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Tanisha Fazal

Professor of Political Science, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
Chapter Member: Minneapolis-St. Paul SSN
Areas of Expertise:

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About Tanisha

Fazal focuses on sovereignty, international law, and armed conflict. Fazal’s current research analyzes the effect of improvements in medical care in conflict zones on the long-term costs of war.

Contributions

In the News

"Putin Is Breaking 70 Years of Norms by Invading Ukraine. What Comes Next?," Tanisha Fazal, Analysis/Monkey Cage, The Washington Post, February 25, 2022.
Tanisha Fazal quoted , "Why The Domestic Political Fallout From The Afghanistan War Is So Hard To Assess" FiveThirtyEight, August 19, 2021.
Guest to discuss We Need To Update Our Definition Of ‘War’ on KERA Think, Tanisha Fazal, December 10, 2019.
"How Long Can the U.S. Military’s Golden Hour Last?," Tanisha Fazal (with Todd Rassmussen, Paul Nelson, and P.K. Carlton), Commentary, War on the Rocks, October 8, 2018.

Publications

"Military Medicine and Military Effectiveness," May 18, 2023.

Argues that military medicine is a crucial component of military effectiveness. Draws on an original dataset of all interstate wars since 1900 as well as a within-case analysis of the introduction of two medical innovations in WWII to demonstrate this relationship. Finds consistently, that investments in military medicine can significantly improve military effectiveness.

"Military Medicine and the Hidden Costs of War. " (Oxford University Press, Forthcoming 2024).

Argues that dramatic improvements in US military medicine, alongside the expansion (especially since WWII) of the veterans' benefits system have increased the long tail of the costs of war in ways that have gone unappreciated.

"The Return of Conquest?" Foreign Affairs (2022).

Explains how Russia's invasion of Ukraine represents a significant violation of the norm against interstate territorial conquest, and what the consequences of those violations could be on the global stage if the norm is not preserved. Establishes further down the road, if the norm against territorial conquest ends up as another casualty of this war, states would be wise to carefully tend to their borders.