Staff /
Ashley Dua
Ashley Dua is an Extern contributing to IFIT’s initiatives on sustainable transitions, apex courts, bottom-up dialogue, hybrid and authoritarian regimes, and civil-military relations through her involvement in various projects conducted by the Security Engagement Practice Group (SEPG), Uzbekistan Expert Group, and Global Initiative on Apex Courts Appointments.
Before joining IFIT, Ashley was an Editorial Intern for Human Rights Quarterly, through the Urban Morgan Institute for Human Rights at the University of Cincinnati College of Law. Additionally, she provided immigration and resettlement assistance in the Broome County region of New York at the American Civic Association. Ashley also has contributed to the CIRI Human Rights Database, where she utilized mixed methodologies to evaluate global protections, in law and in practice, for Indigenous peoples and LGBTQ+ communities.
Ashley holds a B.A. in Political Science with minors in Human Rights and Global Studies. She is currently a masters student at Binghamton University studying Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention through the I-GMAP institute. Her scholarly research focuses on conflict prevention, microdynamics of mass atrocities, social cohesion, memorialization and post-conflict narratives, and gender studies.
Working languages: English.