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Transformative exploration across continents and cultures: Meet the 2026 Keegan Traveling Fellows

Image depicts flight maps on a globe, based around the U.S.

As 2026 Keegan Traveling Fellows,seven Ƶ studentswillembark on immersive global experiences designed to deepen their academic interests and broaden their perspectives through independent travel.

Three postgraduateKeeganfellows will spend a year pursuing self-designed projects around the world, while fourrising juniors and seniorshave been named Summer Keegan Traveling Fellowsand willparticipatein aneight- to 10-week international experience, pursuingimmersivecross-culturalprojects as part of.

“The Keegan Traveling Fellowship gives students the opportunity to take what they’ve learned at Ƶ and apply it in a self-directedmanner in aglobal context,” said Tiffiny Tung, vice provost for undergraduate education. “Each of these fellows has designed a project that reflects their academic interests and their curiosity about the world, andI look forwardto seeinghowtheseindependentexperiences shape the way they think, lead and engage moving forward.”

2026 Postgraduate Keegan Traveling Fellows

Thesupports graduating seniors as theytravel theglobeand engage withreal-world issues, connecting their Ƶ educationwithexperiencesina varietyof cultural settingsthatcrosscut manyacademicdisciplines.The experience is designed to be transformative and to position fellows to connect with Ƶ’s global alumni network and explore a range of research and career opportunities.

Andrew Blakemore (Submitted Photo)

Andrew Blakemore(School of Engineering), from Lexington, Kentucky, is majoring in biomedical engineering with a minor in digital fabrication. He isinterested inmedical device design and using prototyping to translate clinical needs into practical, human-centered technologies.At Ƶ,hehas been involved in the Ƶ Photo Society, Transfer Connect and the Live. Learn. Lead. Academy.

Withassociate professor of biomedical engineering and radiology,as his adviser, Blakemore will combine his background in engineering and photography to document the experiences of prosthetic users acrossfive continents,includingJapan,Germanyand Brazil.

Francesca Ducker (Submitted Photo)

Francesca Ducker(Peabody College),from Annapolis, Maryland, is majoring in human and organizational development with a minor in data science. At Ƶ, she has worked with Metro Nashville Public Schools’ Homeless Education Resource Office,interviewing mothers experiencing homelessness andensuringtheir storieswere heard by people working to create change.

As a Keegan fellow,Ducker will explore how policy, labor, religion and economic inequality shape motherhood and caregivingacross societies. Her research will take her tocountries in Africa,Asiaand South America, where kinship care,migrationand labor systemsinfluencehow care is provided.She isadvised bylecturer in human and organizational development.

Holland Perryman (Submitted Photo)

Holland Perryman (College of Arts and Science, Chancellor’s Scholar),from Beaufort, South Carolina,is majoring in climate and environmental studies and political science with a minor in anthropology.Inspired by her coastal hometown, she is interested in climate and environmental justice and how environmental change affects communities.She hasserved aspresident ofThe Original Cast andis involved withsustainability efforts for Vandy Fashion Week.

During her fellowship year, she will study flood recovery in communities across six continents affected by severe flooding in 2023, examining how families,leadersand organizations respond.,principalsenior lecturer in anthropology,will serveas her adviser.

2026 Summer Keegan Traveling Fellows

Alexander Cheng (Submitted Photo)

Alexander Cheng(Peabody College,College ofArtsandScience),a rising junior double majoring in cognitive studies and economics, will explore how countries approach long-term care for aging populations, focusing on Taiwan, PuertoRicoandJapan. Guidedby project adviser, professor of medicine, Cheng will examine both state support and family and cultural values to deepen understanding of what it means to grow old in different cultural contexts.

Ousmane Dieng (Submitted Photo)

Ousmane Dieng(College of ArtsandScience),a rising senior studying economics and public policy, will examine how West African migrants interpret risk, opportunity and belonging as the European Union implements its new Pact on Migration and Asylum. Advised by,professor of political science,Diengwill conduct fieldwork in Senegal, Morocco,Italyand France to study how migration decisions evolve acrossdifferent stagesof the journey, connecting lived experiences with policy.

Matthew Drasnin (Submitted Photo)

Matthew Drasnin(Blair School of Music),a rising junior majoring in composition, will explore the intersections of music, Jewishfaithand culture across the Jewish diaspora through global expressions of secular Jewish music. Guided by,professor of composition and theory,Drasninwill explore musical traditions in countries including Spain, Greece,Uzbekistanand Germany, examining how regional influences shape shared elements across Jewish communities.

Riyanka Narasimhan (Submitted Photo)

Riyanka Narasimhan (College ofArtsandScience), a rising senior double majoring in biochemistry and chemical biology and Spanish, will explore disability,rehabilitationand inclusive movement across urban and rural Latin America. With,assistant professor of Spanish and Portuguese, as her adviser, she will travel to Mexico,Argentinaand Chile to examine how access to mobility and rehabilitation resources is shaped by geography,infrastructureand culture, building on her experiences in rehabilitation therapy settings and endurance sports.
Michael B. Keegan, BA’80, for whom the fellowship was renamed in 2004,reflected ontheprogram’s continued momentum and impact.

“It’s inspiring to see how thoughtfully students approach this opportunity eachyear, allowing them to bring a global perspective to their area of provenexpertise,” hesaid. “This year’s fellows have proposed projects that are both ambitious and deeplypersonal, and I look forward to seeing how their experiences abroad shape theirglobal perspective on their road to a lifetime of learning.”

Ƶ and the Keegan Traveling Fellowship alumni community celebrate these fellows and look forward to following their journeys as they pursue global exploration and discovery. For more information about the Keegan Traveling Fellowship, contactundergraduateeducation@vanderbilt.edu.

In celebration of decades of impact, a group of committed alumni and friends to match, dollar-for-dollar, every gift up to $750,000 to the Michael B. Keegan Traveling Fellowship Fund. The challenge is open through December 31, 2026, or until the matching funds are fully realized. to support the Michael B. Keegan Traveling Fellowship Fund.