Abdullah Enes Kut is a junior Political Science student with a specialization in international relations and a minor in Global Poverty & Practice. As a George A. Miller scholar, he is primarily involved in research that examines the social, political and economic fabric of developing societies on an international scale, with his primary interests including the examination of power structures, interstate coercion, the merits and shortcomings of international organizations in providing a fair playing field, and the true extent of state sovereignty against the global backdrop. To practically engage with these concepts, Enes actively delegates for the UC Berkeley Model United Nations club and travels to 2+ conferences each semester, in which he represents various global actors/states and engages with the nuances of policymaking first-hand.
- The manifestation, establishment and enforcement of hierarchies within new and developing states
- Workplace disparities pertaining to gender, race, sexual orientation and heteronormativity within unionized spaces
- The economic, sociological and psychological structure of low-income families
- The blurring of culture and religion, and the implications of the former on a society
- The creation and maintenance of political echo chambers
