Awardee Database

Awardees

Ben Branaman

Fulbright Research Grantee Ben Branaman, Arizona State University graduate, is the recipient of the 2025 Project Support Award Norway. Benโ€™s research in Norway involves studying the use of Electronic Monitoring (EM) as an alternative criminal sentencing practice, determining its impact on life outcomes, public safety and human rights. Working with Kriminalomsorgens Hรธgskole og Utdanningssenter (KRUS), Ben will examine experiences in Norwayโ€™s EM program through interviews with probation staff and incarcerated individuals that use EM. Through these interviews, he hopes to understand how serving criminal sentences at home, as opposed to in prison, affects life outcomes.ย 

The Lois Roth Award will enable Ben to conduct additional interviews outside of Oslo and collect vital research data that enhance understanding on Electronic Monitoring in Norway.

Prior to his Fulbright and LRF award Ben studied criminology, and plans to return to Arizona to use his research and experience in carceral environments to work towards a PhD and a career in prison reform research. Ben hopes to use the knowledge gained from his Project Support activities in the US to influence methods of sentencing and impact recidivism rates.ย 

 

Lydia Barrett

Lydia Barrett, PhD researcher at the University of California Santa Cruz, is the recipient of the 2025 Project Support Award Morocco for her project โ€œSinging Resilience in the Climate Crisis: Womenโ€™s Musical Migration to Morocco. Lydiaโ€™s musical anthology research focuses on the sharing of songs by women migrants from across the African Continent.

โ€œThese women and children come to Morocco in the hopes of crossing into Europe, but once they arrive, returning home becomes as difficult as migrating to a new country. Many continue to attempt European migration, while others make a new home on Moroccoโ€™s northern coast. These women sing together to remember, to connect, and to survive.โ€

With the support of the LRF award, Lydia aims to produce an anthology album of songs, as well as a companion website to share interviews, field recordings, and soundscapes. The album and companion website expand the scope of the project, inviting listeners from around the world into the artistic sound worlds of these women composers and performers.

Megan Thiede

Megan Thiede is the 2025 Finland Project Support recipient for her research project to optimize the job application service lifecycle for individuals with cognitive and visual impairments.ย 

โ€œWorking alongside students from 10+ different countries, while learning how to conduct research for individuals with disabilities and neurodiversity, is as challenging as it is rewardingโ€ She hopes that her research will expand upon the connection between service design and accessibility on a more holistic level.

The Project Support award will fund Meganโ€™s participation in the Green Innovatorsโ€™ Challenge at the Institut National des Sciences Appliquรฉes in France where she will conduct a research project on increasing university accessibility and developing sustainability strategies through site visits and workshops with sustainability experts. In addition, the award will assist her in attending the Smart Accessibility Conference in France, an annual convention of thought leaders, gathered to share research and insights about current accessibility challenges and techniques to enable equal opportunity.

A graduate of the University of Colorado Boulder, Megan is completing a Master of Social Sciences at Tampere University in sustainable societies and digitalisation, with a specialization in accessibility and diversity in digital services.

Nicole Tong

Nicole is currently pursuing graduate education at Stanford University. She aims to contribute to the development of ethical AI through her project, โ€œDesign of Artificial Intelligence Systems through Gender and Intersectionality.โ€ Nicoleโ€™s research investigates the historical and modern discrimination faced by the Sรกmi people, with a focus on privacy and data. Nicole will use the Award to develop educational materials demystifying AI for marginalized communities, collaborate with organizations focused on AI literacy, and present her findings at conferences. She hopes to provide insights into the potential positive applications of AI in preserving indigenous knowledge through language technology and supporting traditional practices.

Dr. Bart Pushaw

Most of the Inuit artworks that are the subject of Dr. Pushaw’s study are not in Greenland, taken and residing in collections in places as diverse as Oslo and Kansas. Dr. Bart Pushaw, of the University of Tennessee, Chattanooga researches, collates, historicizes, and analyzes these artworks in order to advocate for their return home.

Indulgent Images: Colonial Inuit Art and the Atlantic World is the first attempt in forty years to establish a critical corpus of Inuit art produced in Greenland between 1680 and 1900. As Dr. Pushawโ€™s first academic monograph, the project foregrounds close reading of historical art and expressive culture by Inuit makers to understand how Kalaallit Inuit envisioned futures for themselves and navigated colonialism in their own terms.

Funds from the Lois Roth Foundation will support Dr. Pushaw to collaborate with the Nuuk Art Museum, Inuit scholars, and community stakeholders to co-create knowledge on historical art and material culture, as well as study, consult, and photograph otherwise inaccessible artworks that are critical to his academic monograph.

Alex Gil

Alex Gil (Yale) received an honorable mention for his translation of Aimรฉ Cรฉsaireโ€™s lost drama on the Haitian Revolution and Toussaint Louverture, written during WWII, under the watchful eye of Vichy censors in Martinique. Now available for the first time in English, . . . . . . And the Dogs Were Silent / . . . . . . Et les chiens se taisaient (Duke UP, 2024) is a bilingual edition of this meditation on Black revolution and liberatory violence, rife with Cรฉsaireโ€™s entrancing poetry and theatrical verve.

Inass Esshir

Moroccan doctoral studentย Inass Esshir was awarded the first grant of the Roth pilot project- Inbound Support grant. Inassโ€™s research focuses on Moroccan storytelling and the work of Paul Bowles, an influential American who lived in Morocco for many years, studying its music and storytelling traditions. Through archival research in the Bowles collection at the University of Delaware in Newark, she is exploring notes on his unpublished, as well as published translations and on his relationships with the storytellers with whom he worked. With this added textual and contextual information, Inass hopes to both expand our awareness of Moroccan storytelling and reshape the scholarly understanding of Bowlesโ€™s work.

Fiona Graham

An honorable mention was awarded to Fiona Graham for her translation of The Rocks Will Echo Our Sorrow: The Forced Displacement of the Northern Sรกmi (UMN Pr., 2024). In a remarkable blend of historical reportage, memoir, and lyrical reimagining, Sรกmi journalist Elin Anna Labba travels to the lostโ€”and still abandonedโ€”homeland to tell of the forced removal of her nomadic ancestors, and how it both lives on in the hearts of Sรกmi today and echoes indigenous histories around the world. The book won Swedenโ€™s prestigious August Prize for Best Nonfiction in 2020.

Johnny O. Hishmeh

The 2025 Lois Roth Award for excellence in cultural diplomacy goes toย Johnny O. Hishmeh, Public Diplomacy Officer for Public Engagement in the Venezuela Affairs Unit at the U. S. Embassy in Bogota.

Johnny exemplifies the legacy of Lois Roth through his patience, wisdom, and generosity in supporting his team in Caracas. Under challenging conditions from Bogota, Johnny has mentored his team and university partners in Venezuela , guiding them through project management, leadership, and financial oversight. His innovative educational diplomacy initiatives have resulted in 26 new U.S.-Venezuelan university partnerships. Notably, he and his team created a U.S.-style internship program with VenAmCham, offering industry tours and applied learning for 60 students from two top universities, an initiative that has laid the groundwork for future programs.

M.R. Ghanoonparvar

For 2025, the first prize goes toย M.R. Ghanoonparvar (UT Austin) for his translation of Ghazaleh Alizadeh’s two-volume novel The House of the Edrisis (1991-2) (Syracuse UP).

The House of Edrisis plays on historical parallels of the Islamic Revolution in Iran within its setting of 1910s Soviet Turkmenistan. Following the drama and dissolution of the powerful Edrisis family, the novelโ€™s dark comedic style lends itself to such complex themes of revolution, hierarchy and social change.

M.R. Ghanoonparvar is professor emeritus of Persian and comparative literature at the University of Texas, Austin. He has translated over 30 books between Persian and English, including The Patient Stone by Sadeq Chubak and Savushun by Simin Daneshvar. In addition to translation, he is a widely-published author on Persian culture, often co-authoring works alongside his wife, Diane Wilcox.

Nicole Finnemann

Honorable Mention for the 2025 Lois Roth Award goes toย Nicole (Nikki) Finnemann, Public Affairs Officer at the Consulate General in Barcelona.

Nikki has consistently demonstrated superior creativity, profound cultural sensitivity, and remarkable human warmth in fostering meaningful international collaboration. She led the 2025 Academy for Women Entrepreneurs Continental Summit, connecting women entrepreneurs across Europe with AI-enhanced business tools, and launched JumpStartUp, linking Barcelonaโ€™s biotech community with counterparts in Boston to foster scientific and cultural exchange. Previously, she spearheaded the Departmentโ€™s public diplomacy engagement at the Ninth Summit of the Americas, highlighting cultural voices, and pioneered the Departmentโ€™s first modern diaspora cultural engagement strategy, positioning Latin American communities as vital cultural bridges in shaping summit priorities.

Abeeda Shahid Talukder and Aria Fani

The second 2025 MLA-Roth Translation Prize goes to The Shape of Extinction (Asemana Books), a collection of Bijan Jalali’s minimalist poems by poet Abeeda Shahid Talukder and Aria Fani (UWash), which masterfully conveys Jalali’s meditative style.

Poet and author of Ghazal Cosmopolitan provides a brilliant reflection of the collection and the translators’ work: โ€œwhere Faniโ€™s insights contextualize the unique place Jalali has in the โ€˜overlapping and plural modernismsโ€™ of Persian poetryโ€” one of the worldโ€™s richest poetic traditionsโ€” Adeeba Shahid Talukderโ€™s fine touch as a co-translator pierces the exosphere of craft, reaching the sphere of the elusive beloved, a space she knows well as a poet who draws from the Urdu tradition. The translated poems in Shape of Extinction settle as dew, refracting the mighty, delicate tendrils between the past and the yet to come, in Jalaliโ€™s Persian, a rare giftโ€.

Britta Bjornlund

The 2025 Ilchman-Richardson award goes toย Britta Bjornlund, Chief of the Youth Programs Division, Office of Citizen Exchanges at the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA).

With calm and compassion, Britta guided the creation and growth of two of the Departmentโ€™s most impactful regional initiatives in the past decade: the Young African Leaders Initiative (YALI), with its Mandela Washington Fellows Program, and the Young Southeast Asian Leaders Initiative (YSEALI). Together, these efforts have forged enduring bonds between Americans and over 10,000 young leaders from Africa and Southeast Asia. Amid unprecedented challenges, Britta led her team with resilience and clarity by overseeing the repatriation of 2,000 high school exchange participants during COVID, restarting those programs once the pandemic eased, and addressing the urgent needs of nearly 200 Ukrainian students displaced by Russiaโ€™s 2022 invasion.

Dr. Nicholas Cull

Dr.ย Nicholas Cullย (USC) is a 2025 winner forย Reputational Security: Refocusing Public Diplomacy for a Dangerous Worldย (2024, Polity Press). A theoretical rethinking of the relationship between realpolitik and โ€œsoft powerโ€ for the 21st century, supported by a convincing array of historical and current examples. This book argues that, particularly in the context of todayโ€™s radically different media and communications environment, national reputation is fundamental to national wellbeing and security. Chapter Seven explores the specific roles played by cultural diplomacy in relation to national reputation, situating these in a sophisticated and useful context and providing examples of a range of successful cultural diplomacy efforts.

Linda Piccirilli

Honorable Mention for the 2025 Ilchman-Richardson award goes toย Linda Piccirilli, International Visitor Exchange Specialist, New York Program Branch of the Office of International Visitors at the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs (ECA).

Over her nearly 30-year career with ECAโ€™s Office of International Visitors New York Program Branch (NYPB), she has deftly managed thousands of IVLP projects and shaped the lives of tens of thousands of emerging global leaders. Her diligence, warmth, and creativity are exceeded only by her commitment to strengthening the United States and its most important partnerships. Among her many notable achievements, Linda helped create a large-scale public-private partnership and developed an annual conference to enhance the Edward R. Murrow journalism project. As her nominator notes, Linda is the โ€œheart and soulโ€ of the New York branch.

Dr.ย Pete Millwood

Dr.ย Pete Millwood (Univ. of Melbourne) received a 2025 prize for Improbable Diplomats: How Ping-Pong Players, Musicians, and Scientists Remade U.S.-China Relationsย (2023, Cambridge Univ. Press). This readable, well-documented academic contribution to work on Sino-American relations in the 1970s investigates how cultural diplomacy remade international affairs. Methodologically innovative, it fleshes out the role and status of NGOs, situated between governments and individuals, and makes use of new archival materials and original oral history interviews. The result is a well-rounded transnational history that examines linguistic and cultural points of view, as well as the agency of Chinese individuals and organizations of the time

Shahid Waseem

The 2025 award went toย Shahid Waseem, Country Alumni Specialist at the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad.

Shahid has transformed Mission Pakistanโ€™s alumni outreach, strengthening Established Opinion Leaders and Emerging Voices networks of U.S. exchange alumni across the country.He founded and leads the Pakistan-U.S. Alumni Network (PUAN) that hosts national and international conferences, provides internships for 1,000 alumni, and funds innovative public diplomacy projects. Thanks to Shahidโ€™s leadership, PUAN is one of the largest networks of its kind in the world. Through his vision and leadership, alumni engagement in Pakistan has flourished, showcasing the lasting impact of exchange programs.

Dr.ย Elisabeth Piller

Dr.ย Elisabeth Piller (Univ. Freiburg) received the 2025 honorable mention for Selling Weimar: German Public Diplomacy and the United States, 1918-1933ย (2021, Franz Steiner Verlag). While much attention has been paid to Cold War US cultural diplomacy efforts toward Germany, very little has focused on Germanyโ€™s use of public diplomacy to shape US views in any period. This book notes that, for the Weimar Republic democracy, โ€œthe need for systematic public diplomacy was among the central lessonsโ€ of WWI, and the country accordingly redesigned and prioritized its cultural outreach, especially toward the U.S. This innovative history of Germanyโ€™s interwar โ€œAmerican projectโ€ goes beyond economic accounts to explain the puzzlingly rapid reversal in US relations with Germany post-WWI and reveals the roots of German self-representations to this day

Charlรจne Wantong

The 2025 Honorable Mention went to Charlรจne Wantong, Public Engagement Specialist, U.S. Embassy in Yaoundรฉ.

In under six years as Emerging Voices Specialist, Charlene has established herself as a visionary leader in educational and cultural diplomacy, combining cross-cultural sensitivity, strategic insight, and a deep commitment to mentorship. She has transformed disparate alumni groups into self-sustaining networks, led Cameroonโ€™s first National Alumni Symposiums, and empowered Mandela and YALI alumni to take leadership roles in youth engagement. Through innovative initiatives like the โ€œConnectUSAโ€ campaign and creative programmingโ€”from poetry slams to culinary diplomacyโ€”Charlene has strengthened U.S. influence while fostering local ownership. As her nominator notes, she embodies the Lois Roth/Gill Jacot-Guillarmod ethos, demonstrating creativity, empathy, and strategic impact in public diplomacy.

Alev Alemdar

Alev Alemdar,ย Established Opinion Leader Specialist at the U.S. Consulate General in Istanbul, has dedicated 27 years to advancing cultural and educational diplomacy with unmatched excellence, integrity, and vision. She has been the cornerstone of the Consulateโ€™s relationships with governments, universities, NGOs, and cultural institutions, guiding nine ambassadors, eight consuls general, and 21 public diplomacy officers with wisdom, warmth, and humor. Her strategic leadership has produced landmark achievements, including a transformative interagency MoU between the U.S. and Tรผrkiye, while her legendary mentorship and generosity have shaped generations of officers, leaving a lasting legacy of impact, resilience, and compassion.

Naimeh Hadidi

Naimeh Hadidi, Senior Public Engagement Specialist at U. S. Embassy in Riyadh, has spent four decades building bridges between Saudi society and the U.S. through visionary public diplomacy programs. She has nurtured extensive networks across the Kingdom, mentoring participants and matching them to impactful initiatives, including Saudi Arabiaโ€™s first English Language Specialist Program reaching 6,000 teachers, pioneering female law student exchanges, and launching the YES program with trusted local leaders. Following 9/11, she championed programming promoting religious tolerance, interfaith dialogue, and outreach to conservative and rural communities. As her nominator notes, Naimehโ€™s sustained efforts have laid the foundation for PAS Riyadh to expand and diversify bilateral engagement under Saudi Arabiaโ€™s Vision 2030, embodying Gillโ€™s principle of โ€œhelping the United States while helping your own country.

Marion Salvanet

Marion Salvanet is a Public Engagement Specialist at Africa Regional Services at the U. S. Embassy in Paris. She provides vital public diplomacy support to 27 French- and Portuguese-speaking posts in Africa. Over her 20-year career, she has recruited U.S. speakers and performing artists, managed press and digital engagement, and trained and mentored generations of PD staff, FSOs, and LES alike. Marionโ€™s exceptional program design skills, extensive networks, and innovative approaches such as her widely emulated virtual programming during the pandemic have strengthened missions across the region. As her nominator notes, her expertise, mentorship, and unwavering dedication exemplify the highest standards of public diplomacy and make her an indispensable asset for the team.

Mathias Tientcheu

Mathias Tientcheu, Public Engagement Specialist at Embassy Yaoundรฉ, has for over two decades been a cornerstone of U.S. public diplomacy in Cameroon, exemplifying creativity, cultural fluency, mentorship, and lasting impact. As an Established Opinion Leaders Specialist, he has led IVLP, Fulbright, university partnerships, and cultural programs including AFCP, while transforming American Corners in Buea and Garoua to extend U.S. outreach into Cameroonโ€™s English-speaking Southwest and Muslim-majority North. From serving as official interpreter at the 2005 New Embassy Compound inauguration to spearheading Cameroonโ€™s Cultural Property Agreement with the U.S., Mathias combines exceptional diplomacy, vision, and innovation. As his nominator notes, his programming, mentorship, and unwavering dedication have left an indelible mark on colleagues, communities, and institutions.

*The Prix Coindreau Prize, The Jeanne Varnay Pleasants Prize for Language Teaching, and the CASVA-Henry & Judith Millon Award are currently inactive.