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61st Program Year - Sixth Meeting

February 16, 2010

Tanoan Country Club

10801 Academy Boulevard NE

How the War on Drugs Gets in the Way of Counterinsurgency

Dr. Vanda Felbab-Brown

Dr. Vanda Felbab-Brown is an Adjunct Professor in the Security Studies Program at the School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University, and a Fellow in Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution. Specializing in issues of conflict and national security, she received her Ph.D. in political science from MIT and her B.A. in government from Harvard University.

Her forthcoming book, Shooting Up: Illicit Economies and Military Conflict, analyzes the relationship between military conflict and illicit economies, such as the production and trafficking of narcotics. With key implications for counterinsurgency strategies, her work challenges the conventional narcoguerrilla theory, and shows that belligerent groups exploitation of illicit economies increases not only their financial resources, but also their political capital from local populations. She has been exploring these dynamics in the cases of Afghanistan, Myanmar, Columbia, and Peru—countries in which she has carried out fieldwork—and also in the cases of India, Turkey, and Northern Ireland. The project has been supported by several grants.

Her doctoral dissertation on illicit economies and military conflict received the APSA 2007 Harold D. Laswell Award for the best dissertation in the field of public policy. During 2006-07, Dr. Felbab-Brown was a Brookings Research Fellow in Foreign Policy Studies at the Brookings Institution. She held several predoctoral fellowships, including at the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, John F. Kennedy School of Government.