Ekaterina Romanova

Ekaterina Romanova
Assistant Professor, School of International Service, American University
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Ph.D., George Mason University
M.A., Kansas State University
Diploma (Honors), Ryazan State Pedagogical University

Biography

Ekaterina Romanova has received her PhD from the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution, George Mason University. Her dissertation research focuses on the challenges of identity formation in the context of varying immigration trends in today’s Russia. Her other research interests include issues of global migration, identity politics, nationalist violence and gender. Dr. Romanova’s regional expertise is in the CIS, the Caucasus and Central Asia. She has been actively involved in the conflict resolution work and trainings in the Caucasus and Asia, contributing to a series of problem-solving workshops between South Ossetian-Georgian civil society leaders and trainings for youth leaders from that region.(source: http://www.american.edu/sis/faculty/romanova.cfm)



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Title Published Date
2011
 In October 2000, the United Nations Security Council unanimously passed Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security, recognizing the challenges women and children caught in armed conflicts face.  This resolution reaffirmed the significance of women...
Category: Book Chapter
2011
Chechnya and Sri Lanka are two cases that explore the emergence of women in the role of suicide bomber. Suicide attacks are often attributed to irrationality, fanaticism, extremism, and ‘pure’ craziness of perpetrators. This chapter explores the agency...
Category: Book Chapter
June 29, 2010
With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Russian Federation faced many challenges, including increased immigration, a search for national identity, and growing nationalist sentiment. Post-Soviet Russia grew increasingly intolerant of people arriving in the...
Category: Doctoral Dissertation
May 01, 2008
Review: Rotberg, Robert I., ed., 2007. Worst of the Worst: Dealing with Repressive and Rogue Nations.] Nation-state repression and tyranny can be overtly violent, as in Zimbabwe, Burma, or Uzbekistan, or relatively peaceful, as in Turkmenistan, Belarus, or...
Category: Journal Article
2007
Category: Book Chapter
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September 21, 2007
Category: Newsletter Article

September 14, 2007
Category: Newsletter Article

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With the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the Russian Federation faced many challenges, including increased immigration, a search for national identity, and growing nationalist sentiment. Post-Soviet Russia grew increasingly intolerant of people arriving in the country either for a temporary stay
June 29, 2010
The discussion will consider the roles, forms, and potential for implementation of various zones of peace in the South Caucasus. Hosted by the Institute for Conflict Analysis and Resolution.Please RSVP to Ekaterina Romanova Contact: Ekaterina Romanova, [email protected]
May 27, 2009
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