SOURCE: https://www.newamerica.org/new-america/the-2016-class-of-new-america-fellows/
New America, formerly the New America Foundation, is a nonpartisan think tank in the United States. It focuses on a range of public policy issues, including national security studies, technology, asset building, health, gender, energy, education and the economy.
Earlier this month New America announced its roster of 2016 fellows.
The New
America Fellows Program supports talented journalists, academics and other
public policy analysts who offer a fresh and often unpredictable perspective on
the major challenges facing our society. New America Fellows are selected on a
highly competitive basis, and serve — some full-time, some on an adjunct basis
— for one or two years.
New America
provides them with a non-partisan intellectual community where they can pursue
their individual research projects. The Fellows benefit from their engagement
with each other, and with New America's various policy programs, while their
presence adds to the intellectual verve of the institution and helps shape its
longer-term agenda and focus.
The New America
Fellows 2016
Rania Abouzeid will write a book about the Syrian
uprising, to be published by Bloomsbury. She has reported from the Middle East
and South Asia for over a decade and is currently a freelance journalist based
in Beirut. Her work has appeared in TIME magazine, The New Yorker, Foreign
Affairs, National Geographic, Politico, and other outlets, both print and
television. She is the recipient of the 2015 Michael Kelly Award, the 2014
George Polk Award for foreign reporting, and the 2013 Kurt Schork Award in
International Journalism among other honors, which include fellowships at the
European Council on Foreign Relations and Columbia University’s Dart Center.
She has thrice been a finalist for the Bayeux-Calvados Award for War
Correspondents. Abouzeid is a graduate of the University of Melbourne,
Australia.
David B. Auerbach will write a book on the impact of
algorithmic and computational methods on public policy and social life, to be
published by Pantheon. He currently writes the weekly Bitwise column on
technology for Slate, for which he was nominated for a National Magazine Award
in Columns and Commentary in 2014 for a series of pieces on Healthcare.gov.
Previously he was a software engineer at Google and Microsoft for ten years,
working primarily on server and systems infrastructure. He has also written on
technology, politics, philosophy, and literature for n+1, Reuters, The Nation,
The Times Literary Supplement, Bookforum, The American Reader, and elsewhere.
Auerbach is a graduate of Yale University.
Andrew Bolden will write the libretto and compose
the score for a new musical about NSA surveillance, anchored by the Edward
Snowden narrative, exploring themes of privacy, power, and patriotism. He has
worked at New America since 2008, with a hiatus for graduate studies. He holds
master’s degrees in music from Converse College and Emory University.
Jesse Eisinger is writing a book on white-collar
crime and (non)punishment, to be published by Simon & Schuster. He is a
senior reporter at ProPublica. He writes a regular column for The New York
Times’ Dealbook section. In April 2011, he shared the Pulitzer Prize for
National Reporting for a series of stories on questionable Wall Street
practices that helped make the financial crisis the worst since the Great
Depression. He won the 2015 Gerald Loeb Award for commentary. He has also twice
been a finalist for the Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting, among
other honors. He has a B.A. from Columbia College.
Franklin Foer, who joined as a New America Fellow
in the spring, is writing a book about the threat that big technology companies
pose to the future of thinking. Previously, Foer was the editor of The New
Republic magazine. He has been a staff writer at Slate and New York. His book,
How Soccer Explains the World: An Unlikely Theory of Globalization, has been translated
into 27 languages. Sports Illustrated named it one of the most important books
of the decade.
Jeff Goodell is working on a book about the
impact of sea level rise on Miami, as well as other cities around the world, to
be published by Little, Brown. He is currently a Contributing Editor at Rolling
Stone and the author of five books, including How to Cool the Planet:
Geoengineering and the Audacious Quest to Fix Earth’s Climate, which won the
2011 Grantham Prize Award of Special Merit. Goodell’s previous books include
Sunnyvale, a memoir about growing up in Silicon Valley, which was a New York
Times Notable Book, and Big Coal: The Dirty Secret Behind America's Energy
Future.
Robin V. Harris, Ph.D., will write a book about the
“godmother of school choice,” Annette “Polly” Williams, the Wisconsin state
legislator who ignited a national movement by writing and sponsoring
Milwaukee’s landmark school voucher program. Currently, Harris is the managing
editor at The Education Trust, a national education advocacy and policy
organization. Previously, she served as editorial director at Education Sector
and associate editor of Diverse Issues in Higher Education, where she focused
on issues facing students of color in K-12 and Higher Education. She is a
graduate of Howard University and earned a master’s and doctorate in English
literature from the University of Maryland, College Park.
Zaha Hassan will complete a novel, Die Standing
Like Trees, which deals with a Palestinian-American woman’s search for answers twenty
years after her mother’s violent death during the height of the Oslo peace
talks. She is a human rights lawyer and former coordinator and senor legal
advisor to the Palestinian negotiating team during Palestine’s bid for UN
membership from 2010-2012. She received her J.D. from the University of
California at Berkeley, an LLM in Transnational & International Law from
Willamette University, and graduated magna cum laude from the University of
Washington in Seattle with a B.A. in political science and Near East languages
and civilizations. She has been cohost for the last two years of the Portland,
Oregon radio show, One Land Many Voices, on KBOO 90.7 FM and is a contributor
to the online magazine, The Civil Arab. Hassan will be a New America Middle East
Fellow.
Kevin Huffman will write a book about the
challenge of building a first-rate public school system in the face of modern
political dysfunction. Huffman was Tennessee’s Education Commissioner from 2011
to 2015, as the state made the largest academic gains in the country. He began
his education career as a first and second grade teacher, and later became an
education lawyer and a senior executive at Teach For America. He also wrote
opinion columns for the Washington Post, where he won the paper’s inaugural
“America’s Next Great Pundit” writing competition in 2009. Huffman is a
graduate of Swarthmore College and has a J.D. from New York University.
Greg Jacobs will co-direct a feature-length
documentary film on the power and potential impact of quality early childhood
education. Greg is the co-founder of Chicago-based Siskel/Jacobs Productions,
which produced the landmark History Channel documentary 102 Minutes That
Changed America, as well as the Emmy-winning National Geographic Channel
special Witness: Katrina. He also co-directed the acclaimed documentary film
Louder Than a Bomb. A graduate of Yale University, Greg has an M.A. in history
from Ohio State and is the author of Getting Around Brown, a history of school
desegregation in his hometown of Columbus, Ohio.
Trymaine Lee will write a book on the true costs
of gun violence in America, in terms of lost dreams and wasted dollars, to be
published by St. Martin’s Press. He is currently a national reporter for MSNBC.
For more than a dozen years Lee has chronicled the role of race, violence, law
enforcement, and politics in the lives of everyday Americans. Previously, Lee
was a reporter at The Huffington Post where in 2012 he broke the Trayvon Martin
story to a national audience. He has been a reporter at The New York Times and
The Times-Picayune in New Orleans where he won a 2006 Pulitzer Prize for
Breaking News as part of a team covering the fallout from Hurricane Katrina.
Lee is a past recipient of the National Association of Black Journalists Emerging
Journalist of the Year award and contributed reporting to The New York Times’
2009 Pulitzer Prize for Breaking News for its coverage of the Gov. Eliot
Spitzer sex scandal. He is a graduate of Rowan University and has a B.A. in
journalism. He will be an Emerson Fellow at New America.
Jay Newton-Small will explore Alzheimer’s disease and
end of life care through a book she is writing about her father’s diagnosis and
treatment. She is also researching the power of narrative on caregiving and how
to build communities in long-term care homes. She is currently a correspondent
for TIME magazine and author of the forthcoming book, Broad Influence: How
Women Are Changing the Way Washington Works. Previously, she was a reporter at
Bloomberg News. She is a graduate of Tufts University and has an M.A. from
Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism.
Alexis Okeowo will write a book about ordinary
people standing up to extremism in Africa, to be published by Hachette. She is
joining The New Yorker as a staff writer. Okeowo was a finalist for the 2014
Livingston Award for Young Journalists and the 2014 Kurt Schork Award in
International Journalism, and a recipient of a 2012 Alicia Patterson Foundation
fellowship, among other honors. She grew up in Montgomery, Alabama and
graduated from Princeton University.
Donna A. Patterson is writing a book on transnational
drug consumption, distribution, and control in Senegal, Ethiopia, and Cape
Verde. She is the author of Pharmacy in Senegal: Gender, Healing, and Entrepreneurship
and she has forthcoming publications on entrepreneurial pharmacists and the
2014 West African Ebola epidemic. Patterson has published scholarly articles in
the Journal of Healthcare for the Poor and Underserved and the Journal of
Women's History, and has been a frequent commentator on global health and
African affairs at The Huffington Post, Pacifica, NPR, and Global Health Now.
She has held fellowships at the Institute for the Medical Humanities at the
University of Texas Medical Branch, the West African Research Association, and
Princeton University, and she has a Ph.D. in African history from Indiana
University. Patterson will be a Carnegie Fellow at New America.
K. Sabeel Rahman will write a book about how
democratic participation and civic power is vital to addressing long-term
economic inequalities—from finance and corporate power, to urban inequality and
community development, to economic insecurity and the gig economy. An Assistant
Professor of Law at Brooklyn Law School, Rahman was a Special Advisor on
economic development strategy in New York City from 2014-15, and currently
serves on the New York City Rent Guidelines Board. Rahman is the Research and
Design Director and part of the founding leadership team for the Gettysburg
Project, a first-of-its-kind design and innovation lab that draws together
leading community organizers and academics to foster new strategies aimed at
rebuilding American democracy in the face of long-term challenges of economic,
ecological, and social justice. Rahman is a graduate of Oxford University,
where he studied economic development and law as a Rhodes Scholar, and Harvard
University, where he earned his A.B., J.D., and Ph.D. in political theory. His
writings have appeared in venues like The Boston Review, The Nation, and Salon.
His first book, Governing the Economy: Democracy, Domination, and the
Administrative State (forthcoming from Oxford University Press), examines how
Progressive Era political thought can inform contemporary democratic theory and
debates in post-financial crisis administrative law and economic regulation.
Janell Ross is writing a book about the racial
wealth gap and the truths about its real origins laid bare by the Great
Recession. The book will be published by Beacon Press. Ross is a political
reporter for the Washington Post. Previously, she has covered a range of social
issues including race, politics, and immigration for The National Journal, The
Atlantic, The New Republic, The Huffington Post, The Tennessean, The News &
Observer, and the Corpus Christi Caller-Times. She is a graduate of Vassar
College and earned a master's degree from Columbia University's Graduate School
of Journalism.
Scott Silverstone will complete a book on the
strategic complexities of preventive war and the enduring historical debate
over British and French policy in response to the rise of German power in the
1930s. He is currently a Professor of International Relations and the Director
of the International Relations program at the United States Military Academy at
West Point. Silverstone is the author of Preventive War and American Democracy,
and Divided Union: the Politics of War in the Early American Republic. At the
beginning of his career he was a U.S. Naval Officer flying with a P-3 Orion
squadron in the western Pacific and Indian Ocean and he served as a crisis
management officer in the Office of the Chief of Naval Operations in the
Pentagon. He is a graduate of the University of New Hampshire and has a Ph.D.
in political science from the University of Pennsylvania. Silverstone will be a
Carnegie Fellow at New America.
Bina Venkataraman will write a book about how our
society of gamblers can forge tools to think about the future amid rapid
technological change. She is currently the Director of Global Policy
Initiatives at the Broad Institute of MIT & Harvard, a lecturer at MIT, and
an op-ed columnist. She is the former senior advisor for climate change
innovation in the Obama White House, and a former science journalist for The
New York Times and The Boston Globe. She is an alumna of Harvard's Kennedy
School and Brown University, where she now serves on the University President's
Leadership Council. A previous recipient of a Fulbright and a Metcalf Institute
fellowship, Venkataraman was recently named a 2015 Young Leader by the
French-American Foundation. She will be a Carnegie Fellow at New America.
Zheng Wang will write a book about how to think
about China’s rise and future U.S.-China relations. The book aims to inform the
policy community how to interpret and respond to China’s new diplomatic
initiatives, maritime disputes with its neighbors, and nationalism. Zheng Wang
is currently the Director of the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies and an
Associate Professor in the School of Diplomacy and International Relations at
Seton Hall University in New Jersey. His book Never Forget National
Humiliation: Historical Memory in Chinese Politics and Foreign Relations is the
recipient of the International Studies Association’s the Yale H. Ferguson Award
for the best book of the year. He has a Ph.D. in conflict resolution from
George Mason University. He will be a Carnegie Fellow at New America.
Josephine Wolff will write a book about a series of
cyber security incidents over the course of the past decade, tracing their
economic and legal aftermath and their impact on the current state of
technical, social, and political lines of defense. She received her Ph.D. from
MIT in 2015 and is joining the Rochester Institute of Technology faculty in the
public policy and computing security departments. She is also a faculty
associate at the Harvard Berkman Center for Internet & Society. Her writing
has appeared in Slate, The Atlantic, Scientific American, The New Republic,
Newsweek, and The New York Times’ Opinionator blog. She has an A.B. in
mathematics from Princeton University. She will be a New America Cybersecurity
Initiative Fellow.
David Wood is writing a book on moral injury,
the effects of war on those who fought in Iraq and Afghanistan, and on
civilians at home who sent them. It will be published by Little, Brown in 2016.
A staff correspondent for The Huffington Post, he won the 2012 Pulitzer Prize
for National Reporting for a series on the severely wounded of those wars. He
is a former conscientious objector who has covered the military and wars since
1977 as a staff correspondent for TIME, the Los Angeles Times, Newhouse News
Service, and other publications. He will be a Future of War fellow at New
America.
Joshua Yaffa will report and write on how Vladimir
Putin has sought to redefine the pillars of his rule and legitimacy, and what
this new age of Putinism means both for everyday Russians and Western
governments. More specifically, he will work on a book that looks at the lives
of several Russians and the inevitable accommodation they must reach with the
system around them. He is currently based in Moscow, where he is a contributor
to The Economist and The New Yorker, among other publications. For his work in
Russia, he has been a finalist for a Livingston Award, a Visiting Scholar at
the Harriman Institute at Columbia University, and received a grant from the
Pulitzer Center for Crisis Reporting. He was previously an associate editor at
Foreign Affairs. He is a graduate of the Georgetown School of Foreign Service
and holds master’s degrees in journalism and international affairs from
Columbia University.
New America is also pleased to
announce the renewal of the following Fellows:
Brian K. Barber, Ph.D., who will continue writing and
reporting his book narrating the lives of six men and their families from the
Gaza Strip who he has interviewed regularly for the past 20 years since they
emerged as youth from the first Palestinian intifada in 1993.
Jason DeParle, an Emerson Fellow, who will continue
writing a book about the rise of global migration and its impact on both the
advanced and developing world. A Good Provider is One Who Leaves: Migration in
the 21st Century will be published by Viking and is based in part on an
extended family of migrants from the Philippines that DeParle has followed for
many years.
Andrea Elliott, an Emerson Fellow, who will continue
writing her book about child poverty in the new gilded age, based in part on
her award-winning New York Times series “Invisible Child,” to be published by
Random House.
Virginia Eubanks, who will pursue a three-year
research study into digital privacy, economic inequality, and data-based
discrimination. Funded by the Digital Trust Foundation, this project engages a
team of grassroots organizations—The Center for Community Transitions
(Charlotte, North Carolina), Allied Media Projects (Detroit, Michigan), and Los
Angeles Community Action Network/Stop LAPD Spying (Los Angeles, California)—to
examine and address the collection, storage, and sharing of personal data in
poor and working-class neighborhoods across the United States.
Mei Fong, who will continue reporting on
issues related to U.S.-China relations and be promoting her forthcoming book,
One Child: The Past and Future of China’s Most Radical Social Experiment, to be
published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in February 2016.
Hua Hsu, who will continue his work studying
immigrant culture and American ideas around diversity. His first book, A
Floating Chinaman, will be published by Harvard University Press in spring of
2016.
Christopher Leonard, a Schmidt Family Foundation Fellow,
who will continue researching, reporting, and writing his book about Koch
Industries.
Yascha Mounk, a newly-appointed Carnegie Fellow,
who will write a book about the crisis of liberal democracy, arguing that a
recent rise in technocratic governance is already leading to a dangerous
populist backlash in both North America and Western Europe.
Monica Potts, who will write a book about the
dilemmas facing poor women and explore the idea of a second-chance society.
Levi Tillemann, an ASU Resilient Futures Fellow,
will be researching, writing about, and developing projects on clean energy,
synthetic markets, and the future of mobility.
Julian E. Zelizer, who will continue to work on his
book about the scandal that brought down Speaker of the House Jim Wright in
1989 and continue to work on co-authoring a book about America since the 1970s.
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