Stanford Law School. Candidate for J.D., June 2006.
• Pre-doctoral Fellow, Center for International Security and Cooperation
• Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellow, Stanford Center for Russian, East European and Eurasian Studies.
• Research Assistant for Prof. Allen Weiner at the Stanford Institute for International Studies on a forthcoming article entitled “The Use of Force: New Threats and (Perfectly Fine) Old Rules.”
• Research Assistant for Prof. Williamson Evers at the Hoover Institution on a forthcoming book outlining a path for the successful modernization and democratization of Iraq in the context of ancient and modern Iraqi history, Islam, and Arab culture.
• Associate Managing Editor, Stanford Journal of International Law.
• Participant, 2005 Kirkwood Moot Court Competition.
• Volunteer Attorney Program, Volunteer for Legal Aid of San Mateo.
• Courses in public international law, international criminal law, and international human rights.
• Member, Stanford Hillel Board of Directors.
Harvard University. Graduated Magna Cum Laude with Highest Honors in History/International Relations, Russian Language Citation, June 2002.
• Phi Beta Kappa, Alpha Iota Chapter.
• Russian Language and Economics Tutor.
• Conducted Research in former Soviet Archives in Moscow and Kiev for Summa Thesis entitled A Delicate Balance: The Politics of Post-Stalin Reform in Amnesties for Nazi War Criminals and Their Soviet Collaborators.
• Awarded Thomas T. Hoopes Prize for “original academic research and writing” (awarded to top theses at Harvard) and Radcliffe Lillian Bell Prize for “best paper on the Holocaust or other 20thcentury human tragedy.”
U.C. Berkeley. Pre-College Honors Program, 1997-98.
• Completed Coursework in Colonial American History and Balkan History.
• Conducted research project on Serbian Nationalism and the formation of the Yugoslav State
under the supervision of Prof. Ronelle Alexander of the Slavic Department.
From 2010-2013, he was Deputy Director of the Russia and Eurasia Program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. There, he founded Carnegie's Ukraine Program, led a multi-year project to support U.S.-Russia health cooperation, and created a track-two task force to promote resolution of the Moldova-Transnistra conflict. From 2007-2010, Rojansky served as executive director of the Partnership for a Secure America, where he orchestrated high-level bipartisan initiatives aimed at repairing the U.S.-Russia relationship, strenghtening the U.S. commitment to nuclear arms control and nonproliferation, and leveraging global science engagement for diplomacy.
Rojansky is also an adjunct professor at American University, and a participant in the Dartmouth Dialogues, a track-two U.S-Russian conflict resolution initiative begun in 1960.
He is frequently interviewed on TV and radio, and his writing has appeared in the International Herald Tribune, the Washington Post, and Foreign Policy.
He is married(wife Lucy) and has two children(Edith (2) and Abraham (4 months))