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Kennesaw State Professor's Research Validates Value Of Peace Corps

Kennesaw State University's Thomas Nisley has delved deeply into the Peace Corps, first as a volunteer worker helping communities.

(Kennesaw State University)

Jul 16, 2021

Kennesaw State professor’s research validates value of Peace Corps

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Thomas Nisley


KENNESAW, Ga.
(Jul 16, 2021)
— Kennesaw State University’s Thomas Nisley has delved deeply into the Peace Corps,
first as a volunteer worker helping communities in need and then as an academic researcher.
His study indicates that the international assistance program is a significant and
cost-effective component of the United States’ foreign affairs.

Find out what's happening in Kennesawfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

That finding is particularly significant, Nisley contends, since last year the Peace
Corps withdrew all its volunteers worldwide from their host sites – nearly 7,000 people
serving in 60 countries – due to the COVID-19 pandemic. While Congress has authorized
federal funding throughout the Peace Corps’ six-decade history, Nisley is concerned
that the ongoing volunteer hiatus potentially could threaten further financial support
for the Peace Corps and hinder its long-term future.

“We have lost a year of what I often refer to as field-deployed public diplomacy,”
said Nisley, a political science professor in KSU’s School of Government and International Affairs. “I think it’s vital for the Peace Corps to return to normal, and I’m hopeful that
it will. My research suggests that the Peace Corps is a relatively inexpensive component
to U.S. foreign policy that provides many returns.”

Sparked by his experience volunteering in the Dominican Republic in his early 20s,
Nisley began researching the effectiveness and value that the Peace Corps has in Latin
America. His research has been published in academic journals and in his first book,
The Peace Corps and Latin America: In the Last Mile of U.S. Foreign Policy, which was published in 2018 and will come out in paperback in August.

Rather than being a memoir of Nisley’s two years in the Peace Corps, though, his book
is an academic study. Nisley looked at several countries’ Peace Corps programs and
participation at different points in time, and evaluated how effectively those carried
out the Peace Corps’ goals to bolster world peace and friendship and promote a better
understanding between Americans and people of other countries.

“The evidence shows that, in the countries that have more Peace Corps volunteers than
others, and for a longer period of time, the people there have a more positive perspective
of the United States,” Nisley said. “At the same time, the volunteers themselves gain
an experience that far exceeds anything they could acquire through academic study
or even a study abroad experience.”

Nisley also credits his time in the Peace Corps with inspiring him to become a university
professor. One of his service projects in the Dominican Republic was teaching English
to members of a youth group, and he found that he enjoyed it and had a knack for it.
Nisley began teaching in higher education after earning his Ph.D. in 2002, joined
the faculty of Southern Polytechnic State University in 2005 and came to Kennesaw
State in 2015 when SPSU and KSU consolidated.

“Kennesaw State’s emphasis on research has been very beneficial to me,” Nisley said. “It gave me the resources and the encouragement
to write this book.”

In addition to the political science and government courses he teaches at KSU, Nisley
gives a lecture about the Peace Corps each semester to a careers class for international affairs majors. Some students have gone on to serve in the Peace Corps, he said.

However, Nisley cautions that serving in the Peace Corps isn’t for everybody. He describes
his living quarters in the Dominican Republic as “a palm wood shack with a little
gas stove, a mosquito net and an outhouse.” In times when he was short on food, Nisley
would drink coffee to curb his hunger.

“It’s not a comfortable life, but I think it’s a good experience,” Nisley said. “I
went into the Peace Corps because I wanted an adventure, and I certainly got an adventure.”

– Paul Floeckher

Photos by Jason Getz


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  • A leader in innovative teaching and learning, Kennesaw State University offers undergraduate, graduate and doctoral degrees to its more than 41,000 students. With 11 colleges on two metro Atlanta campuses, Kennesaw State is a member of the University System of Georgia and the second-largest university in the state. The university’s vibrant campus culture, diverse population, strong global ties and entrepreneurial spirit draw students from throughout the region and from 126 countries across the globe. Kennesaw State is a Carnegie-designated doctoral research institution (R2), placing it among an elite group of only 6 percent of U.S. colleges and universities with an R1 or R2 status. For more information, visit kennesaw.edu.


    This press release was produced by Kennesaw State University. The views expressed here are the author’s own.

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