International

SIS Welcomes New Faculty

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澳门皇冠体育-官网鈥檚 澳门皇冠of International Service (SIS) is honored to welcome several new full-time faculty members for the 2025-2026 school year. Each faculty member is an expert in their field and brings extensive research and practical experience to the classroom.

Among the new faculty, members of the SIS community may recognize a familiar face as a current member of our faculty is promoted to tenure-line. Additionally, SIS welcomes our latest SIS Changemaker Postdoctoral Fellows. These positions are for emerging scholars working on transformational research designed to address pressing contemporary problems in international affairs, such as social cohesion, climate change, humanitarian crises, and social inequality within and across nations.

Get to know our newest faculty members and learn more about their interests and recent research.


Suzanne FreemanSuzanne Freeman joins the SIS faculty as a Changemaker Postdoctoral Fellow. She researches civil-intelligence relations, nuclear issues, and grand strategy, working in the dual context of international relations and comparative politics. Methodologically, she focuses on archival research, structured interviews, and wargaming. Freeman鈥檚 book project, anchored in her work on Russia and the Soviet Union, examines the strategies that authoritarian intelligence agencies employ to intervene in their own state鈥檚 foreign policy decision-making process about the use of force. Her broader research agenda examines the impact of coercive institutions on domestic and foreign policy in authoritarian states. She has received fellowships and awards including a pre-doctoral fellowship at George 澳门皇冠体育 University鈥檚 Institute for Security and Conflict Studies at the Elliot 澳门皇冠of International Relations and a Smith Richardson Foundation World Politics and Statecraft Fellowship. Her peer-reviewed research has been published in听PS: Political Science & Politics. She will receive her PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology鈥檚 political science department in the summer of 2025.听

Thayer HastingsThayer Hastings also joins as a Changemaker Postdoctoral Fellow. Hastings is a cultural anthropologist working on questions raised by the political traditions of sovereignty and anticolonialism in the Middle East.听He received his PhD from the City University of New York Graduate Center in 2025.听His dissertation ethnographically and historically documented the onerous bureaucratic requirements Israel imposes on Palestinians to prove that they inhabit Jerusalem, the city they stake indigenous and national claims to. The research addresses how crises of and within settler colonialism shape and take shape in everyday life, as well as the analytical openings revealed by attending to spaces of intimacy, relationships, and the home. His research has been recognized with fellowships and awards from the Wenner-Gren Foundation, the Palestinian American Research Center,听and the American Anthropological Association Middle East Section.听

Nicholas MicinskiNicholas R. Micinski joins the Department of Peace, Human Rights, and Cultural Relations (PHRCR) as an assistant professor. Micinski's research focuses on the global governance of migration, the political economy of aid, development, climate displacement, the United Nations, the EU, and human rights. He is the author of three books:听Delegating Responsibility: International Cooperation on Migration in the European Union;听UN Global Compacts: Governing Migrants and Refugees; and the forthcoming听Aiding Autocrats: Migration Management, Governance, and Repression in Africa听(co-authored with Kelsey Norman). Micinski was previously assistant professor at the University of Maine, and postdoctoral fellow at Universit茅 Laval and Boston University.

Tazreena SajjadTazreena Sajjad has been teaching in the PHRCR Department and previously in the Global Governance, Politics and Security (GGPS) program for 13 years. Her research focuses on refugees and forcible displacement, the securitization and criminalization of migration, and border violence. Her other areas of interest include transitional justice and 鈥減ost-conflict鈥 transitions. Tazreena's most recent publications include 鈥淗ierarchies of Compassion: Ukrainian Refugees and the U.S. Response鈥 in the Georgetown Journal of International Affairs; 鈥淥nce We Were Refugees: Security, Solidarity and a View from the Global South鈥 in the Journal of Refugee Studies; and 鈥淪trategic Cruelty: Legitimizing Violence in the European Union's Border Regime鈥 in Global Studies Quarterly. Her current research examines the politics of Rohingya reception in Bangladesh, for which she received the 2024 Migration Politics Fellowship at the University of Glasgow. Her other research project examines the role of humiliation in border violence.听

Tereza VarejkovaTereza Varejkova joins the Department of Politics, Governance, and Economics (PGE) as an assistant professor. She holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Maryland, College Park. Prior to that, she earned bachelor鈥檚 and master鈥檚 degrees from Sciences Po Paris and worked on impact evaluations of development programs in West Africa as a research manager at the Center for Evaluation and Development (C4ED) within the University of Mannheim. She is an applied microeconomist with research interests at the intersection of development and environmental economics. More specifically, her research spans two main areas. First, she focuses on the issues of water scarcity, natural resource management, and sustainable farming practices in sub-Saharan Africa. Second, her research investigates how populations respond to natural disasters.

photo of Polina BeliakovaPolina Beliakova听will join SIS in academic year 2025-26 as an assistant professor in the Department of Foreign Policy & Global Security. She currently is a postdoctoral research fellow at the MIT Security Studies Program, where her work addresses Russian foreign and security policy. Her broader scholarship focuses on civil-military relations and the use of force, with regional expertise in Russia, Ukraine, and Israel. She received her PhD in international relations from the Fletcher 澳门皇冠at Tufts University, and held a postdoctoral appointment at Dartmouth College's Dickey Center for International Understanding. Being a native Ukrainian and Russian speaker, she collects data through elite interviews, fieldwork, archival research, and systematic review of local media sources using quantitative and qualitative approaches for data analysis. Her book project,听Know Thy Military: How Governmental Policies Weaken Civilian Control, highlights the understudied effects of governmental decisions about the use of force on the erosion of civilian control in the states with historically coup-averse militaries. The empirical chapters build on evidence from Russia, Ukraine, Israel, and the UK. Polina's work has been published by听Comparative Political Studies,听Texas National Security Review,听Perspectives on Terrorism,听Foreign Affairs,听War on the Rocks,听POLITICO, and the听澳门皇冠体育 Post. Her expertise on the Russian defense sector, Ukraine's security sector governance, and Russia's post-Cold War use of force informed projects by the UK鈥檚 Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office, Transparency International, and the World Peace Foundation, among others.