Two Stanford seniors win Mitchell Scholarships
Two Stanford seniors – Ella Klahr Bunnell, an American Studies major, and Matthew Wigler, a political science major – have won Mitchell Scholarships for one year of graduate study at universities in the Republic of Ireland or Northern Ireland.
They are among the 12 Americans named 2020 Mitchell Scholars by the US-Ireland Alliance , which named the scholarship in honor of former U.S. Sen. George J. Mitchell’s contributions to the peace process in Northern Ireland. Mitchell Scholars are chosen for their scholarship, leadership and sustained commitment to community and public service.
Ella Klahr Bunnell
Ella Klahr Bunnell, 21, of Brookline, Massachusetts, is an honors student in American Studies and focuses on issues of justice, equity and conflict.
In her honors thesis, Bunnell is writing about American criminal disenfranchisement law, focusing on legal challenges to disenfranchisement and the country’s divergence from international norms and modern democratic practices since the 1970s.
As a Mitchell Scholar, Bunnell plans to pursue a master’s degree in Conflict Transformation and Social Justice at Queen’s University Belfast , in Northern Ireland.
At Stanford, Bunnell has served as a research assistant to Susan Olzak , a professor of sociology, emerita, in her research on civilian oversight of police violence.
Through the Stanford in Washington program, Bunnell served as a full-time intern in the office of U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Massachusetts) in fall 2017. She has served as a peer adviser for the program since 2018.
Her paper on W.E.B DuBois, “ Who hath remembered me? Who hath forgotten?”: The reclamation of culture through melody in Du Bois’ The Souls of Black Folk ,” was published in the Stanford Undergraduate Research Journal in the Spring 2017 issue.
At Stanford, she is a member of the university’s chapter of Challah for Hunger , a national student organization that bakes challah and donates the profits to social justice causes.
In Summer 2018, Bunnell served as an intern in the Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, where she researched voting procedures, and with the American Civil Liberties Union, where she conducted research on race and criminal justice. In addition, she interned with U.S. Rep. Joseph Kennedy (D-Massachusetts).
Matthew Wigler
Matthew, Wigler, 20, of Great Neck, N.Y., is a political science major who is earning a minor in history. He is a student in the Center for International Security and Cooperation Honors Program , where he is writing a thesis on political polarization and national security.
As a Mitchell Scholar, Wigler plans to pursue a master’s degree in international politics at Trinity College Dublin .
At Stanford, Wigler is a senator of the Associated Students of Stanford University and the vice president of Stanford Democrats, a student organization.
Last summer, Wigler launched a project to understand and combat political polarization, joining with the leader of a Republican student group at the University of California-Davis, for a cross-country road trip. Together, they visited 14 split-ticket congressional districts and talked to more than 350 swing voters. His blog, Swing District , documented their travels and conversations.
During a 2017 summer internship with the U.S. State Department, Wigler worked with diplomats at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations in New York to expand the sanctions targeting North Korea. In September 2017, he interned in the executive office of Nikki Haley, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations. In addition to drafting policy briefing and memos for the office, Wigler helped coordinate planning, priorities and logistics for the 2017 United Nations General Assembly.
Wigler is the author of “ Charles Carroll of Carrollton and Revolutionary Religious Toleration: The Making of a Founder ,” which was published in 2017 in both the national Journal of the American Revolution and in the Stanford Herodotus Journal , a student-run publication of the Department of History.
International scholarships
Stanford students interested in overseas scholarships and Stanford faculty interested in nominating students for such awards should contact Diane Murk, manager of the Overseas Resource Center at dmurk@stanford.edu , or John Pearson, director emeritus of the Bechtel International Center , at john.pearson@stanford.edu .