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Amy Austin Holmes

Public Policy Fellow

Term

September 4, 2018 — August 31, 2021

Professional affiliation

Research Professor of International Affairs and Acting Director of the聽Foreign Area Officers Program, George Washington University

Wilson Center Projects

  • Mass Displacement in Syria and the Role of Turkey: Part of the Problem or Part of the Solution?
  • Between Democratic Autonomy and Authoritarianism: The Political Ambitions of PYD-aligned Kurdish Militias in Syria and Iraq
  • After the Caliphate: Governance Challenges in the Semi-Autonomous Region of Northeast Syria

Full Biography

Dr. Amy Austin Holmes is Research Professor of International Affairs and Acting Director of the Foreign Area Officers Program at George Washington University. Dr. Holmes has published widely on the global American military posture, the NATO alliance, non-state actors, revolutions, military coups, and de-facto states. With more than 15 years global experience conducting research in the Middle East and Europe, including various conflict zones, she is a noted expert on issues of American foreign policy and international security. She has held Visiting Scholar positions at Harvard University鈥檚 Belfer Center, the Weatherhead Center also at Harvard University, and at Brown University鈥檚 Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs. Dr. Holmes is the author of three books and more than 50 articles. In addition to her academic career, Dr. Holmes served as an advisor at the U.S. Department of State through a Council on Foreign Relations fellowship, where she first worked in the Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations, focused on Iraq and Syria.  She then also served on the Turkey Desk in the Office of Southern European Affairs, which covers Turkey, Greece, Cyprus, and Malta. After the Russian invasion of Ukraine, she also served as a volunteer lecturer at the Kyiv School of Economics during the summer of 2023, where she taught a course on Global Disinformation.

Major Publications

Select Publications for Bio 鈥 Amy Austin Holmes

Book

Social Unrest and American Military Bases in Turkey and Germany since 1945, Cambridge University Press, 2014; paperback released in 2016

路&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫; Featured in a Review Essay in Perspectives on Politics, Vol 15, No 1, March 2017

路&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫;&苍产蝉辫; in International Journal of Comparative Sociology, July 2016

Peer-Reviewed Articles

Working on the Revolution in Bahrain: From The Mass Strike to Everyday Forms of Medical ProvisionSocial Movement Studies, July 2015

(editor), South Atlantic Quarterly, 113:2, Duke University Press, spring 2014

On Military Coups and Mad Utopias鈥, in: A Region of Resistance, South Atlantic Quarterly, 113:2, Duke University Press, spring 2014

The Base that replaced the British Empire: De-Democratization and the US Navy in Bahrain鈥, Journal of Arabian Studies June 2014

There are weeks when Decades happen: Structure and Strategy in the Egyptian RevolutionMobilization, 17(4), December 2012, p 391-410

Articles, Edited Volumes, and Book Chapters

鈥溾 Real Clear World, September 27, 2017

鈥 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Sada Middle East Analysis, June 1, 2017

鈥溾 Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Sada Middle East Analysis, January 26, 2017

鈥溾, op-ed in Mada Masr, March 15, 2016

鈥溾, co-authored with Hussein Baoumi, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Sada Middle East Analysis, January 29, 2016

鈥溾 Washington Post, December 23, 2015

鈥溾, Informed Comment June 26, 2015

鈥溾 Washington Post, February 2, 2015

鈥溾 Washington Post, August 22, 2014

鈥溾, op-ed in Providence Journal, May 5, 2014

鈥溾, op-ed on Al Jazeera, March 27, 2014

鈥溾, Cairo Review of Global Affairs, August 16, 2013

鈥溾, Counterpunch, June 26, 2013

鈥溾, Cairo Review of Global Affairs, February 27, 2013; Re-posted on Jadaliyya in slightly revised form on March 5, 2013

鈥溾, Ahram Online, June 28, 2012

鈥溾 Atlantic Council, November 25, 2011

The real force of stability in Egypt is its people, not its government鈥 op-ed in the Baltimore Sun, February 8 2011 (written under a pen name)