2024 Recipients of the APSA Lee Ann Fujii Diversity Fellowship Program Travel Grant
APSA is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2024 APSA Lee Ann Fujii Diversity Fellowship Program Travel Grant. This grant was made possible by the generous contributions of the Fujii Family and Dr. Fujii’s colleagues and friends.
- Lucia Lopez, University of Houston
- Monique Newton, Northwestern University
- José Pérez, The Ohio State University
- Taylor Vincent, University of Maryland, College Park

Lucia Lopez is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Houston. Her research centers on the role of policy constraints, such as eligibility criteria and administrative burdens, on public opinion.

Monique Newton (she/her) is a 6th-year Ph.D. candidate in the Political Science Department at Northwestern University. Her research interests lie at the intersection of race and ethnic politics, urban politics, political behavior, political psychology, and political violence. A mixed-method scholar, she employs ethnographic, interview, and experimental methods to examine Black political behavior in cities in the United States. Her dissertation project explores how traumatic events by state agents impact local Black political participation in the United States. In her work, Monique builds upon the Harris (2006) model of the evolution of collective memory and its impact on collective action as it pertains to the contemporary Black Lives Matter social movement. The 2024 Lee Ann Fujii Travel Grant will enable Monique to present her paper, “No Safety: An Exploration of the Meaning of Traumatic Events for Black Americans,” in the Violence, Trauma, and Urban Politics panel at the 2024 APSA Annual Meeting in Philadelphia.

José O. Pérez is a Ph.D. candidate in political science at The Ohio State University, majoring in international relations and comparative politics. His research interests include migration and refugee policies, security studies, global health politics, and political violence, with a regional focus on Latin America. Pérez’s dissertation project, “Welcoming Migrants and Refugees: Governance, Labor, and Integration of Venezuelans in Brazil,” examines how Global South states respond to mass migration influxes that occur over short periods of time with innovative policy efforts. Perez’s dissertation fieldwork was funded by the Fulbright-Hays Doctoral Dissertation Research Abroad Grant, and he was previously a 2021 American Political Science Association Diversity Fellow. Pérez holds an M.A. in international strategic studies from the Federal University of Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS, 2019) in Porto Alegre, Brazil. He also holds a B.A. in political science and Latin American studies from the University of Florida (UF, 2014), and was a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant Fellow in Brazil (2015, 2016). His research publications include articles in Security Studies, Security Dialogue, International Feminist Journal of Politics, and Latin American Perspectives.

Taylor Vincent is a Ph.D. candidate focusing on international relations and comparative politics at the University of Maryland. She is interested in civil conflict and gender. More specifically, her dissertation examines how political competition between political parties shapes the security of women in post-conflict societies. Previously, she was a pre-doctoral fellow at the Gender and the Security Sector Lab at Cornell University. Prior to her Ph.D., Taylor received her master’s degree in political science from Duke University in 2019 and her bachelor’s degree from Purdue University in 2015.
