 |
 |
Peace Games |
 |
Moderator: Annick T.R. Wibben, Brown University |
 

 |
Annick T. R. Wibben is a Watson Institute visiting
fellow and a co-investigator with InfoTechWarPeace. She received her Ph.D.
from the University of Wales at Aberystwyth and is currently preparing her
doctoral work on "Security Narratives: A Feminist Examination" for
publication. She has written on feminist theory and IR more generally,
including Narrating Experience: Raymond Aron and Feminist Scholars
Revis(it)ed (1998). |
 |
Moderator: Keith Stanski, Brown University |
 |
Keith Stanski is a senior at Brown University, concentrating in
international relations and education. He is currently coeditor-in-chief of
the Brown Journal of World Affairs. Stanski is researching the implications
of political violence on gendered roles in Colombia. |
 |
Lene Hansen, Copenhagen University |
 

 |
Lene Hansen is an associate professor of international relations at the
University of Copenhagen. Prior to this, she was a research fellow at the
Copenhagen Peace Research Institute (COPRI). Her articles have appeared in
such journals and edited volumes as Alternatives, Cooperation and Conflict,
Journal of Peace Research, and Millennium. She recently co-edited European
Integration and National Identity: The Challenge of the Nordic States (2001,
with Ole Waever). |
 |
Michael Lekson, United States Institute of Peace |
 

 |
Michael Lekson is a program officer in the United States Institute of
Peace's Training Program. He is a specialist in multilateral diplomacy,
Europe and European institutions, NATO and OSCE, arms control and
confidence- and security-building measures, international conflict
management skills training, and the regions of the Balkans and Latin
America. Prior to joining USIP, he enjoyed a 26-year career with the State
Department, where his final position was deputy assistant secretary of state
for arms control. |
 |
Rafal Rohozinski, University of Cambridge |
 

 |
Rafal Rohozinski of Cambridge University's Trinity College researches the
nexus between information technology and the dynamics of "local" conflicts.
Rohozinski has been a practitioner with the United Nations and other
international organizations in over 26 countries. At present, he serves as a
senior advisor to several major initiatives in Central Asia, is a senior
research associate at the International Development Research Center
(Canada), and is on the advisory board member to the USIP-funded "IT for
Peace" Program (Advocacynet). |
|
 |
|
 |