MSU Student Receives Boren Scholarship to Study in Kazakhstan 

Michigan State University undergraduate student Eleanor Pugh has earned a Boren Scholarship to study abroad in Kazakhstan.

The Boren Awards program funds the intensive study of language and culture abroad for U.S. undergraduate and graduate students. Scholars have the option to either apply for a Regional Flagship Language Initiative or select/design their own study program.

A woman with long, straight brown hair smiles at the camera in front of a brick wall. She wears a navy blazer and light blue shirt.
Eleanor Pugh

“I am truly honored to receive a Boren Scholarship and thrilled to have the opportunity to study in Kazakhstan,” Pugh said. “I am extremely grateful for the mentorship and support I have received from my professors, as well as the many opportunities I have had as an MSU student.”

Pugh is an Honors College second-year student majoring in International Relations in James Madison College and Russian in the College of Arts & Letters, with minors in Russian and Eurasian Studies, Muslim Studies, and Economics.

“Eleanor has embraced opportunities through her coursework, the Honors College, and the Distinguished Student Awards Office to develop into a Boren Scholar,” said MSU Honors College Interim Dean Glenn Chambers. “Her academic achievements and international expertise showcase the strengths of MSU as a leader in global education and undergraduate research.”

Embracing Transformative Research

At Michigan State, Pugh’s extensive research experience has included a professorial assistantship from the Honors College with Professor Eric Freedman. This paid opportunity allows students to work closely with members of the MSU faculty on their scholarly research. Pugh also has held research assistantships with Professor Sherman Garnett and Professor Norman Graham.

“Eleanor Pugh is a superb student with an amazing range across disciplines and yet wonderful intensity in everything she studies,” Graham said. “The Boren Scholarship will enable her to perfect her excellent Russian while providing opportunities to pursue her broader interest in the region.”

“Eleanor Pugh is a superb student with an amazing range across disciplines and yet wonderful intensity in everything she studies. The Boren Scholarship will enable her to perfect her excellent Russian while providing opportunities to pursue her broader interest in the region.”

Norman Graham, Professor of International Relations, James Madison College

Pugh is part of the Social Science Scholars Program, in which a small cohort of students works closely with faculty to conduct independent research and take distinct courses on social science topics.

“I have never taught anyone who can match Eleanor Pugh’s ability to grasp the languages, history, culture, and geopolitics of important global regions,” said Professor John Waller, Director of the Social Science Scholars Program.

A Penchant for Foreign Policy

Pugh has extensively researched and worked in foreign policy. In 2024, she was awarded a Critical Language Scholarship to study Azerbaijani in Baku, where she also virtually interned with the U.S. Embassy. Pugh also received a grant from the Citizen Diplomacy Action Fund to co-lead a space science camp in Son-Kul, Kyrgyzstan, in 2024. Through MSU Model United Nations, Pugh served as a chair of a committee on Kyrgyzstan’s 2010 revolution.

Pugh is currently interning at the American Foreign Policy Council and will be participating in the Kissinger Summer Academy on nuclear weapons and grand strategy at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies this summer.

Waller further elaborated on Pugh’s extensive experiences.

“Eleanor is so deserving of this award and has worked very hard to get to this point.”

Kristin Janka, Assistant Dean and Director of MSU’s Distinguished Student Awards Office

“Here are just a few of the accomplishments for which Eleanor won a coveted Boren Scholarship: spending six weeks aged 17 studying Russian in Kyrgyzstan; an internship compiling media reports for U.S. Embassy officials in Azerbaijan; co-leading an educational camp for semi-nomadic children in a remote region of Kyrgyzstan; participating in research with MSU faculty on issues as varied as Sino-Kazakh water sharing and Russian nuclear policy; winning the Gliozzo Scholarship for Muslim Studies, the highest award for Muslim Studies students at MSU; attending the Kissinger Summer Academy at Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies on nuclear policy; and a current internship with the American Foreign Policy Council’s Russia and Ukraine Program and its Central Asia and the Caucasus Initiative,” Waller said. “This quite staggering level of learning and dedication will see Eleanor soon become an invaluable U.S. advisor on security for this critical global region.”

“Eleanor is so deserving of this award and has worked very hard to get to this point,” said Kristin Janka, Assistant Dean and Director of MSU’s Distinguished Student Awards Office, who serves as the university’s campus representative for the Boren Scholarship.

Pugh attended Walt Whitman High School in Bethesda, Maryland. She was initially recruited to MSU as a University Distinguished Scholar.

By Anneliese Mackel and Kristin Janka and originally published by MSU’s Distinguished Student Award Office. Please contact Melanie Brender at brenderm@msu.edu for media inquiries on this story.