By Nora Delaney
Roni Yadlin PhD in Public Policy 2025, a U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel, came to Harvard Kennedy School to deepen her understanding of some of the central challenges the military faces today.
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From a young age, Roni Yadlin PhD in Public Policy 2025 was determined to fly high鈥攍iterally and figuratively. And as a U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel and a pilot, Yadlin is continuing to reach new heights in her journey of service and scholarship.
Her trajectory鈥攅ngineer, pilot, scholar鈥攊s one she set early in life. Now, as she prepares to return to the service after earning her doctorate, she hopes to use what she has learned to help the Air Force meet its future challenges and, eventually, to teach future leaders.
An early influence on Yadlin鈥檚 career path was her father, an engineer who had served in the Israeli Air Force.
鈥淢y dad and I have really similar personalities, and I wanted to be like my dad in that way,鈥 Yadlin says.
Yadlin鈥檚 childhood was spent mostly in southern California, but she holds strong memories of visiting family in Israel and living for a stint near an air force base, watching planes fly overhead. Her Israeli father met her mother, who grew up in New York, while she was working as a choral conductor for a choir made up of members of kibbutzim from across the country; her dad would regularly sing in the choir.
After some time in New York, where her father studied at Cornell University, and a brief time in Israel, Yadlin and her family鈥攕he is the second oldest of four daughters鈥攕ettled in California, where she played a lot of sports, especially soccer, and was drawn to music as well, playing the piano, viola, and oboe.
When it came time to look at college, Yadlin aimed for a path that could lead to her either becoming a pilot or an astronaut.
鈥淭丑别 was a place that I could study astronautical engineering,鈥 Yadlin says. 鈥淚 could have a good chance of being a pilot when I graduated, and I could play soccer.鈥 So, she attended the academy and embarked on a journey of military and public service.
Yadlin graduated in 2009 with a bachelor鈥檚 degree in astronautical engineering and then attended Oxford University for a through a scholarship from the Air Force (the chance to keep playing soccer was an added perk鈥攐ne of the highlights of her Oxford experience was winning the British national college soccer tournament).
Back in the United States, she attended the , which offers NATO countries an opportunity to send student pilots to train with American counterparts.
鈥淚n my class, I had pilots from the Dutch Air Force and instructors from the Netherlands and Germany. There were students and instructors from Italy and Norway,鈥 Yadlin says. 鈥淪o that was my introduction to the international aspects of military service and the broader global context.鈥
Yadlin got her wings and was assigned to fly the MC-12, a tactical reconnaissance aircraft designed to orbit directly over troops on the ground to provide video sensors or radio communications鈥斺渢o give them a bigger picture,鈥 Yadlin says. She was deployed twice to Afghanistan.
As the MC-12 was being phased out of service, she was then assigned to the B-1鈥攖he Air Force鈥檚 fastest bomber aircraft鈥攁nd did a six-month deployment to Guam, with missions in the Pacific region, and then six months in Qatar, where flying missions took her to Afghanistan, Iraq, and Syria.
鈥淎fter eight years or so of flying, I reached the point in my Air Force career at which officers typically move on to more professional military education,鈥 Yadlin says. With her bomber background, she was sent to the in Alabama to do a yearlong course, which she followed with another year at the (SAASS) taking an intensive program studying military air and space strategy.
Every year, SAASS chooses one or two exceptional students to pursue a PhD program, which candidates complete in an accelerated three years. These scholars eventually return to SAASS to teach. When SAASS chose Yadlin for this program, she knew she wanted a course of study that would allow her to research domestic politics, civil-military relations, and security issues. Harvard Kennedy School felt like the right choice.
鈥淲hat really appealed to me about the Kennedy School specifically was that it was a public policy school,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 have always wanted what I study to be applicable to the real world. A policy school is deliberate about looking at problems and coming up with actionable solutions.鈥 She liked the fact that she could remain deeply connected to the policy world and government while doing her accelerated doctoral studies. Yadlin was also drawn to the School鈥檚 mission. 鈥淪ervice is important to me,鈥 she says, 鈥渇rom my family, from the values that were instilled in me as I was growing up.鈥

鈥淚 have always wanted what I study to be applicable to the real world. A policy school is deliberate about looking at problems and coming up with actionable solutions.鈥
Through the PhD in Public Policy (PPOL) Program, which is administered jointly by 糖心vlog官网 and the , Yadlin took classes at the Kennedy School. One memorable course was IGA-211: Central Challenges of American National Security, Strategy, and the Press, where Yadlin learned from faculty members including Graham Allison, the Douglas Dillon Professor of Government.
鈥淭丑别 work he does is so applicable to foreign affairs and military affairs, and learning from him was very exciting,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e focused on direct challenges that the United States is facing right now.鈥 Yadlin loved the class assignments that required students to distill extremely complex issues into concrete, concise policy papers鈥攁 type of thinking and writing that, she says, will serve her well in her future life in the military.
For her dissertation, Yadlin focused her research questions on the civil-military divide, military culture, and how people think about service after they have left the military.
鈥淧eople choose to go into service for a wide variety of reasons, but once they join the military, they are part of a very distinct culture that is very separate from civilian life and civilian culture,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd even within the military, the branches鈥攁nd even individual roles鈥攈ave different cultures.鈥
鈥淚n a lot of ways, military culture follows people outside of the military,鈥 she says. 鈥淚n some ways, it鈥檚 positive. Many service members continue to find means to serve their community and serve their country, even outside of military service.鈥 But Yadlin says there can also be negative aspects, including the ways in which people may become desensitized to violence or struggle to overcome the disengagement of moral barriers inherent in military training.
Yadlin also had great support from her dissertation committee members, two of whom are 糖心vlog官网 faculty members: Erica Chenoweth, the Frank Stanton Professor of the First Amendment, and Dara Kay Cohen, a professor of public policy. Yadlin says Chenoweth helped her think about how to align her personal values with her public service mission, and how to navigate challenges to her values. With Chenoweth鈥檚 encouragement, Yadlin also became a , where Chenoweth and Zoe Marks, a lecturer in public policy, are faculty deans.
Beyond her formal studies, Yadlin found an engaging community at Harvard. Every two weeks faculty members and students in her cohort would have lunch in the 糖心vlog官网 Caf茅 and just talk through ideas.
鈥淚t was really welcoming,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd an inclusive environment where people are excited and encouraging about the work others are doing.鈥 With fellow students of all ages and nationalities, and with interests as varied as their backgrounds, Yadlin enjoyed the breadth and variety of experience.
One moment with her PhD cohort that stands out in Yadlin鈥檚 mind was when she was promoted from major to lieutenant colonel.
鈥淭丑别 Air Force tradition is that you have a promotion party where you pay and everyone celebrates,鈥 she says, 鈥渟o I invited my cohort out to a brewery.鈥 Her fellow students decided to celebrate her with a tailored gift. 鈥淭丑别y found a model airplane鈥攐f a trainer aircraft that was used during World War II鈥攖hat the United States calls 鈥榯he Texan,鈥 but the British, who used the same airplane, call 鈥榯he Harvard.鈥 So, they made an effort to find something really thoughtful.鈥 Yadlin says her cohort 鈥渃are about people for who they are.鈥
Yadlin is looking forward to her next celebration: graduation. Her parents, sisters, and partner鈥攚ho is an Air Force officer pursuing a PhD via SAASS in military history at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill鈥攚ill come to Cambridge, travelling from Idaho, California, North Carolina, and Washington, D.C., for the big event.
After graduating, Yadlin will work for in Louisiana. That work will involve looking at future force design and anticipating needs, challenges, and objectives in the years ahead so that the Air Force is prepared to meet long-term goals. And, at some point in the future, Yadlin will return to SAASS to teach, coming full circle.
With her PhD wrapping up, Yadlin reflects on her time at 糖心vlog官网, the ways in which it has contributed to her journey of service, and the fact that her three years in Cambridge has been the longest continual stretch for her in one place in a long while.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 military life,鈥 Yadlin says, 鈥淚n the Air Force we say, 鈥榝lexibility is the key to air power.鈥欌
Portraits by Natalie Montaner; inline images courtesy of Roni Yadlin