Sigrid Arzt (’91), from Mexico, is founder
and co-director of Democracy, Human Rights and Security (Democracia,
Derechos
Humanos y Seguridad, A.C.) (http://ddhs.org.mx). This non-governmental
organization, based in Mexico City, aims to link government,
academic researchers and representatives of civil society
in order to support reforms that promote respect for human
rights and the strengthening of Mexican democracy. Sigrid
is also director of political analysis at the research center
Fundacion Rafael Preciado, which conducts political and social
policy studies. She is a doctoral candidate in international
relations and comparative politics at the University of Miami.
E-mail: sarzt@ddhs.org.mx
Julie Hart (’91), from the United
States, is associate professor of sociology and peace studies
at Bethel College, a small Mennonite liberal arts college
in southeast Kansas. In 2003 she returned from a two-year
sabbatical in Guatemala, where she wrote six peace and justice
texts that are used in a two-year program of intensive courses
for church leaders throughout Central America. She has worked
summers with Christian Peacemaker Teams in Israel/Palestine
from 1997-2000 and in Colombia in 2004. Julie earned her
Ph.D. in sociology from Notre Dame in 1994, with the dissertation
topic, The Impact of a Peer Mediation Program on an Elementary
School Environment. E-mail: jhart@bethelks.edu
Marianna
Kozintseva (’92), from Ukraine, has been appointed
vice president for Global Emerging Markets Equity Strategy
at Bear Stearns,
a leading investment banking and securities trading firm
in New York City. She is responsible for investment strategy
for Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. Marianna
received her Ph.D. (with honors) from the School of Advanced
International Studies at Johns Hopkins in 2004. She previously
worked for the RAND Corporation, the World Bank, and the
International Institute for Management Development (IMD,
Switzerland). E-mail:Mkozintseva@bear.com
Dani Leis (’92),
from the United States, coordinates volunters for Outside
In (www.outsidein.org), a social service agency in Portland,
Oregon. She writes, “Outside In is on the leading edge of
social work for homeless youth populations. We offer case
management, health care, employment resources, transitional
housing, and a day program which provides shelter from the
weather, showers, activities, and two hot meals a day. We
also have IDU health services, a queer youth drop-in center,
a trans resource center, and full services for HIV+ youth
aged 16-23. Our success rate working with homeless youth
is tremendous. Outside In also has a medical clinic open
to any homeless, low income or uninsured person. The clinic
is a teaching site for three area medical schools and offers
alternative medicine such as naturopathic, acupuncture, and
Chinese herbal medicine as well as allopathic (western) medicine.
Approximately 150 volunteers, including doctors, perform
a critical role in supporting Outside In’s mission. It is
a source of pride for me that my job is to facilitate, support
and encourage volunteer service.” Leis previously ran a queer
youth program, Rainbow Youth, and was the founder and chair
of Capitol Pride, Salem, Oregon’s gay/lesbian/bisexual/trans
pride festival.
E-mail: leis@earthlink.net
Fran Teplitz (’93), from the United States, is managing
director of the Social Investment Forum, the nonprofit association for socially
and environmentally responsible investing (known as SRI), and is the SRI director
for Co-op America. Co-op America is a nonprofit membership organization that
involves consumers, businesses and investors in economic strategies to advance
positive social and environmental change. Fran worked with Peace Action and
the Peace Action Education Fund for seven years before joining
the Social Investment
Forum and Co-op America Peace Action is the largest U.S. grassroots organization
dedicated to disarmament and economic justice. Fran now serves on the board
of directors of the Peace Action Education Fund. E-mail: franteplitz@socialinvest.org
Jana
McDonald (’97), from the United States, is working in Mirebalais, Haiti with
Tulane University as the program coordinator of Mother to Child Prevention of
Transmission of HIV. In December 2004 she took a two-month leave of absence to
work in South Africa with the United Nations on an HIV/AIDS project. Jana earned
a masters degree in international public health from Tulane University in 2001.
She has since worked on prenatal health education with migrant farm workers on
the Eastern Shore of Virginia and served as health coordinator for the American
Refugee Committee in Gjilan/Gnjilane, Kosovo. She says, “I am surprised more
peace studies students haven’t gone into public health. The job I had in Kosovo
was actually a perfect combination of my two degrees, using health to build peace — every
project we worked on had to somehow bring the various ethnic groups together.
Our biggest success was opening the hospital to receive patients of all ethnicities.” E-mail:bananaj@hotmail.com
Tara
Aziz (’98), from Iraq, is program officer at the Washington Kurdish Institute
(www.kurd.org) in Washington, DC. After graduating from ND she returned to Iraqi
Kurdistan, where she worked for the United Nations Office for the Humanitarian
Coordinator for Iraq (UNOHCI), UNICEF and other international humanitarian agencies.
In these positions, she worked extensively with local and international non-governmental
organizations, developing and analyzing a wide range of programs. In 2000 Tara
participated in the establishment of a local NGO that promotes women’s
empowerment in Iraqi Kurdistan.
E-mail: taraaziz@hotmail.com
Tilla McAntony (’98), from Kenya, is a senior
consultant in the Poverty Reduction and Governance Division of the World Bank
Group in Washington, DC. He earned his Ph.D. in political science from the Maxwell
School at Syracuse University in 2003, and taught at Colgate University and John
Hopkins Center for Talented Youth before joining the World Bank. He writes, “I
propose, design and implement public sector governance reforms for World Bank
client countries in the Africa region. I prepare the reforms under technical
assistance (capacity building) frameworks which include the areas of fiscal reforms
(budgeting and fiscal transparency) and anti-corruption (transparency and integrity
systems including civil service, rule of law and other institutions of governance).
In addition, I travel frequently to Africa as part of mission-team to advise
stakeholders, hold meetings, and implement workshops, seminars and other learning
events.” Tilla’s most recent publication is a 2004 co-edited source
book, Poverty Reduction Strategies in Decentralized Contexts: Comparative
Lessons
in Local
Planning and Fiscal Dimensions (World Bank, 2004).
E-mail: blue2050@hotmail.com
Rainer Hindsberg (’99), from Finland, serves as
public information officer for the Parliament of Finland. Rainer is working on
a public outreach project, seeking to increase public access to the parliament
and the MPs, both physically and in the broader sense. “I’ve had a very exciting
year at work. We just opened a visitor’s centre that I was in charge of planning.
And now we’re taking parliament to different fairs, where people have access
to the MPs and where we civil servants provide information on the organization.
Also, we’re hard at work planning the centennial of Finland being the first country
in the world to extend full political rights to everyone! All this is particularly
exciting as we have lots of people from the 10 new EU countries coming here to
learn from our efforts to make government transparent.” E-mail: rainerhindsberg@hotmail.com
Marlise
Richter (’00), from South Africa, is a researcher at the AIDS Law Project at
the Centre for Applied Legal Studies at Wits University in Johannesburg (www.alp.org.za),
where she supports a legal team working on cases of AIDS discrimination, prepares
policy proposals on AIDS-related issues for submission to parliament, teaches
a course in “HIV/AIDS and the Law” at the Wits Law School, and
drafts AIDS educational materials. She also volunteers with the
Treatment
Action Campaign,
an AIDS activist
organization (www.tac.org.za), and is studying for an MA in Law
at the Wits Law School. E-mail: richterm@law.wits.ac.za

Catalina
Acevedo (’02), from Colombia,
works for the mayor’s office in Bogotá, Colombia, where she designs research
on domestic and sexual violence. She also
teaches “Comparative Peace Processes” in the political science department of
Universidad de los Andes in Bogotá.
E-mail: acevedo_catalina@hotmail.com
Abolghasem Bayyenat (’02),
from Iran, is working in the office of the trade representative
of Iran,
where he helps
prepare for the accession of his country to the World Trade
Organization. Ghasem is also engaged in negotiating bilateral
and regional
preferential trade agreements
between Iran and its trade partners. In 2004, he spent three
months in Geneva at a trade policy course organized by the
World Trade
Organization Institute
for Training and Technical Cooperation. In his personal capacity,
Ghasem also continues to write political commentaries and reports
on domestic
and foreign
political developments for the Iranian press. E-mail: abayyenat@yahoo.com
Shabnam
Siddiqui (’03), from India, is working in Mumbai (Bombay)
with the Public Concern for Governance Trust (PCGT), which
works
to mobilize
public opinion
and increase
public participation and activism. Its goal is to create
more transparent and efficient governance in India. Through
her
work with PCGT,
Shabnam is fulfilling
her dream of creating a non-violent law enforcement agency
in her state by identifying areas in which civil society
can complement
the services
of the
law enforcement
agencies in curbing crime and corruption. She has developed
training courses for the police on attitudinal and behavioral
change and
integrity, and
is involved in a dialogue with the public on the role of
the police
force and
its limitations
and constraints. E-mail: shabsids@rediffmail.com
Alexei
Zakharov (’03),
from Russia, has been appointed Russia Anti-Discrimination
Fellow of the Justice
Initiative of the Open Society Institute based in Moscow.
His responsibility is to support
the work of the Tajik migration center and other human rights
organizations working in Russia and to monitor and document
cases of institutional
ethnic discrimination
and racially motivated violence in Russia. After completing
his second year at Kroc as a Fulbright Scholar, he received
Kroc
funding to
support a teaching
internship
in the department of political science of the State University
of Humanitarian Sciences in Moscow.
E-mail: alexei_zakharov@mail.ru
Elias Omondi Opongo, SJ (’04), from Kenya,
has been named program officer for peacebuilding at the Jesuit Hakimani Centre
in Nairobi, Kenya. Hakimani is a combination of two Swahili words, Haki (justice)
and Amani (peace). “I give training workshops on peacebuilding, conflict resolution
and good governance to various communities, leaders and organizations in Ethiopia,
Uganda, Tanzania and Kenya. This has been a challenging experience especially
when, as a trainer, one realizes that the conflicts are so big yet the affected
people are so hopeful. More and more I learn to trust in human capacity to transform
evil.... I also do research on various social issues and participate in advocacy
campaigns in collaboration with other peace organizations.” In June 2004 Omondi
published an article, “The Silent Cry of Aids Orphans in Africa: A Looming Disaster
on the Continent,” in Hekima Review, a publication of Hekima
College, Jesuit School of Theology.
E-mail: eliasomondi@yahoo.com
Chayanit (Nid) Poonyarat (’04),
from Thailand, has been appointed coordinator of the Freedom
of Expression/Freedom
of
Information Project at the Asian Forum for Human Rights
and Development (FORUM-ASIA),
a Bangkok-based leading regional human rights organization.
The aim of the three-year
project
is to protect and promote freedom of expression and freedom
of information in the Southeast Asian region. Nid hopes
that, with
her background
in both media
and peace studies, she will be able to contribute significantly
to these goals. In December 2004 Nid completed a Kroc-funded
internship with Nonviolence
International
Southeast Asia in Bangkok. E-mail: chayanitp@yahoo.com
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Colloquy > Issue 7, Spring 2005