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Dimitris Keridis: Biographical Note
DIMITRIS KERIDIS is coordinator for the newly established
Kokkalis Program on Southeastern and East-Central Europe at the John
F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University. He is also research
associate at the Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis, Cambridge, and a
doctoral candidate of international relations at the Fletcher School of Law
and Diplomacy, Tufts University. He is a graduate of the School of Law at
the University of Thessaloniki and the Law Academy of the European
University Institute in Florence, and holds an M.A.L.D. degree from the
Fletcher School. His main academic interests are European integration,
Balkan security, and theories of international relations and conflict
resolution. He has been awarded numerous scholarships and research grants
by U.S. and European institutions. His publications include book reviews
and short papers on the post-communist Balkans. He is the co-editor of
Security in Southeastern Europe and the U.S.-Greek Relationship,
Brassey's, 1997, and in Greek by Sideris Publishing, author of ``Greece in
the 1990s: The Challenge of Reform,'' in The Greek Paradox,
Allison G.T., K. Nicolaidis, eds, MIT Press, 1997, and in Greek by
Papazisis Publishing, and three chapters of the Southeast
Europe-Factbook and Survey, 1996-1997, ELIAMEP and HRI, 1997.
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