Alumni Books published in 2020
Books by Hungarian Fulbright Alumni
Miklós Vassányi ’16: From Alaska to Yucatan: An American travel diary (in Hungarian)
Balázs Lázár ’00 (ed.): In Refuge – American Diplomats at U.S. Embassy Budapest on Cardinal Mindszenty 1957-1970
Katalin Parti ’13 (ed.): Juvenile Justice and Schools: Policing, Processing, and Programming
Tamás Scheibner ’18: Conspiracy Theories in Eastern Europe: Tropes and Trends
Ágnes Hódi ’19: Editing Measurement Tasks and Questionnaire Items (in Hungarian)
Mónika Fodor ’17: Ethnic Subjectivity in Intergenerational Memory Narratives – Politics of the Untold
Csaba Lévai ’17: Transatlantic slave-trade and the emergence of the slave systems in colonial English-British America (in Hungarian)
Ákos Máthé ’86 (ed.): Medicinal and Aromatic Plants of North America
Géza Jeszenszky ’84: Lost Prestige – Hungary’s Changing Image in Britain 1894-1918
Gábor Turi ’13: American Jazz Diary (in Hungarian)
Veronika Kusz ’05: A Wayfaring Stranger – Ernst von Dohnányi’s American Years, 1949-1960
Péter Galbács ’18: The Friedman-Lucas Transition in Macroeconomics – A Structuralist Approach
Péter J. Sós ’90: #megértjükegymást: Conversations on PR (in Hungarian)
Katalin Sulyok ’15: Science and Judicial Reasoning: The Legitimacy of International Environmental Adjudication
Books by U.S. Fulbright Alumni
Frank Baron ’84: Stopping the Trains to Auschwitz, Budapest, 1944
Ronald Johnson ’04: Magic Happens! My Journey with the Northern Iowa Wind Symphony
Thomas Tobin ’17: Going Alt-Ac: A Guide to Alternative Academic Careers
Leslie Waters ’09: Borders on the Move, Territorial Change and Ethnic Cleansing in the Hungarian-Slovak Borderlands, 1938-1948
Mary Henold ’19: The Laywoman Project: Remaking Catholic Womanhood in the Vatican II Era
Erika Sólyom ’03: Senegalodream of Mine (in Hungarian)
R. Chris Davis ’06: Hungarian Religion, Romanian Blood, A Minority’s Struggle for National Belonging, 1920–1945
Karla Kelsey ’10: Blood Feather
Jacob Lucas ’04: The Seed Vault (poetry collection)
Jan Marie Fritz ’16 (ed.): Clinical Sociology for Southern Africa
Bill Issel ’08: Coit Tower, a Novel of San Francisco