamela Casaudoumecq, MIA ’89<br />

Robert Meade Chilstrom, MIA ’69, CERT<br />

’69 and Buena H. Chilstrom<br />

Susie Gharib, MIA ’74/Nazem Family<br />

Foundation<br />

George Franz Hollendorfer, MIA ’01<br />

Alex and Juliana Krys<br />

Vuslat Sabanci, MIA ’96 and Ali Ismail<br />

Sabanci<br />

Arnold A. Saltzman/Saltzman Foundation<br />

Brent Scowcroft<br />

David Zvi Solomon, MIA ’97/Achim<br />

Foundation<br />

Joel D. Tauber<br />

Paul Wayne Thurman<br />

Neale X. Trangucci, MIA ’81, IF ’81<br />

Enzo Viscusi<br />

$2,500–$4,999<br />

Norton and Ann Bell<br />

Laurence Dara Berger, IF ’70<br />

John William Dickey, MIA ’92<br />

Mary S. Ginsberg, MIA ’78, IF ’78<br />

Marietta Angela Ries Lavicka, MIA ’94<br />

Claudette M. Mayer, MIA ’76, IF ’76<br />

Media Rights Capital/Modi Wiczyk and<br />

Assaf Satchu<br />

Mitchell Darrow Silber, MIA ’05 and Beth<br />

Ann Silber<br />

Frank C. Wong, MIA ’82<br />

Feng Jason Xu, MIA ’96<br />

$1,000–$2,499<br />

Anonymous<br />

Robert Oswald Abad, MIA ’98<br />

Lisa S. Anderson, CERT ’76<br />

Halle J. Bennett, MIA ’92<br />

Michael Paul Benz, MPA ’10<br />

Robin L. Berry, MIA ’78<br />

Blinken Foundation/Donald and Vera<br />

Blinken<br />

Elizabeth Cabot, MIA ’98 and Blake<br />

Cabot<br />

Linda K. Carlisle, MPA ’81<br />

John and Patricia Coatsworth<br />

Larry Rodney Colburn, MIA ’90<br />

Jane D. Coleman, IF ’72<br />

Anisa Kamadoli Costa, MIA ’98/Tiffany<br />

& Co.<br />

John J. Curley, IF ’63 and Ann C. Curley<br />

Gregory R. Dalton MIA ’94, IF ’94<br />

and Lucia Choi/The Dalton-Choi<br />

Family Trust<br />

John William Dandola, MPA ’10<br />

Xinhua Dang, MIA ’93<br />

Nina and Mitch Davidson<br />

Barbara Knowles Debs and Richard A.<br />

Debs/The Debs Foundation<br />

Gregory Deeds and Lisa Helen Deeds<br />

Christian Deseglise, MIA ’90<br />

Troy J. Eggers and Susan K. Glancy<br />

Peter D. Ehrenhaft, MIA ’57<br />

Habib Mohammed Enayetullah, MPA ’91<br />

Kashiyo C. Enokido, MIA ’78<br />

Ivy Lindstrom Fredericks, MIA ’98<br />

Jennifer Ann Pomeroy Fronk, MIA ’83/<br />

Fronk Family Foundation<br />

Shelley Louise Gardeniers, MIA ’96<br />

Richard N. Gardner<br />

Michael Alan Goldstein, MIA ’84<br />

Anthony C. Gooch, MIA ’05, IF ’05<br />

Erin S. Gore, MPA ’97<br />

Alexander Juri Groushevsky, MIA ’96,<br />

IF ’96<br />

Neal H. Harwood, MIA ’61<br />

Andrew and Heather Heller<br />

Ralph O. Hellmold, MIA ’63, IF ’63<br />

Sylvia A. Hewlett and Richard S. Weinert/<br />

Center For Work-Life Policy, Inc.<br />

Peter Alexander Hofmann, MIA ’86/<br />

United Way of Central and NE<br />

Connecticut<br />

John Christopher Howe, MIA ’83/The<br />

Patriot Group<br />

Jingdong Hua, MPA ’03<br />

Constance L. Hunter, MIA ’94<br />

Douglas R. Hunter, MIA ’73<br />

DONOR LIST <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Nadia M. Jabri, MIA ’98<br />

Herman N. Johnson, MIA ’99 and<br />

Tamarra Matthews-Johnson<br />

Hisanori Kataoka, MIA ’98<br />

Allison C. Kellogg, IF ’72, MIA ’73<br />

Melvyn N. Klein, IF ’65<br />

Karen Young Knapp, MPA ’94<br />

Arthur Wayne Koenig, MIA ’70<br />

The Kresge Foundation<br />

Monish Kumar, MIA ’95<br />

Ziad Khalil Makkawi, MIA ’86<br />

Arfan M. K. Malas, MIA ’68/Dextar<br />

World Trade<br />

Christopher James Manogue, MIA ’98<br />

Sherwood G. Moe, MIA ’48<br />

Melineh V. Momjian, MIA ’86 and Mark<br />

Albert Momjian<br />

Thomas John Monahan, MIA ’85<br />

James William Morley<br />

Mark David O’Keefe, MIA ’95 and M.<br />

Guadalupe Granda, MIA ’95<br />

Kenneth Prewitt<br />

Adam and Mandy Quinton<br />

Clyde E. Rankin, IF ’74<br />

Peter M. Robinson, MIA ’79, IF ’79<br />

Karen Scowcroft, MIA ’84, IF ’84<br />

Saurin Dinesh Shah, MIA ’97 and Sara<br />

Elise Borden, MPA ’95<br />

Sandra Shahinian Leitner, MIA ’76<br />

Cassandra A. Simmons<br />

Jonathan P. Simon and Anna C.<br />

Coatsworth<br />

Julie Lynn Siskind, MIA ’95/Jewish<br />

Communal Fund<br />

Alfred C. Stepan, IF ’65<br />

Bela Szigethy, MIA ’80, IF ’80<br />

Masanobu Taniguchi, MIA ’79, CERT ’79<br />

David James Tsui, MPA ’01<br />

Daniel B. Tunstall, MIA ’68<br />

Yuko Usami, MIA ’77<br />

Eliza and Jon Weber<br />

Allyson and Andrew Weiner<br />

Arthur M. Yoshinami, MIA ’80<br />

Geoffrey Paul Ziebart, MIA ’89, IF ’89<br />

$500–$999<br />

Colin Jeffrey Aaron, MIA ’84<br />

Patrick Kenehan Archambault, MIA ’99<br />

John Keeble Bainbridge, MPA ’91<br />

Arlene Renee Barilec, MIA ’84<br />

Jillian Barron, MIA ’88<br />

Matthias Georg Baumberger, MIA ’05<br />

Stefan Robert Benn, MIA ’95<br />

Maureen R. Berman, MIA ’73<br />

Thomas Lynch Bindley, MPA ’03<br />

Kate A. Bullinger, MIA ’94<br />

Paul H. Byers, IF ’67<br />

David C. Chaffetz, MIA ’80, IF ’80<br />

Yung-Woo Chun, MIA ’94, IF ’94<br />

John J. Costonis, IF ’64<br />

Marc P. Desautels, MIA ’66<br />

R. Anthony Elson, MIA ’64, IF ’64<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 39


DONOR LIST <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Jennifer Ann Enslin, MIA ’02<br />

Rhonda L. Ferguson-Augustus, MIA ’79<br />

Robert Mark Finkel, MIA ’88<br />

Walter F. Frey, MPA ’08<br />

Kirsten Alysum Frivold, MPA ’03<br />

Larry S. Gage, IF ’71<br />

Sol Glasner, MIA ’76, CERT ’76<br />

John D. Greenwald, IF ’71<br />

Bruce Kirkwood Harris, MIA ’92<br />

Peter D. Hart Research Associates, Inc.<br />

Teresa Misty Hathaway, MIA ’89<br />

Mark M. Jaskowiak, IF ’77<br />

Horace P. Jen, MIA ’93, CERT ’93<br />

and Karuna Evelyne Shinsho,<br />

MIA ’94<br />

Andrea Lynn Johnson, MIA ’89<br />

Michone Trinae Johnson, MPA ’96<br />

Caroline C. Kay<br />

John J. Kerr, IF ’76<br />

Do-Hyung Kim, MIA ’00<br />

Joachim W. Kratz, MIA ’58<br />

Stephanie Beth Wolk Lawrence, MPA ’93/<br />

Boston Foundation<br />

George M. Lazarus, IF ’69<br />

Ryan S. Lester, MIA ’01 and Amy Lester<br />

Jirawat Sophon Lewprasert, MIA ’84<br />

John F. Lippmann, MIA ’49<br />

Dallas D. Lloyd, MIA ’58<br />

Eric Rogan Mason, MIA ’95<br />

Dan McIntyre<br />

Sreedhar Menon<br />

Amy L. Miller, MIA ’82<br />

David W. Miller<br />

Shalini Mimani<br />

Morgan Stanley Smith Barney Global<br />

Impact<br />

Catherine Mulder, MIA ’81<br />

Hiroko Murase, MIA ’91<br />

Ana Carolina Cabral Murphy, MIA ’09<br />

Stephanie G. Neuman/I. & B. Neuman<br />

Foundation<br />

Yigit Onat, MIA ’10 and Hahna Kim<br />

Evan Hartley Platt/Hartley Corporation<br />

Henrietta B. Pons, MIA ’64/Henrietta B.<br />

Pons Trust<br />

Clara Katingo Quintanilla, MIA ’82<br />

Ailsa Roell and Patrick Bolton<br />

Daniel Rose and Joanna S. Rose<br />

Osman Shahenshah, MIA ’97<br />

Aaron Venn Singer, MPA ’04<br />

Vikram Jeet Singh, MIA ’03, IF ’03 and<br />

Dilshika Jayamaha<br />

Tara Jayne Sullivan, MPA ’86<br />

Sharyn Menegus Taylor, MIA ’85<br />

Maxwell Konrad Trautman, MIA ’92<br />

$250–$499<br />

Kaori Adachi, MIA ’99<br />

Simon K. Adamiyatt, MIA ’81, CERT ’81<br />

Kiyoshi Amada, MIA ’94<br />

Sanford Antignas<br />

Morten Arntzen, MIA ’79, IF ’79<br />

Isabelle Jacqueline Aussourd, MIA ’02<br />

Roshma A. Azeem, MPA ’04<br />

Leonard J. Baldyga, MIA ’62<br />

David A. Balzarini, IF ’62<br />

Rukiye Zeynep Basak, MPA ’05<br />

40 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

Paul Bauer, MIA ’96<br />

Robin M. Beckett, IF ’77<br />

Pieter Anton Bierkens, MIA ’92<br />

Melanie June Bixby, MIA ’91 and Robert<br />

Epstein<br />

Kenneth Herbert Blackman, MIA ’00<br />

Joseph Abraham Blady, MIA ’03<br />

Thomas H. Boast, MIA ’72<br />

John Alexander Bodkin and Dinah K.<br />

Bodkin<br />

Patrick Francis Bohan<br />

Carolyn B. Boldiston, MPA ’89<br />

Georgy Georgovich Bovt, MIA ’92, IF ’92<br />

Joan Copithorne Bowen, MIA ’67<br />

Dwight A. Bowler, MIA ’79<br />

Scott Budde, MIA ’83<br />

Allen L. Byrum, MIA ’72<br />

Robert Christopher Callahan, MIA ’05<br />

Joan O. Camins, IF ’73<br />

Mary W. Carpenter, MIA ’51<br />

Elisa A. Charters, MIA ’02<br />

Kai J. Chin, MIA ’78<br />

Dale Christensen, MIA ’71 and Patricia<br />

Hewitt, MIA ’71<br />

Dale S. Collinson, IF ’62<br />

James Anthony Coppola, MIA ’87<br />

Karen J. Curtin, MIA ’78, IF ’78<br />

Carolyn P. Dewing-Hommes, MIA ’86,<br />

CERT ’86<br />

Richard Albert Dikeman, MPA ’99<br />

Andrew M. Dry, MIA ’80, IF ’80<br />

Judith Ann Edstrom, MIA ’72, IF ’72<br />

Allen Eisendrath, MIA ’81, IF ’81<br />

Mayada El-Zoghbi, MIA ’94, CERT ’94<br />

Cornelia Mai Ercklentz, MIA ’08<br />

Vincent A. Ferraro, MIA ’73, IF ’73 and<br />

Priscilla A. Mandrachia<br />

Louise R. Firestone, MIA ’79<br />

Susan H. Frieden<br />

Sridhar Ganesan, MIA ’96<br />

Hui Gao, MPA ’01<br />

John C. Garrett, IF ’66/Garrett Family<br />

Foundation<br />

Jeffrey Franklin Gay, MIA ’04<br />

Victor Gotbaum, MIA ’50<br />

Manuel G. Grace, IF ’82<br />

Carl C. Greer, IF ’63<br />

Maureen-Elizabeth Hagen, MIA ’83,<br />

CERT ’83<br />

Kay L. Hancock<br />

Peter L. Harnik, MIA ’75<br />

Gordana D. Harris, MIA ’84<br />

Ian Andrew Held, MIA ’95, IF ’95<br />

Warren E. Hewitt, MIA ’50<br />

Christopher John Hirth, MIA ’96<br />

Katherine Hale Hovde, MIA ’89 and<br />

Kenneth Kulak<br />

Thomas W. Hoya, CERT ’69<br />

Christopher Ko Hu, IF ’73<br />

Yutaka Matsuura Ishizaka, CERT ’82<br />

Merit Janow<br />

Edward Van K. Jaycox, MIA ’64,<br />

CERT ’64<br />

Mary Tyler Johnson, MPA ’04/Ayco<br />

Charitable Foundation<br />

Stuart MacLean Johnson, MIA ’67<br />

Richard B. Jones, MIA ’80<br />

Nadine F. Joseph, MIA ’73<br />

Robert K. Kaplan, MIA ’83<br />

Norman D. Kass, MIA ’73 and Lani Kass<br />

Brian John Kennedy, MPA ’04<br />

Julia Metzger Kennedy, MIA ’92<br />

Lawrence S. Klitzman<br />

Susan Koch, MIA ’71<br />

Lisa Esposito Kok, MPA ’90 and George<br />

Hans Kok<br />

Mel Laytner, MIA ’72<br />

Musse Hussen Ld, MPA ’95<br />

Hyun-Koo Lee, MIA ’81<br />

Andre D. Lehmann, MIA ’73, CERT ’73<br />

Jay A. Levy, IF ’62<br />

David Chase Lopes, MIA ’92<br />

Jerrold L. Mallory, MIA ’83, CERT ’83<br />

Sonia P. Maltezou, MIA ’70<br />

Sean Rosen Mandel, MPA ’07 and<br />

Marian Rosen<br />

Ann E. March, MIA ’99<br />

Ludwig J. Marek, MPA ’07<br />

Jocelyn Maskow, MPA ’88<br />

John B. McGrath, MIA ’80, IF ’80,<br />

CERT ’80<br />

Milton W. Meyer, MIA ’49<br />

Marianne Mitosinka, MIA ’81<br />

Tracey Ellen Morzano, MIA ’94<br />

Yaya Moussa, MPA ’98<br />

David W. Munves, MIA ’80, IF ’80<br />

Stephen S. Nelmes, MIA ’73<br />

Carletta Nonziato, MIA ’84/<br />

Carron, LLC<br />

Dmitry Nikitin, MIA ’05<br />

Mary Agnes O’Donnell Hulme, MIA ’95<br />

Avo Erik Ora, MIA ’98, IF ’98<br />

Ruth G. Ornelas, MIA ’80, IF ’80<br />

Jennifer Hirsh Overton, MPA ’93<br />

Kush B. Patel, MIA ’05<br />

Nirmala S. Patni, MPA ’01<br />

Carol Jean Patterson, MIA ’76, CERT ’76<br />

Jon S. Pearl and Barbara S. Pearl<br />

Tas Ling Pinther, MIA ’94<br />

Thomas Guenter Plagemann, MIA ’91<br />

Peter J. Podbielski, MIA ’74<br />

Jefrey Ian Pollock, MPA ’97<br />

Robert W. Pons, MIA ’64<br />

David C. Ralph, MIA ’67<br />

Julie Ramirez, MIA ’94<br />

John M. Reid, MIA ’64<br />

Robert D. Reischauer, MIA ’66<br />

Jeremy Neal Reiskin, MIA ’87<br />

Lucius J. Riccio<br />

William James Rigler, MIA ’03, IF ’03<br />

Robert M. Rodes<br />

William A. Root, MIA ’48, CERT ’48<br />

Smedes Rose, MIA ’94<br />

Marian Rosen<br />

Anne O’Toole Salinas, MIA ’96, CERT ’96<br />

Joseph Andrew Samborsky, MPA ’04<br />

Salvatore V. Sampino, MIA ’83<br />

Julie Elizabeth Satow, MIA ’01<br />

Herbert A. Schectman, MIA ’58<br />

Deborah Gwen Schein, MIA ’88,<br />

CERT ’88<br />

Susan Ellen Schorr, MPA ’98/MGS & RRS<br />

Charitable Trust<br />

Ernst J. Schrader, MIA ’65<br />

William Schumer, CERT ’48<br />

Harold and Jeannette Segel<br />

Ryan James Severino, MIA ’04<br />

Richard M. Smith, IF ’69<br />

Delia B. Spitzer, IF ’81<br />

Marisa C. Stadtmauer, MPA ’93/Marisa<br />

and Richard Stadtmauer Family<br />

Foundation<br />

Sally J. Staley, MIA ’80<br />

Kulratan R. Stuart, MIA ’73<br />

Leonard M. Tavera<br />

Erik Matthew Tollefson, MIA ’06<br />

Elizabeth D. Trafelet, MIA ’03<br />

Jonathan Tretler<br />

Alper A. Tunca, MPA ’05<br />

Sharmila Hainum Tuttle, MIA ’05<br />

Ralph W. Usinger, MIA ’73<br />

Frederi Joseph Vagnini, MIA ’89<br />

Joseph L. Vidich, MIA ’80<br />

Gregory Alexander Viscusi, MIA ’91,<br />

IF ’91<br />

Hans Herbert Wahl, MIA ’95<br />

Efrot Weiss, IF ’89, MIA, ’89<br />

Helgard Wienert-Cakim, MIA ’62<br />

Frank G. Wisner<br />

Anna Wojnarowska, MPA ’04<br />

Silas H. L. Wu<br />

Juliet Wurr, MIA ’89, IF ’89<br />

Hideo Yanai, MIA ’96<br />

Nan Yang, MIA ’95<br />

Zhijing Yin, MPA ’03<br />

Catherine L. Yu-Mark<br />

Up to $249<br />

Anonymous<br />

Ninfa A. Abad, MPA ’07<br />

Amanda Adames Marmolejos<br />

Can Adamoglu, MIA ’02<br />

Carl B. Adams, MIA ’72<br />

William J. Adler, MIA ’80<br />

Afua P. Adusei<br />

Alice Agoos, MIA ’80<br />

Laura Maria Agosta<br />

Christiana H. Aguiar, MIA ’89<br />

Fareez Ahmed, MIA ’09<br />

Lincoln N. Ajoku, MIA ’08<br />

Adam J. Albin, MIA ’86<br />

Delalle Nasr Strateman Alexander,<br />

MIA ’85<br />

Don William Alexander, MPA ’05<br />

Jordan Alexander<br />

Karen Jeannette Alexander, MPA ’90<br />

Keely Dean Alexander<br />

Paula Alfonso, MIA ’11<br />

Patrice L. Allen-Gifford, MIA ’81<br />

Erasto B. Almeida, MIA ’06<br />

Douglas Vincent Almond<br />

Robert J. Alpino, MIA ’85<br />

Stephen Altheim, IF ’69<br />

Nourah Ali AITwairqi<br />

Luis Alvarez Renta, MPA ’09<br />

Daniel Alvarez, MPA ’09<br />

Elena M. Alvarez, MPA ’84<br />

Kenneth Alvord II<br />

Austin Chinegwu Amalu, MIA ’81<br />

Ryan M. Ames, MPA ’09<br />

Yotam David Amit


Gauri Anand, MPA ’11<br />

Bridget Anderson, MPA ’04<br />

G. Norman Anderson, MIA ’60<br />

John C. Angle, IF ’69<br />

Shehriyar D. Antia, MIA ’03<br />

Iris R. Argento, CERT ’67<br />

Nikolaos Argeros, MPA ’10<br />

Sunil Arora<br />

Emily Talbot Ashton, MPA ’04<br />

Sarah S. Ashton, MIA ’93<br />

Elizabeth Athey, MIA ’71<br />

Karen Nicole Attiah<br />

Dooneshsingh Audit, MPA ’09<br />

Ana Elena Azpurua, MIA ’09<br />

Sally Baek, MPA ’85<br />

Sungwon Baik, MIA ’02<br />

Charles Edward Baker, MIA ’92<br />

Laura Shannon Ballman, MIA ’00, IF ’00<br />

Moran Banai, MIA ’06<br />

Saptarsi Bandyopadhyay, MIA ’11<br />

Zdzislaw Baran<br />

Aimee Elise Keli’i Barnes, MPA ’07<br />

Wayne M. Barnstone, MIA ’79<br />

Nicole Ann Barrett, MIA ’95, CERT ’95<br />

Matthew David Barron, MPA ’10<br />

Chhitij Bashyal<br />

Justina Baskauskas, MIA ’94, IF ’94<br />

Elizabeth A. Bassan, MIA ’79, IF ’79<br />

Kevin Alan Baumert, MIA ’98<br />

Alicia Jewel Beal<br />

Kenton H. Beerman, MIA ’05<br />

Julie A. Beglin, MPA ’97<br />

Michael Armand Beirnard<br />

Wanda J. Bell, MPA ’08<br />

Scot H. Bellows, MIA ’79<br />

Nancy Hays Bendiner, IF ’72<br />

Yvette E. Benedek, MIA ’81<br />

Tudor Vlad Benga<br />

Juan Manuel Benitez-Fernel, MIA ’01<br />

Sonja Jean Bensen, MIA ’89<br />

Paul D. Berk, IF ’62<br />

Stephen Michael Berk, CERT ’72<br />

Thomas Paul Bernstein, CERT ’66<br />

Genevieve R. Besser, MIA ’86<br />

Wendy Lee Kutlow Best, MPA ’87<br />

Dorcas Jeanine Bethel, MPA ’95<br />

Richard K. Betts<br />

Peter James Biesada, MIA ’86<br />

Charles G. Billo, MIA ’67<br />

William N. Binderman, IF ’63<br />

Leopold Von Bismarck, MIA ’78<br />

Alexandra Bokan Blair<br />

Whitney Beth Blake, MPA ’07<br />

John Langdon Blakeney, MPA ’06<br />

Lisa Zucrow Block, MPA ’81<br />

Tammy Sue Blossom, MPA ’96<br />

Alisa Blum, MPA ’00<br />

Christopher Joseph Bodington, MIA ’11<br />

Michael Drury Bodman, MIA ’96<br />

Holly Bernson Bogin, MIA ’88<br />

Andrea R. Bonime-Blanc, IF ’81,<br />

CERT ’81<br />

Robert Boothby, IF ’62<br />

Sebastian Borchmeyer<br />

Trudy E. Bower-Pirinis, MIA ’78<br />

W. Donald Bowles, CERT ’52<br />

David Daniel Boyle, MPA ’98<br />

Deirdre Grane Brennan, MIA ’01, IF ’01<br />

and Christian Grane, MIA ’01<br />

Philip Stern Brennan, MIA ’06<br />

Gretchen Stahr Breunig, MPA ’88<br />

Karl Wilhelm Brown, MIA ’06<br />

Keith Dawayne Brown, MIA ’89<br />

Keith Mac Brown, MPA ’90 and Jennifer<br />

Lyle Green, MPA ’90<br />

William C. Brown, IF ’67<br />

Michelle Nichole Browne, MPA ’92<br />

John P. Bruggen, MPA ’00<br />

Jennifer Tara Bruno<br />

Cecile R. Brunswick, MIA ’54<br />

William Ransom Bryant<br />

Laurance Nicholas Buencamino<br />

Beverley Jeanine Buford, MPA ’86<br />

Andrew Craig Buher, MPA ’10<br />

Sonia Virginie Bujas, MIA ’92, CERT ’92<br />

and Nuno Miguel C. Crisostomo,<br />

MIA ’01<br />

Leonardo Bullaro, MPA ’08<br />

Gordon Marshall Burck, MIA ’86<br />

Sarah Burd-Sharps, MIA ’87<br />

Robert K. Burghart, CERT ’79<br />

Kevin James Burgwinkle, MIA ’06, IF ’06<br />

Janet A. Burroughs, MIA ’89<br />

Marta Eugenia Cabrera, MIA ’85,<br />

CERT ’85<br />

Pierre J. Cachia<br />

Fabrizio Cadamagnani, MPA ’11<br />

Gerald A. Cady, MIA ’76, CERT ’76<br />

Kristen Klemme Cady-Sawyer, MPA ’06<br />

Michael A. Cairl, MIA ’77, IF ’77<br />

Marjorie E. Campbell<br />

Robin C. Campbell, IF ’76<br />

Jeffrey L. Canfield, MIA ’82, CERT ’82<br />

Forrest Andrew Carhartt<br />

Donald L. Carpenter, CERT ’54<br />

Nontrel Kesha Carwell, MPA ’05<br />

Elizabeth Hopkins Cashen, MIA ’01 and<br />

David V. Cashen<br />

Valenice Castronovo, MIA ’80<br />

Barbara Foulke Cates, MIA ’84<br />

Mary Kathleen Catlin, MIA ’94<br />

David Michael Caughlin, MPA ’07<br />

John Joseph Cenney, MIA ’92<br />

Elizabeth Ellen Champlin Geske, MIA ’87<br />

Barbara Chan<br />

Ann H. Chaney, MIA ’91<br />

Martin A. Charwat, CERT ’65<br />

Jason Kinbon Chau, MIA ’08<br />

Swati Kumari Chaudhary<br />

Amy Li Chen<br />

Shiliang Thomas Chen<br />

Winifred Debbie Chen, MPA ’07<br />

Peter Chin, MIA ’11<br />

Muzaffar A. Chishti, MIA ’81<br />

Shachi Chopra-Nangia, MIA ’00<br />

Paul Brian Christensen, MIA ’83<br />

Ingrid D. Christophel, MIA ’83<br />

Siew Leng Chuah, MIA ’84<br />

Sandra G. Chutorian, MIA ’82, CERT ’82<br />

Jeff Geefen Chyu, MIA ’83<br />

William Ciaccio, MPA ’79<br />

Amanda Hoagland Clark, CERT ’82<br />

Azeb G. Clark, MIA ’96<br />

Peter James Clayton, MPA ’90<br />

Matt K. Clemons<br />

Jayana J. Clerk, CERT ’77<br />

Drew Dumas Coburn, MIA ’87<br />

Natalie Greenan Coburn, MIA ’89<br />

Laurie L. N. Cochran, MIA ’79<br />

Ann-Marie Cofield, MPA ’10<br />

Daniel Moshe Cohen, MIA ’04<br />

Denise Ann Cohen, MIA ’93, CERT ’93<br />

Dillon Lockwood Cohen, MIA ’09<br />

Ellen Miriam Cohen, MPA ’03<br />

F. Bruce Cohen, MPA ’91<br />

Graham Charles Cohen, MIA ’91<br />

Neil Hayward Cohen, MPA ’89<br />

Daniela Coleman<br />

Jennifer DeRosa Collins, MPA ’05<br />

Joseph J. Collins, MIA ’80, IF ’80 and<br />

Anita L. Collins<br />

Glenn L. Colville, MIA ’75<br />

Bernard Francis Condon, MIA ’91,<br />

CERT ’91 and Patricia Anne Clary,<br />

MIA ’91<br />

Susan E. Condon, MIA ’70, IF ’70,<br />

CERT ’70<br />

Marybeth Connolly, MIA ’01<br />

Maureen Considine, MIA ’86<br />

Richard Cooper, IF ’85<br />

Mary Griffiths Cooperman, MIA ’84<br />

Anthony R. Corea, MIA ’79<br />

Jeronimo Cortina, MPA ’03<br />

Richard W. Cortright, MIA ’82<br />

Steven Roy Costner, MIA ’88<br />

Jeffrey Larter Cox, MIA ’89<br />

Monica Inez Cramer, MIA ’92<br />

Helen Cregger, MPA ’92<br />

Robert S. Critchell, MIA ’70<br />

Burton C. Crow, IF ’77<br />

Matthew Russell Cruse<br />

Alvin Robert Cruz, MPA ’87<br />

Bernadette Cruz, MIA ’08<br />

Mercedes Cubas, MIA ’81<br />

Nikken Cullman, MIA ’09<br />

Victoria R. Cunningham, MIA ’75<br />

Donald J. Curry<br />

Vanda Czifra, MIA ’11<br />

Alessandra Mendes Da Silva, MIA ’89<br />

Theodore Albert D’Afflisio, MIA ’71<br />

Kevin Towne D’Albert, MIA ’90 and<br />

Nancy Carney, MIA ’93<br />

Dolores J. Daly, MPA ’95<br />

Karl I. Danga, MIA ’72, IF ’71<br />

Gina Maria Dario, MIA ’00<br />

Sara Gabriela David<br />

Joel Davidow, IF ’63<br />

Adrienne D. Davis<br />

Edward N. De Lia, MIA ’87<br />

Dorothy T. de Vogel, CERT ’55<br />

Toni Elizabeth Dechario, MIA ’07<br />

Anthony Deckoff, MIA ’07<br />

Carol M. Degener, MIA ’84<br />

Katarina Deletis, MIA ’00<br />

Frank Anthony Dell’Aquila, MPA ’07<br />

Diane Leslie Demmler, MIA ’87<br />

Sonali S. Desai, MIA ’00<br />

Elinor M. Despalatovic, CERT ’59<br />

Amy K. Devaney<br />

Gary Francis Di Gesu, MIA ’89<br />

Philip E. Di Giovanni<br />

DONOR LIST <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Raphael A. Diaz, MIA ’63<br />

Daniel and Belle Dicker<br />

Jessica Ephra Dickler, MPA ’04<br />

Maria Christina Dikeos, MIA ’92<br />

Alok Disa<br />

Stephen D. Docter, MIA ’60<br />

Hidayet Dogan, MIA ’82<br />

Kerry Anne Dolan, MIA ’92<br />

Lucia Adele Domville, MIA ’96<br />

Melissa Sawin Donohue, MIA ’93<br />

Christianna Casey Dove, MIA ’06<br />

Sharla Kathryn Draemel, MPA ’01<br />

Bogdan Cornel Dragulescu, MPA ’03<br />

Ruth I. Dreessen, MIA ’80<br />

Bruce H. Drossman, MIA ’82, IF ’82,<br />

CERT ’82<br />

Jennifer Bee Dudley, MPA ’04<br />

Grant M. Duers, MPA ’07<br />

Christopher William Dula<br />

Leo J. Dulacki<br />

Matthew W. Dundrea, IF ’77<br />

Cecilia Elizabeth Dunn, MPA ’93<br />

Edward K. Dzielenski<br />

E. Michael Easterly, MIA ’68<br />

Joanne Edgar, MIA ’68<br />

Wakana Nakagami Edmister, MPA ’02<br />

John Ehrman, MIA ’83<br />

William B. Eimich<br />

Isaac Manfred Elfstrom, MIA ’07<br />

Francis Granville Eliot, MIA ’11<br />

Susanne Noelle Elizer, MPA ’96<br />

Betsy Rossen Elliot, MIA ’84, IF ’84<br />

Sari J. Ellovich, MIA ’75<br />

Chase Edward Emmerson<br />

Rida Eng, MIA ’00<br />

Gordon Epstein, MIA ’75, IF ’75,<br />

CERT ’75<br />

Dara Erck, MIA ’03<br />

Amelia A. Erwitt, MPA ’06<br />

Franklin Etchu Egbe, MPA ’11<br />

Travis F. Evans<br />

James David Fahn, MIA ’02<br />

Peter Seth Falcier, MIA ’07<br />

Joshua Chaplin Farley, MIA ’90, CERT ’90<br />

Susan Silver Farley, MIA ’78<br />

Robert S. Faron, IF ’75<br />

Maheen Saleem Farooqi, MIA ’11<br />

Judy Anne Farrell, MPA ’96<br />

Antoine Faye<br />

Brent Feigenbaum, MIA ’84<br />

Aurelius Fernandez, MIA ’59<br />

Alexander Patrick Conrad Fernando,<br />

MIA ’05<br />

Nancy A. Ferrante, MIA ’09<br />

Craig James Ferrantino, MIA ’92<br />

Diane P. Fink, MIA ’79<br />

Roger Ransdell Fisk, MPA ’04<br />

Kristin Raphaele Willey Fitzgerald,<br />

MIA ’94<br />

Howard Barrett Flanders, IF ’62<br />

H. Joseph Flatau, MIA ’61<br />

Kathryn Anne Fleury, MIA ’93<br />

Bradley Feeney Foerster, MIA ’88,<br />

CERT ’88<br />

James Fonda, MPA ’07<br />

David Stewart Fondiller, MIA ’92<br />

Anne D. Ford, MIA ’05<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 41


DONOR LIST <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Laura Ellen Forlano, MIA ’01<br />

Edin Forto, MIA ’01, CERT ’01<br />

Laura Herbert Foster, MPA ’10<br />

Richard W. Foster, MIA ’69<br />

William S. Foster, MIA ’06<br />

Catherine Starin Foster-Anderson,<br />

MPA ’04<br />

Donald T. Fox<br />

Jackie Frankel, MPA ’09<br />

Hugh Corning Fraser, MPA ’95/<br />

Community Foundation of Greater<br />

Memphis<br />

Alexander Mols Fraser, MPA ’90<br />

Gerald S. Freedman, IF ’62<br />

Amy Esther Friedman, MIA ’92<br />

Caroline Hearn Fuchs, MIA ’86<br />

Brian Barden Fuller, MPA ’11<br />

Robert John Gallagher, MIA ’90<br />

Alexander Galsky, MIA ’10<br />

Matthew Phillip Gantz<br />

Karina Garcia-Casalderrey, MIA ’02<br />

Emma Gardner, MIA ’11<br />

John G. Garrard, CERT ’64<br />

Frances X. Gates<br />

Stephen Bernt Gaull, MIA ’88, CERT ’88<br />

Joseph G. Gavin, MIA ’70<br />

Benjamin D. Geber, MPA ’90<br />

Brian Houng Gee, MIA ’04<br />

Russell W. Geekie, MIA ’01<br />

Frank Hermannus Gerritzen, MIA ’94<br />

Daniel J. Gettings, MIA ’96<br />

Osama Gharizi, MIA ’11<br />

Elizabeth Schumann Ghauri, MIA ’94<br />

Christine Wrona Giallongo, MIA ’90,<br />

CERT ’90<br />

Susan C. Gigli, MIA ’87<br />

Diana Michele Glanternik, MPA ’05<br />

Vladimir Nicolas Glasinovic, MIA ’11<br />

Adam Spencer Glatzer, MPA ’07<br />

John J. Gmerek<br />

Eric Daniel Goldstein, MIA ’86<br />

Edward Daniel Gometz, MIA ’01<br />

Grace Ellen Goodell, MIA ’69<br />

Nicholas Nickfant Gouede, MIA ’86<br />

David E. Gould, IF ’94, MIA ’94<br />

Rodney E. Gould, IF ’68<br />

Allan I. Grafman, MIA ’77, IF ’77/<br />

Allmedia Ventures<br />

Ann Blumberg Graham, MIA ’81<br />

Francis Lincoln Grahlfs, CERT ’55<br />

John A. Grammer, MIA ’63<br />

Jennifer Youtz Grams, MPA ’99<br />

Carolyn B. Green, MIA ’63<br />

Karl Hans Greimel, MIA ’98<br />

Andrea Christine Griffin, MIA ’11<br />

Jill M. Grillo, MIA ’89<br />

Carole A. Grunberg, MIA ’78<br />

Guy B. Gugliotta, MIA ’73<br />

Sahil Gulati<br />

Jian Wei Guo, MPA ’04<br />

Sarita Gupta, MIA ’79, CERT ’79<br />

Daniel and Susan Gutterman<br />

Deena Jal Guzder, MIA ’08<br />

Jonathan Sullivan Gyurko, MPA ’00<br />

Viktoria Habanova, MIA ’08<br />

Michele Anke Haberland, MPA ’04<br />

Amir Hadziomeragic, MIA ’01<br />

42 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

Brigid Flynn Haeckel, MPA ’90<br />

W. David Hager, IF ’66<br />

Robin Greene Hagey, MIA ’80<br />

Ayesha Haider-Marra, MIA ’04<br />

Mykola Haliv<br />

Scott Praeger Hall, MIA ’92<br />

Bonnie Sue Halpern, MIA ’72<br />

Joel Martin Halpern<br />

Shamsul Haque, MPA ’10<br />

Ayelet Klara Haran, MPA ’11<br />

Katherine Olivia Hardy, MIA ’97<br />

Velinda Tomelden Harjono, MIA ’97<br />

Vanessa H. Harper, MIA ’10<br />

Jonathan Harris, MIA ’59, CERT ’59<br />

Laura Suzanne Harwood, MPA ’92<br />

Md Mehdi Hassan, MIA ’00<br />

James G. Hatcher, IF ’62<br />

Gary Edward Hayes, MIA ’81, CERT ’81<br />

Maureen Hays-Mitchell, MIA ’83,<br />

CERT ’83<br />

Susan L. Hazard<br />

Lisa Ray Hecht-Cronstedt, MIA ’08<br />

Rex S. Heinke, IF ’74<br />

Elizabeth W. Heinsohn, MIA ’89<br />

Hertha W. Heiss, CERT ’51<br />

Gladys Heitin and Elliott Klitzman<br />

Joshua Rob Hepola, MIA ’00, IF ’00<br />

Alan J. Herbach, MIA ’79<br />

Richard Hermanowski<br />

Miguel Angel Hernandez, MIA ’01<br />

Garry W. Hesser, IF ’64<br />

Andrew William Higgins, MIA ’91<br />

John F. Hildebrand, IF ’66<br />

Peter J. Hill, MPA ’11<br />

William E. Hiller, IF ’76<br />

Johanna Hjerthen, MIA ’98<br />

Nadia Man-Chuang Ho, MIA ’03<br />

Lyndell A. Hogan, MPA ’93<br />

Leif Holmberg, MIA ’08<br />

Michael A. Holubar, MIA ’77<br />

Nicole Janine Holzapfel, MIA ’94<br />

Lindsey Levit Honari, MIA ’97<br />

Joon Seok Hong, MIA ’05<br />

Janet Irene Horan, MPA ’05<br />

Pamela A. Houghtaling, MIA ’74,<br />

CERT ’74<br />

Gail Lewis Howard, MIA ’84<br />

William D. Howells, MIA ’60, CERT ’60<br />

John F. Howes, CERT ’54<br />

Kang Shih Huang, MIA ’74<br />

Christopher P. Hufstader, MIA ’96<br />

Richard W. Hull, CERT ’65<br />

Thomas N. Hull, MIA ’73, IF ’73,<br />

CERT ’73<br />

Joseph Kindall Hurd, MIA ’94, IF ’94<br />

Claire Estelle Marie Husson, MPA ’05<br />

Thomas J. Hyra, MIA ’76, IF ’76<br />

Francesco Rocco Iberg<br />

David Lee Ibsen<br />

Roberto Inda, MPA ’05<br />

Ehsan Isaac Iraniparast<br />

Helen Drew Isenberg, MIA ’54<br />

Ogniana Vassileva Ivanova, MIA ’02<br />

Thomas C. Izard<br />

Roy Christopher Jackson, MPA ’90<br />

Jennifer A. Jackson-Strage, MPA ’91<br />

Daniel N. Jacobs, CERT ’53<br />

Erik Jacobs, IF ’85, MIA ’85<br />

Eric Davis Jacobsen, MPA ’06<br />

Adam Jagelski, MIA ’95<br />

Wynne James, MIA ’71<br />

Rehan Rafay Jamil, MIA ’11<br />

Adrienne Mia Jarsvall, MPA ’11<br />

Christopher Silva Jenkins, MIA ’11<br />

Bradley Jennison<br />

Carlos Jerez-Bernal<br />

Mary Tyler Johnson, MPA ’04<br />

Richard J. Johnson, CERT ’65<br />

Sonia P. Johnson, MIA ’48<br />

Rashmi Elizabeth Jose<br />

John Charles Jove, MIA ’85<br />

Walter E. Judge, MIA ’85, IF ’85<br />

Peter H. Juviler, CERT ’54<br />

Velika Kabakchieva, MPA ’07<br />

Mark H. Kagan, MIA ’81, CERT ’81<br />

Stephanie Anne Kahn, MIA ’09<br />

Ann Dolan Kaiser, MIA ’80, IF ’80<br />

Kamil Kaluza, MPA ’06<br />

Nancy C. Kamen, MPA ’86<br />

Christopher Roger Kaminker, MIA ’09<br />

Amishi Ajay Kapadia, MIA ’02<br />

Elisa A. Kapell, MIA ’79, IF ’79, CERT ’79<br />

Alex M. Kaplan, MIA ’85<br />

Leonardo Karrer, MIA ’09 and Kristen<br />

Marie Cleven, MIA ’09<br />

Lloyd R. Kass, MPA ’98<br />

Richard G. Kass<br />

Lilian Kastner, MIA ’06<br />

Elizabeth Lynn Katkin, MIA ’92, IF ’92<br />

Peggy Ockkyung Kauh, MPA ’01<br />

Hirofumi Kawakita, MPA ’01<br />

Michael Barden Keegan, IF ’86<br />

Spurgeon M. Keeny<br />

Katherine B. Keller, MIA ’82<br />

Charles Robert Kelly, MIA ’83<br />

Donn M. Kessler<br />

Clarice J. Kestenbaum<br />

John F. Khanlian, MIA ’69<br />

Michele Llona Wray Khateri, MIA ’97<br />

Bahman Kia, CERT ’80<br />

Yoshiko Kido<br />

Mary C. King, MIA ’79<br />

Noelle King, IF ’84<br />

Brigitte Lehner Kingsbury, MIA ’89<br />

Gordon A. Kingsley, MIA ’81<br />

Molly Catherine Kinney, MIA ’93<br />

Nancy K. Kintner-Meyer, MIA ’89<br />

James Henry Kipers, MIA ’02<br />

Nina Kishore, MPA ’07<br />

Adam Ferrier Klauber, MPA ’04<br />

Jean L. Klein<br />

Bernard Klem, MIA ’63<br />

Anne R. Knulst, MIA ’51<br />

Murat Kocabas, MIA ’11<br />

Anjali Devi Kochar, MIA ’01<br />

Kari Odquist Kohl, MIA ’99<br />

Junji Koike, MPA ’11<br />

Annette Phyllis Kondo, IF ’86<br />

Paik Har Kong, MIA ’82<br />

Sandra Y. Koo, MIA ’90 and<br />

Jonathan Shaw<br />

Victor Koshkin-Youritzin, IF ’65<br />

Stephanie Jane Kosmo, MIA ’84<br />

Tushar D. Kothari<br />

P. Nicholas Kourides, IF ’70<br />

Paul M. Kozar, MIA ’75<br />

Lomi Laura Kriel and Rachel Gabrielle<br />

Uranga<br />

Matt Kumparatana, MPA ’02<br />

Carlos Augusto Kuriyama, MIA ’05 and<br />

Ann Mizumoto, MIA ’06<br />

Richard W. Kurz, MIA ’77<br />

Alina Kwak, MPA ’06<br />

Susanne Kyzivat, MIA ’84<br />

Elizabeth A. LaBarbera, MPA ’10<br />

Laurin L. Laderoute, IF ’66<br />

Polly Nora Lagana, MPA ’04<br />

Thomas M. Lahiff, MIA ’74<br />

Andres Lalinde<br />

James Lalremruata, MPA ’03<br />

Jose M. Lamas, MIA ’86<br />

Richard M. Lamport, MIA ’62<br />

Debbie A. Landres, MIA ’06<br />

Julie Werner Lane, MPA ’92<br />

Thomas Richard Lansner, MIA ’91<br />

Claudia Laviada, MIA ’00<br />

Eugene Kistler Lawson, CERT ’69<br />

Bozidar Lazarevic<br />

Lynn F. Lee, MIA ’57<br />

Grace Lee, MIA ’07<br />

Seung-Yeon Lee, MIA ’03<br />

Bogdan Theodore Leja, MIA ’91<br />

Philip J. Lemanski, MPA ’86<br />

Amanda V. Leness, MIA ’93<br />

Suzanna Lengyel<br />

Sandra M. Lennon, MIA ’95<br />

Oliver Andrew Lennox, MIA ’09<br />

Ignacio Leon Gil<br />

Lane Russell Leskela, MIA ’89<br />

Julia and Robert Lester<br />

Gina Patricia LeVeque, MIA ’07<br />

Sergio Levin, MIA ’79<br />

Joshua Gregory Levine, MIA ’99, IF ’99<br />

Noah M. Levine, MIA ’05<br />

Nadine Netter Levy, MIA ’70/Hess-Levy<br />

Family Foundation<br />

Deborah Jacobs Levy, MPA ’92<br />

James John Lewellis, MIA ’04<br />

David Yifong Li, MIA ’08<br />

Fiona Fangxin Li, MIA ’10<br />

Xuehui Li, MIA ’05<br />

Arthur Dominique Liacre, MIA ’04<br />

Amy Lile, MPA ’05<br />

Mony Liquard, MIA ’02<br />

Alexandre Brites Lira, MPA ’08<br />

John Joseph Lis, MIA ’96, IF ’96,<br />

CERT ’96<br />

Daniel Brown Little, MIA ’05<br />

Kai-Chun Liu, MPA ’82<br />

Victoria Liu, MIA ’75, CERT ’75<br />

Robert T. Livernash, MIA ’73, IF ’73<br />

Jennifer Catherine Livingstone, MIA ’11<br />

Emily Yottie Loebelson<br />

Ka Chun Georgina Lok, MPA ’06<br />

Jody Susan London, MPA ’90<br />

James Michael Lonergan, MPA ’92<br />

Austin Long<br />

William P. Looney<br />

Andrew David Lorber, MIA ’08<br />

William Anthony Lorenz, MIA ’99<br />

Ronald Dean Lorton, MIA ’71, IF ’71


Ping Fong Louie, MIA ’85<br />

Sarah Pressman Lovinger, MIA ’90<br />

Paik-Swan Low, MIA ’85 and Steven<br />

Arthur Hirsch, MPA ’85<br />

Erica Granetz Lowitz, MPA ’94<br />

Julia Y. Lu, MPA ’03<br />

William H. Luers<br />

Jessica Lustbader, MPA ’11<br />

Mark J. Lux, MIA ’79<br />

Yuwei Ma, MIA ’07<br />

Cynthia MacDonald, IF ’77<br />

Vernon L. Mack, MIA ’73<br />

Patricia M. Macken<br />

Alberta S. Magzanian, CERT ’56<br />

Harpreet Mahajan, CERT ’80<br />

Michael Thomas Maier, MIA ’08<br />

Kenneth F. Mailloux, CERT ’74<br />

Haim Malka, MIA ’01<br />

Roy Andrew Malmrose, MIA ’84<br />

Joel Nordin Maloney, MIA ’96<br />

Paulo Cesar de F. Mamede, MPA ’05<br />

Lawrence H. Mamiya, IF ’68<br />

Sarah Vanesa Manaker, MIA ’04, IF ’04<br />

Harriet Lee Mandel, MIA ’85, CERT ’85<br />

Judyt L. Mandel<br />

Justin Mandel, MIA ’09<br />

Richard V. B. Manix, IF ’70<br />

Theodore E. Mankovich, IF ’71<br />

Roberta T. Manning<br />

Ida May H. Mantel, MIA ’64<br />

Robert B. Mantel, MIA ’63<br />

Thibaud Marcesse, MIA ’05<br />

Sarah Marchal Murray, MPA ’04<br />

Frank J. Marsella, MIA ’76<br />

Edward Adger Marshall, MIA ’03<br />

Randi Marshall, MPA ’02<br />

Zachary Blake Marshall, MIA ’91,<br />

IF ’91<br />

Michael G. Martinson, MIA ’70<br />

Raul Kazimierz Martynek, MIA ’93<br />

M. Haytham Matthews, IF ’78<br />

Anneliese Farrell Mauch, MIA ’93,<br />

CERT ’93<br />

Rebecca Lynn May<br />

Elizabeth Sheafe Mayer<br />

Toby E. Mayman, MIA ’65<br />

Glenn Edward McCartan, MPA ’11<br />

Amanda Waring McClenahan, MPA ’02<br />

Alexander Ian McCloskey, MPA ’05<br />

Ann Hunt McDermott, MPA ’90<br />

John Lewis McDonald, MIA ’93,<br />

CERT ’93<br />

Brian C. McDonnell, MPA ’80<br />

Alan B. McDougall, MPA ’92<br />

Clifford Andrew McGadney, MPA ’06<br />

Eugenia McGill, MIA ’00<br />

Fred F. McGoldrick, MIA ’66<br />

James D. McGraw, MIA ’55<br />

John T. McGuire, MIA ’63/McGuire<br />

Family Foundation<br />

Rose W. McHenry, MIA ’62<br />

Anne N. McIntosh, MIA ’85, IF ’85<br />

Robert Calvin McKenney, MIA ’08<br />

John McKinley, MIA ’11<br />

Kathleen Roberta McNamara, MIA ’89,<br />

CERT ’89<br />

Robert E. McNulty, MIA ’83<br />

Patricia Marie McSharry, MIA ’86,<br />

CERT ’86<br />

Mary Helen McSweeney-Feld, MIA ’79<br />

Stephanie Hope Meade, MIA ’02<br />

Laila M. Mehdi, MIA ’86<br />

Neeru Mehra, MIA ’79<br />

Richard Mei, MIA ’85<br />

Claire Anne Bradt Meier, MIA ’04<br />

Joslyn Edelstein Meier, MIA ’07<br />

Hermes Elpidio Mena, MPA ’09<br />

Jack W. Mendelsohn, CERT ’77<br />

Patricia Bernadette Mendoza, MIA ’97<br />

Stephen Carlos Mercado, MIA ’88,<br />

CERT ’88<br />

Stephanie Crane Mergenthaler, MIA ’98<br />

Michael G. Merin, MIA ’84, IF ’84,<br />

CERT ’84<br />

Alexandra Merle-Huet, MIA ’04<br />

Samuel Austin Merrill, MIA ’99, IF ’99<br />

Katherine M. Metres, MIA ’97, IF ’97<br />

Jeffrey Peter Metzler, MPA ’99<br />

Calvin Marshall Mew, IF ’72<br />

Brian R. Meyers, MPA ’06<br />

Frank J. Miceli, MIA ’92<br />

Thomas R. Michelmore, MIA ’74<br />

Adin Calis Miller, MPA ’96<br />

Charles Russell Miller, MIA ’99, CERT ’99<br />

George R. Milner, MIA ’49 and Norah<br />

Leckey Milner, MIA ’49<br />

Courtney Sara Lawrence Minard, MIA ’03<br />

Edmund M. Mitchell, MIA ’73<br />

Marilyn Mitchell<br />

Ayoti Mittra, MIA ’11<br />

Arsalan Mohajer<br />

Redmond Kathleen Molz<br />

Kathleen P. Mone, MPA ’81<br />

Jeffrey Gordon Moore, MIA ’85,<br />

CERT ’85<br />

Joanne Catherine Moore, MPA ’00 and<br />

Kenneth C. Moore<br />

Charlotte T. Morgan-Cato, MIA ’67<br />

Kin W. Moy, MIA ’90<br />

Louis J. Murphy, MIA ’64<br />

Rebecca Elizabeth Myers, MPA ’07<br />

Robert O. Myhr, MIA ’62<br />

James P. Nach, MIA ’66<br />

Jonathan Jacob Nadler, MPA ’81<br />

Sawa Nakagawa, MIA ’09<br />

Sidney Nakao Nakahodo, MIA ’05<br />

Meghan E.W. Nalbo, MIA ’07<br />

Ophelie Namiech, MIA ’11<br />

Joseph Francis Napoli, MIA ’89<br />

Richard B. Nash, IF ’83<br />

Edward Joseph Naughton, MIA ’08<br />

Olga Nedeljkovic<br />

Michele Diane Needham, MPA ’92<br />

Chadwick C. Nehrt, IF ’81<br />

Oksana Dackiw Nesterczuk, MIA ’81,<br />

CERT ’81<br />

Daniel Thomas Newmann, MPA ’10<br />

Richard T. Newman, MIA ’51<br />

Tan Nguyen<br />

Ann Nicol, MIA ’77<br />

David Michael Nidus, MPA ’98<br />

Christopher K. Nikolakopoulos, MIA ’52<br />

Lila Fatemeh Noury, MIA ’06<br />

Joanna Rachel Novick<br />

Hannah Fay Nudell, MIA ’09, IF ’09<br />

Ronald W. O’Connor, IF ’64<br />

Thomas F. O’Connor, MIA ’76<br />

Noreen O’Donnell, MIA ’97<br />

Peter Damian O’Driscoll, MIA ’97<br />

James A. Oesterle, MIA ’65, IF ’65<br />

Lorelei Brooke O’Hagan, MIA ’08<br />

Harry John O’Hara, MIA ’91, IF ’91 and<br />

Annika Linden O’Hara, MIA ’91<br />

Valdimir Olarte Cadavid<br />

Amber Elana Oliver, MIA ’02, IF ’02<br />

Christina Marie Oliver, MPA ’04<br />

Irvin Washington Oliver, MIA ’08, IF ’08<br />

Clarence W. Olmstead, IF ’67<br />

Paul Victor Olsson, MIA ’87<br />

Onuwabhagbe Abbey Omokhodion,<br />

MIA ’00<br />

Yalman Onaran, MIA ’93<br />

Gwynne Arian Oosterbaan, MIA ’97,<br />

CERT ’97<br />

Mary Ann Oppenheimer, MIA ’69<br />

Marie Agnes O’Reilly, MIA ’11<br />

Angela Ortiz, MIA ’08<br />

Ashley Coats Orton, MIA ’07, CERT ’07<br />

Bruce A. Ortwine, MIA ’78<br />

Joseph Osenni, MPA ’79<br />

Kimberley Ostrowski, MPA ’07<br />

Laura Otterbourg, MIA ’87<br />

Marilyn G. Ozer, MIA ’71<br />

William M. Packard, IF ’70<br />

Elizabeth Sherrerd Page, MPA ’98<br />

Angie P. Palacios<br />

Eunha Enna Park, MIA ’89<br />

Amitabh Passi, MIA ’05<br />

Amal Shashikant Patel, MIA ’02 and<br />

Darcy Diane Anderson, MIA ’02<br />

Radha N. Patel, MPA ’06<br />

Grant R. Patrick, MIA ’81<br />

Susan C. Patterson, MIA ’77<br />

Kathleen A. Pauker, MIA ’79<br />

Jessica Horan Payne, MPA ’02<br />

Andrew Collins Peach, MIA ’98<br />

John Edward Peck, CERT ’91<br />

John A. Pecoul, IF ’64<br />

Barbara Pehlivanian<br />

Richard J. Pera, MIA ’79<br />

Diana Carolina Pereira<br />

Don Peretz<br />

Jack R. Perry, CERT ’58<br />

Ned King Peterson, MIA ’06, IF ’06<br />

Dennis E. Petito, MIA ’77<br />

Lawrence C. Petrowski, IF ’69<br />

Peter J. Pettibone<br />

Elizabeth M. Phillips, MIA ’79<br />

Maurice J. Picard, MIA ’61<br />

James Brian Pieri, MPA ’07<br />

Andrew J. Pierre, MIA ’57, IF ’57<br />

Monica Pina Alzugaray, MIA ’11<br />

Jeffrey M. Pines, IF ’71<br />

Daphne Anne Pinkerson, MIA ’85<br />

Vanessa Pino Lockel, MPA ’03<br />

Costantino Pischedda<br />

Amanda Pitman<br />

Robert Walter Pitulej, MPA ’96<br />

Rachel L. Pohl, MPA ’84, IF ’84<br />

Victor M. Polce, MIA ’79<br />

Sally Soo Hoo Pon, MPA ’82<br />

DONOR LIST <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

David L. Porter, IF ’63<br />

Margaret Edsall Powell, MIA ’01<br />

Jennifer Elise Powers-Darrington,<br />

MIA ’06<br />

Chandni Sivasriaumphai Prasad, MIA ’96<br />

Sarah C. Pratt<br />

Beatriz Prieto-Oramas, MIA ’05<br />

Joseph Procopio, MIA ’72<br />

Kelly Proctor, MPA ’10<br />

James Frederick Prusky, MIA ’96<br />

Sami Qadan, MPA ’07<br />

Glenda Liu Quarnstrom, MIA ’77,<br />

CERT ’77<br />

Jenik R. Radon<br />

Chitra Raghavacharya, MIA ’01<br />

Thomas Nelson Rains, MPA ’11<br />

Allison Joy Ramler, MIA ’96, CERT ’96<br />

Timothy Paul Ramsey, MIA ’93<br />

Rikha Sharma Rani, MIA ’11<br />

Andrea L. Rankin, MPA ’97<br />

David J. Ransdell, MIA ’82<br />

Adam Clive Raphaely, MPA ’07<br />

Jonathan Jellis Rawlings<br />

Gary J. Reardon, MPA ’80<br />

Eunice S. Reddick, MIA ’74, IF ’74<br />

Beth Karen Rehman, MIA ’05<br />

Richard T. Reiter, MIA ’85<br />

Jason Warren Rekate, MIA ’00<br />

Janet S. Resele-Tiden, MIA ’92<br />

Michelle D. Rexach-Subira, MPA ’96<br />

Russell E. Richey, IF ’65<br />

Scott Andrew Richman, MIA ’91<br />

Susan B. Rifkin, MIA ’69, CERT ’69<br />

Samuel Hamilton Rikkers, MIA ’04<br />

Eduardo Rivas, MIA ’04<br />

Nina Camille Robbins, MIA ’11<br />

Yoel Ephrain Robens-Paradise, MPA ’92<br />

Debra Leigh Robertson, MPA ’02<br />

Sara E. Robertson, MIA ’84<br />

Pearl Theodora Robinson, CERT ’72<br />

William Rodgers, MIA ’91<br />

Catherine Rodriguez, MPA ’10, IF ’10<br />

Dorena Lynn Rodriguez, MPA ’96<br />

Riordan J. A. Roett, MIA ’61<br />

Andrew Romay<br />

Patricia Rooney, MIA ’82<br />

Susan O. Rose, CERT ’68<br />

Kathryn Ann Rosenblum, MIA ’86<br />

Emily Glaser Ross<br />

Jay Ross, MPA ’11<br />

Susan A. S. Rosthal, MIA ’71<br />

Nathalie E. Roth, MIA ’00<br />

Elizabeth Rothkopf, MIA ’99<br />

Seymour Rotter, CERT ’49<br />

Oleg Radkov Rouptchin, MIA ’02<br />

Richard C. Rowson, MIA ’50<br />

Joanne Golden Ruchman, MIA ’77, IF ’77<br />

Moises Rudelman, MIA ’01<br />

George F. Ruffner, MIA ’72<br />

Robert R. Ruggiero<br />

Stephanie Priscilla Ruiz<br />

Andrew James Russell, MIA ’89<br />

Nona J. Russell, MPA ’85<br />

Leonas Sabaliunas, MIA ’58, CERT ’58<br />

Margaret Heflin Sabbag, MIA ’98<br />

Anthony R. Saccomano, MIA ’70<br />

Nigora Sachdeva, MIA ’11<br />

<strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS 43


DONOR LIST <strong>SIPA</strong><br />

Haroon Saeed, MIA ’95<br />

Carol R. Saivetz, MIA ’71, CERT ’71<br />

Simon Guadalupe Salas, MPA ’83<br />

Alexandra Lisa Salomon, MIA ’99<br />

Emily Saltzman Hoffner, MPA ’90<br />

Teresita Lucia Sanabria, MPA ’89<br />

Sybil Bess Sanchez, MIA ’97<br />

Erica Sanders<br />

Elizabeth Perschbacher Sands, MPA ’07<br />

Jahmal Liani Sands, MIA ’11<br />

Leslie Anne Santamaria, MIA ’06<br />

Ana Catalina Santos Ramos<br />

Manabu Sasaki, MIA ’01<br />

Matthew Schiavenza<br />

Carl Schieren, MIA ’67<br />

Daniele Megan Schiffman, MPA ’02<br />

Miriam Shahrzad Schive, MIA ’11<br />

Kurt A. Schreder, MIA ’93 and Caroline<br />

Paulus Schreder, MIA ’92<br />

David J. Schurman, IF ’63<br />

Chantal Schuster, MIA ’07<br />

Ana S. Schwartz, MIA ’82<br />

Frederick D. Seaton, MIA ’62, IF ’62<br />

Abilene Tralee Seguin<br />

Lynn A. Seirup, MIA ’80<br />

Kaoruko Seki, MIA ’93, IF ’93<br />

Albert Seligmann, MIA ’49<br />

Irwin S. Selnick, CERT ’78<br />

Marc Jay Selverstone, MIA ’92<br />

Nina Maria Serafino, MIA ’76<br />

Karen Serota and Lauren C. Serota,<br />

MIA ’05<br />

Katayoun Mary Shahrokhi, MIA ’08<br />

Jennifer Shaoul, MPA ’90<br />

Amita Sharma, MPA ’08<br />

Howard Jerome Shatz, MIA ’91<br />

Emy Shayo, MIA ’99<br />

Dan Ray Shepherd, MPA ’08<br />

Barnet Sherman, MPA ’82<br />

Sanford T. Sherman, MIA ’82<br />

Elisabeth Day Sherwood, MIA ’95<br />

Betsy Pollack Shimberg, MPA ’97<br />

Karlan Ison Sick<br />

Michael David Sieburg<br />

Marc J. Sievers, MIA ’80, IF ’80, CERT ’80<br />

Kathryn Angel Sikkink, CERT ’84<br />

Jennifer Marie Silvi, MIA ’09<br />

Michael Silvia, MIA ’79<br />

Melvyn J. Simburg, MIA ’71, IF ’71<br />

Kuldip K. Singh, MIA ’77<br />

Vicki Sittenfeld, MPA ’82<br />

Joseph C. Small, IF ’68 and Alice K. Small<br />

Susan V. Smith Santini, MPA ’93<br />

David Burton Snow, MIA ’98<br />

Roberto E. Socas, MIA ’55<br />

Anastasia Sochynsky<br />

Elaine Carol Soffer, MPA ’83<br />

Richard J. Soghoian, IF ’65<br />

Stephen A. Sokol, MIA ’01<br />

Debra E. Soled, MIA ’82, CERT ’82<br />

Jan Solomon, CERT ’75<br />

Andre Israel Solorzano Dimas<br />

Ellen Solowey, MIA ’86, CERT ’86<br />

Frances G. Sonkin, MIA ’75<br />

Christian R. Sonne, MIA ’62, CERT ’62<br />

Aimee Duncan Sostowski, MIA ’07<br />

Stephen H. Spahn, IF ’65<br />

44 <strong>SIPA</strong> NEWS<br />

Molly Catherine Spencer, MPA ’97<br />

Arthur Finn Spring, MIA ’88<br />

Daniel Sreebny, MIA ’78<br />

Charles H. Srodes, IF ’65<br />

Robert Francis Staats, MIA ’83<br />

Elizabeth Stabler, MIA ’56<br />

Marisa C. Stadtmauer, MPA ’93<br />

Claire S. Stelter<br />

Loren M. Stephens, MIA ’67<br />

Amir Abraham Sternhell MIA ’91<br />

Clyde Donald Stoltenberg, MIA ’85<br />

Hari Subhash<br />

Colin Sullivan<br />

Jennifer Jaryi Sun, MIA ’97<br />

Niamh Teresa Sweeney<br />

Alison Kimberly Swenton, MIA ’00<br />

Anne Bernadette Talley, MIA ’94<br />

Alice Ayling Tan, MPA ’01<br />

Ellie Tang, MIA ’09<br />

Florence Tatistcheff-Amzallag, MIA ’76<br />

Eda Franzetti Tato, MIA ’80<br />

William C. Taubman, IF ’63, CERT ’63<br />

Carlos Felix Terrones, MPA ’08<br />

Gweneth Michelle Thirwell, MPA ’06<br />

Paul A. Thompson, MIA ’73<br />

Anna Throne-Holst, MIA ’06<br />

David G. Timberman, MIA ’80<br />

Stephen E. Tisman, IF ’72<br />

Richard Stephen Tobin, MPA ’08<br />

Elizabeth Anne Toder, MIA ’96<br />

Alper Sadik Tokozlu, MIA ’01<br />

Nuria Tolsa Caballero, MIA ’11<br />

Rebecca Rosenblum Tolson, MIA ’94 and<br />

M. Grant Tolson, MIA ’95<br />

M. Tomaszewski<br />

Gabriel Topor, MIA ’92, CERT ’92<br />

Fumitsugu Tosu, MPA ’11<br />

Jennifer Elizabeth Toth, MIA ’04<br />

Ruth E. Townsend<br />

Cathy Rivara Trezza, MIA ’85<br />

Christopher G. Trump, IF ’62<br />

Alilsa Fatma Tugberk de Macedo, MIA ’06<br />

Rebecca Hales Tunstall, MIA ’04<br />

Margaret Ann Turbett, MIA ’84<br />

Robert F. Turetsky, MIA ’72<br />

Mark Owen Turner, MIA ’95<br />

Philip Harry Tuson<br />

Melinda Macdonald Twomey, MIA ’84<br />

Natalia Udovik, MIA ’69<br />

Yuki Uehara, MIA ’04<br />

Takako Ugaya, MPA ’94<br />

Andrew Umans, MIA ’10<br />

Miguel Urquiola<br />

Ali Vakili<br />

Barbara A. Van Geyzel, MIA ’77<br />

Marten H. A. Van Heuven, MIA ’57<br />

Jorge Luis Vargas, MIA ’98<br />

Christopher Michael Vaughn, MIA ’98,<br />

IF ’98<br />

Natalia Vladimirovna Vazhenina, MIA ’11<br />

Ilona Jaramillo Vega, MIA ’94<br />

Leona Isabelle Verdadero<br />

Milka Petrovich Verhaegen, MIA ’85<br />

Neelam Verjee, MPA ’11<br />

Nimish Verma, MIA ’11<br />

Edward J. Vernoff, MIA ’69<br />

Dario Enrique Vilchez, MIA ’10<br />

Susannah Violino, MIA ’81<br />

Justin Gregory Vogt, MIA ’06, IF ’06<br />

Carrie Staub Vomacka, MIA ’06<br />

Ulric Erickson Von Allmen, MIA ’94<br />

Stephanie Von Stein, MIA ’93<br />

Clark David Wagner, MIA ’85<br />

Karen Marie Wagner, MIA ’02<br />

Linda Mary Wagner, MPA ’08<br />

Maria M. Waite-Nied, MPA ’82<br />

Sarah A. Walbert, MIA ’80<br />

Carrie Walker, MPA ’09<br />

Robert Kimball Wallace, IF ’67<br />

Jeffrey Gene Waller, MIA ’02<br />

Jesse Campoll Walter<br />

Stephen Christopher Wamback, MPA ’90<br />

Shontel Lenore Ward, MPA ’06<br />

Carl Thomas Watson, MIA ’04<br />

Robert M. Watts, MIA ’80<br />

Rebecca VanLandingham Waugh,<br />

MIA ’00<br />

Christina Anne Way, MIA ’05<br />

Marian Lillian Weber, MPA ’07<br />

Egon E. Weck, MIA ’49<br />

Kimberly Anne Wedel, MPA ’88<br />

Benjamin Richard Weil, MIA ’92,<br />

CERT ’92<br />

Paul J. Weinstein, MIA ’87<br />

Gary Michael Weiskopf, MPA ’87 and<br />

Lynn Weiskopf, MPA ’91<br />

Morton P. Weitzman<br />

Marilyn S. Wellemeyer, MIA ’68<br />

Caitlin Elizabeth Welsh, MPA ’09<br />

Marilyn L. Wertheimer, CERT ’53<br />

Szczepan Wesoly<br />

Sandra L. West-Williams, MIA ’88<br />

Rebecca Kate Wexler, MIA ’11<br />

Donald F. Wheeler, CERT ’71<br />

Erika Buraczek Whillas<br />

Raymond D. White, IF ’64<br />

Susan Keil White, MIA ’01<br />

Gordon James Whiting, IF ’93<br />

Jill Sue Wilkins, MIA ’91<br />

H. David Willey, IF ’63<br />

Eli Steven Williams<br />

Elizabeth Wilner<br />

Ellen Katherine Wilson, MIA ’93<br />

Edward S. Winsor, MIA ’54<br />

Merle Beth Wise, MPA ’88<br />

Bret Philip Woellner, MIA ’07, IF ’07,<br />

CERT ’07<br />

Ezana Haile Woldegeorgise, MIA ’09<br />

Susan Hammond Wolford, MIA ’79<br />

William D. Wolle, MIA ’51<br />

Menen Wondwosen, MIA ’11<br />

Scott G. Wong, MIA ’11<br />

Gilda Gates Wray, MIA ’66<br />

Dana Ying-Hui Wu, MPA ’92<br />

Michele M. Wucker, MIA ’93, CERT ’93<br />

Norman G. Wycoff, MIA ’50<br />

Anastasia Xenias, CERT ’94<br />

Bernice Esi Yalley, MPA ’06<br />

Hidemasa Yamakawa, MIA ’92<br />

Joanne Stern Yaron<br />

Rebecca Yeh, MIA ’09<br />

Loretta M. Yenson, MIA ’82<br />

Sonia Eun Joo Yeo, MIA ’00<br />

David Yuriy Yesilevskiy, MIA ’09<br />

Ellis Woodworth Youdal, MIA ’95<br />

Mark Donald Young, MPA ’91<br />

Miriam A. Young, MIA ’91, CERT ’91<br />

William Jack Young, MPA ’90<br />

Ying-Yue Yung<br />

Laura Anne Zaks, MIA ’05<br />

Lawrence F. Zant, MIA ’51<br />

Michael Shiel Zdanovich, MIA ’88<br />

Marc-Claude Zeitoun, MIA ’91<br />

Mathias Zeller, MIA ’11<br />

Rachel Zenner Kane, MPA ’98<br />

Allan Jianhua Zhang, MIA ’03<br />

Chenguang Zhang, MPA ’08<br />

Siliang Zhou, MIA ’11<br />

Lauren Ziegler, MIA ’10<br />

Andrew W. Zimmerman, IF ’68<br />

Jonathan Zorach, CERT ’72<br />

Matching Gift Companies:<br />

234 Moonachie Corporation<br />

American Express Foundation<br />

Bank of America Foundation<br />

The Bank of New York Mellon<br />

Foundation<br />

Carnegie Corporation of New York<br />

Citizens Charitable Foundation<br />

Constellation Energy Group Foundation,<br />

Inc.<br />

Deloitte Foundation<br />

Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation<br />

Cleveland H. Dodge Foundation<br />

Ernst & Young Foundation<br />

ExxonMobil Foundation<br />

Fitch Ratings<br />

Goldman, Sachs & Company<br />

HSBC Bank USA<br />

IBM International Foundation<br />

J.P. Morgan Chase Foundation<br />

Juniper Networks<br />

MBIA Foundation, Inc.<br />

The McGraw-Hill Companies<br />

Foundation, Inc.<br />

MetLife Foundation<br />

The Morrison & Foerster Foundation<br />

Nomura America Foundation<br />

Pfizer Foundation<br />

Public Service Electric and Gas Company<br />

The Rockefeller Foundation<br />

The Moody’s Foundation<br />

Tyco<br />

Wells Fargo Foundation


<strong>SIPA</strong> News is published semiannually by <strong>SIPA</strong>’s Office of Communications and<br />

External Relations.<br />

Managing Editor: JoAnn Crawford<br />

Editors: Rebecca Chao, Ethan Wilkes<br />

Contributing writers:<br />

David Borenstein, Alex Burnett, Michelle Chahine, Rebecca Chao, John H. Coatsworth,<br />

Nathaniel Parish Flannery, Pat Jones, Andrea Moore, Crystal Neo, Sara Ray, Tim Sandole,<br />

Priyam Saraf, Martin Waehlisch, Ethan Wilkes, Jennifer Wilmore, and Behar Xharra<br />

Contributing photographers: Munshi Ahmed/Bloomberg/Getty Images, Theresa Barraclough/<br />

AFP/Getty Images, Patrick Baz/AFP/Getty Images, Eileen Barroso, Alejandro Bringas/<br />

REUTERS, Michelle Chahine, Sergei Chuzavkov/AP Photo, Susan Cook, Michael Dames,<br />

Jonathan Drake/Bloomberg/Getty Images, Gael Gonzalez/REUTERS, Jose Luis Gonzalez/<br />

REUTERS, David Gray/REUTERS, Boris Grdanoski/AP Photo, Tim Griffith, Phillip Hayson,<br />

Image Source/Getty Images, Chris Jackson/Getty Images, Blagoja Jankoski/Getty Images,<br />

Jakob Kamender, Francois Lenoir/REUTERS, Vladimir Maravic, Ben Pipe Photography/<br />

Getty Images, Christopher Reeve, William Wan/The Washington Post/Getty Images,<br />

John Wang/Getty Images<br />

Cover Photograph: Stan Honda/AFP/Getty Images<br />

Design and Production: Office of <strong>University</strong> Publications<br />

School of International and Public Affairs<br />

Dean: John H. Coatsworth<br />

Senior Associate Dean: Troy Eggers<br />

Associate Deans: Patrick Bohan, Jesse Gale, Caroline Kay, Dan McIntyre,<br />

and Shalini Mimani<br />

Office of Communications and External Relations<br />

Jesse Gale, Associate Dean, Communications and External Relations<br />

Alex Burnett, Communications Officer<br />

JoAnn Crawford, Director of Publications and Special Events<br />

Phoebe Ford, Web Specialist<br />

Pat Jones, Administrative Assistant<br />

Scott Pesner, Director of Alumni Affairs<br />

Sara Ray, Administrative Assistant<br />

Office of Alumni and Development<br />

Shalini Mimani, Associate Dean, Development<br />

Samuel Boyer, Assistant Director of Development<br />

Barbara Chan, Events and Stewardship Manager<br />

Madelyn Storms, Director of Development<br />

<strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

School of International and Public Affairs<br />

420 West 118th Street<br />

Office of Communications and External Relations:<br />

212-854-8671<br />

Fax: 212-854-8660<br />

www.sipa.columbia.edu


<strong>Columbia</strong> <strong>University</strong><br />

School of International and Public Affairs<br />

420 west 118th Street, Mail code 3328<br />

New York, NY 10027<br />

Nonprofit Org.<br />

U.S. Postage<br />

PAID<br />

New York, NY<br />

Permit No. 3593

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