To qualify for the scholarship, applicants must be a community college student or a freshman, sophomore, or junior in college and have an interest in Asia and U.S. foreign policy with demonstrated academic achievement and leadership potential. Our awardees are selected from a highly qualified and competitive field of applicants.
Testimonials
2022 Undergraduate Diversity Fellows
Macy Thames
Spelman College

Macy Thames worked with the Center for Innovation, Trade, and Strategy team at NBR. She is a rising senior majoring in International Studies with a focus in Cultural Studies and a minor in Comparative Women’s Studies at Spelman College in Atlanta, GA. Macy is involved in various organizations on campus, such as the National Council of Negro Women, Girls Going Global, and Sisters Keeping it Real Through Service (SKIRTS). She enjoys learning about new cultures and ways of living through reading and art. Currently, she is researching racial configurations and gender theory established in popular culture through the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship Program. Before working with NBR, Macy worked with Nationwide as a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion intern and with Public Citizen as an Intern for Protect Democracy. Macy aspires to help enforce truly inclusive and aware work ethics and policies in major global organizations and businesses. As an Undergraduate Diversity Fellow at NBR, she hopes to inspire and influence people worldwide.
Fatihah Ullah
Montgomery College

Fatihah Ullah worked with the Political and Security Affairs team at NBR. She is a graduating sophomore at Montgomery College and intends to major in International Affairs with a concentration in conflict resolution in Asia and the Middle East after transferring to a four-year institution. She takes a strong interest in studying gender dynamics and its intersection with religious and cultural ideals. Before this fellowship, Fatihah worked on an independent research project at Johns Hopkins University, where she studied honor killings in Pakistan and utilized quantitative data to predict a potential solution. Her passion for research stems from a desire to dedicate her life to public service and advocacy in both her local community and at an international level. During her time at Montgomery College, she has focused on various projects targeting food insecurity as well as worked closely with students with disabilities through tutoring. As an Undergraduate Diversity Fellow at NBR, Fatihah is looking forward to exploring global conflict through a new lens while also expanding her knowledge in research and political discourse.
2021 Undergraduate Diversity Fellows
Kylie Del Rosario
Dartmouth College

Kylie Del Rosario worked with the Energy and Environmental Affairs team at NBR. She is a rising sophomore at Dartmouth College and plans to major in government. She is interested in U.S. foreign policy in Asia and diplomacy and is studying Japanese and international relations, as well as conducting research on U.S.-China relations. Prior to becoming an Undergraduate Diversity fellow, she worked on strategic partnerships for the National Youth Council for Real History Education, was a committee chair for the Unified Student Council for Yonkers Public Schools, and founded We Are the Future, a nonpartisan space for students to discuss global political issues. She aspires to work in the Embassy of the United States in Tokyo. During her time at NBR she conducted interviews with Ieda Gomes on Exploring the Future of Natural Gas in South Asia and Raymond Kuo on Strategic Clarity and the Future of U.S.-Taiwan Foreign Relations and contributed to the editing of the commentary In Defense of Strategic Ambiguity in the Taiwan Strait by Steven M. Goldstein.
Alura Winfrey
George Washington University

Alura Winfrey worked with the Center for Innovation, Trade, and Strategy team at NBR. She is a rising sophomore at George Washington University, where she intends to major in international affairs, with a regional concentration in Asia, and minor in sociocultural anthropology. She studies Mandarin Chinese and is currently researching the religious conversion and politicization of migrant and indigenous populations in Chile, China, and Singapore. Before joining NBR, she contributed to the U.S.-China Strategic Studies Organization newsletter and participated in Amnesty International and the Deans Council for Multicultural Recruitment at George Washington University. She plans to pursue a career as a foreign service officer or analyst with the Department of State under the Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs or Bureau of Intelligence and Research. During her time at NBR she conducted an interview with Blaine Curcio titled Developments in China’s Commercial Space Sector.