Professor of Practice of Climate Security, National Defense University
I am a Professor of Practice at the William J. Perry Center for Hemispheric Defense Studies at the National Defense University, where I focus on climate security and the reintegration of formerly armed actors (FAAs), such as military veterans, ex-guerrillas, former cartel members, and ex-insurgents. I also serve as the President and Chair of the Corioli Institute, hold a UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship at the London School of Economics and Political Science, am an Affiliated Faculty member at the Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution, and the Lead Researcher at the University of Chicago’s Office for Military Affiliated Communities (OMAC). As a political anthropologist, I have published and been interviewed in a wide range of academic peer-reviewed, popular, and practitioner forums across more than 20 countries. I have additionally consulted regularly with the International Organization for Migration (IOM) since 2016 in the Latin American, Arab, and African regions on climate security, migration, and reintegration. I earned my Doctorate and Master’s degrees in Comparative Human Development from The University of Chicago, an MBA from Simmons College, and have completed several Executive Certificates in Climate Change, Leadership and Leading Change (Harvard Kennedy School), and Conflict and Fragility Management (Geneva Graduate Institute).