Colloquium | Members

Adriana Guardans-Godo

Adriana is a Spanish-American citizen born in New York City and raised in Barcelona. She is majoring in International Relations with a regional concentration in Europe and is excited to participate in this year's colloquium to better understand the nuanced changes that are occurring on the continent. In particular, Adriana is interested in exploring how the history and cultural foundation of Europe's member states has influenced their global relations and internal development and hopes to discern potential solutions to address the challenges it faces today. At Tufts, Adriana is a leader of Synaptic Scholars, a student-led group within the IGL based on mentorship and interdisciplinary projects, and a member of the TedxTufts team. In her free time, Adriana enjoys traveling, undertaking creative projects and embarking on culinary adventures.

Kirsten Gute

Kirsten Gute is a junior from Boston and is majoring in International Relations with a concentration in Middle East and North Africa (MENA).  She finds the history of the MENA region extremely interesting and how it continues to shape current social, political, and cultural events.  She is especially interested in the Israeli-Palestine conflict and is excited to learn more, particularly about how access to resources such as water and food supply shapes the present realities within the region. At Tufts she has played on the squash team and is a currently DJ for WMFO, Tufts’ radio station; while she plays no instruments, she loves to listen to a variety of music!  This past summer, Kirsten worked at the Tufts Educational Day Care Center; working with kids is another passion of hers.  She is thrilled to be apart of EPIIC, as it will allow her to combine and pursue multiple interests.  She is excited for the EPIIC program this year focusing on the MENA region!

Grigory Hakimov

Grigory is majoring in Political Science. His academic interests include comparative politics and U.S.-Russia relations. He is very excited to participate in discussions and research projects in the current EPIIC colloquium focusing on contemporary Russia.

Patrick Hamon

 

Patrick Hamon is a sophomore from Stamford, Connecticut majoring in International Relations. His major academic interest areas lie in ethnic conflict, post-conflict reconstruction, civil-military relations and security sector reform; he hopes to one day turn these interests into a career in public policy dealing with security in fragile or failed states. At Tufts, he is an executive on the chapter board for the Alliance Linking Leaders In Education and the Services (ALLIES) as well as a councilman on the International Relations Department Director’s Leadership Council. Through ALLIES, he was able to travel to Turkey this past summer to investigate civil-military relations there and got his first taste of the nuances of the Middle East. Patrick is excited to be a part of this year’s EPIIC colloquium and hopes to gain a greater understanding of the intensely interesting peoples of the Middle East and North Africa. 
 

Eloise Harnett

Eloise Harnett is a sophomore from Gardiner, Maine. She is an International Relations major with a focus in the Middle East and an Arabic minor. The daughter of two lawyers, Eloise’s interests in politics and law began at a young age, but her love for the Middle East is a more recent development. She is particularly interested in women’s rights and the role of religion in politics. Eloise also enjoys summer camp, cats, and playing the French horn. 

Eloise Harnett

 

Eloise Harnett is a sophomore from Gardiner, Maine. She is an International Relations major with a focus in the Middle East and an Arabic minor. The daughter of two lawyers, Eloise’s interests in politics and law began at a young age, but her love for the Middle East is a more recent development. She is particularly interested in women’s rights and the role of religion in politics. Eloise also enjoys summer camp, cats, and playing the French horn. 

Sarah Hartman

Sarah Hartman is a senior at Tufts studying Community Health and Anthropology. She was drawn to EPIIC this year because of her past work in Haiti and the Dominican Republic. She has been traveling to Haiti for years to work on various health and education projects in the Central Plateau region, including a needs assessment and latrine pilot project, which she co-led while partnering with the community over winter break. She spent last spring in the northern region of the Dominican Republic volunteering for Health Horizons International, carrying out public health research for a chronic disease prevention program and shadowing community health workers. She has learned so much from the daily struggles and joys of people in both countries, and feels blessed to have had these opportunities. Through EPIIC, she hopes to explore questions such as "What is the role of the government versus non-profit organizations in providing preventative and biomedical care to communities?" She hopes EPIIC will sharpen her knowledge and her skills so she can push for more effective and equitable health interventions worldwide. In addition to global health, Sarah loves dancing, hanging out with her friends and family, and learning from other people.

Daniel Healy

Daniel Healy is sophomore majoring in International Relations. Born and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., Dan is intensely interested in issues of urban development, urbanization and poverty. After his freshman year at Tufts, Dan spent a summer studying abroad and doing research in Havana, Cuba, where he observed drastically different approaches to societal issues like economics, governance, and, especially important to this year’s EPIIC topic, health care. Dan was drawn to the theme of Global Health and Security by an interest in American issues of health such as obesity and nutrition, and he is excited to explore more global themes through EPIIC.

David Heim

David is a senior from Washington, DC studying Physics and Political Science at Tufts University. Before coming to Tufts he lived in Nicaragua for a year teaching English and doing development work with a Nicaraguan NGO. David works as a Spanish and Physics tutor at Tufts, and has been active in the Center for Engineering Outreach, while also participating in research with the Biomedical Engineering department. He spent a semester studying Political Science at la Universidad Carlos III in Madrid, and has always been interested in how living elsewhere not only allows you to grow culturally and linguistically, but also provides a new prism from which to view your own country. David believes in the power of information to tell us how things are, beyond just how we perceive them to be. Political theory has always been about the balance between order and chaos, and in this course we glimpse which way it tilts in this rapidly changing and interconnected world.

Kaitlyn Hodgman

Kaitlyn Hodgman is a senior from Ashland, Massachusetts majoring in International Relations and Political Science, with a minor in Economics. Her IR concentration is International Security, with a particular interest in conflict resolution and how internal politics affect the processes of peace and security. On campus, Kaitlyn is a senior member of the International Relations Program’s Director’s Leadership Council and has held leadership positions in Tufts Relay for Life and AIESEC Tufts. Kaitlyn previously participated in the Institute for Global Leadership FieldEx simulation as a freshman through an Experimental College class on Crisis Mapping. Kaitlyn has also spent time working as an intern for the Massachusetts Democratic Party, Senator Ed Markey in Washington DC, and Sqrrl, a tech start-up. Kaitlyn spent her Junior spring semester abroad at the Universitat Pompeu Fabra in Barcelona, Spain. As a member of EPIIC 2013-2014, Kaitlyn is pursuing research on local political participation in the context of the modern Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and is excited to learn more about the particular histories and cultures of the MENA region.