Lise Howard is Professor of Government and Foreign Service at Georgetown University, where she teaches and conducts research on matters of war and peace. For 2022-23, she has been on leave from Georgetown to work with the Russia-Ukraine Team as a Senior Fellow in Residence at the United States Institute of Peace. She also serves as President of the Academic Council on the UN System (ACUNS). Dr. Howard earned her A.B. in Soviet Studies from Barnard College of Columbia University, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science from the University of California, Berkeley. She studied Philology and Soviet Constitutional Law at Leningrad State/St. Petersburg State University, during the collapse of the constitutional order. She has held yearlong fellowships at Stanford University and Harvard University. She is the author of two award-winning books about different aspects of United Nations peacekeeping, both published by Cambridge University Press. She has conducted fieldwork in conflict zones in Africa, the Balkans, the Middle East, and Eurasia. Her scholarly articles have been published in International Organization, International Security, International Studies Quarterly, The British Journal of Political Science. Her essays have appeared in Foreign Affairs, Foreign Policy, the Conversation, and the Journal of Democracy. She is fluent in French and Russian. Prior to beginning graduate school, she served as Acting Director of UN Affairs for the New York City Commission for the United Nations. She and her husband live in the Washington DC area, and are the parents of two adult children.