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    Brian Libgober

    Brian Libgober

    PhD in Political Science, 2018.
    Assistant Professor, School of Global Policy and Strategy, UC San Diego.


    Postdoctoral Associate and Lecturer in Political Science, Yale University, 2018-2020.

    Stone PhD Scholar in Inequality and Wealth Concentration, Harvard University, 2016-2018.

    Katerina Linos

    Katerina Linos

    JD'06 and PhD in Political Science, 2007.
    Professor of Law, UC Berkeley School of Law.
    Co-Director, Miller Institute for Global Challenges and the Law.


    Junior Fellow, Harvard Society of Fellows, 2006-2009.

    Andrew Carnegie Fellow, 2017. 
    Katerina Linos has been awarded a Carnegie fellowship to study the European refugee crisis.

    Katerina Linos led a team of UC Berkeley and UC Davis staff and students to create the interactive data project, Digital Refugee (digitalrefuge.berkeley.edu). Digital RefugeeThe team translated, coded, mapped and charted over 6,000 interviews with refugees, and over 10,000 facebook posts from Arabic and Farsi refugee sites, to contrast the official narrative of the European refugee crisis, with the refugee crisis seen from the perspective of displaced persons themselves. 

    The Democratic Foundations of Policy DiffusionKaterina Linos's first book, The Democratic Foundations of Policy Diffusion examines how health, family, and employment laws spread across countries. Oxford University Press, 2013.

    • Winner of the 2014 APSA Giovanni Sartori Prize for best book on qualitative methods.
       
    • Winner of the 2014 ISA Chadwick Alger Prize for best book on international organization and multilateralism.
       
    • Winner of the 2014 Peter Katzenstein Prize  for outstanding first book in international relations or comparative politics.
       
    • Selected among the Best Books of 2013 on Western Europe by Foreign Affairs.

    Awarded Larry Neal Prize for Excellence in EU Scholarship 2011.

    Awarded Harvard University Senator Charles M Sumner Prize for the best dissertation “from the legal, political, historical, economic, social, or ethnic approach, dealing with any means or measures tending toward the prevention of war and the establishment of universal peace," 2007.

    Daniel Moskowitz

    Daniel Moskowitz

    PhD in Political Science, 2019.
    Assistant Professor, University of Chicago Harris School of Public Policy.


    Patrick J. Fett Award for the best paper on the scientific study of Congress and the presidency presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, 2020.

    Evan Ringquist Award for the best paper on political institutions presented at the annual meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, 2020.

    Viridiana Rios

    Viridiana Rios

    PhD in Government, 2013.
    Visiting Assistant Professor of Government, Harvard University.
    Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Purdue University.


    Global Fellow, The Mexico Institute, 2016-present.

    Fellow, The Wilson Center for International Scholars, 2015-2016.

    CEO of México ¿Cómo vamos?, a Mexican think tank that studies economic development, 2014-2015.


    Selected as a Young Global Leader 2020 by the World Economic Forum for her vision, courage, and influence to drive positive change in Mexico. 

    Winner of the Will H. Moore  III Prize, Peace Science Society, 2019. Awarded for the paper published in the Journal of Conflict Management or Conflict Management and Peace Science that most effectively addresses issues related to the integrity and respect accorded to individual political rights and freedoms.

    Selected by the Mexican Senate as the youngest selection commissioner of the National Anticorruption System, 2016. 

    Winner of the American Political Science Association's Leonard D. White Award, honoring the best dissertation in the field of public administration for her dissertation is titled, "How Government Structure Encourages Criminal Violence: The Causes of Mexico's Drug War," 2014.

    Ariel White

    Ariel White

    PhD in Political Science, 2016.
    Silverman Family Career Development Associate Professor of Political Science, MIT.


    Heinz I. Eulau Award for best article published in American Political Science Review (“What Do I Need to Vote?”), American Political Science Association, 2016.

    Robert Noxon Toppan prize for best dissertation in political science, Harvard University, 2016.

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