Student
Georgy Tarasenko
IES Graduate Fellow 2025-26
Georgy Tarasenko is a PhD student in the Department of Government at Cornell University. His major field of study is Comparative Politics, with minor fields in Political Thought and Methods. Previously, he was a researcher and lecturer at the Center for Institutional Studies at HSE University in Moscow and the Digital Humanities Center at ITMO University in Saint Petersburg.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Student
- IES Current Graduate Fellow
- PACS Past Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Student
Contact
Email: gt298@cornell.edu
Dayra Lascano
Reppy Fellow 2024-25
Dayra Lascano is a Ph.D. student in the Department of Government at Cornell University, specializing in International Relations with a minor focus on Comparative Politics. Her academic pursuits revolve around the in-depth study of International Organizations and their pivotal role in managing and facilitating international cooperation.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Student
- PACS Current Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Student
Contact
Email: dal348@cornell.edu
Brett Reichert
Prize for Best Essay in Technology and International Security Policy Winner 2024-25
Brett Reichert is a U.S. Army Goodpaster Fellow and PhD student in Public Policy at Cornell University. His research examines how emerging military technology affects conflict dynamics and the use of force. He is interested in the ways legal regimes respond to and shape technological development in armed conflict and the national security context. He is particularly interested in the rise of automation and autonomy in military systems. He holds a Master of Policy Management from Georgetown University.
Additional Information
McKenzie Carrier
Harrop and Ruth Freeman Prize in Peace Studies Recipient 2024-25
McKenzie Carrier was a double major in government and Spanish with minors in law and society, English, Latin American studies, and European studies. While at Cornell, she engaged in research as a Laidlaw Scholar and research assistant with the Xenophobia Meter Project (XMP) at Cornell Law School.
Additional Information
Chiara Visentin
IES Graduate Fellow 2025-2026
Chiara Visentin is a PhD candidate in the Medieval Studies Program at Cornell, with a background in philosophy and sociology. She is interested in the transformations of political cultures, identities and institutions in the central Middle Ages and especially the 12th century, with a focus on the Anglo-Norman and Angevin polities, extending between the British Isles and Western France, as well as their neighbors like Capetian France, and more distant but related polities such as Norman Sicily.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Student
- IES Current Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Student
Contact
Email: cv284@cornell.edu
Zorana Knezevic
Reppy Fellow 2024-25
Zorana Knezevic holds a BA in Anthropology from the University of South Florida and an MA in International Human Rights from the University of Denver. Her research areas are at the intersection of conflict studies and human rights, human security, and international organizations. She is a published co-author in the Journal of Peace Research.
Additional Information
Basim Ali
Reppy Fellow 2024-25
Basim Ali is a second-year Master of Public Administration student at the Brooks School of Public Policy, concentrating in International Development Studies with a minor in Peace and Conflict Studies.
Additional Information
Rachel Horner
IES Graduate Fellow, Spring 2026
Rachel Horner (she/her) is a PhD candidate in music and sound studies at Cornell University. She holds an MA in musicology and a BM in vocal music education and Spanish from Rutgers University. Rachel’s research investigates the intersections between sound, language, and identity, especially in the context of Spanish and Latin American cultural festivals.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Student
- IES Current Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Student
Contact
Email: rkh74@cornell.edu
Nora Siena
IES Graduate Fellow 2025-2026
Nora Siena's dissertation, “Inoperative Brevitas: The Contamination of Short Literary and Philosophical Forms and the Twentieth-century Italian Racconto,” identifies a paradigmatic mode of twentieth-century European poetics and philosophical programs in the disruption of the historical tie between textual brevity and exemplarity.
Additional Information
Program
Role
- Student
- IES Current Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Fellow
- Graduate Student
Contact
Email: ns929@cornell.edu
Maria Luisa Palumbo
IES Graduate Fellow- Fall 2024
Maria Luisa Palumbo is a scholar, architect, and curator working at the intersection of architectural history and theory to question and promote notions of social, environmental, and gender justice. She is the author of New Wombs, Electronic bodies and architectural disorder (Birkhauser, 2000) and Paesaggi Sensibili. Architetture a sostegno della vita (duepunti edizioni, 2012) and the editor of several collective books. In 2012 she curated reMade in Italy, final section of Luca Zevi's Italian Pavilion at the 13th Venice Architecture Biennale.