My piece just came out, “How to engage local patronage networks in Central Asia”, Kennan Cable 97:1-8, Woodrow Wilson International Center, Washington, DC, January 2025. It argues that patronage networks are actually functioning to provide useful services to Central Asian communities, and that foreign aid should work with them so that they can be more inclusive and fair.
Author: Morgan Liu
Recent pieces for broad audiences
2024 “Trust and ‘Corruption’ in Eurasia: Toward an Un-colonial Approach”, NewsNet: News of the Association for Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies (ASEEES), 64(3) 10-14.
2024 “Understanding how patronage networks function in Central Asia”, Eurasianet.org: Independent news about Central Asia, published by Columbia University, Harriman Institute, 26 July 2024.
Speaking at Columbia University, Harriman Institute, Edward Allworth Lecture in Central Asian Studies
Edward Allworth was the first Central Asia scholar I met, when I was considering becoming an academic studying this region. He was one of the few American specialists of Central Asia during the Cold War, remembered here by journalist Bruce Panier. It’s a bit like returning a favor for me to now give a lecture in his honor.
Speaking at University of North Carolina — Chapel Hill
Speaking at Princeton with my work in progress
I’ll be speaking at the Department of Near Eastern Studies, Princeton University, 31 October 2022, about my developing project on Eurasian elites. See their announcement.
Next week at the Central Eurasian Studies Society (CESS) annual meeting at Indiana University in Bloomington, I lead a Network Event on the theme, “Is ‘Corruption’ a Useful Category for the Study of Eurasian Governance and Society?”
Starting Five-Year Appointment as Chair of Department
Starting 1 July 2022, I’ll be Chair of the newly named Department of Near Eastern & South Asian Languages & Cultures, an academic unit covering the Middle East, North Africa, India, Central Asia, and more. The Ohio State University College of Arts and Sciences just posted an announcement and newstory.
Morgan
Fulbright-Hays Promotional Video
The Fulbright-Hays program for Faculty research is being reinstated by the U.S. Congress, after a many-year hiatus. They asked me to make this short promotional video of my experience in 2008 in Jalal-Abad, Kyrgyzstan through Fulbright-Hays. For Ohio State faculty, inquire and apply here; for OSU students, you can navigate to the appropriate student fellowship; Joanna Kukielka-Blaser is OSU’s Fulbright-Hays Project Director, and is super-helpful. For others, general info on Fulbright-Hays is here, but you have to go through your campus Fulbright Program Director if you have one.
Public Lecture: Can the Rich & Powerful Make Society Better?
Elected to be President of the Central Eurasian Studies Society
CESS, the Central Eurasian Studies Society, just elected me as its new President. It is a three-year term as one of its executives: I start in October as its President-Elect, become its President in October 2020 (when Ohio State University hosts the CESS annual conference), and its Past President in October 2021. I have seen CESS as a crucial institution in promoting a broad vision of Central Eurasian studies, where different disciplinary perspectives substantively engage each other to make fuller sense of the region’s issues, and where knowledge of this region also speaks to problems beyond it. I would like to further these goals by serving as its President.
After some administration, back to research!
I finished a twelve month stint as Interim Chair of the Near Eastern Languages & Cultures (NELC) Department at Ohio State, stepping down on July 1, 2018.
I’ve updated my “Writings” page with links to my academic and public writing. Glad to be back to research!
Morgan