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Current Fellows
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Past Fellows
Athanasios Kontogeorgis> Greece
Kontogeorgis studied in the Master in Public
Policy program at the Kennedy School. An attorney, Kontogeorgis holds an
LLB degree from the University of Athens Law School and an MsC in European
Union and Developing Countries from Panteion University. He has served as
president of the Greek-European Youth Association, a social and political
analyst for the Institute of Strategic and Development Studies and
communications coordinator for local chapters of the Panhellenic Socialist
Movement (PASOK) in Greece. He received his Kennedy School degree in
June 2008.
Tamas Kowalik> Hungary
Kowalik has over five years of career experience serving in various
ministries in Hungary, including as professional adviser to the Ministry
of Economy and Transport, speechwriter at the Ministry of Environment and
Water, and political adviser to the Ministry of Education. Mr. Kowalik
received his BA and MA degrees from the Eotvos Lorand University
University of Sciences Faculty of Law, and is currently pursuing a PhD and
a law degree from the same university. He graduated
from the Kennedy
School’s Mason Fellows/Mid-Career Master in Public Administration program
in June 2008.
Stela Mocan> Moldova
Mocan recently served as Program Officer for the International Republican
Institute in Chisinau, Moldova, where she creates democracy building
strategies and development programs for political parties and civil
society organizations. Prior to that, she held a position as a project
manager for the United Nations Development Program in Moldova. She has
served as a consultant to the Soros Moldova Foundation and is a Member of
the Board of Transparency International’s Moldova Chapter. Mocan holds an
undergraduate degree in history from Moldova State University, and
conducted post-graduate studies in political science from the National
School of Government and Political Studies in Romania. She graduated from the Kennedy School’s Mason Fellows/Mid-Career Master in
Public Administration program in June 2008.
Burak Erdenir> Turkey
Erdenir holds a BSc degree from Middle East Technical University, Ankara
and an MBA from Georgetown University. He received his PhD in Political
Science and Public Administration from Ankara University and has has been
teaching at Bilkent University and Ankara University as a part-time
lecturer. Erdenir is currently a senior expert at the European Union
Secretariat General of the Turkish Prime Ministry, the governmental body
which oversees Turkey’s pre-accession process for European Union
membership. He is the author of the book European Identity: From
Pan-Nationalism to Post-Nationalism and has published many articles on
cultural issues and various aspects of Turkey-European Union relationship.
Erdenir graduated from the Kennedy School
Mason Fellows/Mid-Career Master in Public Administration program in June 2008.
Damir
Tokic> Bosnia and Herzegovina
Tokic earned a BA in political science and minor in communication from
St. John’s University, Minnesota in May 2006. Prior to studying at the
Kennedy School, he completed a training program at the Directorate for
European Integrations, Council of Ministers of Bosnia and Herzegovina
and an internship at the Washington, D.C.-based public advocacy firm
David Turch and Associates. He also worked as a TV game show host at
Federal Radio and Television in Sarajevo and as a project manager for
the Peace Trails Program (Bosnia and Herzegovina), during which he
founded and directed the first post-war paragliding school in his
country. Tokic graduated from the Kennedy School with a Master’s in
Public Policy in June 2008.
Nilgun Yankaya> Turkey
Yankaya is a native of Edirne, Turkey and graduated with high honors with
a BSE in Operations Research and Financial Engineering and a certificate
in Applied Math from Princeton University in 2002. Before enrolling in
graduate studies at Harvard, Nilgun worked as a financial analyst at
Morgan Stanley's Investment Banking Division and Corporate Finance team,
where she worked on Turkey's privatization projects in Turkey, including
Turk Telekom as well as the sale of a strategic stake in Garanti Bank to
GE. Yankaya earned a joint-degree in the Kennedy School’s Master
in Public Administration and International Development program and the
Harvard Business School’s MBA program in June 2008.
Recep Bildik> Turkey
A
native of Istanbul, Bildik received a BSc in Economics and PhD in
Finance from Istanbul University, and a MSc in Finance from the Business
School of Istanbul University. He graduated from the Kennedy School’s
Mason Fellows/Mid-Career Master in Public Administration program in June
2007. Prior to coming to the Kennedy School he served assistant director
of the Istanbul Stock Exchange (ISE), where he played a pivotal role in
establishing its first computerized trading system. He also served as an
adjunct professor Koc University’s Graduate School of Business, and was
appointed as associate professor of Finance in 2005 by Turkey’s Higher
Education Council. Bildik has published numerous papers on capital
market in both local and international journals, and served as a
visiting scholar from 2003-2004 at the University of Chicago’s Graduate
School of Business and DePaul University’s Finance Department. He is an
active member of numerous professional boards and committees, including
the editorial board of the Istanbul Stock Exchange Review, the
publication committee of the ISE, the American Finance Association and
the European Financial Management Association.
Richard Danicic>
Serbia
Raised in Belgrade, Danicic received his BA in International Business at
Hawaii Pacific University. He became the first executive director of the
American Chamber of Commerce in Serbia and Montenegro in January 2002,
where he worked to improve the country’s overall business environment
for foreign investors and facilitated communication between the private
sector and government. Prior to this, he worked in the US financial
industry, specializing in futures and future options contracts in the
regulated commodity markets. Danicic earned a Master in Public Administration
from the Kennedy School in June
2007.
Penelopa Gjurcilova> FYROM
A native of Skopje, Gjurcilova holds a BA in International Relations and
Diplomacy from the American College of Switzerland, a Law degree from
the Law School of St. Cyril and Methody University in Skopje, an LLM
degree from the University of Connecticut School of Law, and a PhD from
the Law Department of the European University Institute in Florence.
Since 1995, she served as a counselor at the Ministry of Foreign
Affairs, including a posting at the Permanent Mission of Macedonia to
the United Nations in New York. Prior to this post, Gjurcilova worked as
an associate attorney at Peluso, Valentino and Iacobelli in New York.
She is also co-founder and Vice-President of the Macedonian Women's
Lobby. Gjurcilova graduated from the Kennedy School’s Mason
Fellows/Mid-Career Master in Public Administration program in June 2007.
Kyriakos
Pierrakakis> Greece
Pierrakakis graduated with honors in 2005 from the Athens University of
Economics and Business with a BSc in Informatics. He began his
involvement in politics began from an early age, being one of the
youngest delegates in the PASOK (Socialist Party) National Convention in
2001. During the Greek national election campaign of 2004, he served at
the campaign headquarters of George Papandreou as an aide in media
relations and media coverage assessment. After the elections he
continued serving at the office of the President of PASOK in the areas
of international relations and conference organization. He earned a
Master’s in Public Policy from the Kennedy School in June 2007.
Pierrakakis will commence his Master’s Degree in the Technology Policy
Program at Massachusetts Institute of Technology in September 2007, with
the aim of continuing for a PhD.
Linda Peia> Romania
Peia is a native of Arad, Romania and graduated Cum Laude with a BA in
Economics and Political Science/International Relations from the
American University in Bulgaria. In 2003, she served in the economic
section of the Romanian Embassy in Washington, DC, where she worked as a
research assistant on foreign investment and institutional reform of
small and medium-size enterprises (SMEs). She completed a comparative
research study on SME development for the local government in Romania,
for which she spent February-May 2005 at the Latin American University
of Social Sciences in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Peia also worked as an
intern at the Center for Trade Policy Studies of the Cato Institute in
Washington D.C., and assisted the WEF Global Institute for Partnership
and Governance in the organization of the World Economic Forum in 2005.
Peia earned a Master’s in Public Administration and
International Development from the Kennedy School
in June 2007.
Meltem Aran> Turkey
Born in Istanbul, Aran graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from
Brown University, where she earned a BA in Economics and International
Relations in May 2000. Prior to coming to Harvard, she worked as an
economist for the Industrial Development Bank in Turkey. In June 2004, she
obtained a Master’s in Public Administration and International Development
from the Kennedy School. During the summer of 2003, she completed an
internship at the National Treasury of South Africa. After graduating from
Harvard, Aran moved to Jakarta, Indonesia to work for the Poverty
Reduction and Economic Management Department at the World Bank. Her work
focused on poverty issues, specifically relating to the effect of public
spending on the poor and the impact of poverty alleviation programs in
health, education and social protection. She currently works in the
nonprofit sector in Turkey.
Kosta Barjaba> Albania
Barjaba is a native of Saranda, Albania. He earned a BA in Political
Science (1984), a Ph.D. in Sociology (1989) and a Law degree (2000) from
the University of Tirana. Barjaba also received his professorship in 1999
from the University of Shkodra-Albania. In June 2005, he received a
Mid-Career Master’s in Public Administration from the Kennedy School.
Since graduating from Harvard, Barjaba worked first as adviser to the
Minister of Finance and then as the president of the newly-founded
University of Durres in Albania. He is now chief of staff to the Minister
of Labor. With local Harvard alumni, Barjaba founded the Harvard Club of
Albania in September 2005, and is currently serving his first term as the
president of the Club.
Kujtese Bejtullahu> Kosovo
A native of Pristina, Bejtullahu graduated
from Stanford University with a BA in International Relations and a
secondary degree in Economics in 2004. During her undergraduate studies,
she founded the World Refugee Academy - an initiative to help refugee
youth access opportunities for tertiary education - and led a team of
Stanford students to a refugee camp in Botswana to conduct educational
work. Bejtullahu also served as a media officer for the 2003 World
Economic Forum, completed an internship with the German Foundation for
International Development, and was a conference facilitator for the 2001
Kosovo Youth Congress. She graduated with a Master’s in Public
Administration and International Development in June 2006, and is
currently based in London with Deutsche Bank's leveraged finance team.
Esen Caglar> Turkey
Born in Istanbul, Caglar graduated cum laude from Princeton University
in 2003 with a BA in Politics and certificates in Political Economy and
Near Eastern Studies. Prior to his studies at Harvard, Caglar worked as a
Technology Policy Advisor for the GOSB Technopark, one of Turkey's first
technology-development zones. He also undertook internships at CNN Turk as
a junior producer, and at Koc Holding as a strategic planning analyst.
Caglar graduated from the Master in Public Administration and
International Development program in 2005. After leaving the Kennedy
School, he spent four months in Ethiopia working as a consultant for the
World Bank. Currently, Caglar works as an Economist for at the
Ankara-based Economic Policy Research Institute
(TEPAV).
Manuel Costescu> Romania
A native of Sibiu, Romania, Costescu graduated summa cum laude and Phi
Beta Kappa from Brandeis University in 1999 with a BA in Economics, where
he completed a thesis focusing on economic growth and military
expenditures in Greece. From 1999-2000, Mr. Costescu worked as a research
analyst for The Brattle Group. He obtained a joint Master’s in Public
Administration and International Development from the Kennedy School and
an MBA from the Sloan School of Management in June 2005. Costescu was
selected from among thousands of international graduate students as a 2005
American Academy of Achievement awardee. Currently he is an associate at
McKinsey and Company in New York City.
Theodore Diasakos> Greece
Born in Sparta Greece, Diasakos graduated in 1996 from the University of
Cambridge, King's College, with a BA in Economics and an M.Phil in
Economic Theory and Econometrics. From 1996-1998, he served in the Greek
Army Special Forces as a cadet officer, and worked as an economic analyst
in the private sector in England from 1998-1999. Diasakos obtained a
Master's Degree in Public Administration and International Development
from the Kennedy School in 2001, graduating with the highest academic
achievement, a recipient of the John E. Thayer award. He was also a
honoree graduate student of the American Academy of Achievement at their
2000 London summit. Diasakos received a PhD in economics from the
University of California at Berkeley in 2007. He will assume an assistant
professor position at the Collegio Carlo Alberto in Torino Italy, starting
in the 2007-08 academic year.
Ovidiu Dranga> Romania
Dranga received a BS in Engineering at the Polytechnic Institute in
Bucharest in 1990, and a Master in International Affairs from the Romanian
Institute for International Relations in 1993. He served for ten years in
the Romanian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, where he started his diplomatic
career as an attaché in 1991 with the Policy Planning Division. He also
served as director general at the Department for Defense Policy and
Euro-Atlantic Integration, Romanian Ministry of National Defense. Dranga
obtained a Mid-Career Master’s in Public Administration from the Kennedy
School in June 2004. Since June 2005, he has been working as political
director in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
Sebestyen Gorka> Hungary
Gorka graduated with double honors in Philosophy and Theology at the
University of London’s Heythrop College in 1991. In 1997 he earned an MA
in International Relations and Diplomacy from the University of Economic
Sciences and Public Administration in Budapest. Gorka worked as an analyst
for the Hungarian Ministry of Defense, and was an international research
fellow at the NATO Defense College in Rome. He is a founding member of the
Hungarian Policy Institute and has published internationally on defense
reform terrorism, the NIS and European security issues. Gorka studied in
the Master in Public Administration program at the Kennedy School from
1998-1999. He currently serves a director at the Institute for
Transitional Democracy and International Security in Budapest, and is a
PhD candidate in political science at the Corvinus University. He remains
an analytic contributor to the JANES publishing group and lectures
regularly on national security issues at institutions such as the NATO
School, Oberammergau and the FBI's International Law Enforcement Academy.
Yonita Grigorova> Bulgaria
Born in Lovech, Bulgaria, Grigorova received her undergraduate degree from
the University for National and World Economy, Sofia, in 1996. She
obtained a Master in International Economic Relations from the same
university in 1997, followed by a Master in Economics from Boston
University in 1999. Grigorova obtained her Master’s in Public
Administration and International Development from the Kennedy School in
June 2003. She has served as an economist at the UNDP in Sofia and New
York, a macroeconomic analyst at the Agency for Economic Analysis and
Forecasting in Sofia, a financial analyst at Global Securities Bulgaria
and Prudential Securities in Boston, and a reporter at Kapital. Since
graduating from the Kennedy School, she has worked as a research fellow at
Harvard’s Wiener Center for Social Policy, and at the Poverty Reduction
and Economic Management Department of the World Bank in Washington, D.C.
Currently Grigorova is regional project manager for Deloitte Central
Europe in Bulgaria, where she is part of the Central Europe Clients &
Markets Team.
Anca-Maria Harasim> Romania
Harasim obtained a Master of Science from Bucharest Polytechnic
University in 1983. She served as Executive Director of the Fulbright
Commission and of the Soros Foundation for an Open Society, both based in
Bucharest. Harasim earned a Mid-Career Master’s in Public Administration
from the Kennedy School in 1999. From 2000-2002, she worked for The World
Bank in Tirana, Albania, as a consultant on the Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper. She is the president of the Carpathian Foundation, a non-profit
that helps NGOs and local governments to promote regional development and
to prevent conflicts. Since September 2000, she has served as executive
director of the American Chamber of Commerce in Romania.
Vuk Jeremic> Serbia
Jeremic graduated from Queen’s College in 1998 with a BA in Theoretical
and Experimental Physics. He is currently a doctoral candidate in
Quantitative Finance at Imperial College, University of London. He worked
as an analyst at Deutsche Bank, Dresdner Kleinwort Benson and AstraZeneca
Pharmaceuticals in London, and was an advisor to the Federal Minister of
Telecommunications of Yugoslavia. An active participant in the OTPOR!
Resistance movement of Yugoslav students, he also co-founded the
Organization of Serbian Students Abroad. Jeremic obtained a Master’s in
Public Administration and International Development from the Kennedy
School of Government in 2003. After graduation, he served as the Serbian
defense minister's special envoy for Euro-Atlantic Affairs at the Ministry
of Defense and as the senior advisor to the President of
Serbia. In May 2007, he was appointed as the Minister
of Foreign Affairs
of Serbia.
Georgi Kadiev> Bulgaria
Born in Bourgas, Bulgaria, Kadiev earned an MA in International Affairs
from Moscow State University for International Relations in 1992, with a
specialization in Southeast Asian Studies. In 1994, he earned an MA in
Diplomatic Studies from the University of Leicester, England, where he
served as a British Council fellow. He then worked as a journalist in the
24 Hours Daily in Sofia and as a foreign press correspondent from Sofia.
In 1996, Kadiev founded a private news-clipping service that issued press
reviews and reports on economic life in Bulgaria. Kadiev earned his
Mid-Career Master’s in Public Administration program at the Kennedy School
in 1999. Upon graduation, he sold his company to Internet securities,
Inc., where he continued to work as a member of the board and global head
of their analytical services. In June 2005, Kadiev ran for parliament on
the list of the Bulgarian Socialist Party. He was elected as a member of
parliament, representing his home town. Since September 2005, Kadiev has
worked in the Ministry of Finance as deputy minister in charge of tax
policy issues, tax administration, and customs.
Maria Kapsi> Greece
Kapsi studied political science, international relations and European
public administration at Panteion University in Athens. She worked as a
consultant on European issues in Brussels, and as an assistant to a Greek
member of the European Parliament. In addition, Kapsi was involved in
European Union programs on energy issues. She obtained a Master’s in
Public Administration from the Kennedy School in June 2000. She served as
part of the Athens 2004 Olympics Organizing Committee, serving as a
liaison between Athens 2004 and the City of Athens on policy coordination
issues. Kapsi is currently serving as an advisor for organizational
management at the Greek National Communications and Post Commission.
Sorin Kertesz> Romania
Born in Oradea, Romania, Kertesz graduated from the Academy of Economic
Studies in Bucharest in 2000 with a BA in International Business and
Economics. He obtained a Master’s in Public Policy from the Kennedy School
of Government in 2002. After leaving Harvard, Kertesz worked as a
consultant to the World Bank in Romania. Since 2004, he has worked in
Romania and Greece with Accenture, a global outsourcing company. Kertesz
has also been active as a leader of AIESEC, the international association
of students in Economics.
Milen
Marinov> Bulgaria
Milen Marinov graduated with a BS and MS in Business and Management
Information Systems from the Marriott School of Business, Brigham Young
University. In 2000, Marinov was was a member of the Bulgarian Easter
Initiative (a government initiative aimed at supporting the country’s
entry to the European Union), where he served as a lead member of the IT
and healthcare reform team. Between August 2001-2003, Marinov worked as a
management consultant at Deloitte & Touche’s Boston-based offices, where
he worked largely with non-profit and public sector clients. Marinov
earned a joint Master’s in Public Policy degree from the Kennedy School
and an MBA from Columbia University in June 2007. He currently works as an
associate at Lehman Brothers Investment Banking Division in New York.
Lucia Padure> Moldova
Padure received her university degree in Economics from Chisinau
National University in 1989, and a Doctorate in Economic Sciences from St.
Petersburg State University in 1992. After completing an MA program in
Economics from Northeastern University in 1994, she worked with KPMG
Barents Group as a public policy consultant for the Moldovan Parliamentary
Project. She has held teaching posts at the University of Kansas and the
International Institute of Management Moldova, where she became the
Vice-Rector in 1998. She earned her Mid-Career Master’s in Public
Administration from the Kennedy School in 2003. After Harvard, she became
a research fellow at the University of Toronto, where she is also working
on a doctorate on higher education reforms in Central and Eastern Europe.
In 2005, Padure won a two-year Fellowship from the Canadian Social Science
and Humanities Research Council. She is currently working for the Ontario
Government as a senior policy advisor at the Ministry of Training,
Colleges and Universities, focusing on international higher education
reforms, including the Bologna process in Europe.
Dritan Prifti> Albania
Prifti studied English literature at the University of Tirana and earned
his MBA from the University of New Mexico. He obtained a Mid-Career
Master’s in Public Administration from the Kennedy School in June 2000.
Prifti has worked as chief of staff to the Ministers of Finance and Labor,
as general director of the Albanian Elector-Energy Corporation and
Minister of Energy in Albania. In July 2001, Prifti was elected to the
Albanian Parliament for a 4-year term from the district of Fieri and in
2006 was re-elected.
Tolga Sobaci> Turkey
Sobaci graduated from Ankara University in 1995 with a BA in Economics.
He also holds an MBA from the University of Massachusetts-Dartmouth, and
an MSc in Finance from Boston College. Prior to his studies at Harvard,
Sobaci was employed as a junior associate at the World Bank in Washington
DC and as an economist at the International Monetary Fund in Ankara.
Sobaci obtained a Master’s in Public Administration and International
Development from the Kennedy School of Government in 2003. After
completing his studies at Harvard, Sobaci returned to Turkey and worked as
an investment officer for the International Finance Corporation in
Istanbul for two years. He is the founder of the Turkish subsidiary of
Studio Moderna, the leading Direct Response television company of Europe,
where he is currently the CEO.
Marian Stas> Romania
Born in Bariad, Romania, Stas received a Computer Science degree from
the Romanian Technical Military Academy in 1985 and a degree in
mathematics from the University of Bucharest in 1996. He obtained a
Mid-Career Master’s in Public Administration from the Kennedy School in
1999. In 2001 he retired as a lieutenant-colonel from the Romanian army
and worked at the Human Resources Department of the Romanian Ministry of
Defense, where he coordinated the professional reconversion program for
downsized military. Stas is now Chairman of CODECS Foundation for
Leadership, an NGO set up in February 2001. The Foundation's goal is to
develop and consolidate the organizational culture of transformational
leadership in Romania.
Peter Szoldan> Hungary
Szoldan was born in Budapest, where he studied communication and media
policy at the Jozsef Attila University. He worked as a press campaign
manager for the President of the Fidesz Party and served as a
representative in the Budapest City Council from 1990-1998. Szoldan
obtained a Master’s in Public Policy from the Kennedy School in 2001. He
has since worked as an associate for McKinsey New York, a consultant for
Droege & Company, and a financial analyst for Mekisoft, Inc. Currently he
is the CEO of a company he founded, NetDayTrade and manager of ActiveMedia,
an online marketing firm.
Elka Todorova> Bulgaria
Todorova holds an MD degree in Psychology from Moscow State University
and a PhD in Social Psychology from the Institute of Sociology, Bulgarian
Academy of Sciences. She received a Fulbright Fellowship in 1998, which
facilitated her studies at the School of Social work at Salem State
College. She earned a DSc from the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences in 2000,
and a Mid-Career Master’s in Public Administration from the Kennedy School
in 2001. Prior to Harvard, Todorova founded an NGO on neighborhood social
services, and continues to serve as a director and member of the Board.
From 1996-2000, she was dean of Faculty of Social Work at Varna Free
University. She is the author of six books and has published numerous
articles. Todorova is now a senior research fellow at the Institute of
Sociology, Bulgarian Academy of Sciences, and director of the European
Social Policy and Social Work Master’s Program at the New Bulgarian
University. She also serves as an advisor to the Chairman of the Bulgarian
Parliament.
Ana S. Trbovich> Serbia
Trbovich completed a joint degree program with Tufts University and the
Fletcher School in 1998, having triple-majored in Economics, International
Relations and French Literature for her BA, and earning a Master of Arts
in Law and Diplomacy. She obtained a Master’s in Public Administration
from the Kennedy School in June 2001 and completed her PhD at the Fletcher
School of Law and Diplomacy in 2006. Trbovich served as assistant minister
of International Economic Relations in the Government of Serbia from
2002-2006. Her responsibilities included coordinating Serbia’s EU
accession process and directing foreign direct investment policy. Trbovich
worked on the implementation of the Dayton Peace Accords in the Republic
of Srpska in 1997, and also worked in the non-government sector in the
field of democratization and economic development. Currently she is an
assistant professor at the University of Singidunum, where she is also the
director of the Center for European Integration for the Faculty of
Economics, Finance, and Administration. Additionally, she is a Senior
Consultant with USAID Serbia.
Miroslav Vassilev> Bulgaria
Vassilev holds a BA in Political Science
and International Relations from the American University in Bulgaria and a
Master of Science in Management Research from Keble College, University of
Oxford. His professional experience includes working as a strategy
consultant for the United Nations and Project Director for Goldman Sachs’
Global Leaders Social Entrepreneurship Fund, during which he founded and
led the implementation team for a project focused on women at high risk in
post-conflict FYROM. Vassilev also was the founder and project leader of
the EU-funded Ethnic Minority Enterprise Initiative and a crisis
management advisor for the International Red Cross in FYROM. In June 2007,
he earned a joint Master’s in Public Policy from the Kennedy School and an
MBA from The Wharton School. Vassilev is currently an investment analyst
with Rockbay Capital Management, L.P. in New York City.
Katarina Veljovic> Serbia
Born in Belgrade, Serbia, Veljovic obtained a Bachelor in Law from the
University of Belgrade in 1996 and an LL.M. from Northwestern University
in 1998, graduating with honors from both universities. From 1998-2000 she
worked at the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development in London
as an associate to the General Counselor conducting comparative law
research and briefings on legal and policy issues. Veljovic earned a
Master’s in Public Policy from the Kennedy School of Government in June
2002. After Harvard, Veljovic headed the Treasury Department of the
Serbian Ministry of Finance, and soon after was promoted to assistant
minister of finance. From 2004-2007 she served as director of Investment
Management at M&A Publikum, a firm managing foreign investments in the
Serbian financial sector. She is currently spearheading the World Bank’s
corporate governance initiatives in Serbia and working on her PhD at the
University of Belgrade, focusing on corporate governance and ownership
concentration in Serbia.
Nicholas Yatromanolakis> Greece
Yatromanolakis studied political science and international relations at
Panteion University in Athens, earning his BA in 1997. Prior to his
studies at Harvard, Yatromanolakis worked at the Hellenic Foundation for
European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP), where he was in charge of the
Information and Documentation department. He obtained a Master’s in Public
Policy from the Kennedy School in June 2000. After graduation, he served
as associate director for research and strategic planning at the Kokkalis
Program. Between 2002-2004, he worked as corporate social responsibility
and communication officer for S&B Industrial Minerals in Athens, Greece.
In February 2004, Yatromanolakis began serving as education program
manager for Microsoft Hellas, where he was involved in the company’s new
“Partners in Learning” initiative. Since November 2005, he has been the
Citizenship and Government Affairs manager for Microsoft Hellas. |
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