Doing Fieldwork in Challenging Environments: Insights from Research in Liberia, Colombia and Cambodia.
Ph.D., Political Science 2002, University of Virginia, Dissertation:Historical Legacies and Policy Choice: Public Sector Reform in Poland, Egypt, Mexico and the Czech Republic 1991-1992 Fellow at the Center for Arabic Studies Abroad (CASA)
M.A., Political Science 1991, The New York University
Ph.D., Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University
M.S., Conflict Analysis and Resolution, Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution
Ph.D., Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University
November 11, 2014 1:00PM through 2:00PM
Join S-CAR Ph.D Researchers
for an
Afternoon Discussion
on
Doing Fieldwork in Challenging Environments: Insights from Research in Liberia, Colombia and Cambodia.
November 11th, at 1:00pm
Metropolitan Building, Rm 5183
Abstract:
As researchers, our primary task is to collect information. But as researchers of conflict, the realities we face in the field are multifaceted and complex. In the case of active conflict-contexts, this is even more so. How do we go about our research in such settings safely, ethically and efficiently? Join PhD students Alison Castel, Sam Johnson and Sarah Rose-Jensen as they share their experiences of doing fieldwork in Colombia, Liberia and Cambodia respectively.