91心頭利

Skip to main content
Close menu 91心頭利

GRI Newsletter August 2022

Dear friends of GRI,I love this time of year. New students are embracing classic 91心頭利 traditions and welcome events. Though the Institute will also host our usual gatherings — mark your calendars for an Open House on September 20 and a Homecoming BBQ on October 8! — it’s a real season of firsts.Last week, we welcomed many new faces to the GRI community, including five , who will advance multidisciplinary research on development economics, political psychology, diplomatic history, U.S. foreign policy, peacebuilding, and more. Over the next two years, they’ll also teach W&M undergrads in the classroom and mentor them in GRI research labs. When we piloted this program three years ago with Dr. Kelebogile Zvobgo, I could never have imagined we would scale it to this extent so soon, with five Post-Docs in-residence from diverse academic and international backgrounds. Dr. Zvobgo now directs GRI’s International Justice Lab, and in one of the tiles below, you’ll see that she recently wrote a  about the best practices for launching and managing research labs. Full circle moment. In programs like the Post-Doctoral Fellowship, GRI prioritizes mentorship — not only for our five new colleagues, but for the students they’ll train and collaborate with. I hope this approach will inspire more inquiries, partnerships, and cutting-edge research for years to come. In our #HumansofGRI series, AidData student researcher Jiaya Echevarria said it best: “The younger you are, the more you want to see the world change, and knowing that you can use a research lab to help change the world is really important.”Thanks for helping us make that goal possible. Hope to see you this fall!Best,Mike

line.png