PACS Current Graduate Fellow
Brume Dezembro Iazzetti

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Brume Dezembro Iazzetti is a PhD student in the Department of Science and Technology Studies. She is currently working on a proposal on early trans medicine in Brazil, amid the Military Dictatorship period, crossing discussions on futurity, ethnographies of (and beyond) violence, and paths to reparative justice. Her Ph.D. research moves into present-day controversies on emerging medical and digital technologies, and questions on body plasticity and extraordinary body transformations, including in right-wing movements.
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Upasana Singh

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Upasana Singh is a J.S.D. candidate at the Cornell Law School. She is also working as a research assistant with Carl Marks Professor of International Studies at Cornell University, Dr. Kaushik Basu. She holds an LL.M. from Cornell Law School with a focus on conflict resolution and restorative justice. She serves on the review board of the Indian Law Institute Law Review.
Prior to this, she served as an Assistant Professor of Law in India and practiced as an advocate in the Supreme Court of India and the High Court of Delhi.
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Sebastian Restrepo

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Sebastian Restrepo is a PhD student in the Department of City and Regional Planning. His research interests focus on the institutional arrangements to improve the implementation of peace agreements in conflict or post-conflict regions. He has more than fifteen (15) years of experience designing and implementing regional development programs.
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Program
Role
- Student
- PACS Current Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Student
Contact
Email: sebas.restrepo85@gmail.com
Saomai Nguyen

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Saomai Phuong Nguyen (they/she) is a PhD student in the Department of History, focusing on Asian/American history. Their research examines refugee transits and passages after the war in Vietnam, particularly the in-waiting site of the refugee camp and how the children of refugees come to remember, understand, and embody their parents’ displacement and resettlement through memory work and cultural productions.
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Or Aroch

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Or Aroch is a PhD student in the Department of Anthropology. His research focuses on education and childhood in the context of Israel/Palestine. He examines how educational processes and children’s experiences in conflict-ridden Israel transform amid war, political instability, and civic upheaval, with attention to processes of militarization and nationalization, negotiations over future visions and collective memory, and the role of democratic and peace education in these circumstances.
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Kyaw Hsan Hlaing

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Kyaw Hsan Hlaing is a PhD student in the Department of Government. He studies comparative politics and international relations with a focus on political violence, insurgency, authoritarianism, and regime change, exploring dynamics of civil conflict and post-war transitions.
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Cassidy Fowler

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Cassidy Fowler is a PhD student in the Department of Government. Her research focuses on international security, with a particular interest in nuclear weapons strategy and operations, IR theory, and security studies.
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Anurag Koyyada

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Anurag Koyyada is a J.D. candidate at Cornell Law School. He is interested in how law, society, and technology interact in military and surveillance contexts. His work, as it relates to conflict and security, examines how emerging technologies both mirror and mold societal power, both constraining and enabling peace. Anurag is a researcher at the Aerospace ADVERSARY Lab, studying cyber- and space-based warfare, and works on NATO's HEIST project. Previously, he studied political economy at King's College London.
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Lois Matthew

Reppy Fellow 2025-26
Lois Matthew is a PhD student in the Department of Government, specializing in comparative politics, with a minor in international relations and methods. Her research focuses on democratization, authoritarian legacies, parties, elections, and voting behavior in Sub-Saharan Africa.
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Zhilin Lu

Reppy Fellow 2024-25
Zhilin Lu is a first-year Ph.D. student in Cornell University’s government department. Her research focuses on US-China on AI governance and the intersection of emerging technologies such as AI and biotechnology with strategic stability and power shifts.