Staff

Next Generation Social Sciences is run out of the Social Science Research Council’s New York office and also draws on local leadership from regional affiliate program management offices.


New York

Staff_2013_Asher_Thomas_WebThomas Asher is director of the Next Generation Social Sciences in Africa program, which offers fellowships to support emerging researchers across African institutions of higher education. He has led projects related to international development, international education, and international affairs, including one on public engagement and Islamic studies and another supporting architects and social scientists in order to galvanize more inclusive urban design in urban Africa, Asia, and North America. He serves on global advisory boards for the African Centre for Cities (Cape Town) and the International Institute for Asian Studies (Leiden), and chairs the board of the Reagent Project. He currently is writing a series of interconnected articles on Kibera, an area of densely concentrated poverty in Nairobi, in which he is exploring informal economies and development concepts in a site of accelerating growth. He also has written on participatory politics, the effects of economic liberalization on political life in South Asia, and implications of a transition from a manufacturing economy to a knowledge economy in urban India. He speaks Hindi and lived in Delhi and Mumbai for several years as a child and later to undertake his dissertation research. He holds a PhD in anthropology from the University of Chicago and previously served as a research fellow at Human Rights Watch–Africa and executive director of Food Aid Management, a food security organization. Tom Asher joined the SSRC in November 2007.

Mamasa Dukureh is the program assistant for the Next Generation Social Sciences in Africa  program and joined in summer 2018.  Prior to joining the council, Mamasa served as a 2016-2017 ELLA Fellow at The Sadie Nash Leadership Project, where she founded Shades of Blackness, a community-based intervention workshop series for high school girls in Newark, NJ.  She holds a BA in Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies from Columbia University where she was a Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellow.  Her primary research interests include the intersections of race and ethnicity, and gender and sexuality in the areas of social and political violence, and culture and identity formation across sub-Saharan Africa.

Stephen Imburgia is the communications intern for the Next Generation Social Sciences in Africa program and joined in May 2018. Prior to joining the Council, Stephen worked at the Brookings Institution's Governance Studies research program. He is entering his final year as a BA candidate in political science, journalism, and economic policy at the University of Pennsylvania.

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