New Video Series Features Faculty Stories
In eight new videos, Middlebury Institute faculty members share personal stories that shed light on the essence of their character and passion for teaching.
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In eight new videos, Middlebury Institute faculty members share personal stories that shed light on the essence of their character and passion for teaching.
Recent Middlebury Institute Nonproliferation and Terrorism Studies graduate Tom Gray is the first recipient of a new two-year fellowship with the National Nuclear Security Administration (NNSA) in Vienna, Austria.
A new dual degree program offers nonproliferation students the chance to earn master’s degrees from both the Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey and the Moscow State Institute of International Relations.
| by Eva Gudbergsdottir
Terrorism Studies professor Jeffrey Bale sounds the alarm about the group behind the 2015 Paris attacks.
Analysis by experts at the Middlebury Institute’s James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies showing that North Korea manipulated video of a submarine-launched ballistic missile test to mask failures has drawn headlines around the world.
North Korea’s claims of a successful hydrogen bomb test were met with skepticism from Institute experts with the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies in interviews with national and international media outlets.
Middlebury Institute student Muhammad Umer Khan’s research paper on the prospects for cooperation between India and Pakistan to combat the threat of nuclear and radiological terrorism recently won the International Journal of Nuclear Security student writing competition.
Fellows’ contributions to the Middlebury Institute range far beyond simply conducting research. They deepen and enrich the experiences of students, faculty, and staff by introducing fresh perspectives and adding to the Institute’s global web of professional connections.
| by Eva Gudbergsdottir
Kathryn Smart MANPTS ’15 explores the role of women in North Caucasus militant groups.
A team of physicists including the Middlebury Institute’s Dr. Ferenc Dalnoki-Veress was awarded the Breakthrough Prize for the same neutrino research that recently won them a Nobel Prize.