Which information in Kristins history indicates
Kristin Fabbe is a Jakurski Family associate professor in the Business, Government, and International Economy Unit. Her primary expertise is in comparative politics, with a regional focus on the greater Mediterranean region. Her first book, Disciples of the State: Religion and State-Building in the Former Ottoman World (Cambridge University Press, 2019) examines the role of religious elites, institutions, and attachments in state-building and modernization initiatives in Greece, Turkey, and Egypt. She is currently researching a second major project on social cohesion and crises, particularly economic shocks, severe austerity measures, and large demographic changes. In other work, Kristin uses surveys and qualitative methods to examine legacies of violence, post-conflict reconciliation, refugees and forced-migration, secularization, democratic durability and state-business relations. She has conducted fieldwork in Turkey, Greece, Egypt, Iraq, Morocco, Saudi Arabia and Cyprus. Show At HBS, Kristin teaches the course Globalization and Emerging Markets. Previously she taught Business, Government and the International Economy in the MBA required curriculum. She also has taught in several executive education programs, including the Agribusiness Seminar and SELPME (Senior Executive Leadership Management Program, Middle East). Kristin is a faculty affiliate at the Middle East Initiative at the John F. Kennedy School of Government’s Belfer Center and the Harvard Center for European Studies. She sits on the steering committee of Harvard’s Center for Middle East Studies and the AlWaleed Islamic Studies Program. She is an Associate Editor at the Review of Middle East Studies. Professor Fabbe received her PhD in political science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She also holds an MSc in international relations from the London School of Economics and a BA in history from Lewis and Clark College. Before joining HBS, she was an associate professor of government and international relations at Claremont McKenna College. Books
Professor Fabbe’s research interests center on modernization, identity politics, social resilience and cohesion, historical institutionalism, and the political economy of development. Her regional expertise is in the greater Mediterranean region, including southeastern Europe, the Middle East, and North Africa. Professor Fabbe is
currently conducting fieldwork for a book project that focuses on how societies respond to crisis and how states seek to use modernization initiatives to strengthen social resilience and cohesion. Towards this end, she is researching local variation in response to adversity through an examination of economic shocks, austerity measures, and large demographic changes in post-crisis Greece. Professor Fabbe’s first book, Disciples of the State?: Religion and State Building and in the Former Ottoman World, examines processes of strategic interaction between religion and the emergent machine of the sovereign state across the Middle East and Balkans. Her findings show that decisive victories for either the secular state or for religion are rare during modernization drives. Instead, across the region, religion-state arrangements have taken the form of intriguing amalgams that defy the conventional, dichotomous classification of secular vs. religious. There are two central arguments. First, states carved out more sovereign space in places like Greece and Turkey, where religious elites were integral to early centralizing reform and modernization processes. Second, region-wide structural constraints on the types of linkages that states managed to build with religion during modernization efforts have generated long-term repercussions. Fatefully, both state policies that seek to facilitate equality through the recognition of religious difference and state policies that seek to eradicate such difference have contributed to failures of liberal democratic consolidation. Professor Fabbe’s second area of research focuses on individual and collective responses to violence and forced migration. Under this research stream, she has implemented large survey projects in Iraq, Turkey, and Morocco. Her work in Turkey tests the notion that violence begets violence by investigating how exposure to barrel bombing affects Syrian refugees’ attitudes toward peace and reconciliation. Her research in Iraq examines how legacies of violence shape combatants’ propensity to exhibit cognitive empathy and humanizing behavioral tendencies toward their enemies. Here, she also examines issues related to transitional justice and tollerance. Finally, through a nationally representative survey of Moroccan citizens, Professor Fabbe is studying determinants of anti-migrant sentiment in the global south. In an ongoing research stream, Professor Fabbe is studying the political economy of business development in fragile societies. Her newest project in this research stream explores the opportunities for complementarities and joint ventures between Syrian and Turkish businesses in Gaziantep, Turkey. In addition, building on extensive interviews with women business owners and a large-scale survey of female-owned businesses in Northern Iraq, another study assesses how women leverage social, political, and economic resources to launch businesses despite the absence of state-directed credit or a well-defined system of individual property rights.
Additional Topics Geographies Which information in the clients history indicates an increased risk for coronary artery disease?A family history of heart disease also increases your risk for CAD, especially a family history of having heart disease at an early age (50 or younger). To find out your risk for CAD, your health care team may measure your blood pressure, blood cholesterol, and blood sugar levels.
Which nursing intervention should be implemented first?Assessment is the first step in the nursing process, according to the American Nurses Association (ANA). Nurses need to understand a patient's medical history, the medications they may be taking and current health condition before they can provide proper care.
How does coronary artery disease develop?CAD happens when coronary arteries struggle to supply the heart with enough blood, oxygen and nutrients. Cholesterol deposits, or plaques, are almost always to blame. These buildups narrow your arteries, decreasing blood flow to your heart. This can cause chest pain, shortness of breath or even a heart attack.
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