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Policy & Faculty Fellows

SPIA NJ Fellows

SPIA in New Jersey Names Inaugural Policy Fellows

The inaugural SPIA in New Jersey Policy Fellows come from diverse backgrounds, ranging from social justice and journalism to policy and advocacy, with all having done important work in the Garden State.

Policy Fellows

Adriana Abizadeh, 2023-25

Adriana AbizadehAdriana Abizadeh is the executive director of the Kensington Corridor Trust in Philadelphia, the nation’s first neighborhood trust focused on a commercial corridor, and a Senior Policy Fellow at the Rutgers University Bloustein School. Adriana is also the President of Catalyst Consulting Group (CCG), a boutique consulting firm moving projects forward for nonprofits and other stakeholders. A passionate leader and social justice advocate paving the way to ensure fair treatment and access to resources for people of color. She has committed herself to serving on several boards that reflect some of her deepest passions: immigration, racial and health equity, and youth development. Adriana has a BA from Rutgers University in Political Science with a minor in Security Intelligence and Counter Terrorism. She also has an MS in Public Policy from Drexel University.

Amol Sinha, 2024-25

headshot of amol sinhaAs Executive Director of the ACLU of New Jersey (ACLU-NJ), Amol Sinha leads a team of dedicated professionals and guides the organization's innovative integrated advocacy work, utilizing litigation, policy, public education, and strategic communications to build a more equitable society.

During Amol's tenure, the ACLU-NJ has appeared before the New Jersey Supreme Court more times than any non-governmental party, deepened community partnerships across the state, and centered the experiences of directly impacted communities. Highlights include developing litigation and legislation that led to the early release of over 9,000 people from our state's prisons and jails, leading the successful fight to legalize cannabis through a racial justice lens, and passing legislation to ensure driver's licenses for all, regardless of immigration status.

Before joining the ACLU-NJ in 2017, Amol was an advocate at the Innocence Project, where he worked to address wrongful convictions and reform the criminal legal system across the country. From 2010-2015, Amol was the director of the Suffolk County Chapter of the New York Civil Liberties Union, where he focused primarily on criminal justice and immigrants' rights.

Amol holds a BA from New York University and a JD from Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law. 

Tennyson Donyea, 2023-24

Tennyson DonyeaTennyson Donyea, a seasoned journalist, storyteller, and aspiring filmmaker continues to leave his mark on New Jersey's media landscape. A Temple University alumnus, he holds a B.A. in Media Studies and Production (2016) and later deepened his journalistic expertise through the Entrepreneurial Journalism Creators program at CUNY Newmark Graduate School of Journalism in 2022. Over the past seven years, Tennyson has extensively reported for various platforms including TV, radio, and both print and digital mediums. His journey has taken him to various states – from California to Maine – but his role at WHYY News in Philadelphia stands out, showcasing his dedication to delivering quality news about New Jersey politics. In 2023, Tennyson's commitment to local journalism was recognized when he received the New Jersey News Commons' Partner of the Year award. This accolade celebrated his significant contributions to bolstering New Jersey's local news ecosystem. Keenly aware of the narratives surrounding New Jersey's Black community, Tennyson took it upon himself to challenge and reshape these perspectives. In 2021, he founded "Black In Jersey" with the aim to provide a more accurate representation of Black communities and address pertinent issues in the fight for Black liberation. Originally hailing from Washington, D.C., Tennyson has called New Jersey home since 2019 and is currently based in Trenton, NJ, where he continues to be a beacon of change in the world of journalism.

Brandon McKoy, 2023-25

Brandon McKoyBrandon McKoy is an established leader in state policy analysis and advocacy in New Jersey and nationwide. He completed his bachelor’s degree at The College of New Jersey and earned a master’s degree from the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University. Brandon worked as a Program Associate at The Fund for New Jersey and served as its first philanthropy fellow from 2012-2014. He then went on to spend more than seven years at New Jersey Policy Perspective in several roles, first as a State Policy Fellow through the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities’ program, then as a Policy Analyst, and then as Director of Government and Public Affairs, before assuming leadership of the organization as NJPP’s President for nearly 3 years. In 2024, Brandon rejoined The Fund for New Jersey as President, after more than two years at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities in Washington, DC, where he was Vice President for state partnerships and co-leader of the State Fiscal Policy Division. He is a lifelong New Jerseyan who was born in Secaucus, raised in South Orange, and now resides in Hunterdon County with his family.

Nedia Morsy, 2023-25

headshot of nedia morsyNedia Morsy is the Deputy Director at Make the Road New Jersey, a powerful grassroots movement of immigrant and working-class people. Make the Road operates three organizing hubs in Elizabeth, Passaic and Perth Amboy that provide legal support and services, adult education, and youth development programming. Over the past ten years, Make the Road has won 20 campaigns that transform the lives of our members and policy victories that have helped lift more than 1 million immigrant and working class New Jerseyans out of poverty, including the first guaranteed severance, the strongest temp workers bill of rights in the country, financial aid for Dreamers, and occupational licenses for all.

Among other priorities, over the next year as a SPIA in NJ Policy Fellow, Morsy plans to study right-of-center organizing strategies, instruct students in power mapping, and coordinate popular education workshops. 

Morsy graduated from Amherst College and served as a Coro Fellow in Public Affairs in St. Louis.

Faculty Fellows

John J. Farmer, Jr., 2023-24

John FarmerJohn Farmer is a University Professor (Law) and Director of the Miller Center on Policing and Community Resilience at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey.

After graduating from Georgetown University (BA 1979) and Georgetown University Law Center (JD 1986), Farmer began his career as a law clerk to Associate Justice Alan B. Handler of the New Jersey Supreme Court. He worked as an associate at Riker, Danzig, Scherer, Hyland & Perretti LLP before joining the Office of the U.S. Attorney in Newark, where he received the U.S. Attorney General’s Special Achievement Award for Sustained Superior Performance in 1993.

Farmer joined the administration of New Jersey Governor Christine Todd Whitman in 1994, serving as assistant counsel, deputy chief counsel, and then chief counsel. From 1999-2002 he was New Jersey’s Attorney General.

From 2003-2004, as senior counsel and team leader for the 9/11 Commission, Farmer led the investigation of the country’s preparedness for and response to the terrorist attacks and was a principal author of the Commission’s final report. His team was charged with recreating the comprehensive timeline of the events on 9/11 itself at every level of government.

His book, The Ground Truth: The Story Behind America’s Defense on 9/11, was named a New York Times notable book. His article on the Patriot Act, “At freedom’s Edge,” was part of a series that was awarded the ABA Silver Gavel Award for outstanding legal journalism. He has published numerous opinion pieces in the New York Times, The Washington Post, The Star Ledger, The Jerusalem Post, The Boston Globe, The Hill, Psychology Today, The Messenger, and the Harvard Crimson. His book, Way Too Fast: An American Reckoning (2022), was named a notable book by Shelf Unbound.

Following the 9/11 Commission, Farmer was a partner at K&L Gates and in 2007 became a founding partner of the law firm Arseneault, Whipple, Farmer, Fassett and Azzarello, LLP.

In addition to his law practice, in 2008 he served as senior advisor to General James Jones, Special Envoy for Middle East Regional Security, on development of the rule of law in the Palestinian Authority territory, and was invited by the U.S. Embassy in Armenia to assist that nation’s legislative commission in investigating widespread violence and unrest following its elections. He also served on the commission formed to investigate the arrest of Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr.

He was recruited to become Dean of Rutgers School of Law—Newark in 2009, and served in that capacity until April 2013, when he was asked to complete his Deanship contract by serving as Senior Vice President and General Counsel of Rutgers University. He was named General Counsel of the Year for 2013 by the publication New Jersey Biz.

In 2011 he served as counsel to the commission that redrew New Jersey’s legislative districts and, later that year, was appointed the independent, tie-breaking member of the commission charged with developing a new map of New Jersey’s Congressional districts.

In 2012, he received the Justice William J. Brennan, Jr. Award from the Association of the Federal Bar of New Jersey and the Distinguished Public Service Award from Leadership New Jersey. In 2014, he received the Thurgood Marshall Award from the Thurgood Marshall College Fund. In 2015, he received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the New Jersey Law Journal.

Farmer served as a member of the New Jersey State Ethics Commission from 2002-2008, on New Jersey’s Advisory Committee on Judicial Conduct from 2007-2014, and as the Compliance Monitor, from 2008-2014, of a National Security Agreement entered into with the federal government by Alcatel and Lucent Technologies upon their merger.

Most recently, from 2019-2023, he served as Director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics at Rutgers University. He is currently enjoying a one-year research leave.

Joe Krakora, 2024-25

headshot of joe krakoraJoe E. Krakora (’76) is the newly appointed Faculty Fellow for SPIA in NJ. Mr. Krakora comes to Princeton after serving as the Public Defender for the State of New Jersey from 2011 to 2024. In that position, he oversaw an agency of approximately 620 attorneys and 1200 total employees. Under his leadership, the office built a reputation as one of the best Public Defender offices in the country. He recruited talented attorneys from around the country, expanded the office’s training programs, and upgraded the agency’s technology and facilities. He became an influential stakeholder in New Jersey’s justice system on many policy issues, having spearheaded the pretrial release reform that eliminated cash bail, advocated for sentencing reform on New Jersey’s Sentencing Commission, and directed the filing of three successful Orders to Show Cause in the NJ Supreme Court for release of jail and prison inmates during the pandemic.

Mr. Krakora’s career as a public defender began in 1986 and spanned thirty four years. He started as both a staff attorney and manager in the Essex Region where he developed a reputation as one of the top criminal trial attorneys in New Jersey, specializing in homicide cases including capital cases. He was profiled in four front page NJ Law Journal articles after acquittals in high profile cases. Mr. Krakora served as the agency’s Assistant Public Defender and Director of Capital and Special Litigation from 2002-2010. In that capacity, he served on the Death Penalty Study Commission as a strong advocate leading to its abolition in December 2007. He also spent five years in private practice and served as the Law Clerk to the Hon. Lloyd F. McMahon, U.S.D.J for the Southern District of New York. He majored in History at Princeton and holds his law degree from the Cornell University Law School.