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Lincoln Mitchell

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Lincoln Mitchell

Lincoln Mitchell is a political analyst, pundit and writer based in New York City and San Francisco. Lincoln works on democracy and governance related issues in the former Soviet Union, Eastern Europe, the Caribbean, the Middle East, Africa and Asia. He also works with businesses and NGOs globally, particularly in the former Soviet Union. Lincoln writes and speaks about US politics as well, and was the national political correspondent for The New York Observer from 2014-2016. Lincoln was on the faculty of Columbia University’s School of International Affairs from 2006-2013 and retains an affiliation with Columbia’s Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies. In addition, he worked for years as a political consultant advising and managing domestic political campaigns.

Dr. Mitchell is an accomplished scholar and writer whose current research includes democratic rollback in the US, US-Georgia relations, political development in the former Soviet Union, the role of democracy promotion in American foreign policy and baseball.  He has written six books: Uncertain Democracy: US Foreign Policy and Georgia’s Rose Revolution (Penn Press 2008), The Color Revolutions (Penn Press 2012), The Democracy Promotion Paradox (Brookings 2016), Will Big League Baseball Survive? Globalization, the End of Television, Youth Sports and the Future of Major League Baseball (Temple University Press 2016), Baseball Goes West: How the Dodgers and Giants Shaped the Major Leagues (Kent State University Press 2018), and San Francisco Year Zero: Political Upheaval, Punk Rock and a Third Place Baseball Team (Rutgers University Press, 2019). Dr. Mitchell has written articles on these topics in The National Interest, Orbis, The Moscow Times, the Washington Quarterly, The American Interest, Survival, the Central Asian Survey, World Affairs Journal, The New York Daily News and Current History as well as for numerous online publications including the online sections of The Washington PostThe New York Times. The Forward and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Eurasianet, and Transitions Online. Lincoln has been quoted extensively in most major American, Georgian and Russian newspapers and has appeared on numerous television and radio programs and podcasts including Fox and Friends, All Things Considered, Lou Dobbs, Al Jazeera English, Al Jazeera America, the Jim Lehrer Newshour, ABC Nightline, the Diane Rehm Show, Up and In: The Baseball Prospectus Podcast, the Cespedes Family Barbecast, Sports Byline and The BBC as well as in Russian and Georgian television.  Lincoln also frequently blogs about American politics on several different online platforms.

Lincoln’s current and recent clients include Freedom House, Democracy International, ARD/Tetratech, the Albright Stonebridge Group, the UNDP and DFID, the United Nations Democracy Fund, the National Democratic Institute for International Affairs, as well as several private businesses, political interests and investors working in the former Soviet Union.

Lincoln earned his BA from UC Santa Cruz and his Ph.D from Columbia University.

The Latest from Lincoln Mitchell

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Georgia: European aspirations, Middle Eastern realities
Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan (R) and Georgia's Prime Minister Giorgi Gakharia (L) hold a joint press conference at the Presidential Complex in Ankara on October 31, 2019.
  • Analysis
  • Georgia: European aspirations, Middle Eastern realities

    Since regaining its independence nearly three decades ago, European aspirations have been a central part of Georgia’s political agenda and identity. But the reality is more complicated and Georgia is, in a meaningful sense, part of both greater Europe and the greater Middle East.

    January 7, 2020

    The Caucasus and the Middle East
    Georgian soldiers run during a farewell ceremony before their departure to Afghanistan in Tbilisi, June 27, 2013.
  • Analysis
  • The Caucasus and the Middle East

    For years, politics and conflicts in the Middle East have spilled over into many other regions of the world. Refugee crises, terrorism, and political instability in the Middle East have impacted foreign and domestic policy and politics in North America and Europe, but the Caucasus is much closer and, therefore, a particularly important case for policymakers in Washington and Brussels.

    December 2, 2019