483 Items

  1. In the News

    Where is Angela Knippenberg Now?

    | by Cinemaholic

    Netflix’s ‘The Serpent’ is an eight-part true-crime drama series that profiles the life and actions of French serial killer Charles Sobhraj, who targeted tourists throughout the Hippie Trail between 1975 and 1976. Angela Knippenberg, now Kane, played a crucial role in translating all of Marie-Andrée Leclerc’s diary entries for evidence against Sobhraj. In fact, as seen on ‘The Serpent,’ she was the one who cataloged everything. Angela has an honorary doctorate from the Middlebury Institute of International Studies.

  2. In the News

    Biden Administration asks for volunteers to help place migrant children

    | by Kion546

    As the number of migrant children in the U.S. surges, the Biden Administration is asking for federal workers to help care for and place unaccompanied migrant children arriving at the southern border. “Today we have a crisis in which the treatment they are receiving is not the treatment they deserve,” said Professor William Arrocha of the Middlebury Institute of International Studies.

  3. In the News

    The ship blocking the Suez is finally unstuck, but we could see bottlenecks like this again

    | by Popular Science

    The Suez Canal is what experts, like Professor Wei Liang of the Middlebury Institute, refer to as a choke point, and the world witnessed what happens when a choke point suddenly closes completely. Another global choke point on Liang’s radar is the Malacca Strait, off the coast of Malaysia. Popular Science spoke to Professor Liang who teaches in the MA in International Trade and Economic Diplomacy program about these choke points.

  4. In the News

    House Republicans’ claim about ‘known or suspected terrorists’ at the border

    | by Washington Post

    “Bottom line: Most terrorists are already here — they are American citizens these days” - Middlebury Institute Nonproliferation and Terrorism Studies Professor Jason Blazakis, director of the Institute’s Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism was interviewed in Washington Post story on claims that terrorist are entering the United States via the Mexican border.

  5. In the News

    How New is the New Extremist Threat? Preliminary Conclusions from the U.S. Capitol Arrests Data

    | by Jason Blazakis and Nate Rosenblatt

    We believe there are a variety of demographics, beliefs, intentions, levels of organization, and propensity to commit acts of violence represented in the Capitol arrests. And, while President Donald Trump’s rhetoric brought these individuals together, it would be a mistake to label them with a broad-brush stroke and conclude that they are all extremists who see violence as a tool for political change. Instead, the Biden administration should treat the Jan. 6 cases going forward with more nuance. Not all Capitol rioters were violent, not all Capitol rioters were extremist, and not all Capitol rioters were part of a mass movement. - Nate Rosenblatt, and Nonproliferation and Terrorism Studies Professor Jason Blazakis, director of the Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism argue in op-ed published by War on the Rocks.

  6. In the News

    Op-Ed: Why QAnon’s similarity to other cults makes it a significant national security threat

    | by Jason Blazakis and Los Angeles Times

    “The most radical QAnon believers exhibit traits that have manifested among dangerous cults and doomsday groups — a willingness to dismiss their own individuality for a perceived greater good.” Middlebury Institute Professor Jason Blazakis, director of the Center on Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism writes about the cult of Qanon and similarities to cults of the past in The Los Angeles Times.