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Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili

Founding Director, Center for Governance and Markets
Professor, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs
Nonresident Scholar, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

Jennifer Brick Murtazashvili is the founding director of the Center for Governance and Markets and a professor at the University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public and International Affairs. She serves as a nonresident scholar at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, a distinguished scholar of peace and international order at the Institute for Humane Studies, and is a contributing editor at National Interest magazine. She has been recognized as one of the world’s top thinkers by Prospect Magazine. At the University of Pittsburgh, she received the Donald Goldstein Professor of the Year Award and the Sheth Distinguished Faculty Award for International Achievement.

Her first book, Informal Order and the State in Afghanistan (Cambridge University Press), received the Best Book Award in Social Sciences from the Central Eurasian Studies Society and an honorable mention from the International Development Section of the International Studies Association. Her second book, Land, the State, and War: Property Institutions and Political Order in Afghanistan (with Ilia Murtazashvili), was published by Cambridge University Press. She has co-authored two more books on the political economy of development.

In the policy world, she served as a democracy and governance officer for the United States Agency for International Development in Tashkent, Uzbekistan, and worked as a senior researcher for the Afghanistan Research and Evaluation Unit in Kabul. Other policy work includes service for the World Bank, the US Department of Defense, the United Nations Development Program, UNICEF, and as a US Peace Corps Volunteer in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.

Currently, she is a member of the executive board of the American Institute for Afghanistan Studies, a board member at the Collins Institute for Abrahamic Heritage, and a member of PONARS Eurasia. Previously, she was a nonresident senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center, served as the president of the Central Eurasian Studies Society, and was an elected board member of the Section for International and Comparative Public Administration of the American Society of Public Administration.

  • University of Wisconsin–Madison, 2009 PhD Political Science
  • University of Wisconsin–Madison, 2006 MA Agricultural and Applied Economics
  • University of Wisconsin–Madison, 2003 MA Political Science
  • Georgetown University, 1997 BS Foreign Service
  • Sheth Distinguished Faculty Award for International Achievement, 2024
  • Best Book Award (Social Science; for the proceeding two years), Central Eurasian Studies Society, 2018
  • Honorable Mention, Book Award, Global Development Section, International Studies Association, 2017
  • Faculty Fellowship, University Center for International Studies, University of Pittsburgh, 2018.
  • Donald Goldstein Teacher of the Year Award, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, 2017
  • Finalist, Elinor Ostrom Award, 2015
  • American Institute for Afghanistan Studies, Top Prize, Annual Student Paper Competition, 2008
  • United States Agency for International Development, Superior Unit Citation for designing and implementing post-September 11 conflict mitigation programs, 2002