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Annual Report 2016-2017

Annual Report 2016-2017 - School of International and ...international trade and finance, and macroeconomic and monetary policy. Our faculty include both internationally recognized

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Page 1: Annual Report 2016-2017 - School of International and ...international trade and finance, and macroeconomic and monetary policy. Our faculty include both internationally recognized

Annual Report 2016-2017

Page 2: Annual Report 2016-2017 - School of International and ...international trade and finance, and macroeconomic and monetary policy. Our faculty include both internationally recognized

SIPA DEGREE PROGRAMSMaster of International Affairs (MIA)Master of Public Administration (MPA)MPA in Economic Policy Management (MPA-EPM)MPA in Environmental Science and Policy (MPA-ESP)Executive MPA (EMPA)MPA in Development Practice (MPA-DP)PhD in Sustainable Development

MIA AND MPA CONCENTRATIONSEconomic and Political DevelopmentEnergy and EnvironmentHuman Rights and Humanitarian PolicyInternational Finance and Economic PolicyInternational Security PolicyUrban and Social Policy

MIA AND MPA SPECIALIZATIONSAdvanced Policy and Economic AnalysisGender and Public PolicyInternational Conflict ResolutionInternational Organization and UN StudiesManagementRegional (Africa, East or South Asia, Europe, Latin America, the Middle East, and Russia and the Former Soviet States, among others)Technology, Media, and Communications

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2 Letter from President Lee C. Bollinger

3 Letter from Dean Merit E. Janow

4 Education

16 Research

24 Engagement

32 Institutes and Centers

38SIPA at a Glance

40 Career Statistics

42 SIPA Advisory Board and Campaign Advisory Council

43Donor List

Table of Contents

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Letter from President Lee C. Bollinger

As we take stock of a year that encompassed a rousing 70th anniversary celebration, the School of International and Public Affairs continues to thrive under Dean Merit Janow’s leadership. SIPA students are conducting their Capstone projects and summertime fieldwork in more than 40 countries. Public discourse is kept powerfully relevant by distinguished guest speakers that last year included the current (António Guterres) and former (Ban Ki-moon) Secretaries-General of the United Nations, civil rights icon and U.S. Representative John Lewis, and Emmanuel Macron, who months after visiting SIPA would become President of France. The Dean’s initiatives on the digital economy and cybersecurity, central banking and financial policy, and social entrepreneurship are all fulfilling their promise. Jack Lew joined SIPA’s faculty as a visiting professor weeks after concluding his service as U.S. Secretary of the Treasury. And SIPA’s Global Leadership Award was given to Fundação Lemann and, poignantly, to the universally admired Zbigniew Brzezinski, a defining presence at SIPA for so many years, who died in May. This is, no doubt, how those in SIPA’s founding generation envisioned the School’s future back in 1946. As the contours of a post-war world were emerging, Columbia University sought to establish a school that would expand knowledge of strategically important geographic regions, bridge the gap between academic study and public policy, and train future leaders occupying the international stage. Fulfilling this purpose required, from the beginning, thinking of the world as an interconnected whole, collaborating across disciplines, and forging partnerships with individuals and organizations in the public and private sectors. As society confronts a litany of severe problems—among them, inequality of wealth, mass migration, and environmental change—the capacities intrinsic to SIPA’s founding mission have become, by necessity, widespread throughout the University. In other words, SIPA remains very much a model for pursuing scholarly inquiry across academic boundaries and developing policy solutions involving collective action among nations. I am very pleased to have this opportunity to share with you this annual update on some of the scholarship and programmatic initiatives occurring at Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs. SIPA’s groundbreaking teaching and research would not be possible without your generosity. Thank you for your commitment to our collective future.

Sincerely,

Lee C. Bollinger President

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Letter from Dean Merit E. Janow

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I often describe SIPA as the place “Where the World Connects.” This is because each and every day our students, faculty, and alumni engage the world’s dynamism and complexity along so many different dimensions, in New York City and abroad, and at the local, state, and interna-tional levels. These myriad connections produced a year of exceptional progress and achievement for our community. I am pleased to share with you a few highlights in the pages that follow. Education: SIPA is committed to providing our students with a transformational educational experience. Our students come to us from more than 90 countries. They seek to enhance their knowledge and develop the practical skills necessary to achieve impact in a changing world. Among their activities, they participated in more than 80 Capstone projects, proposing solutions to real world challenges on behalf of clients in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. They benefitted from new courses in areas such as financial development in emerging economies, politics and policy in authoritarian regimes, the dynamics of cyber power, and creating social enterprises and public-private partnerships. They also participated in simulations that placed them in decision-making roles in the face of contemporary crises. Research: The quality and scholarly impact of research undertaken by SIPA faculty is widely recognized as outstanding, and this year was no exception. From international finance to economic development, international security to human rights, energy and the environment to urban and social policy, our faculty were on the frontlines of policy analysis and served as leading voices on significant global policy matters. They also published works in areas as diverse as macroeconomic policy, food security, data science and political economy, energy policy, climate negotiations, human rights, motherhood and identity, the psychology of statesmen, school vouchers, cyber risk, and other areas. Engagement: SIPA’s role as an interdisciplinary hub for global convening and discussion reached new heights in 2016-2017. Leaders from every sector joined us to foster new thinking on complex policy topics and to shape and ignite public debate. This year was also dramatic for our year-long observance of SIPA’s 70th anniversary, which in April brought together more than 1,000 members of our community—and engaged another 5,000 around the world. At a time of increasing global tension and uncertainty, our 70th anniversary was a powerful reminder of the importance of SIPA’s mission to educate the next generation of leaders and to advance the global public interest. We hope you enjoy this overview of another special year at SIPA. Thank you for your generosity and for your involvement.

Merit E. Janow Dean, School of International and Public Affairs

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EducationSIPA is the hub of a global learning community. Energized anew each fall by students from around the world, SIPA’s educational programs build upon a multidisciplinary foundation of academic knowledge, integrated with institutional and policy frameworks taught by leading practitioners from the U.S. and abroad—and honed by students through experiential learning such as team-based class projects, multi-day simulations, high-impact internships around the world, and the cumulative Capstone assignment with real-world clients. Whether our degree candidates study economic policy or sustainable development, international security or energy policy or human rights, SIPA places them at the center of a transformational experience that reaches from New York City to alumni and partners in nearly every country of the world.

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Global Economy / Trade / Finance / Development

Outgoing U.S. Secretary of the Treasury Jacob “Jack” Lew joined SIPA as a visiting

professor in spring 2017. Mere weeks after leaving Washington, D.C., Lew was teaching a SIPA seminar, Leadership and Policy Development. He led students on deep dives into a handful of today’s most pressing policy issues, such as international financial crises, global currency strife, and debt ceiling negotiations. He also provided practical instruction in the presentation of data-based arguments to senior policy- makers and gave them opportunities to refine the communication and negoti-ation skills required to mobilize action. In addition to teaching, Lew and faculty from across the University joined experts from the U.S. and abroad in high-level policy dialogues.

The MPA in Economic Policy Management launched a focus area in Central Banking and Financial Markets. Its all-star faculty included Christine Cumming, former first vice president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, who taught Financial Stability Monitoring; Augusto de la Torre and Alain Ize from the World Bank’s Chief Economist Office for Latin America and the Caribbean, taught Financial Development in Emerging Economies; and Liliana Rojas-Suarez, a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development, taught Macroprudential Regulation.

University Professor Joseph Stiglitz co-taught a new course, Behavioral Development Economics, with Dr. Karla Hoff, lead economist in the World Bank’s Development Research Group. Drawing on the insights of behavioral economics, which challenge the rational actor assumptions of neoclassical economics, Stiglitz and Hoff explored new approaches to some of the most intractable problems in economic development. Based on their own extensive policy experience, the professors showed students how re-thinking human decision-making and behavior can lead to new models for change.

Sixth Annual Alliance Graduate Summer School

The PhD in Sustainable Development program held its Sixth Annual Alliance Graduate Summer School, May 31-June 2, 2017, at Columbia’s Reid Hall in Paris. This year’s topic was “Research Methods for Sustainable Development” and their application in economics, natural science, and policy—with a focus on remote sensing, network analysis, and high-resolution data. Lectures and workshops gave partici-pants the opportunity to apply spatial analysis tools (such as Google Earth Engine) and data visualization software. The program was co-hosted by l’Institut d’études politiques de Paris (Sciences Po) among others.

Former SIPA Dean Lisa Anderson, James T. Shotwell Professor Emerita of International Relations, developed and taught a new course, Authoritari-anism: Accountability and Policy- making in Non-Democratic Settings. An important dimension of the course is to prepare students for the diverse challenges of working in non-democratic states. Drawing on her scholarly expertise, as well as experience as the former provost and president of American University in Cairo, Anderson put a special emphasis on authoritarian regimes in the Middle East and North Africa. Alumnus Zaki Raheem MIA ’08 returned to SIPA as an adjunct associate professor to co-teach Micro and Small Enterprise Development. With over 14 years of experience in value chain development and inclusive finance, Raheem is a member of the Inclusive Economic Growth team at Development Alternatives, Inc. (DAI), and has worked most recently on economic development projects supported by the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development (DFID), USAID, and the World Bank. The highly popular course deepened students’ understanding of value chain analyses and provided practical skills for development careers.

SIPA is a global leader in graduate education and applied research in economic policy, with special strengths in development economics, international trade and finance, and macroeconomic and monetary policy. Our faculty include both internationally recognized scholars and high-level practitioners, including finance ministers, central bankers, and economic experts at major international financial institutions. Below are a few examples of new activities this year.

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Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs

Yasmine Ergas, director of the Gender and Public Policy specialization, taught Globalizing

Reproduction: Care, Childbearing and Gender in International Perspective. The course explored how to promote women’s empowerment and gender equality, while taking into account differences among societies and cultures. The course also asked whether the emergence of powerful “re-nationalizing”

populist political parties undermine or create new possibilities for reproduc-tive policies intended to promote gender equality. Iain Levine, program director of Human Rights Watch (HRW), led a simulation as part of the class Rethinking Human Rights on October 25, 2017. The simulation presented an overview of HRW methodology followed by a role-play exercise.

The popular two-day Humanitarian Crisis Simulation workshop with Professors Susannah Friedman, Dirk Salomons, and Howard Williams recreated the context of an acute humanitarian crisis, combining natural disaster with ensuing civil strife. Each student participant took on a role (varying from national government official, UN aid coordinator, NGO volunteer, donor representative, or local community activist) and was given a mandate, as well as resources. The objective of the course was to give each participant an opportunity to experience the complexities of decision-making during a crisis in a compressed, real-time setting.

Energy and Environment

Expert Launches Course on Clean Energy Finance

The Energy and Environment concentration (E&E) prepares students for careers in a sustain-

able energy field. New courses offered in 2016-2017 included Environmental Finance: Scaling Up Clean Energy. The course, which was taught by Adjunct Professor Michael Eckhart, introduced students to both the public policy context and the financing opportunities in the public and private sectors. Eckhart, who is currently Global Head of Environmental Finance at Citigroup, won the prestigious Skoll Foundation award for creating the American

Council on Renewable Energy, a leading advocate for large-scale investment in renewable energy.

Capstone Workshops in Environment and Energy

The MPA in Environmental Science and Policy’s (MPA-ESP) three-semester Capstone workshop culminates in a real-world project for clients in New York City and beyond. Projects include:

• “Upstream Emissions of Coal and Gas” for the Sierra Club

• “Microgrid Integration in New York” for the New York Power Authority

• “Increasing Awareness of and Support for Integrated Approaches to Conservation” for the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust

The MIA/MPA Capstone workshop program conducted several consulting assignments focused on energy and environment. One example was the project with Solar Sister, a network of African women that addresses the severe gap in distribution of modern energy technologies to the rural poor. Solar Sister is working to bridge the gender and technology divide in some of the most energy poor communities in Uganda, Nigeria, and Tanzania, where access to electricity is below 5 percent. The Capstone team analyzed the most promising pay-as-you-go (PAYG) models to provide diversified financing options to entrepreneurs/customers in Tanzania and emphasized ways in which Soul Sister could draw upon technology platforms to deploy PAYG.

SIPA is widely recognized for its strengths in graduate education and policy research in energy and environment. The faculty include both renowned researchers in climate change and sustainability, as well as leading practitioners in U.S. and international energy and environment policy. We offer students a concentration in energy and environment, a specialized degree in environmental science and policy, and a PhD in sustainable development. Highlights from the year are described below.

Complemented by Columbia University’s longstanding strengths in human rights, SIPA is recognized for its education and engagement in international human rights issues, including humanitarian crises, armed conflict, forced migration, poverty, gender discrimination, and climate change. Students benefit from the School’s connections with multilateral institutions, particularly the United Nations, and they receive experiential training through courses, Capstone workshops, and simulations.

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International Security and Foreign Policy

SIPA offered several new learning opportunities in 2016-2017 in the areas of security and foreign

policy. As part of SIPA’s technology and policy initiative, Senior Research Scholar Jason Healey launched a new course, Dynamics of Cyber Power and Conflict, focusing on national security threats arising in the digital realm. Adjunct Professor and Associate Director of the RAND Corporation’s Center for Asia Pacific Policy Scott Harold taught East Asian Security, an overview of security challenges in the Pacific Rim from North Korea to the South China Sea.

The International Security Policy (ISP) concentration hosted its annual student-run crisis simulation, which provides an experiential learning opportunity in diplomacy and military strategy. The 2017 simulation centered around confrontation between North Korea and the United States, triggered by North Korea testing a ballistic missile capable of reaching the continental U.S. and miniaturizing a nuclear warhead to fit on that missile. By the end of the day, the students had come to under-stand some of the difficulties associated with operating in a dynamic environ-ment with incomplete information and limited time to reach their goals.

In fall 2016 students from the United Nations Studies specialization course, The Realities of Peacekeeping, taught by Elisabeth Lindenmayer, presented the findings from their summer research with UN Peacekeeping Operations. Four students were hosted by the United Nations Multidimensional Integrated Stabilization Mission in the Central African Republic (MINUSCA) and five by the UN Mission in Liberia (UNMIL). The student teams conduct-ed close to 200 interviews with various communities and UN staff on the ground, and examined the tools of peacekeeping and the political and operational challenges that peacekeep-ing operations face in putting people at the center of their work.

From left: Lt. Gen. Arnold Bunch, U.S. Air Force; and Jason Healy, SIPA senior research scholar, at the annual National Security Scholars Conference sponsored by the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies on October 13, 2016

SIPA and Columbia University have been recognized for decades as leaders in graduate education and applied research on security and foreign policy. Faculty and practitioners, who draw on diverse, multidisciplinary perspectives, provide opportunities for students to engage diverse topics, including war, military strategy, peacekeeping, and cyber security. Through its International Security Policy concentration, International Conflict Resolution specialization, and Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, SIPA offers a rigorous curriculum and robust program of activities.

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Global Urban and Social Policy

Alexander Hertel-Fernandez, assistant professor of international and public affairs,

joined SIPA in fall 2016. He studies the political economy of the United States with a focus on organized interests, government, and social policy. He taught the MPA core course Politics of Policymaking: American Institutions in Comparative Perspective, as well as U.S. State Politics and Policy: The Promises and Pitfalls of American Federalism.

In the course Leadership and Urban Transformation, Michael Nutter, David N. Dinkins Professor of Professional Practice, draws on his experience as

two-term mayor of Philadelphia to explore how mayors make their cities work. This includes campaigning for election, the relationship of politics to governing, managing the city bureaucracy, leadership during crisis, and transforming policy through innovation. Whether it is high tech, clean energy, finance, or expanded retail, the mayor’s role is to balance the demands of disparate interests to govern fairly and effectively. The course challenges students to think critically and to understand policies and problems from different points of view.

Francesco Brindisi, currently a senior economist at the NYC Office of Management and Budget, taught a new course, Using Big Data to Develop Public Policy. The course draws on the Social Science Research Council’s DATA2GO.NYC project, which is one of the most extensive sources of information on New York City, from local census data to economic and social indicators related to education, environ-ment, health, and housing. SIPA students worked with large data sets on projects that included an analysis of the relationship between the number of Airbnb listings in a neighborhood and the number of rental market listings, and the influence of NYC’s Vision Zero policies on speed limits within city borders.

left: Professor Miguel Urquiola right: Assistant Professor Alexander Hertel-Fernandez

SIPA offers a distinctive graduate education in urban and social policy that is enriched by the resources of New York City and the wide- ranging expertise of its faculty, both leading academics and high-level practitioners. New faculty and courses, highlighted below, bring to SIPA the most current experience and thinking on urbanization in the 21st century, as well as on social policy challenges, including health, housing, and education.

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Technology and Policy

SIPA has launched The Tech and Policy Initiative to develop new thinking and expertise at

the intersection of digital technology, data, public policy, and SIPA’s core fields. The initiative has expanded instruction in an exciting range of policy areas that combine technology and policy, including advanced data analytics and public policy; cyber conflict and deterrence; financial services and cyber risk; digital technologies to enhance civic engagement; and many other areas.

• Computing in Context: Public Policy provides a practical grounding in computing, including coding and machine learning. Students learn how to apply this knowledge to contemporary policy problems.

• Technology Solutions for Development and Change prepares students to use new media and information and communication technologies to craft participatory approaches to advance the United Nations’ Millennium Development Goals.

• Policy Dilemmas in Cyber Security explores the implications of major practical questions facing policymakers today, such as how to govern the Internet and how to balance the tradeoffs between privacy security and resilience today with the longer-term sustainability of the Internet.

• Using Big Data to Develop Public Policy uses large, real-world data from NYC to help students learn how to design research questions and work with statistical tools to answer contemporary policy questions.

• Technology and the Future of Governance and Public Policy introduces decision- making in the public sector and then teaches multiple new models of problem- solving, including the utilization of new technology, so students can apply this knowledge in projects to address public policy challenges.

The SIPA Entrepreneurship and Policy Initiative engages scholars, entrepreneurs, and leaders from

the public and private sectors to advance understanding of how to promote innovation, entrepreneurship, and social entrepreneurship.

• Entrepreneurship for the New (Technology) Economy introduces students to the skills and knowledge required to be successful entrepreneurs in the tech economy,

focusing both on businesses that use technology as an enabler and on those that market technology as their product.

• Creating a Social Enterprise introduces students to the market economy. They learn how to build a social enterprise from case studies and actual social enterprise business plans, and conclude by building a plan to launch their own social enterprise, which they present to a panel of experts in the field.

• Strategic, Organizational and Entrepreneurial Management gives students the analytical ability and practical skills to build the right strategy, organization, and entrepreneurial culture for both for-profit and nonprofit models and their respective roles in the broader for-profit and nonprofit organization through case studies, leading management texts, and insights from practitioners. Special emphasis is given to negotia-tions and managing people and organizational culture. Students are required to develop an entrepreneurial venture focused on a social/nonprofit, emerging market, or private sector opportunity.

Entrepreneurship and Policy

SIPA has established itself in recent years as a leader in graduate education and policy development in cyber security, the digital economy, and internet governance. Students in diverse fields have opportunities to delve into the latest policy frameworks, learn practical skills (such as coding for public policy), and to interact with experts from academia and the public and private sectors. Some of this year’s new courses are noted below.

SIPA collaborates across Columbia University and with public and private sector partners in New York City and globally to study the conditions and means that give rise to entrepreneurship and social entrepreneurship, and to support student entrepreneurial ventures. Below are examples of new courses in 2016-2017.

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TECH AND POLICY

The Peruvian coffee industry supports more than 200,000 small coffee growers, and accounts for U.S. $1 billion in annual revenues. However, the industry has struggled recently to achieve sustainability due to widespread lack of coordination and low quality of production. The livelihood of coffee farmers relies on the market price. This price is determined by the quality of the coffee, which has a strong correlation with technical education and how coffee is processed. Faced with limited resources and technical assistance, several farmers find it difficult to produce high quality coffee. Consequently, they are forced to abandon its production and may resort to planting other, more lucrative crops—including illicit ones. This Capstone project assessed how digital technologies could improve the supply chain, which would result in higher quality and greater production levels of coffee. The team interviewed technology experts, researched agricultural technologies, and spent three days in the Selva Central coffee-growing region of Peru with seven different coffee cooperatives.

In the short-term, the Capstone team recommended that an independent advisory panel should develop and guide specific quality guidelines to produce coffee. With their insights, the team also recommended implementing certain internet-connected devices that can be monitored by a centralized data management platform to inform future production forecasts and improve quality through data analysis. With these initiatives in place, each stage of the supply chain can be traced to mitigate future risks and problems, and ensure a sustainable coffee industry for years to come.

Client Inter-American Development Bank (IDB)

AdvisorsUlrike Zeilberger Tim Meyer

Improving Supply Chain Performance with New Digital Technologies

Capstone WorkshopsSIPA Capstone workshops apply students’ practical skills and analytical knowledge to real-world issues. Students work in teams, under faculty supervision, on a policy-oriented project with an external client. This year, SIPA students participated in more than 80 workshops in 25 countries. Here are some examples of 2016-2017 Capstone workshops.

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During the past decade, the prevalence of opioid addiction on Staten Island has skyrocketed, demonstrated by a sharp rise in opioid-related overdose deaths. The Capstone team performed a needs assessment for opioid addiction prevention and treatment on behalf of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor for NYC, Richmond County District Attorney, and Staten Island Partnership for Community Wellness. The study involved 29 semi-structured interviews with five key groups: political officials, law enforcement, people in recovery, academic researchers, and service providers. Qualitative data was supplemented by an assessment of treatment capacity and service distribution across the island. The study identified

discrepancies between where services were offered and where overdoses were taking place, misconceptions about the epidemic’s demographic and geographic profile, gaps in knowledge and awareness surrounding addiction, and a lack of linkages in the treatment system. A New York Times article described the Capstone project report as “a model for multidisciplinary needs- assessment projects on opioid addiction and recovery.”

Client Office of the Special Narcotics Prosecutor for the City of New York and Richmond County

AdvisorsLisette Nieves Silvia Martins

Staten Island Needs Assessment: Opioid Addiction Prevention and Treatment Systems of Care

GLOBAL URBAN AND SOCIAL POLICY

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The U.S. Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM) is one of nine unified combatant commands of the U.S. armed forces. Its responsibilities combine a legacy nuclear assurance and deterrence mission with responsibility for space and cyberspace control across a global domain. The arrival of new Commander General John E. Hyten in November 2016, requirements to reduce the Command’s workforce, pressure to lower spending, and a planned transfer to a new headquarters facility in 2019, presented operational difficulties, as well as platforms for innovation and change management. Considering this context, USSTRATCOM invited SIPA to research and propose solutions to some of its most persistent management-related challenges. Specifically, this study used the social value investing framework to examine private sector principles from finance and business that could be adapted to help modernize USSTRATCOM’s operations.

The bold agenda for innovation established by General John E. Hyten in his Commander’s Vision and Intent document identified four goal areas that would enable USSTRATCOM to fully incorporate innovation into its processes, practices, and outcomes. The Capstone team recommended that USSTRATCOM create a workforce and culture supportive of innovation, improve strategic readiness through an increased use of war gaming, cultivate and leverage the Command’s reputation, and expand engagement with outside partners by leveraging their resources and expertise. This Capstone report provided insights on each goal area, coupled with recommen-dations for specific actions that chart a path to achieve desired outcomes.

Client United States Strategic Command (USSTRATCOM)

AdvisorHoward Buffett

How to Innovate U.S. Strategic Command’s Deterrence and Assurance Operations

INTERNATIONAL SECURITY AND FOREIGN POLICY

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The Paris Agreement calls on signatory countries to work towards low-carbon energy to achieve the mitigation targets in their Nationally Determined Contributions (NDCs). To facilitate this process, IHS Markit proposed a Competitive Low-Carbon Challenge (CLCC), in which participating countries would increasingly utilize private sector capital to scale up low-carbon energy solutions. To start, the Capstone team provided an analysis of the barriers and opportunities for the private sector to invest in renewable energies and energy efficiency programs in Vietnam and China. These countries offer lessons that can be extrapolated to other countries pursuing sustainable economic development due to the shared features of rapid economic growth, growing populations, dependence on fossil fuels, and increasing concern about environmental issues. China is already a leader in global

investment in renewable energy. In addition, Vietnam is currently undergoing regulatory reforms, making it increasingly desirable for private investment. After completing their analysis, the team recommended specific profitable opportunities and risk mitigation strategies. They developed a Net Present Value (NPV) model for a typical 40 megawatt wind farm for each country, using appropriate and realistic assumptions. The team concluded that profitable low- carbon energy opportunities exist for both countries. Additionally, the team concluded their report by recommending other similar investments in emerging economies.

Client IHS Markit

AdvisorJason Bordoff

A Global Low-Carbon Challenge

ENERGY AND ENVIRONMENT

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Conflicts in the Middle East have prompted mass displacement across the region— a significant proportion of whom are young people who often find themselves deprived of opportunities for education, livelihoods, and civic engagement. This reality has contributed to a profound sense of exclusion and disempowerment among displaced youth. At the same time, it is increasingly recognized that youth engagement— increasing youth capacity and agency to make decisions over programs and policies that affect their lives—can have positive impacts on their personal, social, and human development. International and local organizations can play a critical role in leveraging the potential of young people to serve as active contributors to their communities and take ownership over their own futures. This project involved a multi-country study across Syria (remotely), Jordan, Lebanon, and Greece to examine: 1) youth perspectives

and ideas on their engagement in existing programs and their own initiatives; and 2) organizational perspectives, strategies, and constraints to engage youth in the various phases of programming. Although contexts vary from country to country, this study highlighted the priorities and concerns of displaced youth and the challenges they face. While organizations working with displaced youth often recognize the value of youth engagement, many lack effective means to delegate decision-making authority and resources to youth in their programs. Organizational strategies for youth engagement range from tokenistic involvement to meaningful partnership. This study promoted good practices for youth engagement and provided recommendations for organizations to adapt and design programming that effectively empowers and engages displaced youth as partners in change.

Client Engaging Refugee and Displaced Youth in the Middle East as Partners in Change

AdvisorSarah Deardorff Miller

Engaging Refugee and Displaced Youth in the Middle East as Partners in Change

HUMAN RIGHTS AND HUMANITARIAN AFFAIRS

For their Capstone project with Mercy Corps, SIPA students conducted a focus group with Syrian refugee youth in Azraq camp, Jordan.

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This Capstone project involved investigating negative interest rate policies across four central banks. During 2014-2016, the European Central Bank (ECB), the Riksbank in Sweden, the Swiss National Bank (SNB), and the Bank of Japan (BoJ) cut their rates below zero. For a long time this was deemed impossible, but all four central banks were successful in bringing short-term interbank rates negative. Beyond that, a wide universe of asset return rates went negative, showing that monetary transmission can work in negative territory. However, some features of monetary policy do change. For instance, the team found that longer dated securities are less responsive to central bank policy rate cuts when these cuts are in negative territory. Further, the team discovered that money market trading can suffer if market players are not technically

equipped to handle negative rates. Whether central banks telegraphed the possibility of negative rates before the actual cut (ECB, SNB, Riksbank) or did not (BoJ) made a big difference in market functioning immediately after the cut below zero. In general, however, the Capstone team could not conclude if negative rates—not too far below zero—behave in much the same ways as positive rates close to zero.

Client Federal Reserve Bank of New York

AdvisorDaniel Waldman

Negative Interest Rates: A Comparison of Negative Interest Rate Implementation Approaches and Experiences across Major Central Banks

GLOBAL ECONOMY / TRADE / FINANCE / DEVELOPMENT

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ResearchSIPA’s faculty unites noted research scholars and distinguished practitioners to produce, disseminate, and implement new knowledge about pressing public policy challenges. Thoughtful and active, these experts shine light on a variety of critical issues facing the world: the characteristics of financial crises, the ongoing damage of climate change, the role of global cooperation in protecting the environment, social policies that promote the rights of women and children, and many more. Their collective work is visible, influential, and enduring. It is reflected in the continuously evolving courses they teach at SIPA, in the articles they publish in journals both popular and academic, and in their ongoing engagement with the local, national, and global policy community beyond Columbia’s campus. It is a hallmark of the School today and a legacy for tomorrow.

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Global Economy / Trade / Finance / Development

Macroeconomics in Times of Liquidity Crisis, MIT Press, 2016

Guillermo Calvo, Professor of International and Public Affairs; Director, MPA in Economic Policy Management Program

Guillermo Calvo’s book claims that “recent financial crises are associated with global episodes of liquidity crunch, which are radically different from most recession episodes in developed economies after WWII. This is argued by discussing the salient characteristics of financial crises in emerging economy markets since 1995 and the Lehman crisis in 2008. The book proceeds to rationalize these crises by sketching out a theory labeled liquidity approach that helps to explain

why the U.S. dollar became stronger in the Lehman crisis, even though the U.S. was at the epicenter of the crisis. More- over, liquidity trap, a recent phenomenon that had not surfaced since the Great Depression, is rationalized by a new concept labeled liquidity deflation, which helps to explain why monetary policy in developed economies appears to be running out of steam.”

Good Nutrition: Perspectives for the 21st Century, Karger, 2016

Glenn Denning, Professor of Professional Practice in International and Public Affairs; Director, MPA in Development Practice Program

In the opening chapter of the book, Glenn Denning and co-author Jessica Fanzo of Johns Hopkins University (formerly an adjunct professor at SIPA) identify 10 key forces that influence the global food system, including climate change, urbanization, consumer behavior, culture and traditions, and conflict. They also stress the importance of food system sustainability and the importance of the new global agenda framed by the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Denning and Fanzo argue that the SDGs provide a new impetus to rethink the way we produce, distribute, and consume our food. These internationally agreed goals provide the opportunity to set the global food system on a more sustain-able path and commit all nations to “end hunger, achieve food security and improved nutrition, and promote sustainable agriculture.”

“Data Science and Political Economy: Application to Financial Regulatory Structure,” Journal of the Social Sciences 2 (7), 2016

Sharyn O’Halloran, George Blumenthal Professor of Political Economy and Professor of International and Public Affairs

The development of computational data science techniques in natural language processing and machine learning algorithms that analyze large and complex textual information open new avenues for studying the interaction between economics and politics. O’Halloran and co-authors Sameer Maskey, Geraldine McAllister, David K. Park, and Kaiping Chen apply these techniques to analyze the design of financial regulatory structure in the United States since 1950. The analysis focuses on the delegation of discretionary authority to regulatory agencies in promulgating, implementing, and enforcing financial sector laws and overseeing compliance with them. Combining traditional studies with the new machine learning approaches enables the authors to go beyond the limitations of both methods and offer a more precise interpretation of the determinants of financial regulatory structure.

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PhD in Sustainable Development Publications

Kayleigh Campbell PhD ’17 published “Sharing riders: How bikesharing impacts bus ridership in New York City” in Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice (June 2017). The article, written with Candace Brakewood, an assistant professor of civil engineering at City College of New York, was also featured on Atlantic Media’s CityLab website. Kimberly Lai Oremus PhD ’17, along with Kyle Meng PhD ’13, published “New England Cod Collapse and the Climate,” in which they research

methods to improve fishery management, given an increasing need to address the long-term consequences of climate change affecting fisheries, in PLOS One. Their work was also featured in Science Daily, Business Insider, and other publications. Wolfram Schlenker, professor of international and public affairs and Anthony D’Agostino PhD ’17 published “Recent weather fluctuations and agricultural yields: Implications for climate change” in Agricultural Economics on November 29, 2016. In their research the authors analyzed the link between agricultural yields and weather fluctuations, with an eye

toward considering adaptation and commodity pricing based on predicted crop yield declines. Solomon Hsiang PhD ’11, Amir Jina PhD ’14, and James Rising PhD ’15 published “Estimating economic damage from climate change in the United States” in Science on June 30, 2017, along with co-authors Robert Kopp, Michael Delgado, Shashank Mohan, D. J. Rasmussen, Robert Muir-Wood, Paul Wilson, Michael Oppenheimer, Kate Larsen, and Trevor Houser. This research has been widely featured in the New York Times, The Guardian, Washington Post, The Atlantic, and on NPR, among others.

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Energy and Environment

“The American Energy Superpower,” Foreign Affairs, July 6, 2017

Jason Bordoff, Professor of Professional Practice in International and Public Affairs; Director, Center on Global Energy Policy

In his article, Jason Bordoff examines the meaning of the Trump administration’s new policy goal of “energy dominance.” Bordoff argues that dominance as a goal sends the wrong signal to our partners around the world and ignores that the U.S. benefits from global energy cooperation and interconnectedness. Ramping up domestic production and exports, key to the administration’s definition of dominance, brings economic and geopolitical benefits to the U.S. But, Bordoff argues, dominance is about more than increasing supply. U.S. energy strength also depends on investing in tomorrow’s new energy technologies, maintaining its leadership role in global energy cooperation, increasing its resilience to market swings, and protecting the environment.

“An experimental investigation into ‘pledge and review’ in climate negotiations,” Climatic Change 138(1): 339-351, published online in June and in print September

Scott Barrett, Lenfest-Earth Institute Professor of Natural Resource Economics

A novelty of the new Paris Agreement is the inclusion of a process for assessment and review of countries’ nationally determined pledges and contributions. The intent is to reveal whether similar countries are making comparable pledges, whether the totality of such pledges will achieve the global goal, and whether, over the coming years, the contributions actually made by countries will equal or exceed their pledges. The intent is also

to provide an opportunity for countries to express their approval, or disapproval, of the pledges and contributions made by individual countries. Barrett and co-author Astrid Dannenberg report the results of a lab experiment on the effects of such a process in a game in which players choose a group target, declare their individual pledges, and then make voluntary contributions to supply a public good. Their results show that a review process is more likely to affect targets and pledges than actual contributions. Even when a review process increases average contributions, the effect is relatively small. As the window for achieving the 2 °C goal will close soon, their results suggest that, rather than merely implement the Paris Agreement, negotiators should begin now to develop complementary approaches to limiting emissions, including the adoption of agreements that are designed differently than the one adopted in Paris.

Fostering Internationalism through Marine Science: The Journey with PICES, Springer, 2017

Sara Tjossem, Senior Lecturer in the Discipline of International and Public Affairs

Oceans cover more than two thirds of the planet’s surface and profoundly impact human livelihoods through regulation of weather and global climate and provision of marine resources. It is a truism that marine science is inherently international because it takes place beyond national boundaries, but how does it develop, and is international collaboration a given condition? In the book, Tjossem details the sometimes competing, sometimes complementary, scientific and policy demands and responses addressed by the intergovern-mental North Pacific Marine Science Organization (PICES). As PICES has convened academic and agency scientists from six Pacific Rim countries to explore

ocean and atmospheric processes, it has developed over the past quarter century into the premier forum for the exchange of ideas, information, and technology across the Pacific region. Its network of scientists has developed standard tools and methods to investigate and cooperate across geographical, political, scientific, and institutional boundaries. Tjossem argues that such institution building is essential to create and foster robust networks of collaboration that magnify individual efforts to tackle global challenges. Integrative projects allow these scientists to understand fundamental ocean processes, as well as predict how future marine ecosystems may respond to climate change and human activities. By mapping the evolution of the organization’s mission, Tjossem provides insight into the development of modern marine science and reveals the challenges of creating and communicating policy- relevant advice to member nations.

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Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs

“Memories of Violence: Micro and Macro History and the Challenges to Peacebuilding in Colombia and Northern Ireland,” Irish Political Studies, February 2016

Elazar Barkan, Professor of International and Public Affairs; Director, Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy Concentration

The article compares how Colombia and Northern Ireland addressed the historical memory of mass violence and war crimes in their peace process and post-conflict policies. It argues that Colombia proactive policies to address the history of the conflict provided a breakthrough in the peace negotiations and why Northern Ireland resistance to confronting the history of the conflict failed in bridging sectarian animosity. The article then explores what conflict resolution professionals can learn from the inclusion of historical dialogue as methodology of peace building. Barkan researches the influences that historical legacy and memory of past violence exercise on contemporary politics and policies. This work includes organizing the Historical Dialogues, Justice, and Memory Network and the global project of Mapping Historical Dialogue, in addition to organizing international annual conferences and workshops, including on the role of history in genocide prevention and on memory laws. His work emphasizes the role civil society advocacy plays in peacebuilding, truth-seeking, and reconciliation processes, and it investi-gates contested historical narratives and memories in order to understand their role as drivers of conflict.

Reassembling Motherhood: Procreation and Care in a Globalized World, Columbia University Press, 2017

Yasmine Ergas, Lecturer in the Discipline of International and Public Affairs; Director, Gender and Public Policy Specialization

In the book, Yasmine Ergas and co-editors Jane Jenson, professor emerita at the Université de Montréal, and Sonya Michel professor emerita at the University of Maryland, bring together contributors from a variety of disciplines to examine issues surrounding motherhood and identity. Technology, globalization, and changed understandings of gender have converged to “unsettle” motherhood, and the rights of women, children, and men hang in the balance. It is impossible to tackle the question of equality without addressing the effects of being or not being a mother on women’s life chances, from employment and financial security to political participation and social mobilization. But who is — and who can be — a “mother” today? Assisted reproductive technologies require us to confront which biological processes should (or should not) count to make a woman a mother: providing ova, giving birth? How do women who migrate to care for the children of others still find ways to care for their own? What issues do the commingling of global markets in procreation and care raise? How can such markets be regulated in ways that respect the rights of all the parties involved? What aspects of “motherhood” should or should not be removed from the purchase of markets? And how do these issues affect the prospects for gender equality?

Campaigning for Children: Strategies for Advancing Children’s Rights, Stanford University Press, 2017

Jo Becker, Adjunct Associate Professor of International and Public Affairs

This book provides an up-to-date look at current children’s rights issues and the individuals and organizations that are making a difference in the lives of children. Becker explores the range of abuses that affect children today, including early marriage, female genital mutilation, child labor, child sex tourism, corporal punishment, the impact of armed conflict, and lack of access to education. From a practitioner’s perspective, she presents case studies of effective advocacy campaigns — both national and international — that have advanced children’s rights. The book also traces the history of the children’s rights movement, and the evolution of international laws and standards to protect children from abuse and exploitation.

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International Security and Foreign Policy

“The National Security Act, Seventy Years On,” The American Interest, vol. 12, no. 4, Spring 2017

Richard K. Betts, Leo A. Shifrin Professor of War and Peace Studies and Arnold A. Saltzman Professor of War and Peace Studies; Director, International Security Policy Concentration

In this article, Betts claims that “the modern U.S. government system for making and implementing defense policy was set by the 1947 National Security Act, amended or supplemented several times by legislation over the years. Criticism of the now-old system and proposals for wholesale reform overlook its remarkable success in coordinating complex functions, enduring numerous changes of party control, and adapting to changing demands. Disasters in policy such as the Vietnam War or the second war against Iraq have been due to mistaken choices by elected leaders, not the bureaucratic structure or processes mandated by the original act. One fundamental new issue for which major adaptation of the system may be needed is cybersecurity, but otherwise basic reorganization of the system could cause as many new problems as it resolves.”

How Statesmen Think: The Psychology of International Politics, Princeton University Press, 2017

Robert Jervis, Adlai E. Stevenson Professor and Professor of International and Public Affairs

Foreign policies are made by national leaders, and so to explain them it is important to understand how statesmen think. Drawing on international history and psychology and building on his classic Perception and Misperception in International Politics, over the past 40 years Jervis has explored this multifacet-ed topic in a set of essays that are collected here. To decide how to behave, decision-makers have to understand their environments and the capabilities and intentions of others. But these are always ambiguous. “Reality” and “facts” do not speak for themselves. Beliefs are strongly influenced by the person’s theories, expectations, and political and psychological needs. Biases, both cognitive and affective, play a large role. Since different actors come to situations with very different perspectives, world politics rarely resembles chess or poker, the two most commonly used analogies. Instead it is like the Japanese short story, “Rashomon,” which portrays the same situation as seen—and seen very differently—by four participants.

This approach is developed by examining how leaders search for and interpret information and are influenced by whether they are seeking to make gains or avoid losses. In this way, Jervis probes a range of topics including signaling, intelligence, the role of national identities, deterrence, the domino theory, and the changes in perceptions that contributed to the end of the Cold War.

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Global Urban and Social Policy

“Stopping Trash Where It Starts: A Project to Mitigate Floatable Trash NYC Waterways through Targeted Street Litter Reduction”

Ester Fuchs, Professor of International and Public Affairs and Political Science; Director, Urban and Social Policy Concentration

In April 2017, Professor Ester Fuchs collaborated with Professor Patricia Culligan of the Columbia University Data Science Institute and a team of student researchers to complete this study for the NYC Department of Environmental Protection. The goal of the study was to find ways to reduce floatable trash by targeting street litter before it enters the Municipal Separate Storm Sewer System (MS4) and NYC waterways. The study proposed significant policy recommendations that the city is now implementing. Politico reported on the study; data from the report was used in a New York Daily News op-ed, “Plastic Bags are a City Scourge,” in support of New York City plastic bag legislation; and the City of Dallas has expressed interest in replicating the study.

“School vouchers: A survey of the economics literature,” Journal of Economic Literature, 55(2), 441-492, 2017

Miguel Urquiola, Professor of International and Public Affairs and Economics

Urquiola, along with co-authors Dennis Epple and Richard E. Romano, considers a long-standing question: Would children be better off if the government provided them with vouchers to be used at any school (private or public), as opposed to only offering them slots in public schools? This question has received renewed attention as Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos has favored granting parents greater control over where their children go to school. The authors review essentially all the economic research on the issue. Their conclusion is that the evidence to date is not sufficient to warrant recommending that vouchers be adopted on a wide-spread basis; however, multiple positive findings support continued exploration. For example, research on relatively small programs does not suggest that awarding students a voucher is a systematically reliable way to improve educational outcomes, and some detrimental effects have been found. Nevertheless, in some settings, or for some subgroups or outcomes, vouchers can have a substantial positive effect on those who use them. The authors underline that while more research will be useful, the question is complex. As a result, work originating in a single case (e.g., a given country) or in a single research approach (e.g., experimental designs) will not provide a full under- standing of voucher effects; fairly wide-ranging research will be necessary to make progress.

“Americanizing Latinos, Latinoizing America: The Political Consequences of Latino Incorporation,” Social Science Quarterly, July 2016

Alan Yang, Lecturer in the Discipline of International and Public Affairs and Rodolfo de la Garza, Eaton Professor of Administrative Law and Municipal Science and Professor of International and Public Affairs

This research examines the impact of Americanization on Latino policy preferences. Using data from the 2006 Latino National Survey, the authors create a continuous scale that measures the extent to which Latinos have Americanized—that is, become incorporated in the U.S. mainstream. This scale allows more precise differenti-ation of respondents across the entire range of Americanization level, from the most recent immigrant arrivals who are entirely Spanish language dominant to third generation U.S. natives who are entirely English dominant, compared to other frequently used measures of incorporation. Yang and de la Garza use multivariate analyses to examine the impact of Americanization on a wide range of salient policy preferences. The research shows that across a wide array of issues, Latino policy preferences vary considerably (both linearly and non-linearly) by level of Americanization, even after accounting for a rich set of control variables commonly found to predict policy preferences. The results also indicate that, regardless of level of Americanization, Latinos approach unanimity in their support of an expanded socioeconomic safety net supported by the government. The results indicate that Latinos are well to the left of the national mainstream on key policy issues. The political implications of these preferences are that despite increased outreach, Republicans will find it difficult to woo Latino voters, and that it will be a challenge for Democrats to maintain or increase their support.

Professor Ester Fuchs

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Selected Faculty Publications

Scott Barrett “Collective Action to Avoid Catastrophe:

When Countries Succeed, When they Fail, and Why,” Global Policy, 7(S1): 45-55, 2016.

Daniel Corstange

The Price of a Vote in the Middle East, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge Series in Comparative Politics, September 2016.

Geoffrey Heal

Endangered Economies: How the Neglect of Nature is Threatening Our Prosperity, Columbia University Press, December 2016.

Alexander Hertel-Fernandez

“American Employers as Political Machines,” Journal of Politics, 79(1), 2017.

Takatoshi Ito

“Supervision and Regulation: Effects of Global Financial Crisis on Japan and Asia,” The Future of Large, Internationally Active Banks, Demirgüç-Kunt, A.D. Evanoff and G. Kaufman (eds.), World Scientific: 213-217, 2016.

Wojciech Kopczuk

“The Role of Bequests in Shaping Wealth Inequality: Evidence from Danish Wealth Records,” American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings, 106(5): 656-661, May 2016.

W. Bentley MacLeod

“Diagnosis and The Big Sort: College Reputation and Labor Market Outcomes,” joint with Evan Riehl, Juan Saavedrea, and Miguel Urquiola, American Economics Journal: Applied Economics, Vol. 9, No. 3: 223-261, July 2017.

Dipali Mukhopadhyay “Provincial Governors in Afghan

Politics,” U.S. Institute of Peace Special Report, No. 385, 2016.

Maria Victoria Murillo

“Economic Performance and Incumbents’ Support in Latin America,” with Giancarlo Visconti, Electoral Studies, 45: 180–190, February 2017.

Gary Okihiro

Third World Studies: Theorizing Liberation, Duke University Press, 2016.

Ben S. Orlove

“Two Days in the Life of a River: Glacier Floods in Bhutan,” Anthropologica, 58(2): 227–242, 2016.

Arvind Panagariya

The World Trade System: Trends and Challenges, edited with Jagdish Bhagwati and Pravin Krishna, MIT Press, 2016.

Cristian Pop-Eleches

“Local Instruments, Global Extrapolation: External Validity of the Labor Supply- Fertility Local Average Treatment Effect,” joint with James Bisbee, Rajeev Dehejia and Cyrus Samii, Journal of Labor Economics, 2017.

Kenneth Prewitt

“Scholarly Knowledge: At an Inflection Point?” International Journal of African Higher Education: Peril and Promise Fifteen Years On, Analysis and Critique (Special Issue), Vol. 3, No. 1: 113-124, 2016.

Stephen Sestanovich

“The Truth About Populism and Foreign Policy,” Foreign Affairs, May 30, 2016.

Robert Y. Shapiro

“Public Opinion,” Oxford Handbook of American Political Development, Robert Lieberman, Suzanne Mettler, and Richard Valelly (eds.), Oxford University Press: 516-534, 2016.

Rodrigo R. Soares “Spillovers from Conditional Cash

Transfer Programs: Bolsa Família and Crime in Urban Brazil,” with Laura Chioda and João M. P. de Mello, Economics of Education Review 54: 306-320, October 2016.

Jan Svejnar

“Does Wealth Distribution and the Source of Wealth Matter for Economic Growth? Inherited v. Uninherited Billionaire Wealth and Billionaires’ Political Connections,” with S. Bagchi, Inequality and Growth: Patterns and Policy Volume II: Regions and Regularities, Kaushik Basu and Joseph Stiglitz (eds.), Palgrave, Macmillan, pp. 163-194, 2016.

Michael Ting

“Collective Action, Aspirations, Reference Groups,” with Jonathan Bendor and Daniel Diermeier, Political Science Research and Methods 4(3): 451-476, 2016.

Michael Urquiola

“Competition among Schools: Traditional Private and Public Schools,” Handbook of the Economics of Education, Volume 5, 209-237, 2016.

Eric Verhoogen

“On the Origins and Development of Pakistan’s Soccer-Ball Cluster,” with David Atkin, Azam Chaudhry, Shamyla Chaudry, Amit Khandelwal, and Tariq Raza, World Bank Economic Review (ABCDE Conference Papers & Proceedings), March 2017.

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EngagementSIPA is where the world connects—a place for students, scholars, and policy experts to come together, to share ideas and insights, to teach and to learn. Policymakers from Argentina, France, and India—students from Chile, Israel, and Japan—scholars from Indonesia, Israel, the United States—alumni in China, London, Mexico—these overlapping circles form a unique setting, an opportunity to educate, interact, and deploy new ideas and new knowledge throughout the world. The connections formed at SIPA undergird a network for sharing scholarship, gaining experience, and engaging the world now, and in the future.

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Global Economy / Trade / Finance / Development

Tax Avoidance and Privacy in the Digital Age

On September 21, 2016 and linked by video, participants in New York and Milan engaged in a debate on competi-tion, tax avoidance, and privacy in the digital age from both U.S. and EU perspectives as part of the first transat-lantic Citizens’ Dialogue. Co-sponsored by SIPA, the European Commission, and Bocconi University in Milan, the discussion featured current European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager, University Professor Joseph E. Stiglitz, and Dean Merit E. Janow, in New York, along with Senator Mario Monti, the former commissioner for competition and former prime minister of Italy, in Milan. More than 2,000 people from 39 countries watched the live broadcast.

Stanley Fischer Discusses Central Bank Communication

Stanley Fischer, vice chairman of the Federal Reserve System, gave the inaugural Lecture on Central Banking at SIPA on April 17, 2017. Speaking about central bank communication, Fischer said that actions by the Fed can surprise because central banks are obligated to follow an appropriate monetary policy regardless of market expectations. Fischer noted that if the Fed is too path-oriented and does not incorporate enough uncertainty about the economy into its projections, its policies will not adequately respond to unexpected market shocks.

Trade Issues Today SIPA, the Jerome A. Chazen Institute

for Global Business at Columbia Business School, and SIPA’s Center on Global Economic Governance organized a conference examining the world trade system on September 30, 2016. The event brought together international experts from government and academia, including Jagdish Bhagwati, University Professor at Columbia; Ernesto Zedillo, former president of Mexico; Consul General of Sweden Leif Pagrotsky, a former industry and trade minister; Arvind Panagariya, a member of Prime Minister of India Narendra Modi’s cabinet on leave from SIPA; and economist Alan Krueger of Princeton University, former chairman of President Obama’s Council of Economic Advisors.

from left: European Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager, Dean Merit E. Janow, and University Professor Joseph E. Stiglitz spoke at the transatlantic Citizens’ Dialogue.

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Argentina: Graduating from Populism after One Too Many Spring Breaks

Finance Minister of Argentina Alfonso Prat-Gay visited SIPA on October 10, 2016, to discuss policy changes needed in the South American nation to turn its economy around. His talk was spon-sored by the Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum (OMFIF) and SIPA’s Initiative on Central Banking and Financial Policy and MPA in Economic Policy Management program.

“Women in Finance: Toward Equality” Workshop

On March 9, 2017, SIPA’s inaugural “Women in Finance: Toward Equality” workshop convened scholars, students, and professional practitioners for a day of wide-ranging discussion about the intersection of women and finance. In a keynote address, Mary J. Miller, former undersecretary of the U.S. Treasury, analyzed the state of gender diversity and its relation to the performance of financial firms. The workshop was organized by Yasmine Ergas, director of the Gender and Public Policy specialization; Ailsa Röell, professor of international and public affairs; and Patricia Mosser, director of the Initiative on Central Banking and Financial Policy.

MPA-EPM Students Learn from Visiting Experts

Throughout the academic year, the MPA in Economic Policy Management (MPA-EPM) program invited scholars and economists from all over the world to advise students on their spring projects and answer questions on their area of work. Visitors during the spring 2017 term included Gary B. Gorton, author of Misunderstanding Financial Crises; Miguel A. Kiguel, executive director of Econviews; Michael Kumhof, senior research advisor at the Bank of England; Alan Taylor, professor of economics and finance at the University of California, Davis; and Luis Felipe Céspedes, the Republic of Chile’s minister of economy, development, and tourism.

MPA in Development Practice (MPA-DP) Summer Placements

Summer placements are a core requirement of the MPA-DP program. Students gain experience while embedded in host organizations for three months after completing their first year. During 2017, 58 MPA-DP students worked in 35 countries. Host organizations included several UN agencies: World Food Programme in Ethiopia, Italy, Panama, Peru, and Senegal; Food and Agriculture Organization in the Lao People’s Democratic Republic; UNICEF in Armenia and Jordan; United Nations Population Fund in Turkey; UN Women in Timor-Leste; and the UN Secretary- General’s Office in New York. Other host institutions included The World Bank in Tanzania; Innovations for Poverty Action in Liberia; Laboratoria, a social enterprise in Peru founded by MPA-DP alumni; PEGAfrica, an off-grid solar company headquartered in Ghana; and Educate Girls, a nonprofit organization in India.

Hyomi Carty MIA ’17 leads a discussion with youth representatives in Gbarnga, Bong County, Liberia.

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Energy and Environment

MPA in Environmental Science and Policy’s Circular Economy Week

The MPA-ESP Class of 2017 organized Columbia University’s first Circular Economy Week to explore this alterna-tive economic model in which natural resources are used in a closed loop and waste is minimized. The series of events featured both rising and established sustainability leaders and included an NYC student panel discussion in which student leaders from education programs around New York compared approaches to driving sustainable change within their schools. A concluding forum was moderated by Professor Steven Cohen, director of the MPA-ESP program and executive director of the Earth Institute.

Columbia Global Energy Summit

On April 13-14, 2017, the Center on Global Energy Policy (CGEP) hosted its annual summit at Columbia University’s Low Library Rotunda. The all-day event was comprised of panel discussions with a roster of distinguished speakers, including keynote conversations on “Energy, Economics, and Trade” by Jacob “Jack” Lew, visiting professor of international and public affairs at SIPA and 76th secretary of the treasury, and “Technology’s Role in the Clean Energy Transition” with Lisa Jackson, vice president of environment, policy and social initiatives at Apple and former administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.

12th Annual Student Energy Symposium

Columbia University’s 12th Annual Student Energy Symposium on February 2-3, 2017, convened thought leaders and practitioners from across the energy sector, representing industry, government, civil society, and the broader Columbia and New York community to explore key challenges and drivers impacting the energy system. The Symposium was jointly organized by the SIPA Energy Association, the Columbia Business School’s Energy Club, the Columbia Law School’s Environmental Law Society, and the Columbia Engineering Energy Club.

New York’s Renewable Energy Future

The Center on Global Energy Policy (CGEP) hosted a conversation on the future of renewable energy in New York on May 2, 2017. Professor Jason Bordoff, CGEP founding director, moderated the conversation with a group of distinguished speakers, including Knut M. Aanstad, president at Statoil Wind U.S. LLC; Dan Esty, Hillhouse professor of environmental law and policy at Yale University; Richard Kauffman, chairman of energy and finance for New York; Eric Martel, president and CEO of Hydro-Québec; and Vijay Modi, professor of mechani-cal engineering at Columbia and director of infrastructure programs for the Millennium Villages Project.

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Human Rights and Humanitarian Affairs

Beyond Neutrality: The Humanitarian System at a Crossroads

SIPA’s Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy (HRHP) concentration spon-sored the “Beyond Neutrality: The Humanitarian System at a Crossroads” conference on October 27, 2016. The conference featured two plenary panels, “Conformity, Impartiality, and Rights” and “Humanitarianism between Charity and International Security,” moderated by Columbia professors Dirk Salomons and Susannah Friedman. Speakers included Professor Elazar Barkan, HRHP concentration director; Michael Doyle, University Professor at Columbia; Michael Neuman, director of Médecins Sans Frontières’ research center in Paris; author David Rieff; Edem Wosornu, chief of the strategic planning, evaluation and guidance section at the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA); and Aurelien Buffler, chief of the policy advice and planning section at OCHA.

Human Rights, Rule of Law, and the Challenges of Civil Society Activism

On April 5, 2017, the Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy concentration sponsored “Human Rights, Rule of Law, and the Challenges of Civil Society Activism.” The main speaker was Navanethem Pillay, former United Nations high commissioner for human rights, former president and judge at the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, and former judge at the International Criminal Court. Dr. Pillay discussed her career and experience as a human rights activist and lawyer.

2017 Columbia Graduate Global Policy Awards

Three students in the Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy concentration were recipients of the 2017 Columbia Graduate Global Policy Award, which was used towards their summer research projects as part of the Columbia Global Policy Initiative. Daniel Bradley worked on research related to being LGBTI in Asia; Anika Juliann Michel dedicated her summer to fieldwork at the Camp for Peace Liberia; Huda Wajih was engaged in the project “Pakistan’s First ‘Violence Against Women’s Center’: Successful implementation and expansion.”

Students Participate in Symposium on Gender, Law, and Constitutions

Students in SIPA’s Gender, Globalization and Human Rights class taught by Yasmine Ergas took part in the Second International Symposium on Gender, Law, and Constitutions held April 12 and 13, 2017 in Washington, D.C. The conference was organized by UN Women and the United States Institute of Peace. The theme of the conference was “Ensuring Gender Equality in Constitutions: Engaging the Next Generation of Stakeholders.” SIPA students participated in the conference’s research panels, which addressed consti- tutions and gender equality in an international and comparative perspective.

Student-Organized Symposium Considers Forced Displacement

On October 5, 2016, SIPA’s Migration Working Group hosted a symposium on the lessons learned from two recent landmark summits for refugees and migrants. Michael Doyle, University Professor and director of Columbia’s Global Policy Initiative, and Daniel Naujoks, an adjunct professor at SIPA and the New School, moderated panels featuring distinguished speakers from the UN, Human Rights Watch, and other international organizations.

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International Security and Foreign Policy

Ban Ki-moon: UN’s Role in a Changing World

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon gave SIPA’s Gabriel Silver Memorial Lecture on October 26, 2016, and observed that, despite its limitations and need for restructuring, the UN still has a vital role to play in addressing global issues, such as climate change, economic upheaval, and humanitarian crises. Ban cited the adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the COP 21 Paris Agreement as major steps forward in addressing these issues.

Emmanuel Macron: Reforging Transatlantic Bonds

Emmanuel Macron, then a candidate for the French presidency, spoke at SIPA on December 5, 2016, on the impor-tance of maintaining a strong relationship between the United States and Europe and the risks he perceived in the current political climate. Macron, who served as France’s minister for the economy, industry, and digital affairs from August 2014 to August 2016, is founder of the French political movement En Marche!

Shlomo Ben-Ami: Politics and Conflict in the Middle East

Historian and former Israeli politician Shlomo Ben-Ami discussed “The Politics of Conflict in the Middle East” when he presented the George McGovern Lecture at SIPA on November 1, 2016. The McGovern professorship of International and Public Affairs is a one-year visiting position for scholars who show a deep commitment to international peace and cooperation. Provost John H. Coatsworth introduced Ben-Ami as a “scholar, educator, diplomat, and champion of cooperation and peace.”

SIPA Progressive Security Working Group

A group of SIPA students founded the SIPA Progressive Security Working Group, which focuses on the intersection of national security issues and progres-sive politics. The group’s inaugural event was a panel discussion on the future of the nuclear deal with Iran, featuring former Special Assistant to the President and National Security Council Senior Director for Arms Control and Nonproliferation Jon Wolfsthal, former Principal Deputy Coordinator for Sanctions Policy at the Department of State and SIPA Senior Research Scholar Richard Nephew, and Iran Project Deputy Director, Iris Bieri MIA ’11.

Cyber 9/12 Student Challenge The Atlantic Council’s Cyber 9/12

Student Challenge is an annual cyberpol-icy competition for students across the globe to compete in developing national security policy recommendations tackling a fictional cyber catastrophe. In spring 2017, SIPA’s team —Thomas Lind MIA ’17, Leo Isaac-Dognin MIA ’17, Jon Song MIA ’18, and Anne Novak MIA ’17— took second place overall in the competition.

Emmanuel Macron, then a candidate for the French presidency, being interviewed following his talk at SIPA on December 5, 2016

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Global Urban and Social Policy

WhosOnTheBallot.org and the 2016 ElectionThe Urban and Social Policy (USP) concentration and the United States specialization welcomed numerous speakers and panels in the run-up to and aftermath of the election. USP partnered with Columbia College for the third year to host five days of speakers and events designed to promote civic engagement and community involve-ment among students. USP students staffed voter registration tables and assisted new voter registrations and absentee ballot requests.

WhosOnTheBallot.org, a USP-managed, non-partisan voter registration and engagement initiative, was updated and used by nearly 100,000 New Yorkers in the 2016 election cycle. The website and mobile app provide New York City citizens with easy access to election information, candidate information, and polling locations.

Dinkins Forum The 20th Annual David N. Dinkins Leadership and Public Policy Forum was held on March 30, 2017, with a keynote address by John Lewis, the renowned civil rights leader and U.S. Representative from Georgia. Lewis’s keynote was followed by a panel discussion on reframing economic and political citizen- ship, moderated by Professor Ester Fuchs, with Michael Nutter, the David N. Dinkins Professor of ProfessionalPractice in Urban and Public Affairs andformer mayor of Philadelphia; DavidGoodman, president of the AndrewGoodman Foundation; Verna Eggleston,head of Women’s Economic Developmentat Bloomberg Philanthropies; andMichael Waldman, president of theBrennan Center for Justice at NYU Schoolof Law.

Global Mayors Forum Fernando Haddad, former mayor of São Paulo, Brazil’s largest city, discussed the challenges of innovation in mega- cities, including how mass migration of people from rural to urban areas has overburdened public services and aging infrastructure. In his April 10, 2017, talk at SIPA’s Global Mayors Forum, Haddad suggested that politics are a major barrier to improving Brazil’s infrastructure.

The Future of Immigration PolicyProfessor Michael Nutter moderated a panel on the Future of Immigration Policy on December 13, 2016. The panel of activists and practitioners included Albert Fox Cahn, legal director for the New York Chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-NY); Steven Choi, executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition; Aracelis Lucero MIA ’12, executive director of the Mexican American Students’ Alliance; Elora Mukherjee, director of the Immigrants’ Rights Clinic at Columbia Law School; and Domenic Powell, advocacy and policy strategist for the American Civil Liberties Union. The event, part of the Dean’s Seminar Series on Race and Policy, was co-sponsored by SIPA Students of Color (SSOC) and the SIPA Diversity Committee.

Columbia Public Policy Review

The Columbia Public Policy Review, a student-run publication dedicated to domestic policy in the United States, released its inaugural issue in fall 2016. Both SIPA faculty and students contributed articles on topics including urban leadership, polling and elections, policing, LGBTQ rights, race, and cybersecurity. Professor Ester Fuchs, director of the Urban and Social Policy concentration and United States specialization, served as advisor to the publication. from left: Professor David N. Dinkins,

former New York City mayor, with U.S. Representative John Lewis at the Dinkins Forum

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Technology / Entrepreneurship and Policy

Dean’s Public Policy Challenge Grant

The challenge grant competition invites students to form teams to propose student-designed projects and proto-types that use ICTs and/or data analytics to solve global policy problems. The SIPA 2017 Challenge Grant was awarded to three teams: HelmetSmart, a tech- nology company whose mission is to encourage motorcyclists in India to wear helmets while riding to eliminate preventable traffic-related injuries and deaths; FiveOne Labs, an online startup incubator that will empower a new generation of refugee and conflict-affected entrepreneurs to create sustainable livelihoods; and I-Care, an online platform that utilizes technology and medical data to provide disabled senior citizens and their families with more and better choices. SIPA’s I-Care team also won the top prize at the Global Public Policy Network Conference held in Paris February 17-18, 2017. Hosted by the Sciences Po School of Public Affairs, the conference convened 32 student teams from member schools—including six from SIPA—to present data-driven solutions to the UN’s current Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

SIPA Receives Nasdaq Grant In 2016, the Nasdaq Educational

Foundation awarded SIPA a multi-year grant to support initiatives in entrepre-neurship and public policy. SIPA will leverage the grant to enhance its position as a hub for the study of entrepreneurship, innovation, digital technology, and public policy. Programming began in fall 2016 and will continue through spring 2019.

2017 Global Digital Futures Forum

Held on May 5, 2017, this year’s Global Digital Futures Policy Forum focused on the tension between fragmentation of the internet and globalization through six panels focusing on industrial vs. commercial uses of the internet, digital trade, trust and assurance, global platforms and international development, conflict and democracy, and financial systemic risks. In the featured keynote conversation, Dean Merit E. Janow of SIPA and Alphabet CEO Eric Schmidt considered questions of globalization, automation, and artificial intelligence.

Jared Cohen Discusses Cyberpower and the New Digital Age

In a visit to SIPA on May 3, 2017, Jigsaw CEO Jared Cohen explored the “new digital age” and how it is radically changing the nature of global problems and their solutions. Jigsaw is an incubator within Alphabet—best known as Google’s parent company—that builds technology to tackle some of the toughest global security challenges facing the world today. In a conversation with Dean Merit E. Janow, Cohen described how the next decade will be defined by the ubiquity of technology and data.

How Does Tech Enrich Urban Policy?

SIPA’s Entrepreneurship and Policy Initiative hosted a discussion with Alphabet’s Sidewalk Labs on February 23, 2017. Panelists included: Rohit Aggarwala, chief policy officer for Sidewalk Labs; Noelle Francois, CEO at Heat Seek NYC; Miguel Gamiño Jr., chief technology officer for the City of New York; Maria Gotsch, president and CEO at the Partnership Fund for New York City. Andrew Rasiej, founder and CEO of Civic Hall, moderated the discussion.

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Center for Development Economics and Policy

Events CDEP hosted 52 events during 2016-

2017: Twenty-six were talks by outside speakers in the CDEP Development Workshop speaker series. Twenty-five were talks by PhD students in SIPA and the Economics Department, either as part of the CDEP Development Workshop speaker series or in a brown bag student colloquium. CDEP also co-sponsored a conference at Columbia on February 6, 2017, entitled “Institution-building, Governance, and Compliance in Brazil: Politics, Policy, and Business.”

Publications

The CDEP-CGEG working paper series, sponsored jointly by CDEP and the Center on Global Economic Governance (CGEG), has continued to publish recent research by its members including:

• “Childhood Circumstances and Adult Outcomes: Act II” by Douglas Almond, Janet Currie, and Valentina Duque

• “Economic Shocks and Crime: Evidence from the Brazilian Trade Liberalization” by Rafael Dix-Carneiro, Rodrigo R. Soares, and Gabriel Ulyssea

• “Disease and Gender Gaps in Human Capital Investment: Evidence from Niger’s 1986 Meningitis Epidemic” by Belinda Archibong and Francis Annan

• “Social Origins of Dictatorships: Elite Networks and Political Transitions in Haiti” by Suresh Naidu, James A. Robinson, and Lauren E. Young

• “The Arrival of Fast Internet and Employment in Africa” by Jonas Hjort and Jonas Poulsen

Grants The Center continued its grant program

for graduate students and faculty at Columbia working in development. Grants were awarded to the following student projects:

• So Yoon Ahn: “Cross-Border Marriage and Female Empowerment”

• Francis Annan: “Fraud on Mobile Financial Markets: Evidence from a Pilot Audit Study”

• Kolby Hanson: “Militant Recruitment In and Out of Ceasefire”

• Nandita Krishnaswamy: “Producer Responses to Agricultural Price Floors: Evidence from India’s Public Distribution System”

• Lorenzo Lagos: “The Effects of Violence on Commercial Loans: Evidence from Mexico’s Narco-Wars”

• Lorenzo Pessina: “Enterprise Form and Economic Activity: Evidence from Colombia”

• Golvine de Rochambeau: “Inefficiencies in the Transport Sector: Evidence from Liberia” CDEP announced the winners of its Faculty Research Grant Program, made possible by a generous gift from Anuradha Jayanti. Winners included: Project: Impacts of Glyphosate Use in Agriculture on Human Health CDEP Faculty Affiliate: Rodrigo R. Soares, Lemann Professor of Brazilian Public Policy and International and Public Affairs, SIPA

Coauthors: Mateus Dias (São Paulo School of Economics-FGV) and Rudi Rocha (Federal University of Rio de Janeiro)

Glyphosate is the most used herbicide in the world today. The goal of this project is to assess the impact of glyphosate use on the health of human populations. This is a major issue in the current debate on the use of glyphosate and, more generally, of genetically modified seeds. In Brazil, the use of glyphosate is concentrated on the production of soybeans and increased with the expansion of soybean planted area following the adoption of genetically modified seeds in the 2000s. The project uses this setting to analyze the effect of expansion on the use of glyphosate on human health.

Project: The Andean Way? Understanding Corruption and Inefficiency in Peru

CDEP Faculty Affiliate: Paul Lagunes, Assistant Professor of International and Public Affairs, SIPA

A large portion of the developing world was rocked by a corruption scandal that originated in Brazil. The nation’s largest construction group was colluding with government officials to inflate the costs of public infrastructure. In Peru, as reported by The Economist, the Brazilian firm would “win contracts by making low bids and then corruptly secure big increases in costs through addenda.” The goal of the project is first, to uncover the frequency with which this corrupt maneuver appears across Peru’s districts over time; and second, to reveal the political dynamics that make this practice more or less likely. Understanding how politics relates to corruption is an important step toward curbing the problem in Peru and beyond.

Co-directors: Eric Verhoogen, Vice Dean of SIPA and Associate Professor of International and Public Affairs and Economics; and Cristian Pop-Eleches, Associate Professor of International and Public Affairs

The goal of the Center for Development Economics and Policy (CDEP) is to promote microeconomic research in development at Columbia and to help bring that research to a broader audience.

Institutes and Centers

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Center on Global Economic Governance

Research Projects and New Initiatives

• Initiative on Infrastructure Investment and Sustainable Development, led by Patrick Bolton, the Barbara and David Zalaznick Professor of Business and Professor of Economics at Columbia. As part of this initiative, the Energy Transition, NDCs, and the Post-COP21 conference was held in September 2016, in Marrakesh, Morocco; the resulting publication, Coping with the Climate Crisis: Mitigation Policies and Global Coordination, co-edited by Patrick Bolton, is forthcoming.

• Research initiative on “Corruption and Oversight: Insights from Field Experiments,” led by Paul Lagunes, assistant professor at SIPA

• Project on international trade and protectionism, led by Jagdish Bhagwati, University Professor at Columbia University

• Innovation and Technological Change, with co-director at CGEG’s BRICLab Marcos Troyjo, and CGEG director Jan Svejnar

Lectures and Publications

The Kenneth J. Arrow Lecture Series honors the pioneering scholarship of Nobel Laureate Kenneth J. Arrow and his seminal contributions to the field of economics. The lecture series features world-renowned economists and provides the basis for the accompanying book series, published with Columbia

University Press. On November 10, 2016, John Geanakoplos, the James Tobin Professor of Economics at Yale University, lectured on “Credit Surfaces, Leverage Cycles and Doom Loops.”

Convening Global Leaders and Experts

CGEG hosted events and conferences in New York City and around the world in Brazil, China, the Czech Republic, and Morocco.

• The Challenges for Monetary Policy Conduct of Emerging Market Central Banks, held on October 5, 2016, featured Veerathai Santiprabhob, governor of the Bank of Thailand; Takatoshi Ito, professor of international and public affairs at SIPA; and Patricia C. Mosser, director of the SIPA’s Initiative on Central Banking and Financial Policy.

• The workshop, World Development Report (WDR) 2018: Learning to Realize Education’s Promise, held on February 27, 2017, included Deon Filmer, co-director of WDR 2018 and lead economist at the World Bank; Ravi Kanbur, T. H. Lee Professor of World Affairs at Cornell University; Halsey Rogers, co-director of WDR 2018 and lead economist at the World Bank; Miguel Urquiola, professor of economics and international affairs at Columbia; and many others.

• Part of the Ambassador Donald and Vera Blinken Lecture Series on Global Governance, The Current Situation and Future Prospect for Europe’s Economy, featured Werner Hoyer, president of the European Investment Bank, on April 10, 2017.

• Co-sponsored by the MPA in Economic Policy Management and the Initiative on Central Banking and Financial Policy, the Second Annual Central Bankers Roundtable on Challenges to Monetary and Fiscal Policy in Emerging Market Economies was held on April 24, 2017. The conference brought together heads of central banks from all over the world, as well as business leaders and academics to address current challenges and financial stability objectives.

• On December 8-9, 2016 and March 17, 2017, the Center continued its ongoing research project on Strategies for Growth: The Changing Role of the State, holding conferences in Brazil and China, in partnership with the Columbia Global Centers in Rio de Janeiro and Beijing. Leading academics, Nobel Laureates, policymakers, and business leaders participated in round-table discussions on the role of government in promoting inclusive economic growth and formulated policy briefs to further inform regional and global policy debates.

• Participants at both conferences included Eric Chang, senior director of technology strategy and communica-tions at Microsoft Research Asia; Merit E. Janow, dean of SIPA; Jacob J. Lew, former U.S. secretary of the treasury; Edmund Phelps, director of the Center on Capitalism and Society at Columbia; Joseph E. Stiglitz, University Professor at Columbia; and Yang Lan, co-founder of Sun Media Group, among others.

Director: Jan Svejnar, James T. Shotwell Professor of Global Political Economy

During the 2016-2017, SIPA’s Center on Global Economic Governance (CGEG) continued to engage global leaders in economic governance and expand its research program, spearheaded by CGEG faculty associates, in several major areas. These include monetary and fiscal policy, financial regulation, trade and investment, innovation and technological change, corruption, and income and wealth distribution.

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The Center on Global Energy Policy (CGEP) seeks to strengthen the understanding of global energy policy issues and support leaders working to solve today’s most pressing energy challenges.

Center on Global Energy Policy

Research “Can Coal Make a Comeback?” CGEP director Jason Bordoff and Trevor

Houser, partner at the Rhodium Group, released a seminal report in April 2017 that analyzed how Trump’s rollback of Obama-era environmental regulations would affect coal jobs in the U.S. The report found that, contrary to Trump’s claims that these regulations were the cause of the coal industry’s decline, cheap natural gas, renewable energy resources, and decreasing demand for coal from China are in fact the real culprits. The report has been widely received in the media, including on Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, Vox, Greentech Media, NPR, and CNN.

“The Geopolitics of Renewable Energy”

In a working paper jointly published by CGEP, the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at the Harvard Kennedy School, and the Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, the authors—including CGEP Inaugural Fellow David Sandalow—explore geopolitical issues that could accompany the widespread deployment of renewable energy technologies.

Publications

CGEP released the first book in a series with Columbia University Press titled Crude Volatility: The History and the Future of Boom-Bust Oil Prices (January 2017). Author Robert McNally, a non-resident fellow at CGEP, explains the history of oil market volatility and how past periods of stability and volatility in oil prices help us understand the new boom-bust era.

Launch of the Energy Journalism Initiative

CGEP launched the Energy Journalism Initiative, a new program to enhance energy literacy by supporting energy journalism. In June 2017, 19 journal-ists—selected from more than 80 applicants—were brought to New York for a three-day seminar to learn about energy and environmental issues from leading academic and policy experts.

Events

Columbia Global Energy Summit, April 13, 2017

CGEP hosted its annual summit, an all-day event featuring keynote speakers and panel discussions with senior energy sector leaders. The summit focused on key issues and questions at the intersec-tion of energy policy, financial markets, the environment, and geopolitics.

Distinguished speakers included:

• Jacob “Jack” Lew, visiting professor at SIPA and 76th secretary of the Treasury

• Lisa Jackson, vice president of environment, policy, and social initiatives at Apple and former U.S. Environmental Protection Agency administrator

• Jim Connaughton, former chairman of the White House Council on Environmental Quality for President George W. Bush

• Jeff Holden, chief product officer at Uber Technologies

• Fu Chengyu, former chair at both China Petroleum and Chemical Corp (Sinopec) and the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC)

• Dr. Alissa Park, director of the Lenfest Center for Sustainable Energy at Columbia

• Dr. Peter Kelemen, chair of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Columbia

CGEP Energy Leaders Forum with Former U.S. Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz, October 13, 2016

Several months before leaving office, former Secretary of Energy Ernest Moniz delivered remarks on his time at the U.S. Department of Energy, nuclear energy, and the outlook for U.S. energy policy.

Women in Energy (WIE) Tour of Brookhaven National Lab

CGEP’s WIE program continued to be active in 2016-2017. The Center sponsored a number of events and workshops for women graduate students and professionals, including a trip to the Brookhaven National Lab, where participants toured the lab’s solar arrays and learned about the U.S. Department of Energy’s work in sustainable energy technology.

Columbia Energy Exchange Podcast Series

The Columbia Energy Exchange entered its second year of weekly programming, bringing intimate conversations with global energy and climate leaders to the world. Several highlights include:

• Leading up to the 2016 U.S. presidential election, Columbia Energy Exchange interviewed two senators from opposing parties—Trent Lott and Byron Dorgan— in a two-part series on the outlook for U.S. energy policy.

• Catherine McKenna, Canadian minister of environment and climate change, discussed climate policy in Canada and around the world, and President Trump’s decision to leave the Paris Agreement.

Director: Jason Bordoff, Professor of Professional Practice at SIPA

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Picker Center for Executive Education

New Initiatives • In October 2016, the first annual

conference on Innovations in Governance in the U.S. and China, jointly sponsored by the Picker Center and Peking University, was held in Beijing. The second conference was held in 2017 at SIPA, with subsequent conferences planned for 2018 and 2019 in Beijing and Columbia, respectively.

• The Center launched five major new Executive Training programs for the International Finance Corporation (IFC), China Minsheng Bank, China Everbright Bank, a Brazil leadership program—including participants from all three sectors and all three levels of government—and a new program partnership with Korea University. For the eighth year, the Center was chosen to help run and teach in the Advanced Leadership Enhancement Programme for the Hong Kong Civil Service.

Research and Teaching Innovation

• The Picker Center’s Digital Education Group continued to introduce innovations in teaching and learning to be used both in Executive Master of Public Administration (EMPA) classes and other SIPA offerings. As part of Columbia’s move to the Canvas online learning platform, the Picker Center team designed a new online class template and “Coursebuilder” website, now used by the EMPA program, the MPA-DP program, and SIPA’s Capstone program.

• The Picker Center received funding and support from the Provost’s Center for Teaching and Learning to expand its work on Canvas and audiovisual case studies, and to make these learning assets available to all SIPA classes. In 2017, a shared SIPA Case Collection was created and made available to all SIPA classes. In 2017-2018, this program

will expand to include training to establish new student-created cases from SIPA Capstone projects.

• Case research and creation also continued in 2016-2017 with the finalization of case studies on development issues on Rwanda, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Ghana. A new video and written case was completed on Juntos, a cross-sector partnership to improve the effectiveness and transpar-ency of local governments in Brazil, which was created by Comunitas, an organization of the leading corporations and philanthropists in Brazil. In addition, a new film and case on economic development through agriculture and higher education in Afghanistan through an international public-private partnership is now in the final stages of editing.

Executive Director: William B. Eimicke

SIPA’s Picker Center provides customized graduate-level training to build knowledge and leadership skills in executives at public agencies, corporations, and nonprofit organizations around the world. Over the past year, the Picker Center continued to serve as a forum for discussion and debate on critical issues in public service and international affairs.

from left: Sun Zhe, SIPA adjunct senior research scholar; William Eimicke, founding director of SIPA’s Picker Center for Executive Education; and Professor Wang Puqu, dean of the Institute of State Governance Studies at Peking University, co-leaders of the U.S.-China Symposium on Government Innovation and Governing Skills at Peking University in Beijing, October 2016

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Deepak and Neera Raj Center on Indian Economic Policies

Trade Policy Today Conference This day-long conference on global trade

policies incorporated a focus on India. Participants included Robert Lawrence, the Albert L. Williams Professor of International Trade and Investment at Harvard; Douglas Irwin, the John French Professor of Economics in the Social Sciences at Dartmouth; Caroline Freund, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics; Pravin Krishna, deputy director of the Raj Center and the Chung Ju Yung Distinguished Professor of International Economics and Business at Johns Hopkins University; and Devashish Mitra, the Gerald B. and Daphna Cramer Professor of Global Affairs at Syracuse University.

Kotak Distinguished Lectures

• Dale Jorgenson, University Professor at Harvard, delivered a lecture on December 2, 2016, on why he believes India has become the fastest-growing major economy.

• Arvind Panagariya, cabinet minister and vice chairman of the National Institution for Transforming India, traced the evolution of policy reform in India on February 6, 2017, emphasizing the rationale for reforms undertaken since 2014 under Narendra Modi, prime minister of India. Panagariya, the Jagdish N. Bhagwati Professor of Indian Political Economy, was on leave from SIPA from January 2015-August 2017.

• Urjit Patel, governor of the Reserve Bank of India lectured about challenges facing the Indian macroeconomy and discussed Indian economic reforms, including the Government’s demoneti-zation policy on April 25, 2017.

Special Lectures• Devesh Kapur, professor at the

University of Pennsylvania, “The Indian Diaspora,” February 13, 2017

• Milan Vaishnav, senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment on International Peace, “Money in Politics,” March 7, 2017

• University Professor Jagdish Bhagwati, keynote address at the India Business Conference presented in partnership with Columbia Business School, April 1, 2017

Research Agenda

The Center’s research focused on the following themes:

Improving Indian Productivity and Economic Performance

Research was conducted on binding constraints on growth and policy options for market reforms. Specific research projects include:

• Labor Market Regulations and Indian Productivity, directed by Pravin Krishna and Ritam Chaurey

• Endogenous Organization of Production Networks in India and Comparison with China, directed by Pravin Krishna and Heiwai Tang

• The Impact of the GST on Internal and External Trade, directed by Pravin Krishna and Eva Van Leemput

Trade Policy Options India’s trade policy choices were

analyzed at the unilateral level; at the bilateral level by participating in agreements such as the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership; and at the multilateral level through negotiations at the World Trade Organization. Pravin Krishna presented a research paper on this topic to high-level policymakers in Delhi in November 2016.

Health Care in India

Professor Jagdish Bhagwati; T. N. Srinivasan, Samuel C. Park, Jr. Professor of Economics Emeritus at Yale University; and Kannoth M. Muraleedharan of the Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai are jointly doing a major study of Caesarian deliveries and maternal health in India.

Policy Outreach in India

• Professor Bhagwati was invited to a private meeting with Prime Minister Modi to discuss a variety of issues concerning the Indian economy in December 2016. He was also interviewed by NDTV and India Today TV for his views on the demonetization debate.

• Pravin Krishna was an invited speaker at a high-level policy conference in New Delhi on Indian trade integration with China in November 2016. In December 2016, he was invited to share his views with Prime Minister Modi and senior government officials on India’s place in the international economy.

Director: Arvind Panagariya (on leave as Vice-Chairman, NITI Aayog, 2015-2017), Director: Professor Jagdish Bhagwati, Deputy Director: Professor Pravin Krishna

The mission of the Deepak and Neera Raj Center on Indian Economic Policies is to increase economic prosperity in India. Through scholarly research, training students, publications, and events, the Center informs Indian economic policies and accelerates growth, enabling a substantial reduction in poverty and putting India on center stage of the world economy.

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Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies

Lectures and Conferences• The annual National Security Scholars

Conference with Secretary of the U.S. Air Force Deborah Lee James MIA ’81 and Air Force Chief of Staff General David L. Goldfein

This year’s conference examined the implications of an uncertain future security environment on United States Air Force strategy and operations. Participants included nearly 50 leading international relations scholars, think tank analysts, senior Air Force leaders, and active duty, reserve, and Air National Guard Airmen from several nearby Air Force installations. Secretary James and General Goldfein also held roundtable discussions on leadership and Air Force operations with students from SIPA’s International Security Policy concentration, the Department of Political Science, the Air Force Reserve Officer Training Corps, and several campus veteran’s organizations, October 13, 2016

• The Eighth Annual Kenneth N. Waltz Lecture in International Relations: “Theorizing Cybersecurity and Other 21st-Century Problems” by Martha Finnemore, University Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, at George Washington University, September 29, 2016

The Annual Kenneth N. Waltz Lecture in International Relations was established by the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies in September 2008, in celebration of Waltz’s many outstanding contributions to the field of international relations.

• “Reflections on Investigations into the Renewed Use of Chemical Weapons” by Virginia Gamba, assistant secretary- general and head of the Joint Investigative Mechanism at the United Nations, March 22, 2017

Virginia Gamba previously served as director and deputy to the High Representative for Disarmament Affairs at the United Nations and director of the United Nations Institute for Disarmament Research (UNIDIR) project on disarmament in peace support operations.

• “The State of the Air Force and the Future of Nuclear Deterrence” by Lt. Gen. Jack Weinstein, deputy chief of staff for Strategic Deterrence and Nuclear Integration at the U.S. Air Force Headquarters in Washington, D.C., March 22, 2017

As head of the Air Force Global Strike Command, Lt. Gen. Weinstein provided insight into the current landscape of nuclear armament and his assessment for how the service can best approach modern strategic deterrence. He addressed a number of issues including U.S.-Russia military relations, the increasing prominence and importance of cyber operations, and emerging threats from new technologies.

• “Radicalism in the Middle East: Perspectives from Egypt” by Ambassador Ahmed Farouk, consul general of Egypt in New York, April 6, 2017

Ambassador Farouk, the former ambassador to Slovenia and deputy head- of-mission to Japan, discussed the ongoing struggle between two competing ideologies: the first championed by

reformers, who believe in the notion of the modern nation state; and the second sponsored by radicals, who call themselves awakeners and believe in the establishment of the theological state.

Book Talks

• “Confronting Evil: Engaging our Responsibility to Prevent Genocide” by Dr. James Waller, Cohen Professor of Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Keene State University, September 29, 2016

Dr. Waller discussed his new book, which explores strategies to prevent genocide from taking place; to prevent further atrocities once genocide is occurring; and to prevent future atrocities once a society has begun to rebuild after genocide.

• “How Everything Became War and the Military Became Everything: Tales from the Pentagon” by Rosa Brooks, professor of law at Georgetown University, September 19, 2016

Rosa Brooks, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, previously worked at the Pentagon as counselor to the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. In 2011, she was awarded the Secretary of Defense Medal for Outstanding Public Service.

Director: Richard K. Betts, Leo A. Shifrin Professor of War and Peace Studies; Arnold A. Saltzman Professor of War and Peace Studies; and Director of the International Security Policy Concentration

As one of the leading research centers on international relations in the United States, the Saltzman Institute’s activities include lectures and presentations on the most critical public policy issues.

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SIPA at a Glance

International 54%

Female 57%

United States 46%

Male 43%

ENROLLMENT BY CITIZENSHIPENROLLMENT BY GENDER

SIPA STUDENTS

MIA: 349

MPA-DP: 115

GPPN Dual Degree: 52

MPA-EPM: 50

Columbia Dual Degree: 33

MPA: 471

EMPA: 200

MPA-ESP: 46

ENROLLMENT BY ACADEMIC DEGREE TOTAL STUDENTS

1,316NUMBER OF COUNTRIES REPRESENTED

90

Based on fall 2016 enrollment

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FULL-TIME FACULTY

72VISITING PROFESSORS OR SPECIAL ONE-YEAR APPOINTMENTS

9ADJUNCT FACULTY

294 FULL-TIME RESEARCH SCHOLARS

17 PART-TIME RESEARCH SCHOLARS

80

BUDGET

$87,901CURRENT USE GIFTS

$11,208ADDITIONS TO ENDOWMENT

$2,203RESEARCH SUPPORT

$4,040ENDOWMENT MARKET VALUE (AS OF 6/30/17)

$104,683

LARGEST CONCENTRATION OF SIPA ALUMNI TOTAL ALUMNI

21,287NUMBER OF COUNTRIES REPRESENTED

162

SIPA ALUMNI

FACULTY FINANCIALS (IN THOUSANDS)

United States 15,602

New York Metro 6,333

Washington, D.C. 2,853

San Francisco Metro 732

Los Angeles Metro 546

Japan 595

United Kingdom 385

China 362

Mexico 237

France 229

Canada 200

South Korea 188

India 188

Turkey 131

Germany 126

Colombia 119

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Total Graduating Students: 396 Total Reporting: 354 Reported six months after graduation

Employed/ Further Study 179 (90.0%)

Seeking Employment 18 (9.0%)

Nonprofit Sector 40 (22.3%)

Private Sector 86 (48.0%)

Further Study 6 (3.4%)

Not Seeking Employment 2 (1.0%)

Public Sector 47 (26.3%)

GRADUATE EMPLOYMENT

OVERVIEW

GRADUATE EMPLOYMENT

BY SECTOR

GRADUATE EMPLOYMENT

BY SECTOR

Employed/ Further Study 320 (90.4%)

Seeking Employment 33 (9.3%)

Not Seeking Employment 1 (0.3%)

GRADUATE EMPLOYMENT

OVERVIEW

Public Sector 108 (33.8%)

Private Sector 125 (39.0%)

Nonprofit Sector 82 (25.6%)

Further Study 5 (1.6%)

Career Statistics

40

2016 MASTER OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS (MIA)

2016 MASTER OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION (MPA)

Total Graduating Students: 244 Total Reporting: 199Reported six months after graduation

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PUBLIC SECTORFederal Reserve Bank of New York

New York City Mayor’s Office of Management and Budget

New York State

United Nations

United States Army

United States Department of State

World Bank Group

NONPROFIT SECTOR Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL)

Columbia University

Environmental Defense Fund

Innovations for Poverty Action

New York City Economic Development Corporation

One Acre Fund

Wildlife Conservation Society

World Economic Forum

PRIVATE SECTOR Azimuth Solar

Boston Consulting Group

Citigroup

Deloitte Consulting LLP

Goldman Sachs

JPMorgan Chase & Co.

McKinsey & Company

Moody’s Investors Service

Uncharted Play

41

2016 TOP EMPLOYERS BY SECTOR

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42

Charles S. Adams MIA ’83

Reed D. Auerbach IF ’81, MIA ’82, LAW ’85

David Seth Baran MIA ’87

Roger Baumann IF ’84, MIA ’85

Thierry Berman IF ’86, BUS ’86

Kathy Finn Bloomgarden, PhD CERT ’74, GSAS ’74, GSAS ’77, GSAS ’83

Michael James Brandmeyer BUS ’94, MIA ’95, IF ’95

Anisa Kamadoli Costa BC ’97, MIA ’98

The Honorable David N. Dinkins

Habib Enayetullah MPA ’91

Arminio Fraga

Alexander Georgiadis MIA ’85

Tanvir S. Ghani MIA ’01, IF ’01

Susie Gharib MIA ’74

Richard S. Goldberg

Gordon Mitchell Goldstein, PhD CC ’90, MIA ’94, IF ’94, GSAS ’98

Wang Hongyuan MPA-EPM ’04

Robert Hormats, PhD

Anuradha T. Jayanti

Robert I. Kopech MBA ’76, MIA ’77

Vladimir V. Kuznetsov IF ’90, MIA ’91

Jorge Paulo Lemann

Harley Lippman MIA ’79

James Luikart MIA ’72

Peter Marber, PhD MIA ’87

Juan Navarro

Tina Nelson-Fordham MIA ’99

Brett A. Olsher MIA ’93

David B. Ottaway, PhD IF ’63, GSAS ’68, GSAS ’72

John H. Porter, PhD IF ’82, MIA ’83, CERT ’83

Deepak Raj

Michael M. Roberts MIA ’86

Juan A. Sabater

Maurice R. Samuels MIA ’83

Alejandro Santo Domingo

Romita Shetty MIA ’89

Mitchell D. Silber MIA ’05

Sumant Sinha MIA ’92

David Z. Solomon MIA ’97

Joan E. Spero, PhD MIA ’68, GSAS ’73

Gregory Stoupnitzky CC ’78, MIA ’80

Lynn Thoman

Michael D. Tusiani

The Honorable Martin Varsavsky MIA ‘84, BUS ‘85

Maria Teresa Vivas de Mata BUS ’93, MIA ’03, IF ’03, GSAS ’06

Richard E. Witten CC ’75

Lan Yang MIA ’96

SIPA ADVISORY BOARD AND CAMPAIGN ADVISORY COUNCIL

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The donor list represents legal donations made during fiscal year 2017 (July 1, 2016, to June 30, 2017)—this includes pledge payments, as well as outright gifts. It does not include multi-year pledges in order to avoid double counting. 43

*Deceased

$1,000,000+Abrams Foundation/Amy Levine Abrams IF ’78, MIA ’80, BUS ’80 and David Abrams

Cheniere Energy, Inc.

First Seafront Fund Management Co., Ltd.

$500,000-$999,999 Aphorism Foundation

Carnegie Corporation of New York

Jian Ni MIA ’01 and Zhe Sun, PhD GSAS ’99, GSAS ’00

Statoil

China Energy Fund Committee (USA) Inc.

$100,000-$499,999 AlfredP. Sloan Foundation

Julius G. Blocker MIA ’56*

Bloomberg Philanthropies

Centrica

ConocoPhillips Company

Charles Fabrikant LAW ’68/SEACOR Holdings Inc.

Zach He CC ’12

Hefei Guoxuan High-Tech Power Energy Company

The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation

Susan Aurelia Gitselson, PhD BC ’63, MIA ’66, GSAS ’70

Qing and Xiaosong LiuJosé Roberto MarinhoSreedhar and Saroj MenonThe Cynthia and George Mitchell FoundationNIC Holding Corporation Brett Alan Olsher MIA ’93 and Christina Noel OlsherDavid B. Ottaway, PhD IF ’63, GSAS ’68, GSAS ’72 and Marina S. Ottaway, PhD GSAS ’74 Tami J. Paumier and Glen C.WarrenNeera and Deepak RajJoan E. Spero, PhD MIA ’68,GSAS ’73 and C. Michael SperoSmith Richardson FoundationThe Rockefeller Brothers FundThe Rockefeller FoundationThe Sasakawa Peace FoundationTellurianTokyo Gas Company, Ltd.Wintershall HoldingNan Hai Corp. Ltd.

$25,000-$99,999 Dwight and Julia Anderson

Anonymous

Reed David Auerbach IF ’81, MIA ’82, LAW ’85 and Adrienne Petite Auerbach

David Seth Baran MIA ’87

Piraye and Nick Beim

Michael James Brandmeyer BUS ’94, MIA ’95, IF ’95 and Polly Brandmeyer

Citi Foundation

Citigroup Incorporated

Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología

Daniel Zhiyao Ding GS ’13, MIA ’14

Habib Mohammed Enayetullah MPA ’91

Arminio Fraga, PhD

Tanvir S. Ghani MIA ’01, IF ’01

Jerri-Ann and Gary Evan Jacobs

Anuradha T. Jayanti and Martin C. Milewski

Charles Koch Foundation

Rajiv Kothari

Vladimir V. Kuznetsov IF ’90, MIA ’91 and Olga L. Malova

Leon Lowenstein Foundation

Lu Li CC ’96, BUS ’96

Yifei Li

Harley L. Lippman MIA ’79

James Luikart MIA ’72 and Amira Luikart

Judyt L. Mandel, PhD

Peter Marber, PhD MIA ’87 and Andrea Marber GSAPP ’09

OCP Foundation

Pioneer Natural Resources

John H. Porter, PhD IF ’82, MIA ’83, CERT ’83

Michael M. Roberts MIA ’86 and Patricia Roberts

Theodore Roosevelt IV

Julie Newton St. John MIA ’85 and Marc St. John MIA ’84, IF ’84

Schlumberger

Zachary J. Schreiber and Lori Fisher Schreiber BUS ’02

Sandra Shahinian MIA ’76

Kimberley and Scott D. Sheffield

Sharmila Hainum Tuttle CC ’96, MIA ’05 and Thomas L. Tuttle

Maria Teresa Vivas de Mata BUS ’93, MIA ’03, IF ’03, GSAS ’06 and Andres Mata Osorio

$10,000-$24,999Georgia S. Adams MIA ’83 and Charles Smith Adams MIA ’83

CFA Institute

Anisa Kamadoli Costa BC ’97, MIA ’98 and Len Costa III MIA ’98

John J. Curley IF ’63, JRN ’63 and Ann C. Curley

Maria S. Dreyfus

Brent Feigenbaum MIA ’84

Susie Gharib MIA ’74 and Fereydoun F. Nazem BUS ’75

Richard S. Goldberg and Jill Miller

James E. Jordan MIA ’71, BUS ’75

Robert I. Kopech MBA ’76, MIA ’77

Lawrence H. Linden/Linden Trust for Conservation

Official Monetary and Financial Institutions Forum

Thank You to Our DonorsWe are grateful for the generosity of SIPA’s alumni and friends, whose financial support advances SIPA’s academic programs, provides students with fellowship aid, and promotes SIPA’s work in policy research. This past year, SIPA celebrated its 70th anniversary and successfully completed the 70 by 70 Fellowship Campaign, an initiative that secured 70 new fellowships in celebration of SIPA’s 70th anniversary. Gifts to SIPA provide vital support for fellowships, teaching, and research, and help the school develop innovative new programs such as Tech and Policy @ SIPA.

Thank you for your continued commitment to SIPA’s mission.

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Juan A. Sabater and Mariana Nunez Sabater

Nancy W. Silver and Harry Silver BUS ’80

Bela Szigethy IF ’80, MIA ’81

Douglas Boyd Thomas MIA ’98

$5,000-$9,999Anonymous (2)

Roger R. Baumann IF ’84, MIA ’85 and Julie Baumann

Norton W. Bell

James L. Broadhead IF ’63, LAW ’63

Judith Brown Meyers, PhD IF ’71, GSAS ’74, GSAS ’76 and Michael Meyers

Eric David Cantor MIA ’05

Jessica Carta MIA ’13

Pamela Hawkins Casaudoumecq MIA ’89, BUS ’90 and John Casaudoumecq

F. Bruce Cohen MPA ’91

Kun Deng MIA ’95 and Zhen Deng, MD

Alexander Georgiadis MIA ’85

Erin S. Gore MPA ’97

Barbara E. Kaplan and Philip S. Kaplan

Karen Young Knapp MPA ’94 and Frank Knapp

Helen L. Krol

Claudette M. Mayer MIA ’76, IF ’76

Deborah Marisa Mollo BC ’88

Hiroko Murase MIA ’91 and Satoru Murase

Vuslat Sabanci MIA ’96 and Ali Ismail Sabanci BUS ’95

Anya Maria Schiffrin JRN ’00 and Joseph E. Stiglitz, PhD

Toyota Motor North America

$2,500-$4,999Anonymous

Allen L. Byrum MIA ’72

Linda K. Carlisle MPA ’81 and Robert E. Mast

Gregory R. Dalton MIA ’94, IF ’94 and Lucia Choi

Mary S. Ginsberg IF ’78, MIA ’79

Neal H. Harwood MIA ’61

Jirawat Liwprasert MIA ’84

Amy L. Miller MIA ’82 and Gregory C. Brandner

Amber Elana Oliver MIA ’02, IF ’02

Steve Sang Park MIA ’92, CERT ’92

Kenneth Prewitt, PhD

James Profestas MPA ’14

Marietta Angela Ries Lavicka MIA ’94 and Matthew Lavicka

Mozelle W. Thompson CC ’76, IF ’79, LAW ’81

Bruce Alan Wolfson

Geoffrey Paul Ziebart MIA ’89, IF ’89

$1,000-$2,499 Lisa S. Anderson, PhD GSAS ’76, GSAS ’77, GSAS ’81

Luisa M. Anzola MIA ’88 and Enzo Viscusi

Mulan Ashwin MIA ’93

Pamela Maria Ayuso MIA ’07

Gabriella D. Barschdorff MIA ’99

Kimberly Bayer MPA ’02

Robin L. Berry MIA ’78

Maria Betancur-Hall MIA ’07 and Brandon James Hall MIA ’07

Pieter Bierkens MIA ’92

Kenneth Lawrence Blacklow MPA ’93 and Kimberly Brown Blacklow LAW ’94

Kathy Finn Bloomgarden, PhD CERT ’74, GSAS ’74, GSAS ’77, GSAS ’83 and Zachary Bloomgarden

Patrick Francis Bohan

Dwight A. Bowler MIA ’79

Marcia Beth Burkey MIA ’88

Daniel F. Burton MIA ’81

Ann H. Chaney MIA ’91

Eric Daniel Chasser MIA ’04

H. Eric Chiang MIA ’99

Peter Chidyllo

Anna C. Coatsworth BUS ’01 and Jonathan P. Simon

Natalie Greenan Coburn MIA ’89

Sunanda A. Datar

Vishakha N. Desai, PhD and Robert Oxnam, PhD

Judith Ann Edstrom MIA ’72, IF ’72

Can Vahit Eksioglu MIA ’01

Amelia A. Erwitt MPA ’06 and Kamil Kaluza MPA ’06

Jacqueline Escobar MPA ’07

William S. Foster MIA ’06

Ivy Lindstrom Fredericks MIA ’98 and William Curtis Fredericks

David Patrick Garten MPA ’02, SW ’02

Toby Trister Gati CERT ’70, GSAS ’70, MIA ’72 and Charles Gati

Richard Golden MIA ’79, IF ’79

Gordon Mitchell Goldstein, PhD CC ’08, MIA ’94, IF ’94, GSAS ’98 and Anne A. Gilbert BC ’86, JRN ’94

Anthony C. Gooch MIA ’05, IF ’05*

David R. Goodman

Manuel G. Grace IF ’82, LAW ’82

M. Guadalupe Granda MIA ’95 and Mark O’Keefe MIA ’95

Carl C. Greer, PhD IF ’63, BUS ’66 and Patricia Greer

Ralph O. Hellmold IF ’63, MIA ’63 and Susan Eastham

Andrew Higgins MIA ’91 and Patricia M. Higgins

Alik Odinga Hinckson MPA ’04

A. Michael Hoffman IF ’69, MIA ’73 and Mercedes C. Hoffman

David W. Hornbeck IF ’66

Jingdong Hua MPA ’03

Mary O’Donnell Hulme CC ’92, MIA ’95

Constance L. Hunter MIA ’94 and Jeffrey John Dufty MIA ’98

Douglas R. Hunter MIA ’73

Kirsten Frivold Imohiosen MPA ’03

Mark M. Jaskowiak IF ’77 and Georgina Baker

Andrea Johnson MIA ’89 Alexander Gerard Kamp MIA ’07

Allison C. Kellogg IF ’72, MIA ’73

Patricia G. Keros MIA ’91

John J. Kerr IF ’76, LAW ’76 and Nora Wren Kerr LS ’75

Sohrab M. Kheradi MIA ’63, GSAS ’74 and Teresa Aguilar

Paulo Kluber MIA ’08, CERT ’08

Jamie Ann Kosmar MIA ’05, IF ’05, CERT ’05 and Steven Darr Eaton MIA ’05

Monish Kumar MIA ’95

Rosa H. Kwon MIA ’90, CERT ’90

F. Stephen Larrabee, PhD IF ’69, GSAS ’78

Allison Judith Lee MIA ’92, CERT ’92

Ryan S. Lester MIA ’01 and Amy Esty Lester LAW ’02

Beatriz Eugenia Leycegui Gardoqui MIA ’90

Tondra C. Lynford BC ’67, SW ’96

Amanda Gilbert Marsted MIA ’95

Nina Elise McLemore BUS ’95 and Donald I. Baker

Mitsubishi Corporation

Melineh V. Momjian MIA ’86 and Mark Albert Momjian CC ’83, LAW ’86

Thomas Monahan MIA ’85

Catherine Mulder MIA ’81

Molly Matthews Multedo MIA ’92, JRN ’92 and Fernando P. Multedo TC ’92, TC ’97

John Franklin Neuffer MIA ’86

James Michael O’Neill MIA ’02 and Lynn Bunch O’Neill

Glenn Orloff MIA ’88

Cady S. Panetta MPA ’02 and Michael Panetta

Shawn Thomas Pearce MIA ’06

Peter J. Podbielski MIA ’74

Jennifer Ann Pomeroy Fronk MIA ’83

Chandni Prasad MIA ’96

Curtis Probst MPA ’14 and Cheryl Robbins Probst BUS ’93

Amelia Estelle Prounis MIA ’87 and Haralambos Raftopoulos

Rene A. Ramos MPA ’07

Clyde E. Rankin IF ’74, LAW ’75 and Camille C. Rankin

Barbara Helen Reguero MIA ’86

Piotr Paskal Rejmer MIA ’06

Lucius J. Riccio, PhD

Emily G. Ross CC ’06, MPA ’12

Peter Sang MPA ’14

Karen Scowcroft LAW ’83, MIA ’84, IF ’84

Brigid Catherine Sheehan MPA ’03

Michael Benjamin Shtender- Auerbach MIA ’06

Melvyn J. Simburg MIA ’71, IF ’71, LAW ’72

Alfred C. Stepan, PhD IF ’65, GSAS ’69*

Shigemitsu Sugisaki MIA ’67

Akiko Sugiyama MIA ’07

Melinda Macdonald Twomey MIA ’84

James Williamson Uehlinger MPA ’92, IF ’92 and Valerie Williamson Uehlinger SW ’90

Frederic Vagnini MIA ’89

Matthias Georg Wabl MIA ’02, IF ’02

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Jing Wang MPA ’02

Efrot Weiss MIA ’89, IF ’89

Moine I. West MIA ’75, IF ’75

Samuel H. Wyman MIA ’63

Zhijing Yin MPA ’03

Julio Zamora MIA ’89 and Maria I. Lopez

Jinguo Zhang MPA ’04

Qinghong Zou MIA ’06

Thomas David Zweifel MIA ’96

$500-$999Ali Alisher

Christopher C. Allieri MIA ’00

Mashael AlShalan MIA ’15

Ameera Amir MIA ’11

Delphine Arrighi MIA ’07

Lawrence W. Axelrod, PhD IF ’74, CERT ’76, GSAS ’77, GSAS ’89 and Roberta L. Axelrod BC ’77, GSAPP ’80

Nauman Barakat

Christoph Barchewitz MPA ’07

Jillian Barron MIA ’88, LAW ’88 and Jonas K. Simonis

Joanne Rita Bauer MIA ’90 and Andrew J. Nathan

Matthias Georg Baumberger MIA ’05

David Sidney Berman MPA ’03, PH ’03

Carolyn B. Boldiston MPA ’89

Andrea Bonime-Blanc, PhD GSAS ’80, CERT ’81, GSAS ’82, IF ’84, LAW ’85, GSAS ’85

Trudy E. Bower MIA ’78

Aurelien Antoine Boyer MIA ’07

Alan L. Brott

Leonardo Bullaro MPA ’08

Raymond F. Burghardt CC ’67

Elisa A. Charters MIA ’02

Simeng Chen MIA ’11

David Xing Cheng, PhD MPA ’07 and Nancy Cheng

Stephen Conn IF ’66, MIA ’68, LAW ’68

Sebastian Contreras Jr. and Sean O’Shea

John J. Costonis IF ’64, LAW ’65

Maria Elena Crescia MIA ’97

Ruth C. Curtis MIA ’71

Alessandra Da Silva MIA ’89

Philippe Dauba-Pantanacce MIA ’07

Hans W. Decker

Tladi P. Ditshego MIA ’96

Ruth I. Dreessen MIA ’80

Ann DuBois MIA ’69 and Jonathan Delafield DuBois

Jeffrey John Dufty MIA ’98

Nima Patel Edwards MIA ’94

William B. Eimicke, PhD

John Robert Evans MIA ’86

Rick Faery MIA ’00

Thomas M. Flohr IF ’78, LAW ’79

Margaret Alice Forgione MPA ’91

Steven Foundos BUS ’06, MIA ’07

Grace Frisone MIA ’76, BUS ’77 and Michael G. Metzger

Larry S. Gage IF ’71, LAW ’72 and Carol J. Gage

Charles Edward Gagnon MPA ’91

Cristina Gallach MIA ’86

Thomas George Gerginis MIA ’87

Samuel S. Gilbert MPA ’81

Lisa G. Goldschmidt MPA ’04 and Luke Burrows

Allan I. Grafman MIA ’77, IF ’77

Norman A. Graham, PhD IF ’74, GSAS ’74, GSAS ’80

Yan-Hua Guo MPA ’00

Myra Mai-Dung Ha MIA ’98

Anne W. Hamilton MIA ’79

Nicholas Mark Hamilton MIA ’11

Ebrahim Hashem MPA ’17

Henry Joseph Hector MIA ’71, CERT ’71

Joshua Hepola MIA ’00, IF ’00

Svea Herbst-Bayliss MIA ’88 and George Palmer Bayliss, MD MIA ’86, CERT ’86

Elizabeth A. Hochman MIA ’83, LAW ’86

George Hollendorfer MIA ’01

Lixin Huang MPA ’11

Qun Julia Huang MIA ’97

Sarah Beth Huber MIA ’06

Constance L. Hunter MIA ’94

Gregory Todd Hutton MIA ’00

Ana Maria Iragorri MIA ’03

Won Jang

David A. G. Johnson MIA ’75, IF ’75

Herman N. Johnson MIA ’99, LAW ’99 and Tamarra Matthews-Johnson

Michone Trinae Johnson MPA ’96, LAW ’96

Ophelia Barbara Karavias CC ’00, MPA ’09

Elizabeth Katkin MIA ’92, IF ’92

Lauren Jennifer Kelley MIA ’84

Barbara Anne Kieber MPA ’90

Bomsinae Kim MIA ’05

Steve S. Kim MIA ’94

James Henry Kipers MIA ’02

Sandra Y. Koo MIA ’90 and Jonathan Shaw

Jaime Tackett Koppel MPA ’07

Erin Elizabeth Kotheimer MIA ’98

Anna Somos Krishnan MIA ’07

Richard W. Kurz, PhD MIA ’77

Ting Lan MIA ’05

Claudia Laviada MIA ’00, BUS ’01 and Carlos Rohm

Stephanie Wolk Lawrence MIA ’93

George M. Lazarus, MD IF ’69, PS ’71 and Rochelle B. Lazarus BUS ’70

Catherine Grace Lee MIA ’96

Deborah Susan Lee MIA ’01

Kent Lee MIA ’88

Jeffrey Scott Levine MPA ’05

Harold O. Levy

John B. Lewis MPA ’91

Rachel Eve Lindell MIA ’94

Sherr Yun Lo MPA ’07

Dening Lohez MIA ’04 /Jérôme Lohez September 11 Scholarship Foundation

Tamera S. Luzzatto

Elena Vladimirovna Makovskaia MPA ’08

Jerrold L. Mallory MIA ’83, CERT ’83

Sonia P. Maltezou, PhD MIA ’70

Christopher W. Mansfield MPA ’94

Franck Kazad Manyong MIA ’06

Dina Maria Tavares Marchioni MIA ’04

Ludwig J. Marek MPA ’07

Sylvain David Marpeau-Roussel MPA ’07

Raul Kazimierz Martynek MIA ’93

Heather R. McGeory BC ’97, MIA ’05

On April 1, 2017, SIPA donors, friends, alumni, faculty, and students gathered at the Cathedral Church of Saint John the Divine to celebrate SIPA’s 70th Anniversary at the Global Leadership Awards Gala.

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Dan McIntyre

Aurelie Marie McKinstry MPA ’05

Leslie S. Meek MIA ’94, BUS ’94

Liana V. Melchenko MIA ’08

Pavel K. Mikhailov MIA ’93, IF ’93

Gregory L. Miles JRN ’78, MIA ’79

Shalini Mimani

Dinshaw J. Mistry, PhD MIA ’94

Jeanene Mae Mitchell MIA ’07

Marianne Mitosinka MIA ’81, BUS ’82

Monica Mitrani-Shaio MIA ’97 and Robert Oswald Abad MIA ’98, BUS ’98

Andrea Crawford Mody MIA ’04

Kathleen P. Mone MPA ’81

Lamia Abu-Haidar Moukheiber MIA ’92

Matthew H. Murray IF ’85, MIA ’88, LAW ’88

Sidney Nakao Nakahodo MIA ’05

Anshu Nangia MIA ’95

Masaki Nishino MIA ’01

Milica Obradovic MIA ’07, CERT ’07, BUS ’07

Constantine G. Papavizas MIA ’81, IF ’81

Nirmala S. Patni MPA ’01

Laura Patten MIA ’00, IF ’00

Carol Jean Patterson MIA ’76, CERT ’76

Jefrey Pollock MPA ’97

Prodigy Finance Ltd

Rajiv Krishna Punja MIA ’07

Ketaki Purohit MIA ’16

David C. Ralph MIA ’67

Betsey M. Rhoads MIA ’79

Susan B. Rifkin, PhD MIA ’69, CERT ’69

Callahan Robert

David James Robertson MPA ’13

Laura Robinson MPA ’10

Stephen Bristol Rogers MIA ’98, BUS ’98

Kathleen Roh MPA ’15

William A. Root MIA ’48, CERT ’48

Samanta Tatiana Salomon Navarrete MPA ’07

Arshad M. Sayed MPA ’92

Deborah Schein MIA ’88, CERT ’88

Ernst J. Schrader MIA ’65

Caroline Paulus Schreder MIA ’92 and Kurt A. Schreder MIA ’93

Ana S. Schwartz MIA ’82 and Daniel Marc Schwartz

Ryan Severino MIA ’04

Anuj A. Shah MIA ’05

Donna M. Sharp MPA ’01

Karuna Evelyne Shinsho MIA ’94 and Horace P. Jen MIA ’93, CERT ’93

Chhaya Shriram MIA ’94

Harry Silver BUS ’80 and Nancy W. Silver

Ida Dokk Smith MIA ’12

Eva Christine Steinhaus MIA ’01

Liana Sterling MPA ’11, PH ’11

Alan Stern MIA ’68

Sheree S. Stomberg MIA ’79

Jukka-Pekka Strand MIA ’07

Marianne L. Sullivan JRN ’92, MIA ’93

Sharyn Elizabeth Tenn MIA ’97

Monica A. Thakrar MIA ’00

Eva Timerman MIA ’85, CERT ’85 and Javier Timerman GSAS ’84, MIA ’86

Todor Todorovski MIA ’07

Elizabeth D. Trafelet MIA ’03 and Douglas Trafelet

John Christopher Traylor MPA ’89

Yik Wai Tse MPA ’13 and Shaochun Zhang

Jaume Tutusaus Luque MIA ’06

Donald J. Twombly MIA ’73

Alinson Wang MIA ’06

Zhuoer Wang MIA ’14

John C. Weber IF ’65, DM ’65

Marian Lillian Weber MPA ’07 and Michael Paul Benz MPA ’10

William Frederick Wechsler MPA ’93

Douglas Michael Wharton MIA ’07

Gordon James Whiting IF ’93, BUS ’94

Tracy L. Wilson MIA ’86

David L. Wisowaty MIA ’77, IF ’77

Irene Wong MPA ’93

Hon Chung Woo MIA ’03

Anastasia Xenias BC ’91, MIA ’94, CERT ’94, GSAS ’01, GSAS ’07

Shinobu Yume Yamaguchi, PhD MPA ’91, TC ’98, TC ’98

Marguerite Tabor Yates IF ’80 and David C. Chaffetz MIA ’80, IF ’80, BUS ’80

Lanlan Zhang

Wei Victoria Zhao MIA ’11

Yunlong Zhao

Sina Vanja Zintzmeyer MPA ’07

Jonathan Zorach, PhD CERT ’72, GSAS ’72, GSAS ’75

$250-$499 Simon K. Adamiyatt CERT ’81, MIA ’83, GSAS ’83 and Annette M. Adamiyatt

Laura Maria Agosta MPA ’12

Tae Euin Ahn MIA ’06

Adam J. Albin MIA ’86

Isabel Alvarez Norma MPA ’07

Sanford Antignas

Jocelyn Ybanez Aragon MPA ’15

Tess Arzu MPA ’16

John Henry Austin MPA ’14

Fritz Florian Bachmair MIA ’11, IF ’11

Tara Badri MIA ’13

Jacqueline Claire Baertschi MPA ’13

Yun Bai MIA ’16

Wensley Barker MIA ’98

Nicholas Adam Barnard MIA ’04

Edmund Beard, PhD MIA ’68, GSAS ’73

Robin M. Beckett IF ’77

Laurence S. Belinsky BUS ’91

Stefan Robert Benn BUS ’93, MIA ’95

Karin Christina Bennett MIA ’10

Carol Weiss Bitter MIA ’00

Melanie June Bixby MIA ’91 and Robert Epstein

Kenneth Herbert Blackman MIA ’00, BUS ’00

Joseph Blady, MD MIA ’03

Alexandra Blair MPA ’12

Thomas H. Boast, PhD MIA ’72 and Molly S. Boast JRN ’71, LAW ’79

Alice K. Bolocan CERT ’57, GSAS ’57

Robert Boothby IF ’62, GSAS ’63 and Susan Boothby NRS ’63

Christopher Peter Bujara SPS ’13

Medali Cachicatari MIA ’12

Jeffrey L. Canfield MIA ’82, CERT ’82

Ting Ting Chen MPA ’11

Susan Yoon Choe MIA ’95

Erika Christ MIA ’99

Kay Hancock Clarkson MIA ’64

Kristen Marie Cleven MIA ’09 and Leonardo Karrer MIA ’09

Jonathan Alan Cohen MIA ’99

Marybeth Connolly MIA ’01

Maureen Considine MIA ’86, PH ’86

Sarah M. Corcoran MPA ’94

Dustin Craven MIA ’93

Carlos Augusto Cuevas CC ’05, MPA ’12, PH ’12

Terence Culver

Karl I. Danga IF ’71, MIA ’72

Linara Jinee Davidson MPA ’14

Randi Davis MIA ’91

Anne Lee Degnan, PhD

from left: Zbigniew Brzezinski receives the Global Leadership Award from Dean Merit E. Janow as his son Mark looks on.

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MPA ’88, GSAPP ’01

Carolyn P. Dewing-Hommes MIA ’86, CERT ’86

John William Dickey MIA ’92

Richard Albert Dikeman MPA ’99

Robert Dizard MIA ’81

Simon Dodge MIA ’90

Lucia Domville MIA ’96

Haya Douidri MIA ’12

Bruce H. Drossman MIA ’82, IF ’82, CERT ’82

Alexandra Madeline Dudziuk MPA ’16

Cecilia Elizabeth Dunn MPA ’93

Amy Margaret Edwards MIA ’00, BUS ’00

George Jove Ehrhardt MPA ’12

Jodi A. Erlandsen MPA ’98

Charles E. Essick MPA ’81

Terrance E. Favors MIA ’09

Lyn Farrow Fay MPA ’02

Kari Anne Fazio MPA ’97

Alexander Patrick Conrad Fernando MIA ’05

Anne Lewis Fletcher MPA ’02, SW ’02

James Fonda MPA ’07

Ebenezer Irving Forbes MIA ’02

Paul Fraioli MIA ’11, IF ’11

Daniel Fried MIA ’77 and Olga Karpiw

Doniel Michael Furst MIA ’99

Robert John Gallagher MIA ’90

Hui Gao MPA ’01 and Yang Diao BUS ’01

John C. Garrett IF ’66, PS ’68

Joshua Andres Gatmaitan MPA ’05

John Laurent Joseph Gelati MPA ’11

Omar M. Gharzeddine MIA ’95

Songhee Ghim MIA ’05 and Sosuke Yokota MIA ’05

James Sevier Gilliland MPA ’99 and Kathryn Gilliland

Diana Michele Glanternik MPA ’05

Sol Glasner MIA ’76, CERT ’76 and Nina Glasner

Richard K. Golb MIA ’89

Marisa Beth Goldstein MIA ’99

Cheryl Lyn and Daniel Grau

Maria Soledad Guilera MIA ’12

Jorge Guttlein CC ’75, IF ’76, MIA ’79, LAW ’79 and Pun Ok Benn

Stacia Janina Hachem MIA ’87

Brian Gerald Hackett MIA ’01

Maureen-Elizabeth Hagen MIA ’83, CERT ’83

Peter L. Harnik MIA ’75

William Whitman Harsh MPA ’16

Patricia Hewitt MIA ’71 and Dale C. Christensen MIA ’71, CERT ’71

Stephen Hilbert MIA ’83

John F. Hildebrand IF ’66, JRN ’66 and Vasana L. Hildebrand

Kazuki Hirano MIA ’96

Christopher John Hirth MIA ’96, BUS ’96

Edwin Christian Horne BUS ’91, MIA ’92

Shiyu Huang MIA ’16

Laurel Bowers Husain MIA ’81

Quekan Anike Ibidunni

Melissa S. Ingber MIA ’95

Roy Christopher Jackson MPA ’90

Sara Josephine Jacobs IF ’11, CC ’11, MIA ’12

Nicholas W. Jakobson MIA ’09

Edward Van K. Jaycox MIA ’64, CERT ’64

Andrew Hill Jeffries MIA ’96

Samuel Jerome MPA ’13

Justin Charles Jimenez MIA ’12

Mary Tyler Johnson MPA ’04, PH ’04

Acoyia Jones MPA ’14

Esther Jung MIA ’10

Martina Kadunc MIA ’12

Kosuke Kanematsu MPA ’12

Henry Edward Kaplan MIA ’86

Vikram Kapur MIA ’93

Norman D. Kass MIA ’73 and Lani Kass

Iori Kato MIA ’03 and Akiko Ishizuka Kato BUS ’88

Daniel Lewis Katzive MIA ’92

Arman Kayupov MIA ’12

Ann-Marie Keller MPA ’10

Rinat Khasanov MIA ’12

Tanya Parvez Khokhar MIA ’12

Lina Ko MPA ’14

Rebecca Elizabeth Koike MPA ’07

Laurin L. Laderoute IF ’66, LAW ’66

Dinyar Rustam Lalkaka MIA ’86 and Fei Xing

Kristin D. Lang MIA ’94

Joshua Larson MIA ’92, CERT ’92

Francisco Eduardo Lastra y Lastra MPA ’13

Krystal Laymon MPA ’12

Funmilayo Lediju MPA ’13

Julie Lenehan MIA ’97

Oliver Andrew Lennox MIA ’09

Jay A. Levy IF ’62, PS ’65 and Sharon Levy

George P. Lightbody MIA ’92

Thomas A. Lintern MPA ’00, SW ’00

John Joseph Lis MIA ’96, IF ’96, CERT ’96 and Jennifer Lis

Qu Fei Liu

Emily Yottie Loebelson MIA ’12

Ronald Dean Lorton MIA ’71, IF ’71

Karl Jeffrey Lott MIA ’84

Xiang Lu

Andreas Maerki MPA ’15

Paul Mah GS ’82, MPA ’87

Michael Thomas Maier MIA ’08, LAW ’08

Justin Mandel BUS ’08, MIA ’09 and Emily Lou Sheetz Mandel BUS ’08

Andrew Thomas Mangan IF ’84, JRN ’84 and Katherine Mangan

Pauline Manos MIA ’88, CERT ’88

Ida May H. Mantel MIA ’64

Robert B. Mantel MIA ’63

Ann E. March MIA ’99

Amanda Adames Marmolejos MPA ’12

Jennifer Lin Marozas MPA ’97 and William Marozas

Jocelyn Maskow BC ’85, MPA ’88

Victoria Wagner Mastrobuono MPA ’16

Geraldine Anne Mc Allister MIA ’08

John T. McGuire MIA ’63

Calvin Marshall Mew IF ’72

R. Collin Middleton MIA ’67

John Haakon Moe MPA ’12

Andrea Turner Moffitt MIA ’07, BUS ’07 and Steven Moffitt

Hema Sareen Mohan MPA ’01

Diana Montero Melis MPA ’08

Jeffrey Gordon Moore MIA ’85, CERT ’85

Kenneth C. Moore

Gerhard Jakob Mulder MIA ’98

David W. Munves MIA ’80, IF ’80 and Sarah F. Follen

Gregory Murmylyuk MIA ’12

Scott Albert Myers MIA ’94

Eri Noguchi, PhD MPA ’93, SW ’93, GSAS ’98, GSAS ’03 and Michael Anthony Lewis SW ’90

Thomas O’Connor MIA ’76

Peter Damian O’Driscoll MIA ’97

Onuwabhagbe Abbey Omokhodion MIA ’00

Timothy Edmund O’Regan MIA ’00, IF ’00

Robert Annen Orr MIA ’87

Alejandro B. Osorio Carranza MPA ’01

Jennifer D. Overton CC ’88, MPA ’93

Angie P. Palacios MIA ’12

Aku Shika Pappoe MPA ’11

Andrew Collins Peach MIA ’98

John A. Pecoul IF ’64

Dennis E. Petito MIA ’77 and Lisa Petito

James Brian Pieri MPA ’07 and Danae Michelle Dietiker BUS ’07

Robert W. Pons MIA ’64

Jeffrey D. Ratner

Diane Barbara Raynes MPA ’85

Liza Reiderman MPA ’14

Robert D. Reischauer, PhD MIA ’66, GSAS ’71

Therese Ruth Revesz MIA ’70

Jamie Reyes MPA ’14

Neal Elliott Rickner MIA ’12, BUS ’12 and Amber Rickner

Yaakov Ari Ringler MPA ’05

Jasmin Ines Rivera MPA ’15

Alexander Reid Robarts MIA ’90

Lacey Paige Robbins MPA ’15

Ashley Dawn Robinson MIA ’14

Patrick R. Romain MIA ’82, IF ’82

James Joseph Rorimer MPA ’13

Deborah Hannon Rosenblum MIA ’89 and Todd Rosenblum MIA ’88

Nathalie E. Roth MIA ’00

Celine Solsken Ruben-Salama MPA ’08

Anna Darlene Hayes Rubley MPA ’08

James T. Ryan MIA ’86

Margaret Heflin Sabbag MIA ’98

Marysol D. Sanchez Velamoor CC ’99, MIA ’01, LAW ’05

Ana C. Santos Ramos MIA ’12

Indranil Sarkar MIA ’01

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Ajay Satchit MPA ’14

Paul Schlamm MIA ’68

Anna-Maria M. Schneider MIA ’84

Alissa Sevrioukova MPA ’14

Deepika Sharma MPA ’12

Clayton Shedd MPA ’15

Sanford T. Sherman MIA ’82

Missouri Sherman-Peter MIA ’04

Ruba William Shweihat MPA ’14

Marc J. Sievers MIA ’80, IF ’80, CERT ’80

Milenko Sikljovan MIA ’15

Meredith Slesinger and Colin Finan

Karen Joy Slifka MIA ’95

Peter H. Smith, PhD IF ’62, CERT ’64, GSAS ’66

David Snow MIA ’98

Jan Solomon CERT ’75 and Kenneth Simonson

Sysounthone Somboun MPA ’14

Lasa Sophonpanich MIA ’07

Gary F. Stein IF ’62, PS ’64

Alan Stern MIA ’68

Kulratan R. Stuart MIA ’73

Yi Su MIA ’06

Tara Sullivan MPA ’86 and James Joseph Horan

Jennifer Jaryi Sun MIA ’97

Laura Elina Sundblad MPA ’14, IF ’14

Michael Szymanski

Ines Tabka MIA ’93

Jessica Shani Taylor MPA ’12

Elsabeth T. Tedros MIA ’07

Suleyman Tonbul MIA ’87

Brian Einar Torgersen MPA ’14

Pertshuhi Torosyan MPA ’15

Omar Alexis Toro-Vaca MPA ’12

Anastasia Trifonoff MPA ’13

Alisa Tugberk MIA ’06, BUS ’06 and Adrian Rodriguez MIA ’06, BUS ’06

Daniel B. Tunstall MIA ’68

Ralph W. Usinger GS ’69, MIA ’73

Cara Jane Valentini MPA ’05 and Alessandro Valentini BUS ’06

Anna Veduta MIA ’16

Alexander R. Vershbow MIA ’76, CERT ’76

Joseph L. Vidich MIA ’80

Maria Leslie Villegas MIA ’99

Alexandre Philippe Vinel MIA ’13

Carrie Staub Vomacka MIA ’06

Conrad Martin von Igel MPA ’07

Douglas B. Wake CC ’80, MIA ’80, CERT ’98

Jeffrey Waller MIA ’02

Shunan Wang MIA ’15

Tian Wang MPA ’14

Andrea Neidorf Weinstein MIA ’91

Helgard Wienert-Cakim MIA ’62

Chang-Chuan Wu, PhD CERT ’69, GSAS ’74

Hideo Yanai MIA ’96

Allan Zhang MIA ’95

Chenxi Zhao MPA ’10

Annie Yang Zhou MPA ’13

Chenke Zhou MIA ’01

Wenyan Zhu MIA ’16

Up to $249 Pamela Aall MIA ’77, CERT ’77

Tamar Sarah Abraham BC ’03, MIA ’14

Jason Steven Abrams MIA ’94, IF ’94

JoAnne Adlerstein IF ’75, LAW ’76

Peter Darko Afari MIA ’16

Narinder K. Aggarwala JRN ’65, MIA ’71 and Jean H. Aggarwala

Hyun Jung Ahn MIA ’08

Jason S. Alcorn MIA ’10, IF ’10, JRN ’10

Ali Lutfi Al-Dajani MIA ’97

Delalle Alexander MIA ’85

Brigette Patricia Allen MIA ’07

Toni Sharisse Allen MPA ’05

Jennebah Allette

Orli Almog MIA ’99

Luis Alvarez Renta MPA ’09

Daniel Alvarez MPA ’09

Bridget Anderson MPA ’04

G. Norman Anderson CC ’54, MIA ’60

Paul Anirban MPA ’03

Kerry Margaret Annett MIA ’88 and Richard David Leigh MIA ’88

Anonymous

Pano Thomas Anthos MIA ’84, IF ’84

Hiromitsu Araki MPA ’14

Olavi Arens, PhD CERT ’69, GSAS ’69, GSAS ’76

Kerry Ann Armstrong MPA ’95 and George Andrew Armstrong

Sarah Elizabeth Arnold MPA ’11

Sunil Arora MPA ’12

Alice Woodley Asby MIA ’92, IF ’92

Sarah S. Ashton MIA ’93

Elizabeth Athey MIA ’71

Patrick Sylvestre Augustin MPA ’07

Kimberly Marie Avila MIA ’90

Margaret A. Aycock IF ’76, LS ’77

Nyi Nyein Aye MPA ’07

Fadi Robert Baaklini MIA ’15

Robert P. Bachmann MPA ’13

Suzana Bacvanovic MIA ’00

Sungwon Baik MIA ’02

Dilawar Khan Bajauri MPA ’02

Moran Banai MIA ’06

Noelle Bannister

Gaurav Bansal MIA ’01

Stephen James Banta MIA ’76

Alejandra Barcelo MIA ’12

Asta Bareisaite MIA ’13

Arlene Renee Barilec MIA ’84

Katrina Maria Barnas MPA ’08

Aimee Elise Keli’i Barnes MPA ’07

Laurie D. Barrueta MIA ’94

Elizabeth A. Bassan MIA ’79, IF ’79

Steven Lowell Bate MIA ’84

Lydia D. Beaver MPA ’81

Kenton H. Beerman MIA ’05

Julie A. Beglin MPA ’97

Scott H. Bellows MIA ’79

Martin H. Belsky IF ’68, LAW ’68

Anne Elizabeth Bergman MPA ’14

Christian Vincent Bergmann IF ’92 and Bethel Lemma Yemaneberhan

Stephen Berk, PhD GSAS ’71, CERT ’72

Genevieve K. Besser MIA ’86

Wendy Lee Kutlow Best BC ’82, MPA ’87

Lisa Leena Bhansali MIA ’88, CERT ’88

Sharon Bially MIA ’93

Kyle Bibby MPA ’15

Peter James Biesada MIA ’86

Alison A. Binkowski MIA ’09, PH ’09

Whitney Beth Blake MPA ’07

John Langdon Blakeney MPA ’06

Robert Boccio MPA ’97

William Andrew Bodenlos MIA ’89 and Walfrido Baltazar Patawaran PH ’09

Michael Bodman MIA ’96

Andrea Boone MPA ’93

Sebastian Borchmeyer MIA ’12, IF ’12

Sara Elise Borden MPA ’95 and Saurin Shah MIA ’97, BUS ’97

Darko Bosnjak MIA ’00, CERT ’00

Rebecca Boston CC ’93, MPA ’94

Joan Copithorne Bowen MIA ’67

Lori Neal Bowman MPA ’02

Susan J. Zelony Breen MIA ’79 and Bradford Breen

Arnoldo Alejandro Brethauer MIA ’01 and Carmen Magdalena Le Foulon GSAS ’04, GSAS ’08, GSAS ’14

Gretchen Stahr Breunig MPA ’88 and Christopher J. Breunig

Mia Cecilia Briones MIA ’14

Todd MacLean Bristol MPA ’01

Michael Broudo

William C. Brown IF ’67, LAW ’68

Shanna R. Brownstein MPA ’08

Cecile R. Brunswick MIA ’54

Carol Holmes Buck MIA ’69, CERT ’69 and Jan Andrew Buck LAW ’70

Yvette Buckner

Paola M. Buendia MIA ’04

Beverley Buford MPA ’86

Sonia Virginie Bujas MIA ’92, CERT ’92 and Nuno Miguel C. Crisostomo MIA ’01

Roger E. Bunker MIA ’65

Gordon Burck MIA ’86

Peter James Burgis MPA ’97

Jonathan Chao Burnston MIA ’11

Nathaniel Albert Byerly CC ’15, MIA ’16

Paul H. Byers IF ’67, JRN ’67 and Frances B. Byers

Katarzyna Maria Bzdak IF ’06, MIA ’07

Michaela Juana Socorro Cabrera MIA ’06

Gerald A. Cady MIA ’76, CERT ’76

Erin Calamari

Kevin Michael Callahan MIA ’96

Pablo E. Cardenas SEAS ’88

Aubrey Alexander Carlson MIA ’84, IF ’84, CERT ’84

Jessica Carta MIA ’13

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Laura M. Caruso MPA ’98

Michael J. Casey MPA ’81

Kathryn E. Cashin

Kathryn K. Cashin, PhD

Ken Cashin

Michael Tatu Castlen MPA ’93

Barbara Foulke Cates MIA ’84

Nancy G. Cattell CERT ’49, GSAS ’49, GSAS ’73

David Michael Caughlin MPA ’07 and Julia Elena Viegas BUS ’07

Paula Maria Cerutti MIA ’12

Robert Mark Chadwick MIA ’83

Erika de la Garza Chamberlain MIA ’95

Mario A. Chamorro MIA ’07

Anuj Desai Chang MIA ’90

Alejandro Chanona

Peggy Chao MIA ’98 and James A. Boyce

Martin A. Charwat CERT ’65

Lisa Chase

Lenia Chaves MPA ’05

Charles E. Cheever

Cheng Chen MPA ’15

Hyun Jung Chin

Muzaffar A. Chishti MIA ’81

Eun Jung Cho MIA ’09

Shachi Chopra-Nangia MIA ’00

Paul Brian Christensen MIA ’83

Puja Chugani MIA ’04 and Avik Mukhopadhyay

Ganbat Chuluunkhuu MIA ’05

Phannee Chunjitkaruna MIA ’01

Jeff Geefen Chyu BUS ’78, MIA ’83

Nancy J. Cieri

Jeannine T. Ciliotta MIA ’72*

Azeb Gessesse Clark MIA ’96

Patty Clark

Peter James Clayton MPA ’90

Laurie L. N. Cochran MIA ’79

Irene Borecky Coffman MIA ’82 and Richard Wayne Coffman GSAS ’81, GSAS ’84, CERT ’84, LAW ’86

Jane Kaitz Cohen MIA ’84

Neil H. Cohen MPA ’89

Joseph Michael Coleman MIA ’88, CERT ’88

Joseph J. Collins, PhD MIA ’80, IF ’80, GSAS ’82, GSAS ’84 and Anita L. Collins

Glenn L. Colville MIA ’75 and Dianne K. Colville

Burcu Copuroglu MIA ’07, IF ’07

Edward A. Corcoran, PhD CERT ’67, GSAS ’67, GSAS ’77

Jennifer Miladys Cordero, PhD MIA ’98

Anthony R. Corea CC ’76, MIA ’79

Jesse Corradi MIA ’13, IF ’13

Richard W. Cortright MIA ’82 and Elizabeth Marks Cortright

Daniel Costello MPA ’01

Steven Costner MIA ’88

Jeffrey Cox MIA ’89 and Gretchen Irene Cox GS ’89

Vivian Coyne CC ’13, MIA ’14

Monica Cramer MIA ’92

Anna Thurlow Crankshaw BC ’90, MPA ’94 and Anthony Bernard Depalma MIA ’94

JoAnn T. Crawford SOA ’77

Michael Bruce Creighton MIA ’10

Robert S. Critchell MIA ’70

Maya Crone MPA ’89, LAW ’92

Mercedes Cubas MIA ’81

Victoria R. Cunningham MIA ’75

David R. Czerniejewski IF ’65, BUS ’66

Philip A. Dabice MIA ’77, BUS ’77

Jessica Daniels CC ’02, MIA ’08, IF ’08

Constantine D. Dantoulis MIA ’96

Probal DasGupta MIA ’07

Joel Davidow IF ’63, LAW ’63

Robert Harding Davis CC ’83, GSAS ’87, CERT ’87 and Alice Freida Yurke LAW ’87

Shannon L. Davis SPS ’13

Camille Purvis Dawson MIA ’99

Benjamin Charles Dean MIA ’14

Toni Elizabeth Dechario MIA ’07

Anthony Deckoff MIA ’07

Laura A. De Dominicis MIA ’99 Carol M. Degener Lynch MIA ’84

Christopher Michael Degner MIA ’08

Katarina Deletis MIA ’00

Edward N. De Lia MIA ’87 and Antonella De Lia

Vincent DeLusia MIA ’71, BUS ’73

Diane Leslie Demmler MIA ’87

Samuel Deng and Jenny Qiu

Christian Deseglise MIA ’90 Nina Fleur Diaz MIA ’05

Raphael A. Diaz MIA ’63 and Donna Deeprose Diaz JRN ’62

Rose Diaz

Jessica Ephra Dickler MPA ’04

Gary Di Gesu MIA ’89

Maria Dikeos MIA ’92

Arend E. Dikkers MIA ’83, BUS ’84 and Deborah Durkin

Cheikh Dioum MPA ’16

Stephen D. Docter MIA ’60 and Beverly W. Docter

Kerry Dolan JRN ’91, MIA ’92

Thad Andrew Domick MPA ’04

Carr L. Donald, PhD MIA ’55

Jeanne D’Onofrio MPA ’07

Melissa Sawin Donohue, PhD MIA ’93

Christine Marian Doyle MIA ’92

Linda and Martin Dubensky

Christine Lindsay DuBois MPA ’13

Jennifer Bee Dudley MPA ’04

Kendall Dudley MIA ’68

Janet Duni MPA ’94

Jennifer Ann Durst MIA ’99

Sandy Eapen MIA ’08

Sue Y. Earl MIA ’67

E. Michael Easterly MIA ’68

Mark Christopher Easton CERT ’92, MIA ’95

Michael Anthony Eckels BUS ’92, MIA ’94

Wakana Nakagami Edmister MPA ’02

Judith Ann Edstrom MIA ’72, IF ’72

John Ehrman MIA ’83

Susanne Noelle Elizer MPA ’96

Jonathan Harald Elkind CERT ’86, GSAS ’86

Deborah A. Elman GSAS ’95, MIA ’97, PH ’97

Mayada El-Zoghbi MIA ’94, CERT ’94

Dayna English BUS ’90, MIA ’81

Sharon E. Epstein MIA ’71, IF ’71

Dara F. Erck MIA ’03/Adobe Systems

Kenneth Erickson, PhD IF ’64, CERT ’70, GSAS ’70

Guillermo Escobar MPA ’98

Jim Ramon Esquea MPA ’94

Deborah A. Everett MPA ’90

David Andres Falconi MPA ’07

Robert S. Faron IF ’75 and Suzanne Faron

Gregory Alexander Fedor MIA ’05

Alessandra Felloni

Aurelius Fernandez MIA ’59

George A. Fernandez MIA ’83

Nancy A. Ferrante Murphy MIA ’09

Vincent A. Ferraro, PhD MIA ’73, IF ’73 and Priscilla A. Mandrachia

During SIPA’s 70th Anniversary weekend, panel discussions included “Foundations—Catalysts for Social and Economic Transformation” with (l to r) Ruben Vardanyan, impact investor and social entrepreneur; Brandee McHale, president, Citi Foundation and director of corporate citizenship; and Denis Mizne, CEO, Lemann Foundation.

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Diane P. Fink MIA ’79

Ezra M. Finkelstein CC ’50, MIA ’52

Lawrence P. Finnegan IF ’71, BUS ’72

Kristin Raphaele Willey Fitzgerald, PhD CC ’90, MIA ’94

Howard Barrett Flanders IF ’62, LAW ’63

Anne D. Ford MIA ’05

Andrea Eva Forgacs MIA ’01, BUS ’01

Edward B. Forman MPA ’93

Catherine Starin Foster-Anderson MPA ’04

Jackie Frankel MPA ’09

Giovanna Franky MPA ’98

Hugh Corning Fraser MPA ’95

Gerald S. Freedman IF ’62, PS ’64 and Karen J. Freedman

Janeene Kimberly Freeman MPA ’05

Maria Salome Galib-Bras MIA ’88, CERT ’88, LAW ’98 and Duane McLaughlin LAW ’98

Carrie Lyn Gallagher MPA ’09

Michael William Galligan IF ’83, MIA ’84, LAW ’85

Danielle Nicole Garbe MPA ’01

Karina Garcia-Casalderrey MIA ’02

Lindsay Gail Garten MPA ’16

Susan C. Gates MIA ’94

Stephen Bernt Gaull MIA ’88, CERT ’88

Joseph G. Gavin, PhD MIA ’70, GSAS ’76, GSAS ’80 and Pamela B. Gavin

Linnea Gavrilis MIA ’97

Benjamin D. Geber CC ’83, MPA ’90

Gwenn H. Gebhard MPA ’87, PH ’87 and Paul Replogle Gebhard MIA ’86

Inge Gedo MIA ’93

Russell W. Geekie MIA ’01

Meredith Robin Geraghty MPA ’12

Frederick H. Gerlach, PhD MIA ’63, CERT ’63, GSAS ’68

Aaron Roth Gershowitz MIA ’89

Ellen Miriam Gertsen MPA ’03

Anne Elizabeth Geyer MIA ’88

Christine Wrona Giallongo MIA ’90, CERT ’90

Susan C. Gigli MIA ’87

Joseph Michael Gilbride MPA ’08

Lisa Gittleman MIA ’79

Adela Gondek, PhD and Lawrence D. Brown, PhD

Alexander Goodman MPA ’13

Victoria W. Grafflin MIA ’94

John A. Grammer MIA ’63

Marisa Salamone Greason MPA ’86, PH ’86

Benjamin John O’Brien Green MPA ’13

Carolyn B. Green MIA ’63

Charles Lewis Green MIA ’94, SEAS ’98

Robin Greene Hagey BC ’76, MIA ’80, JRN ’81

Karl Hans Greimel MIA ’98

Joan Elaine Griffith-Lee ’GS 98, MPA ’05, SPS ’17

Jon Edmund Groteboer MIA ’08

Carole A. Grunberg MIA ’78

Guy B. Gugliotta CC ’67, MIA ’73 and Carla A. Robbins

Gaurav Gujral MPA ’07

Yang Guo MPA ’13

Maritza Guzman MPA ’90 and Steven R. Abrahamson CC ’87

Viktoria Habanova MIA ’08

Michele Anke Haberland BC ’94, MPA ’04 and Thaddeus Tracy CC ’95

Ayesha Saira Haider Marra MIA ’04

Stephanie Ann Haile MIA ’04

Diallo William Hall MIA ’05

Craig Philip Hallgren MIA ’86

Mark G. Hambley MIA ’71

Richard E. Hammond IF ’69, LAW ’70

Amal Haque MIA ’11

Ayelet Klara Haran MPA ’11

Katherine Olivia Hardy MIA ’97

Diane Wallace Harpold MIA ’90 and William Rodgers MIA ’91

Ryan Hart

Alison M. Harwood MIA ’85, BUS ’85

Batool S. Hassan MIA ’07

James G. Hatcher IF ’62, LAW ’63

Gary Edward Hayes, PhD MIA ’81, CERT ’81

Maureen Hays-Mitchell, PhD MIA ’83, CERT ’83

Ryan Foster Heath CC ’05, MPA ’10 and Aubrey Heath

Lisa Ray Hecht-Cronstedt MIA ’08

Hertha W. Heiss BC ’50, CERT ’51, GSAS ’51

David Helfenbein

Rachel Heller-Scott MPA ’01

Judith Hellerstein MPA ’94

Fritz Herrick

Peter T. Hess MIA ’80 and Debra M. Kenyon

Garry W. Hesser IF ’64

Michael Anthony Hillmeyer MIA ’97, IF ’97

Susan Hinko IF ’78, BUS ’79 and Carl A. Batlin BUS ’77, BUS ’78

John L. Hirsch, PhD CC ’57

Lily Ho Leavitt MIA ’96, BUS ’96 and Andrew Leavitt

Christopher B. Hodges, PhD MIA ’77, IF ’77

Lyndell A. Hogan MPA ’93, SW ’93 and Stephen G. Diorio

Amy Elizabeth Holman MIA ’87

Michael A. Holubar MIA ’77

Nicole Janine Holzapfel MIA ’94, BUS ’94

Lindsey Levit Honari MIA ’97, BUS ’97 and Sharam Honari BUS ’97

Joon Seok Hong MIA ’05

Ramya Thambuswamy Hopley MIA ’86, CERT ’86 and John Schaller Hopley GS ’87, MIA ’90

Anthony H. Horan IF ’63, PS ’65

Janet Horan MPA ’05

William D. Howells MIA ’60, CERT ’60

Mark Fong-Hui Huang BUS ’96, IF ’96, MIA ’97

Jan Hudis MPA ’90, PH ’91

Richard W. Hull, PhD CERT ’65, GSAS ’68 and Jo Marvel Hull

Thomas N. Hull MIA ’73, IF ’73, CERT ’73

Riham Hussein MIA ’09

Claire Husson-Citanna MPA ’05

Evelyn Hutter MIA ’10

Kazuyoshi Ikeno MIA ’76

Farhod Inogambaev MIA ’07

Dianne Tai Yan Ip SEAS ’99, MIA ’00

Eleni Istavridis IF ’80, MIA ’81, BUS ’82

Arisa Ito MIA ’16

Robbin Frances Itzler MPA ’84

Hidenori Iwasaki MIA ’01

Devika Iyer MIA ’07

Brook Sharon Griffin Jackson MPA ’07

Kathryn Marie Jackson MIA ’88, BUS ’89

Erik Jacobs CC ’93, MIA ’85, IF ’85 and Laura J. Eberstein CC ’88

Gloria R. Jacobs MIA ’78

Maria Irene Jacobson MIA ’60

Meena Jagannath MIA ’07

Spencer Jakab

William Holt Jansen MIA ’85

Bernd Gunnar Janzen MIA ’92, CERT ’92

Kristi Bahrenburg Janzen MIA ’93, CERT ’93

Jacqueline Marie Jenkins MIA ’83 and Richard Gregory Jenkins BUS ’86

Andrew T. Jhun MPA ’04

Stephen Searle Johnson MIA ’93

Anuja Pande Joshi MIA ’07

John Jove MIA ’85

Walter E. Judge MIA ’85, IF ’85 and Jean C. O’Neill

Christopher W. June MIA ’65

Sharon Kahn-Bernstein MPA ’97

Michele F. Kalafer MPA ’02

Robert Kambo

Vamsee Krishna Kanchi MIA ’99

Daniel B. Kaplan CC ’79, MPA ’82

Krystal Kaplan TC ’09

Nancy Beth Katz MPA ’94 and Richard C. Greenwald MPA ’93

Peggy Ockkyung Kauh BC ’97, MPA ’01

Olga Kazianis MIA ’87

Faith Keenan

Frank Kehl, PhD CERT ’81, GSAS ’81

Charles Robert Kelly MIA ’83

Laurie S. Kelly MIA ’79

Samia Zaheen Kemal

Stephen Patrick Keppel MIA ’07

Robert Charles Kerr MIA ’87

Allan R. Kessler MIA ’82

Clarice J. Kestenbaum PS ’68

Jawad Zahur Khan MIA ’02

John F. Khanlian MIA ’69

Michele Llona Wray Khateri MIA ’97

Hahna Bosun Kim MIA ’10, BUS ’10

Namyoung Kim

Natasha Suzanne Kindergan MIA ’04, IF ’04

Mary C. King MIA ’79

Noelle King IF ’84, GSAS ’85

Brigitte Lehner Kingsbury MIA ’89

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Gordon A. Kingsley, PhD MIA ’81

Nancy K. Kintner-Meyer MIA ’89

Nora and Alexander Kintzoglou

Hilka Klinkenberg MPA ’09

Anne Raick Knulst MIA ’51

Harrison Kobb MPA ’15

Andrew Jerome Koch ’IF 06, MIA ’07

Gabriela Koloffon Valdez MIA ’14

Victor Koshkin-Youritzin IF ’65

Daniel Mayer Kosinski MPA ’07

Stephanie Kosmo MIA ’84

Eric Kimball Kostrowski MIA ’08

Ilana K. Krishnamurti MIA ’67

Bernard Kritzer MIA ’72

Abraham B. Kroma MIA ’97

Esther Rose and John Krystal

Rebecca Morris Kuhar MPA ’98 and Robert Kuhar

Aradhana Bhargava Kuhn MPA ’15

Orin Michael Kurland MIA ’91

Darwin R. Labarthe IF ’62, PS ’65

Alexander Wesley LaBua MIA ’13

Paul Felipe Lagunes

Yeliz Arat Lambson MIA ’01

Aikojean Lane MIA ’05, IF ’05 and Haruhisa Ohtsuka MIA ’05

Julie Lane BC ’91, MPA ’92

Kristen Elizabeth Lanham- Hostetter MIA ’09

Eugene Lawson, PhD GSAS ’68, CERT ’69, GSAS ’82

Daniel Emil Lee MPA ’05

Donna Lee MIA ’98

Lynn F. Lee MIA ’57

Wayne Hun Lee MIA ’02

Frederick A. Leedy CERT ’52, GSAS ’52

Elizabeth Paula Leff MPA ’99

Julie Lenehan MIA ’97

Amanda V. Leness MIA ’93

Michael William Lenihan MIA ’15

Rudolph Alvise Lennkh MPA ’12

Valerie Leon MPA ’09

Justin Peter Leous MPA ’06

Margaret M. Levchenko CERT ’57, GSAS ’57 and Andrew Levchenko MIA ’56

Daedre Elisabeth Levine BC ’92, MPA ’03

Deborah Jacobs Levy MPA ’92 and Frank M. Levy

James Lewellis MIA ’04

Diane Lewis IF ’73

Gail Lewis MIA ’84 and James D. Howard

Kristin Marie Lewis MIA ’15, BUS ’15

Elizabeth Mary Leyne MIA ’04

David Yifong Li MIA ’08

Arthur Dominique Liacre MIA ’04

Alice E. Liddell MPA ’05

Jordan S. Lieberman MPA ’02

Edith R. Lim CERT ’74, GSAS ’74

Samuel J. Lipsky MIA ’73

Michael Aaron Listgarten MIA ’94, LAW ’94 and Petra Silton

James A. Listorti, PhD MIA ’71, IF ’71, PH ’77

Michael Littenberg-Brown MIA ’12

John Liu

Yanling Liu MIA ’09

Shweta Lodha MIA ’99

Joan Marie Lofgren, PhD MIA ’89, GSAS ’99, GSAS ’03

Jody London MPA ’90

James Michael Lonergan MPA ’92

Christine M. Loomis CERT ’75, GSAS ’75

Lois J. Lord-Sharma BUS ’85

Kimberly Amber Loui MPA ’00

Ping Fong Louie MIA ’85

William Love MIA ’90

Paik-Swan Low MIA ’85 and Steven Arthur Hirsch MPA ’85

Cynthia Beth Lowe MPA ’13, SW ’13

Erica Granetz Lowitz MPA ’94

Julia Y. Lu MPA ’03

Marcus P. Lubin MIA ’81

Douglas Lucius MIA ’89, GSAPP ’89

Edward Michael Luera MPA ’83

Alida Marie Lujan MPA ’11

Natalia Luna-Bujanda MIA ’10

Karyn T. Lynch MPA ’82

Yuwei Ma MIA ’07

Charles F. MacCormack IF ’64, MIA ’65, GSAS ’74

Vernon L. Mack MIA ’73

Patricia M. Macken SW ’83

Scott Charles Macmurdo MIA ’12

Barbara M. Magnoni MIA ’94

Harpreet Mahajan, PhD CERT ’80, GSAS ’83

Michael Emanuel Malefakis MIA ’90

Roya S. Malekian MIA ’06

Nora Malek-Shair BC ’95, MIA ’98, CERT ’98

Dennis Maloney MIA ’12

Joel Nordin Maloney MIA ’96

Sarah Manaker MIA ’04, IF ’04

Michael Sarkis Manavdjian MIA ’14

Elizabeth Faye Marazita IF ’87, CERT ’87, MIA ’88

Donna A. and John A. Marino

Melissa Martinez Larrea MIA ’15

Margarita L. Martinez MIA ’98, JRN ’98

Michael G. Martinson MIA ’70

Izumi Masaki MPA ’15

Alice Mastrangelo Gittler MIA ’90

Patrick E. Mathes MIA ’97

Yasuyuki Matsui MPA ’08

M. Haytham Matthews IF ’78, GSAPP ’79, PH ’79 and Hyacinth E. Robinson PH ’79

Mark G. Matuschak IF ’83, LAW ’84

Anneliese Farrell Mauch MIA ’93, CERT ’93

Toby E. Mayman MIA ’65

Raquel Mazon MIA ’96, PH ’96

Patricia Jean McCall MIA ’05

Amanda Waring McClenahan MPA ’02

Gordon Carlos McCord, PhD SIPA ’12

Jesse Matthew McCormick

Michael I. McCormick MIA ’97, BUS ’97

Alan B. McDougall MPA ’92 and Joan W. McDougall

C. Andrew McGadney MPA ’06

Fred F. McGoldrick MIA ’66

SIPA students, Alice Bosley MIA ’17, Patricia Letayf MPA ’17, and Suha Gilliani MPA ’18 (r to l) discuss their joint ventures, including Five One Labs, a start-up incubator for refugees and conflict-affected entrepreneurs in the Middle East, with Allan Grafman MIA ’77, IF ’77, BUS ’80 at the annual recognition luncheon for SIPA leaders.

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John B. McGrath MIA ’80, IF ’80, CERT ’80

RoseAnn W. McHenry MIA ’62

Anne N. McIntosh IF ’85, MIA ’85

Elizabeth Louise McKeveny MPA ’16

Asia Marie McLaughlin MIA ’15

Neha Mehra IF ’12, MIA ’14

Richard Mei MIA ’85

Joslyn Edelstein Meier MIA ’07, PH ’07

Hermes Elpidio Mena MPA ’09

Jack Mendelsohn CERT ’77

Miten Arun Merchant MIA ’95

Michael G. Merin MIA ’84, IF ’84, CERT ’84

Alexandra Merle-Huet MIA ’04

Samuel Austin Merrill MIA ’99, IF ’99

Alexander Matthew Metelitsa MIA ’12

Katherine M. Metres IF ’96, MIA ’97

Jeffrey Peter Metzler MPA ’99

Jennine Rachel Meyer MIA ’00

Jeannith M. Michelen MPA ’08

Thomas R. Michelmore MIA ’74

Bethany K. Mickahail, PhD MIA ’82

Nick Mider MPA ’14

Charles Russell Miller, PhD MIA ’99, CERT ’99

Harlan Ira Miller MIA ’95

Rebecca Miller MPA ’15

Denise Mitchell MPA ’15

Edmund M. Mitchell MIA ’73

David M. Moniz MIA ’81

Rose Everette Montas MIA ’88

Hyuk Moon MIA ’84, CERT ’84

Anne Moretti MIA ’82, IF ’82

Charlotte T. Morgan-Cato MIA ’67

Marina Morgenegg MIA ’83

James C. Mori MIA ’80 and Susan C. Horst Mori GSAPP ’80

Anna Marisa Morris MIA ’05

James W. Morrison MIA ’63

Karen Marie Morrissey MIA ’89

Wendell L. Mott MIA ’66

Kin W. Moy MIA ’90

Andrew John Mueller MIA ’97

Keith Reinhold Mueller MIA ’02

Shubhendu Mukherjee MPA ’04

Sudip Mukherjee MIA ’03

Maarten H. Muller MIA ’81

Theresa Murphy

Jacqueline Therese Murray MIA ’84

Nancy G. Musselwhite MIA ’82, CERT ’82

James P. Nach MIA ’66

Ekaterina Nadirova MIA ’01 and Leigh E. Sprague LAW ’99

Jonathan Nadler MPA ’81, LAW ’86

John H. Nahm GS ’99, MIA ’00 and Miky Nahm

Sawa Nakagawa MIA ’09, BUS ’09

Yumiko Nakajima MIA ’90

Ambareen Naqvi MPA ’13

Denise Natali MIA ’87

Peter Ryan Natiello MIA ’90, IF ’90

Nicolas Navas MIA ’02

Judith Ann Ndubuisi MPA ’96

Tekeste G. Negus MIA ’79

Stephen S. Nelmes MIA ’73 and Ellen Meier

Richard T. Newman MIA ’51

Ndingara Nicole Ngardingabe MIA ’95

Giang Truong Nguyen MIA ’98 and Hoa Xuan T. Do

David Michael Nidus MPA ’98

Maria M. Nied MPA ’82 and Dennis Nied

Brian Albert Nogy MIA ’07

Akbar Noman

Alexandre R. Nouvakhov MIA ’99

Martin D. Novar MIA ’84, CERT ’84

Peter T. Nulty MIA ’70, CERT ’70 and Katherine Valyi

Kristine and Patrick O’Brien

Noreen O’Donnell MIA ’97

James A. Oesterle GS ’64, MIA ’65, IF ’65

Yemisi Otema Ogunro MIA ’09

Harry John O’Hara MIA ’91, IF ’91

Clarence W. Olmstead IF ’67, LAW ’68 and Kathleen F. Heenan

Shebna Nur Olsen GS ’06, MPA ’08

Marina Olshansky CC ’92, MIA ’93

Bruce A. Ortwine MIA ’78

Joseph Osenni MPA ’79

Cesar Oswaldo Osorio Flores MPA ’07

Mike O’Sullivan

Mildred Otero

Paula Pacheco Flanagan MPA ’12

John F. Palmer IF ’70

James Parenti

David Justin Park GS ’93

Jee Hoon Park MIA ’07

Neal Barrett Parry MPA ’06

George Patras MIA ’91

Jessica Horan Payne MPA ’02

Eric Albert Peltzer MPA ’07

Richard J. Pera MIA ’79

Steve A. Perez MIA ’07

Maha Pervez MIA ’12 and Muneeb Arslan MPA ’08

Scott Pesner

Anita Peter MIA ’84

Mariana S. Petermann MIA ’94 and Helge Petermann BUS ’94

Velika Peterson MPA ’07

Lawrence C. Petrowski IF ’69, LAW ’69

Todd Pfeiffer MPA ’97

Ethan R. Phillips JRN ’09, MPA ’13

Andrew J. Pierre IF ’57, MIA ’61, GSAS ’68 and Joan Root

Tas Ling Pinther MIA ’94

Susan Heller Pinto MIA ’93, IF ’93, CERT ’93

Henry Cooper Pitney IF ’87, LAW ’87

Mark Pitts MIA ’93

Robert Walter Pitulej MPA ’96

Carole Rogel Poirier CERT ’62, GSAS ’66

Ellen Hope Polansky MPA ’89

Sally Soo Hoo Pon MPA ’82

Margaret Edsall Powell MIA ’01

Jennifer Elise Powers-Darrington MIA ’06

Jeffrey D. Pribor IF ’82, LAW ’83, BUS ’84

Orlie Prince MPA ’86

Joseph Procopio MIA ’72

Laura Jean Protzmann MPA ’02

SIPA fellows Shawn Bush MIA ‘17, Alana Plaus MPA ‘18, Anusheh Naveed Ashraf MPA ‘17, and Cameron Torreon MIA ’17 (l to r) gather to celebrate SIPA alumni, donors, and friends at the SIPA Leaders Luncheon.

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Angela D. Pruitt MPA ’02

PSA Management Company

Wesley Pulisic MIA ’04, CERT ’04

Glenda Quarnstrom MIA ’77, CERT ’77 and Thomas J. Quarnstrom CC ’75

Shakil Aziz Quazi MPA ’93 and Jennifer Rachel Thomson MIA ’97

Laura Joan Quigg MIA ’85, GSAS ’85

Peter Quinn MIA ’97, IF ’97

Allison Joy Ramler MIA ’96, CERT ’96, PH ’97

Timothy Paul Ramsey MIA ’93

Andrea L. Rankin MPA ’97, SW ’97

Sushant Palakurthi Rao MIA ’02

Jonathan H. Rappe MIA ’06, BUS ’06

Robert D. Rawlins IF ’73, BUS ’73

Gary J. Reardon MPA ’80

Melinda Day Leonard Reed MIA ’02

Sidra Rehman MPA ’10

Jordan Reisner

Richard T. Reiter CC ’83, MIA ’85

Jason Warren Rekate MIA ’00, BUS ’02

Scott Rembrandt MPA ’00

Kathy Ann Reniers MPA ’01

Christopher J. Reposa MPA ’00

Edward Alexander Reynolds IF ’11, MPA ’12

Richard Christopher Reynolds IF ’11, MPA ’12

Diana E. Rheault MPA ’05

Michael Rhee MIA ’94

Russell E. Richey IF ’65

Scott Andrew Richman MIA ’91

Kathleen Rithisorn MPA ’13

Eduardo Rivas MIA ’04

Richard C. Robarts MIA ’61, IF ’61

Debra Leigh Robertson MPA ’02

William Rodgers MIA ’91

Stacey Nicole Roen MPA ’09

Jose Luis Rojas Villarreal MIA ’00 and Maija Pratt

Patricia Rooney MIA ’82

Louise Alexis Rosen JRN ’99

Edward S. Rosenbaum MIA ’77 and Davey Rosenbaum

Kathryn Ann Rosenblum MIA ’86

Stacy Ilana Rosenfeld MPA ’99

Frederick L. Rosenstein CC ’78, MPA ’81

Allen Rosso

Susan Rosthal MIA ’71

Elizabeth Rothkopf MIA ’99

Seymour Rotter CERT ’49, GSAS ’54

Heather Johnson Row MIA ’84, CERT ’84

Richard C. Rowson MIA ’50

Helene Marie Roy MIA ’13

Bruce E. Rubin IF ’67, PS ’68

Jeanne Tihomirova Rupchin MIA ’07, CERT ’07 and Oleg Radkov Rupchin MIA ’02

Nona J. Russell MPA ’85

Eugene E. Ruyle, PhD CERT ’71, GSAS ’71

Carol Jean Ryan MIA ’83

Anthony R. Saccomano MIA ’70

Carol R. Saivetz, PhD MIA ’71, CERT ’71, GSAS ’79

Alexandra Lisa Salomon MIA ’99

Christine Samano MIA ’05

Ieva Samsonova MPA ’07 and Scott Elkins

Aisha Noel Sanchez MIA ’12, BUS ’12 and Eduardo Gabriel Sanchez BUS ’12

Fernando S. Sanchez MIA ’90

Maria Virginia Sanchez MIA ’03

Charles Alfred Santangelo MPA ’83 and Kathy Santangelo

Shannon Sara

Priyam Saraf MPA ’12

Jared Sarfaty IF ’77, BUS ’78

Kengo Sato MIA ’01

Yoichiro Sato MIA ’09, IF ’09

Rebecca Marion Saxton-Fox IF ’11, MPA ‘13

Liliana Monk Schatz MIA ’78

Mark I. Schickman IF ’73 and Susan Schickman

Lilli Debrito Schindler MIA ’90

Scott Ronald Schless MIA ’87

Nadja Carolyn Schmeil MIA ’01

Kathleen Elizabeth Schoener MIA ’13

Diane Joan Schwartz MIA ’85

Brian Daniel Scull MPA ’17

David Porter Searby MIA ’88

Frederick D. Seaton MIA ’62, IF ’62

Christina Sebastian

Lynn A. Seirup MIA ’80

Kaoruko Seki MIA ’93, IF ’93

Katherine J. Sekowski GSAS ’77

Albert L. Seligmann CC ’44, MIA ’49*

Christine Lynne Selph MIA ’03

Marc Jay Selverstone, PhD MIA ’92

Nina Maria Serafino MIA ’76

Karen Serota

Bijal G. Shah MPA ’16

Beth Shair MIA ’94

Suzanne Shanahan MPA ’10

Jennifer Shaoul MPA ’90

Andrew J. Shapiro IF ’93, LAW ’94, MIA ’95

Monika Anne Sharma MIA ’10

Emily Sarah Sharrock MPA ’04

Howard Shatz, PhD MIA ’91

Grace Whitaker Shelton MIA ’86, LAW ’89

Dan Ray Shepherd MPA ’08

Caitlin Barnett Sherman MPA ’17

Elisabeth Day Sherwood MIA ’95

Betsy Shimberg MPA ’97 and Kenneth M. Shimberg

Eric Nathan Shrago MPA ’15

Madeline Rose Silva MPA ’14

James William Silver MIA ’91

Brett Nicholas Simon MIA ’10

Sarah Magdeleine Simoneau MIA ’09

Amon Simutowe IF ’13, MIA ’14

Kuldip K. Singh MIA ’77

Thomas Sinnickson MPA ’09

Vicki Sittenfeld MPA ’82

Sichan Siv MIA ’81, IF ’81

Ilana Hoffer Skoff MIA ’90, CERT ’90

Brian Francis Slattery MIA ’03

Teresa K. Smith de Cherif MIA ’87, CERT ’87

Susan V. Smith Santini MPA ’92, PH ’94

Roberta Smith

Roberto E. Socas, PhD CC ’50, MIA ’55, GSAS ’65

Elaine Carol Soffer MPA ’83 and Richard G. Kass

Richard J. Soghoian, PhD IF ’65 and Stephanie F. Soghoian

Erzen Sogut MIA ’13

Ron B. Sokolov MPA ’98

Debra E. Soled MIA ’82, CERT ’83

Jocelyn Andico Songco MIA ’03, IF ’03, BUS ’03

Aimee Duncan Sostowski MIA ’07 and Dominik Zurakowski

Daniel R. Southerland IF ’63, JRN ’63

Phillip M. Spector

Giuseppina Speranza MIA ’08

Elisabeth Sperling

Peter Spiller MIA ’68

Xabay Spinka MIA ’03

Robert Francis Staats MIA ’83

Elizabeth Stabler MIA ’56

Gregory John Stangl MIA ’98, BUS ’98

Yuliya Valentinova Stankova MIA ’07

Walter Alan Stein CC ’63, MIA ’69, CERT ’93

Barry H. Steiner GSAS ’70

Loren M. Stephens MIA ’67

Mark S. Sternman MIA ’92, IF ’92

Ted Stiffel

Amy T. Stockman MPA ’01

Jonathan Stockman

Susan Storms

John Kelly Strader MIA ’80, CERT ’80

Freida and Max Strauss

Alec Sullivan

Talant Isakovich Sultanov MIA ’06

Elina Sverdlova MIA ’07

Ildiko Szilank MIA ’98

Adedayo Olajumoke Taiwo MIA ’97

Kamran Talattof, PhD

Anne Bernadette Talley MIA ’94, BUS ’94 and Brian Andrew McDermott BUS ’93

Alice Tan MPA ’01

Mara Tekach MIA ’86, CERT ’86

Tamy Gelman Tesone MIA ’05

Trevor Graeme Thomas MIA ’04

Paul A. Thompson MIA ’73

Anna Throne-Holst MIA ’06

Stephen E. Tisman IF ’72, LAW ’72

Richard Stephen Tobin MPA ’08

Justin Craig Tolton IF ’73, BUS ’73

Cathy Trezza MIA ’85

Vicki G. and Michael J. Troyan

Rebecca Dianne Truelove MPA ’96 and John G. O’Sullivan

Christopher G. Trump IF ’62, JRN ’62 and Claire Kaukinen

Alper A. Tunca MPA ’05

Vanessa Claire Tutos MPA ’05

Christie Marie Ulman MIA ’08

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Andrew Umans MIA ’10

Miguel Urquiola, PhD

Daniel D. Valle MPA ’89

Maria Vallejo-Nguyen

Laura Van Wie McGrory MIA ’95

Lucia Vancura MIA ’06

Ioannis Vasileiou MIA ’11

Jesus Maria Vasquez Gomez MPA ’12

Angel Ismael Vasquez MPA ’15

Ann-Ariel Nichiko Vecchio MPA ’04

Jose Alfredo Velaztiqui Achucarro MPA ’10

Edward J. Vernoff MIA ’69

Frederic Pierre Vigneron MIA ’83

Dario Enrique Vilchez MIA ’10

Simon Columbus Vining MPA ’94

Susannah Violino MIA ’81

Sarita Anne Vollnhofer MIA ’13, PH ’13 and Lucas Tomilheiro Sancassani BUS ’14

Piroska Ilona von Gordon MIA ’09 and Anthony Faulise

Clark Wagner MIA ’85

Linda Wagner MPA ’08

Hans Herbert Wahl MIA ’95

Ida Wainschel MPA ’10

Sarah Walbert MIA ’80

Elizabeth Walker IF ’88, BUS ’89

Stephen William Walker MIA ’93, IF ’93

Robert Wallace, PhD GSAS ’67, IF ’67, GSAS ’72

Janet Eun Wang MIA ’08

Deborah E. Ward, PhD BC ’89, MPA ’94, GSAS ’97, GSAS ’00 and Ivan de Jesus Gonzalez MPA ’98

Ella Suzanne Watson-Stryker MIA ’09, PH ’09

Rebecca VanLandingham Waugh MIA ’00

Christina Anne Way MIA ’05

Cory Way

Egon E. Weck CC ’47, MIA ’49

Kimberly Wedel MPA ’88

Phillip Weed MPA ’14

Benjamin Richard Weil MIA ’92, CERT ’92

Jill Weinstein

Daniel Stephen Welt MIA ’05

Marilyn L. Wertheimer CERT ’53 and Michael Wertheimer

Alison Wescott MIA ’92

Donald F. Wheeler, PhD GSAS ’69, CERT ’71, GSAS ’74

Raymond D. White IF ’64

Ethan Seth Wilkes MIA ’12

Bret David Wilson MPA ’01, GSAS ’01

Craig Ronald Wilson MIA ’01

Ross L. Wilson MIA ’79

Ronald Wimer IF ’86, JRN ’86, MIA ’87

Enid and Stuart Winefsky

Sonia Winner

Merle Wise MPA ’88

Jennifer B. Witriol MIA ’05

Noel Wo

Bret Philip Woellner MIA ’07, IF ’07, CERT ’07

Stephanie Beth Wolk Lawrence MPA ’93 and David Lawrence

William D. Wolle MIA ’51

Donna C. Wonnacott CERT ’60, GSAS ’60

Jonathan M. Woods MIA ’93, BUS ’93

Michele M. Wucker MIA ’93, CERT ’93

Stephen Michel Wunker MPA ’96

Gabriel Xia MPA ’15

Jing Xiao MIA ’12

Ching-yu Yao MIA ’03

Jillian Leigh Yoerges MIA ’15

Caryn Ruth Young MIA ’93

Drew M. Young MIA ’72, IF ’74, CERT ’72

Mark Young MPA ’91

Miriam A. Young MIA ’91, CERT ’91

William J. Young MPA ’90

Judie Yu BC ’94, MIA ’95

Michael Yun MPA ’05

Zhao Yunlong

Andrzej Zdrok MIA ’01

Philip E. Zegarelli CC ’70, MIA ’76, IF ’76

Marc-Claude Zeitoun MIA ’91

Boris Victor Zemtzov MIA ’87

Lori M. Zett MIA ’99

Andrew W. Zimmerman IF ’68, PS ’70

Azmat Jalil Zuberi MIA ’94

Matching Gift CompaniesAmerican Express Foundation

Apex Foundation

Bank of America Foundation

BlackRock

The Capital Group Companies Charitable Foundation

Deloitte Foundation

Exelon Corporation

Ford Foundation

GE Foundation

Goldman Sachs & Company

IBM International Foundation

The Johnson Family Foundation

Macquarie Group Foundation

The Pew Charitable Trusts

The PIMCO Foundation

PWC Foundation

State Street Foundation

Textron Charitable Trust

Tyco

Wells Fargo Foundation

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