Hardwired: On the Frontlines of Freedom

Dr. Elizabeth Prodromou, The Fletcher School

October 06, 2021 Hardwired Global Season 1 Episode 4
Hardwired: On the Frontlines of Freedom
Dr. Elizabeth Prodromou, The Fletcher School
Show Notes Chapter Markers

In this conversation, Hardwired Global Founder and President, Tina Ramirez, and Dr. Elizabeth Prodromou discuss the tragedy of religious and cultural "memoricide" in places like Cyprus, and the centrality of education in protecting fundamental freedoms. Dr. Prodromou also draws on her expertise to help us understand why the Middle East is inclined to authoritarianism and she warns us about similar trends happening in the U.S. today.

 Watch the interview on Hardwired's YouTube channel here: bit.ly/DrPinterview

Dr. Elizabeth H. Prodromou is a faculty member at The Fletcher School at Tufts University where she directs the Initiative on Religion, Law, and Diplomacy. Dr. Prodromou served as Vice Chair and Commissioner on the U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (2004-2012) and was a member of the U.S. Secretary of State’s Religion & Foreign Policy Working Group (2011-2015). Her research focuses on geopolitics and religion, specifically issues of religious freedom, democratization, and security threats in the Eastern Mediterranean and Middle East. 

Dr. Prodromou’s current research projects concentrate on cultural heritage and institutional religious freedom in Turkey and comparative contexts, as well as Eastern Orthodox Christianity and global public engagement. She is a non-resident Senior Fellow and Co-Chair of the Working Group on Christians and Religious Pluralism in the Middle East at the Center for Religious Freedom at the Hudson Institute, and was non-resident Senior Fellow in National Security and the Middle East at the Center for American Progress. She is a Co-President of Religions for Peace. 

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Elizabeth’s “Origin Story” in Human Rights Advocacy
USCIRF Trip to Turkish Occupied Northern Cyprus
Centrality of Education in Protecting Fundamental Freedom
Why is the Middle East Inclined to Authoritarianism?
Planting Seeds of Freedom in Iraq Recovers its History of Pluralism
Concerning Trends in American Politics and Society Today
Owning our Responsibility