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Inside the Blue Box: Organizational Identity and Turf Decision-Making in the United States Air Force
(Georgetown University, 2021)
Why would a US military service relinquish a mission—a mission that could justify millions of dollars in new assets—while pursuing another to the point of near obsession? Why do these decisions regarding “turf,” that is, ...
Dangerous by Design: The American Special Operations Institution and Strategy in Irregular Warfare
(Georgetown University, 2021)
The United States Department of Defense defines irregular warfare as a struggle among state and nonstate actors to influence populations and affect legitimacy. Yet, despite the centrality of influence and legitimacy in ...
Sorry for the Things We Did When We Rebelled: Why Do Rebel Groups Apologize?
(Georgetown University, 2021)
Since 1989, nine rebel groups have apologized after civil wars; despite the prevalence of literature on public apologies by states, apologies by non-state actors have not been studied. Why do rebel groups apologize? This ...
Why Do Guerrilla Groups That Had Enough Capabilities to Continue in an Armed Struggle Shift Their Strategies from Military to Political and Participate in Negotiations?
(Georgetown University, 2021)
*no abstract*
THE ENDS OF JUSTICE: SEEKING PERPETUAL PEACE IN A TIME OF ENDLESS WAR
(Georgetown University, 2021)
U.S. forces have been engaged around the globe since World War II, and “endless” war has become the backdrop of American life. This militarized status quo is rife with paradox and contradiction. The Constitution stipulates ...
The Eastern Question, Great Game, and Modern Hot Wars: Policy Lessons and Statecraft Implications for US Relations with Russia, Turkey, and Iran in the 21st Century
(Georgetown University, 2020)
This study provides additional context for unacknowledged but sustained Russian and Iranian hot wars against the United States that unfolded and became normalized in the 2010s. It examines key events through four constructs: ...
Open and Shut Cases: Irregular Migration Management and Policy Convergence in the European Union
(Georgetown University, 2021)
Why have European states adopted similar approaches to managing irregular migration? Existing explanations of migration policy development posit that the relative political power of interest groups that are favorably or ...
Public Opinion, Refugee Programs, and State Welfare in Twenty Countries
(Georgetown University, 2020)
Refugee programs bolster global human rights by promoting responsibility-sharing and assisting the 25.9 million people who have been forced to flee their countries for fear of war or persecution. As refugee numbers soar ...
Citizen-Generated Data? Participation as a Lever for Improving National Statistical Capacity
(Georgetown University, 2021)
Quality national statistics can help steer domestic policymaking, public and private investment, and civic engagement. As such, increased funding for national statistical capacity has become a key advocacy target in ...
The Impeding Effects of United States Sanctions on Humanitarian Trade with Iran
(Georgetown University, 2021)
I set out to examine the relationship between United States sanctions on Iran and humanitarian trade in the form of pharmaceutical imports. To measure this relationship, I used the gravity model of international trade. In ...