MIIS Students Travel to Russia for MIRS Research
With help from the Monterey Initiative in Russian Studies, two students learn insights about U.S.-Russian relations.
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With help from the Monterey Initiative in Russian Studies, two students learn insights about U.S.-Russian relations.
| by Eva Gudbergsdottir and Mary Chen MANPTS '19
Jason Blazakis will head the newly revitalized center dedicated to terrorism research at the Middlebury Institute, renamed the Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism (CTEC).
| by Eva Gudbergsdottir
The Middlebury Institute community is mourning the passing of Dr. Raymond A. Zilinskas, longtime adjunct faculty member and director of the Chemical and Biological Weapons Program at the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies.
Students in a unique dual degree master’s program in nonproliferation, a collaboration between the Middlebury Institute and Russia’s PIR Center and Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO), recently began their course of study in Moscow.
| by Eva Gudbergsdottir
The most terrifying thing about the new novel by Professor Jeffrey Lewis about a nuclear war with North Korea “is how much of it is true,” says The Economist.
| by Jason Warburg
Amber Morgan MANPTS ’19 has been awarded scholarships from both Women in Defense—where she was one of 26 recipients nationally—and the National Council for International Trade Development.
| by Jason Warburg
William C. Potter and Sarah Bidgood of the Institute’s James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) celebrated the launch of their new co-edited volume Once and Future Partners: The United States, Russia, and Nuclear Non-proliferation earlier this month.
| by Masako Toki
For more than a decade, Sarah and Tom Pattison have been stalwart supporters and friends of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) at the Middlebury Institute. They are the major supporters of the Summer Undergraduate Nonproliferation Program.
| by Sarah Bidgood
The Institute’s James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies hosted a workshop featuring Governor Jerry Brown and current and former U.S. and Russian officials.
| by Eva Gudbergsdottir
A team of researchers at the Middlebury Institute’s James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies has located the likely site of North Korea’s covert uranium enrichment plant using open source information.