Devin Entrikin is a research associate at the Center for Governance of Technology and Systems (GoTech) focused on strategic cybersecurity and emerging technology governance. He also serves as lecturer at the School of Public Policy, teaching undergraduate courses in international security and global governance. In addition to his work, Entrikin is in the late stages of a Ph.D. dissertation that examines the effects of arms embargoes and other international interventions on civil conflict intensity in Africa.
Entrikin previously worked as a communications manager and researcher at the Center for International and Security Studies at Maryland (CISSM) and as a research director in the private sector. He holds a BA in political science: international relations from the University of California, San Diego and a MA in international affairs from The New School in New York.
As violent conflict shifts markedly from the inter-state arena to civil wars, the need for sustained global engagement to foresee, mediate, and prevent civil conflict grows.
Learn More about Civil ViolenceIn today’s security environment, civil conflicts, mass migration, climate change, epidemics, and other emergent phenomena create multiple, often overlapping, instabilities that exacerbate human insecurity.
Learn More about Human SecuritySchool Authors: Nancy Gallagher, Lindsay Rand, Devin Entrikin, Naoko Aoki
School Authors: Devin Entrikin
School Authors: Nancy Gallagher, Lindsay Rand, Devin Entrikin, Naoko Aoki