PISP FELLOWSHIP


The 'Program on International Security Policy' ('PISP') 'Fellowship' is an undergraduate fellowship established in the University of Chicago by the Program on International Security Policy. Its main focus is on theories of international relation and is heavily rooted in the ideas of realism.

Contents
Description
Directors and eligibility
Speakers

Description


Fellows participate in active discussions, workshops and are invited to dinners with outside speakers. The fellowship is an important part of PISP and is an excellent way to gain exposure to the discipline of international politics in academia and policy making.

Directors and eligibility


The Fellowship is run by John Mearsheimer, Robert Pape, and Charles Glaser, all of them renowned theoreticians in the field of international politics and security. Every year around 20 University of Chicago students are nominated to participate in the program and a few of those are then selected as PISP Fellows. Most nominated students are selected because of their academic record, interest in the fields at hand, recommendations from previous fellows or faculty members and overall excellence. It is considered a high honor to be invited to join the fellowship and is often used as a launching pad for careers in academia and/or foreign affairs fields.

Speakers


Since it is the most important part of the program, the discussions and workshops are always led by high-profile academics who have established reputations in academia and the political world. Speakers from most elite universities in America and Europe, as well as members of the foreign policy, defense and intelligence communities have participated in the Fellowship.
Some of the speakers (and their organizations) that have participated in the program include:

Michael Gordon, New York Times

Peter J. Katzenstein, Cornell University

Dominic Johnson, Princeton University Society of Fellows

Michael C. Williams, University of Wales, Aberystwyth

Michael Massing, Columbia Journalism Review

Fred Halliday, London School of Economics

Merrill A. McPeak, Former Chief of Staff, U.S. Air Force

Kenneth Waltz, Columbia University, Institute of War and Peace Sudies

Stephen Flynn, Council on Foreign Relations

Lawrence Korb, Center for American Progress

Joseph Cirincione, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Keven Ruby, University of Chicago

Emily Goldman, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars

John Mearsheimer, University of Chicago

James Dobbins, RAND Corporation

Charles Kupchan, Georgetown University

Lora Viola, University of Chicago

Stephen Walt, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University

Jonathan Tucker, Monterey Institute of International Studies

Joel Westra, University of Chicago

Chaim Kaufmann, Lehigh University

Audrey Kurth Cronin, Congressional Research Service

Edward Rhodes, Rutgers University

David Kang, Dartmouth College

David Edelstein, Georgetown University

Alexander Downes, University of Chicago

Steven Miller, Harvard University

Paul Bracken, Yale University

Thomas Berger, Boston University

Paul Kennedy, Yale University

Sean Kay, Ohio Wesleyan University

Barnett Rubin, New York University

Ian Lustick, University of Pennsylvania

Mary Habeck, Yale University

Leon Sigal, Social Science Research Council

Daniel Philpott, University of Notre Dame

Kamal Sadiq, University of Chicago

Matthew Kocher, University of Chicago

Vincent Cannistraro, Former Chief of Counter-Terrorism, Central Intelligence Agency

Gerald Steinberg, Bar Ilan University

Mia Bloom, Hofstra University

Andrew Marshall, Department of Defense

Robert Pape, University of Chicago

Sebastian Rosata, University of Chicago

Richard Andres, School of Advanced Airpower Studies, Maxwell Air Force Base

Stephen Biddle, Strategic Studies Institute, U.S. Army War College

Richard Falkenrath, Office of Homeland Security

John Zogby, Zogby International

Frank Gavin, University of Texas

Samantha Power, Harvard University

Gary Milhollin, Wisconsin Project on Nuclear Arms Control

Sheri Berman, Princeton University

Paul Huth, University of Michigan

Stuart Kaufman, University of Kentucky

Stephen P. Cohen, The Brookings Institute

Daniel Byman, RAND Corporation

Victor Utgoff, Institute for Defense Analysis (IDA)

Stathis Kalyvas, University of Chicago

John Mueller, Ohio State University

Stephen Van Evera, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Tanisha Fazal, Harvard University

Michael Barnett, University of Wisconsin

Andrew Marshall, Office of Net Assessment, Pentagon

William Wohlforth, Dartmouth College

Morton Halperin, Council on Foreign Relations

Peter Feaver, Duke University

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