 |
Dr.
Muna B. Ndulo,
Professor, Cornell University Law School,
Director, Institute for African Development
 |
|
Conflict
and war cost the lives millions
of people world wide with millions
more injured and forcibly displaced
and becoming refugees or internally
displaced in their own countries.
War and conflicts result in failed
states characterized by poverty,
disease and gross violations of
human rights. The United Nations
through the Security Council bears
the primary responsibility for the
maintenance of international peace
and security in the world. It is
actively involved in resolving conflicts
and rebuilding failed states. It
does this through the process of
peace keeping and works towards
preserving peace, however, frangible
where fighting has been halted and
assists in peace building that is
in implementing peace agreements
achieved by the peace makers and
works towards the return of the
refugees to their homes and the
reintegration of ex combatants in
society. The nature of peace keeping
operations has evolved rapidly in
recent years, and the established
principles and practices of peace
keeping responded flexibly to new
demands. Yet peace keeping operations
have been a mixture of failures
(Rwanda, Somalia) and successes
(Mozambique, East Timor). In my
talk I will examine the question
whether there is a crisis in peacekeeping.
I will further look at the conditions
necessary for successful peace keeping,
the role of external actors, the
reintegration of combatants and
refugees into society. The challenge
in peacekeeping is always one of
how to aid in the creation of a
capable state one in which peace
and security are guaranteed over
a sustained period. Without peace,
there can be no development and
without development the risks of
war, disease and refugees and displacement
are substantially increased.
|
Latin
American Art from the Permanent Collection
|
The changing images
of Latin American art include a
wide range of dramatic colors. Stark
photographs by Mario Algaze capture
the play of strong light and shadow
and contrast with the richly colored
textiles from Guatemala, contemporary
paintings and sculptures. Although
the changing images of Latin America
are the subjects of this exhibition,
the continuity of the art and the
blurring of cross influences and
traditions are also evident.
The exhibition includes
objects from 500 A.D. to the present
and a vast geographic region including
Central America, South America and
North American urban centers like
Chicago and Miami, Florida. The
various art forms represented are
West Mexican ceramic sculpture,
photographs by Mario Algaze, Guatemalan
textiles, jewelry, molas and various
folk arts.
|
Dr.
Hernando de Soto, Director, Institute
for Liberty and Democracy in Lima, Peru
|
Hernando de Soto will
speak about the importance of establishing
legal land titles for residents
in developing areas. He will argue
that the poor have assets, but that
these assets are not easily traded
due to the lack of land titles.
If legal titling is established,
he argues, a number of benefits
will result, including job creation,
less homelessness, higher school
enrollments, increased political
participation, better tax collection
and less dependence upon foreign
capital. De Soto supports his arguments
with the results of a $77 million
dollar World Bank project conducted
in the 1990s, which resulted in
a net benefit of $9.4 billion dollars.
|
Dr.
Antonio Curet
|
Despite
the fact that the Caribbean was
the first area successfully colonized
by Europeans, few people among the
general public have even the basic
knowledge of its ancient history.
This talk presents a general overview
of the ancient history of this region,
emphasizing cultural, social, economic,
and demographic aspects, from the
first inhabitants to the first European
colonizers. The presentation includes
empirical information and brief
discussions on the main questions
and debates addressed by Caribbean
archaeologists.
|
Dr.
Flávia Bastos, Associate Professor
and Director of Graduate Studies in Art
Education, School of Art, University of
Cincinnati.
|
This
presentation will critique the dialogue
between place-specific and international
influences in the work of contemporary
Brazilian artists. Looking at fine
art, indigenous and popular art
traditions, Bastos will outline
multifaceted dimensions of Brazil's
contemporary culture. Departing
from her own experiences as a native
of Southern Brazil, she will contextualize
Brazilian art production in terms
of the country's history, economic
and political development, and ethnic
origin.
|
Dr.
William L. Partridge, Professor of Anthropology
and Human and Organizational Development,
Vanderbilt University
|
Dr.
Partridge will be speaking on the
humanitarian consequences of civil
war in Colombia.
This presentation is part of the
Center for American and World Cultures’
2004 lecture series entitled “Homeless
in the World: A Global Crisis.”
|
Dr.
Marjorie Agosín
|
Exile
Diaspora and identity have defined
human experience, especially in
the 20th century, often called the
century of refugees. In her lecture,
Dr. Agosín will speak about
the meaning of identity and belonging,
the importance of keeping one’s
mother tongue, as well as the liberating
possibilities that travel offers
in these uncertain times. “Cartographies”
explores the golden possibilities
of travel as a way of understanding
otherness, foreignness and, mostly,
ourselves. She will also speak about
her own experience as a Chilean
exile.
|
Sandra
Fernández, Ecuadorian artist, SUNY-Buffalo,
NY
|
Her “Cucas/Paper Doll Series”
will be on exhibit in the Hiestand
Gallery during the month of October,
and she will give a lecture on her
work.
Ms. Fernández
explains that,
“…The
Cucas/Paper Doll Series confronts…feelings
of vulnerability, rage, powerlessness,
and loneliness…They try
to project upon situations, and
circumstances that could happen
to any woman growing up. Each
work is an attempt to create a
story about this, to establish
a visual form of communication
of what my personal relationship
to the world is. Paper dolls and
photographs from my childhood,
lace, embroidery, weaving and
basketry all come together in
a synthesis of textured studies
of skirts, blouses and garments.
Texture is “painted”
with machine and hand stitches,
for sewing is firmly associated
with personal memories of my grandmother
and all those women who brought
me up. Each Cuca celebrates my
cultural identity and experiences
of emotional struggle as a child.
These are small works, built upon
layers of materials that invite
the viewer to take the time to
investigate and unravel their
meaning.
My work,
however, is not localized to women’s
craft but rather expands and takes
ownership of materials and scale
that at one time were considered
part of the male domain…”
|
Jolene
Smith, Executive Director, Free The Slaves
 |
|
There
are more people enslaved today than
at any other time in human history.
Within the past five years, the
issue modern slavery has gone from
being virtually undetected and ignored
to becoming a burgeoning cause celebre.
In the United States, politicians
from both political parties, government
agencies, faith communities, social
service providers and the mass media
have highlighted in particular the
issue of human trafficking, the
modern-day slave trade. Human trafficking
has been brought to the American
public eye through high profile
venues including all the major newspapers,
primetime TV news magazine shows,
top-rated talk shows, and recently,
various public statements by President
Bush, including during two addresses
to the United Nations General Assembly.
What is going largely unnoticed,
however, is that Americans are supporting
slavery every day through the products
they buy. Slave-made goods are illegal
in the United States, yet they constantly
cross American borders and make
their way into American homes. In
the next wave of consumer campaigning
and corporate social responsibility,
consumers and the anti-slavery movement
are now calling for full transparency
in product supply chains, for ‘slave-made
goods’ to be available for
consumers and for slavery to be
rooted out at its source, regardless
of where it is occurring. University
students are at the forefront of
this next chapter of the anti-slavery
movement, whose mantra is that “Slavery
is too high a price to pay for cheap
goods.”
|
Dr.
Hays Cummins, Professor
of Interdisciplinary Studies, Western
College Program, Miami University
|
Dr.
Cummins has spent over a dozen field
seasons in Costa Rica. He will speak
about current Costa Rican environmental
concerns including land use, species
loss, deforestation, conservation
and climate change in this tiny
Central American country.
|
Forum-Debate:
“Latin American Immigration: Good
or Bad for our Nation?”
| Dr.
Josiah Heyman,
Professor of Anthropology, University
of Texas-El Paso |
Altagracia
Sánchez-Ruiz, Americorps
City Year, Philadelphia |
Baldemar
Velásquez,
President, Farm Labor Organizing
Committee |
The
forum will begin with short talks
by Josiah Heyman, Altagracia Sanchez
and Baldemar Velasquez, followed
by brief statements prepared by
representatives of various student
groups including Students for Social
Justice, College Republicans, College
Democrats, Latin and American Students,
Black Students Association, Business
Students Associations, and others.
The second half of the event will
be a forum involving questions and
comments from the audience and responses
by invited speakers and student
group representatives.
Josiah Heyman’s
talk is titled Inside-Out: Connecting
U.S. Immigration/Host Community
Issues with U.S. Relationships with
Latin America
Altagracia Sanchez’s talk
is: Coming of Age in Two Worlds:
Caribbean Immigrant Youth and Minority
Activism in the U.S.
Baldemar Velasquez’s talk
is titled Remembering the Alamo:
Latino Perspectives on Immigration,
Presidential Politics, and U.S.
Economic Imperatives
|
Dr.
Jorge Cañizares-Esguerra,
Department of History, SUNY-Buffalo
 |
|
This
talk Iberianizes the Puritans of
early-modern Massachusetts. Cañizares-Esguerra
argues that like their Iberian cousins
to the South, the Puritans wholeheartedly
embraced knightly and crusading
discourses of Reconquista. The enemies
of the Puritan, to be sure, were
the Indian "Moors," but
more important, the Devil himself.
According to this view, the Devil
had allegedly enjoyed absolute sovereignty
over the American continent for
some 1,500 years. Iberians and Puritans
arrived in the New World with the
mission of driving Satan out of
the continent, engaging therefore
in a long-lasting war of attrition.
Among Satan's minions in the continent
there stood a host of demons in
the landscape and nature. Demons
had control over America's weather
(causing lightening and storms during
Atlantic crossings), plants (creating
poisonous plants), and animals (possessing
animals, snakes in particular).
Cañizares-Esguerra studies
early modern European perceptions
of the American landscape both in
Iberia and British America and finds
these two sensibilities toward nature
remarkably similar. In fact the
entire Puritan discourse of the
"wilderness" and the "City
of the Hill" are hardly original.
They were all derivative from much
earlier Iberian colonizing discourses.
Cañizares-Esguerra’s
talk is part of his forthcoming
book Toward a Wider Atlantic:
Nature Narratives and Identities,
1500-1900 to be published by
Stanford in 2005.
|
Dr.
Nalini Nadkarni,
Evergreen State College, Co-founder of
the International Canopy Network, Costa
Rica
 |
|
Hefner
Lecture: “Beyond Tarzan and
Jane: New Perspectives in the Emerging
Field of Forest Canopy Research”
The field of forest canopy research
- the world of rainforest treetops
-has produced new tools for access
and measurement. The use of experimental
approaches, satellite imagery, and
computer visualizations has opened
our eyes to the important functions
of the forest canopy in maintaining
diversity, stabilizing global climate,
and providing sustainable resources
for humans. Worldwide efforts are
now underway to document this previously
unknown world of our planet.
The Hefner Lecture was established
in memory of Robert A. Hefner, former
professor and chair of the Department
of Zoology. Presented by the Department
of Zoology and the Hefner Zoology
Museum, the Lecture enjoys co-sponsorship
from across the University, including
the Center for Environmental Education
and Natural History, the Department
of Botany and the Center for American
and World Cultures, among others.
For more information on the Hefner
Lecture, contact Lisa Rosenberger
at the Hefner Zoology Museum at
529-6086.
Technical
lecture: “Development of the
Research Ambassador Program to Disseminate
Science to Non-Scientists: Case
Studies from Forest Canopy Research”
Disseminating research results to
the general public is a critical
part of the scientific process,
but academic researchers are often
unrewarded for these efforts. Dr.
Nadkarni describes a new program
to provide incentives for scientists
in all fields to communicate their
results to non-traditional audiences.
She focuses on case studies from
the field of forest canopy research,
particularly the effects of global
climate change on epiphyte communities
of tropical cloud forests.
Co-sponsored
by the Center for Environmental
Education and Natural History and
the Department of Botany.
|
Donna
Gabaccia, Mellon
Professor of History at the University
of Pittsburgh
|
Most
Americans are familiar with popular
images of their country as a nation
of immigrants, symbolized by the
Statue of Liberty. Few realize that
vast international migrations have
contributed to the building of many
other modern nations. Argentina,
France, Australia, Canada and Switzerland
have all, at times had higher proportions
(if not absolute numbers) for foreigners
in their midst. Why has the U.S.,
almost alone among modern nations,
so highlighted immigration in its
tales of nation-building? Can it
provide a model of cultural pluralism
for other nations around the world?
|
Professor
David Bathrick, Cornell
University
|
Professor
Bathrick's lecture will explore
the Nazi construction of Chaplin
as a Jew in the Third Reich, taboos
about comedy, and the politics of
American isolationism in the 1930s
and 1940s.
David Bathrick, Jacob Gould Schurman
Professor of Theatre, Film &Dance
and German Studies at Cornell University,
has published more than 60 articles
and book chapters on modem German
literature, cinema, politics, and
theory. His most recent book The
Powers of Speech: The Politics of
Culture in the GDR (U of Nebraska
Press, 1995) received the German
Studies Association/ DAAD Book of
the Year Prize in 1996. Professor
Bathrick is a co-editor and co-founder
(1973-) of New German Critique,
the premier joumal of German Studies
in North America. His current book
project, Rescreening
the Holocaust, explores Holocaust
cinema from 1940 through the early
1970s.
|
Dr.
Clyde Snow,
Emeritus Professor Anthropology, University
of Oklahoma
 |
|
Dr
Clyde Snow is a leading forensic
anthropologist. He holds degrees
from New Mexico Military Institute
(Roswell), New Mexico University,
Texas Technical University, and
a PhD in anthropology from University
of Arizona. He began his career
with the Civil Aero Medical Institute
(CAMI) as an examiner of wrecked
planes.
In 1985 Dr. Snow provided forensic
evidence that helped an Argentine
court bring paramilitary members
involved in the 1970s murders of
nearly 20,000 Argentine citizens
to justice. He later headed a team
of forensic experts identifying
human remains of over 200,000 Guatemalan
citizens killed in its protracted
36-year civil war, and has worked
in almost every country in Latin
America and many others around the
world. His work is painstaking because
the murder victims lack important
information such as medical records
necessary for such a mission. Dr.
Snow is one of the chief advisors
at the Institute for International
Criminal Investigations. He is affiliated
with the United Nations Human Rights
Commission and involved with Americas
Watch.
|
Cynthia
Bogard, Associate
Professor, Hofstra University
|
Bogard
will compare what constitutes homelessness
in the United States with the phenomenon
in other countries and examine where
this era of homelessness comes from
and how homelessness is dealt with
here and abroad. The presentation
will also explore American individualism
and how long-held values about poverty
and work influence the ways in which
we deal with the problems of homelessness.
As America's poorest of the poor,
homeless people face a world of
increasingly complex economic realities
and narrowing choices. What role
should citizens and their government
play in assisting homeless people's
survival?
Please
click here
to read the complete paper.
|
Steve
Walker, Refugee Services
Program, Ohio
Department of Job and Family Services
 |
“Refugees
in Ohio” |
Who
is a refugee and where do refugees
come from? How are they resettled
in the United States? Who provides
assistance? In this presentation,
Walker will examine these and other
questions pertaining to the problems
and obstacles faced by refugees
with special attention to Ohio.
Successful resettlements will also
be discussed.
|
Don Whitehead,
Director, National
Coalition for the Homeless
|
According
to Whitehead, housing is a human
rights issue; everyone is entitled
to stable, comfortable, and safe
housing. In this presentation, Whitehead
will provide action strategies that
will provide for: greater housing
assistance in urban, suburban, and
rural areas, emergency rental assistance
for families facing eviction, stable
housing for schoolchildren, and
greater housing assistance for the
elderly, disabled, veterans, and
individuals with HIV/AIDS. He will
also discuss various measures to
guarantee and expand economic and
health security to the homeless,
as well as provisions to insure
that patients and other high risk
individuals do not return to homelessness.
|
Linn Song
 |
“Border
Crossings: Diaspora, Environment
and Homelessness of the ‘Other’
”
|
If a local or cultural identity
is defined by a set of shared ideals,
values and beliefs, which determine
a way of looking at the world, then
it is also about shaping and regulating
it through the establishment and
defense of “territory”.
Territorialization is the cultural
process of regulating not only physical
space, but social interaction as
well. Laws, customs and territorial
behavior are defenses against the
“Other”, against the
threat to personal security, self-esteem
and self- and cultural-identity
brought about by diversity and a
perceived loss of control and power.
This presentation uses 19th/20th
century German landscape painting,
cognitive mapping, and digital photography
to examine Germany as a case study
to illuminate the ties between landscape
and the built environment of cities
and places to the manipulation and
sustenance of exclusionary practices
in politics, image making, history
and cultural representations that
are contributing to a growing number
of “homeless” in the
21st century.
|
Lonnie
Holley
 |

|
"A
Hand is a Hand When It's Helping
Someone" |
Lonnie Holley, evicted
from his home in Birmingham, Alabama,
will speak about how is personal
experiences of homelessness have
influenced his art. A leading “outsider
artist”, Holley’s first
works of art were sandstone carvings.
He now paints and makes assemblages
from cast-off metal and various
other found materials. He will tell
his own story through images of
his art. "My art is helping
the mind to realize the depths to
which we can go, and helping people
in the first stage of learning how
to help yourself, be yourself and
love yourself."
|
Anita Fábos,
Refugee Studies, University
of East London
 |
"Forced
Migration and Human Rights
in the Middle East" |
As
a region beset by political instability
and repression of opposition groups,
widespread discrimination towards
ethnic and religious minorities,
and war and conflict, the Middle
East and North Africa region (MENA)
is home to the largest numbers of
refugees in the world. Significant
flows of refugees and other forced
migrants within MENA include Palestinians,
Sudanese, Kurds, Lebanese, Yemenis,
Iraqis, and Iranians. In addition,
there have been huge numbers of
refugees from Afghanistan to Iran.
This presentation outlines some
of the main flows and characteristics
of forced migration in the MENA
region in the context of changing
international refugee policies,
ongoing conflict and instability,
shifting patterns of local and transnational
practices, and the unresolved Palestinian
question. I discuss region-specific
challenges to addressing the vulnerability
of refugees and other forced migrants
in terms of the problem of Palestinian
refugees, an overall lack of rights
for non-citizens, the urban nature
of the refugee situation in the
region, and the transnational circumstances
of most forced migrants today. The
specific dimensions of vulnerability
of forced migrants in MENA are characterized
as relating to lack of ethnic and
minority rights, gender insecurity,
and poor support for children. The
presentation highlights the ambiguous
distinction between forced and voluntary
migration from the Middle East,
a human rights issue that is particularly
relevant in light of the ‘war
on terror’ discourse in North
America, Europe, and Australia.
|
Dr.
Katherine O'Donnell,
Professor and Chair, Department of Sociology,
Hartwick College
 |
“Walking
in Women’s Land: Lessons
on Building North-South Solidarity
from Chiapas, Mexico” |
This talk explores
transnational organizing for economic
justice, human rights, indigenous
sovereignty, and women's health
and the tensions which emerge between
grassroots movements, international
actors, and NGOS in the context
of Chiapas, Mexico. It identifies
security as a multifaceted project
with economic, political, social,
health, cultural, gendered, and
environmental dimensions, all of
which are interconnected and embodied
in indigenous organizing, accords,
and worldview as collective rights
and argues that security, in part,
is forged through international
and local NGO networking but fundamentally
through grassroots movements which
emphasize social justice, economic
solidarity, democracy, and people-centered
development. Activist ethnography
and solidarity work inform the analysis
of the case of Chiapas, Mexico,
where threats to indigenous women's
security are rooted in neoliberal
development, systemic racism, and
sexism. Such threats manifest themselves
in poverty, political exclusion,
and militarization. It is perhaps
in the arena of women's health where
the potentially lethal intersection
of these forces is demonstrated
most forcefully. To challenge militarization,
globalization, and political exclusion,
a vibrant, global, civil society
movement has been created, north
and south. Personal experience with
women's transnational organizing
and alliance building, models for
solidarity, and key challenges to
forming long term successful and
sustainable relationships North
and South are presented.
|
Jolom
Mayaetik Cooperative
|
Click
here
for information about the Jolom
Mayaetik Cooperative.
|
Dr.
Premlata Shankar,
Assistant Professor of Pediatrics, The
Center for Blood Research, Harvard
Medical School
 |
“RNA
Interference: A New Tool Against
Viral Agents of Bioterrorism” |
With
the increase in global travel and
commerce and ever present threat
of bioterroism, infectious diseases
pose new threats to world survival.
In the U.S, this is exemplified
by the contamination of our postal
service with anthrax, as well as
the increase in the incidence of
West Nile Virus infections.
The search for novel therapies for
use against these infectious diseases
is one means that we can thwart
bioterrorism. The recent discovery
of the evolutionarily conserved
gene silencing mechanism of RNA
interference (RNAi) has ushered
in a revolution in the field of
biology. Introduction of synthetic
double stranded RNA molecules called
short interfering RNA that have
identical sequences to any specific
gene triggers RNAi, which destroys
the target RNA and silences gene
expression. We are harnessing RNAi
as a treatment strategy against
West Nile, Dengue and and Japanese
encephalitis, which belong to a
family of mosquito-borne viruses
called Flaviviruses. These viruses,
which are classified as potential
agents for bioterrorism can cause
severe diseases with fatal complications
such as encephalitis and hemorrhagic
shock. We have identified several
candidate siRNAs that attack gene
sequences common to the three viruses.
Our results show that these siRNAs
are not only highly efficient at
suppressing all three viruses in
test tubes, they also prevent JE
and WN encephalitis in mice. These
results demonstrate the potential
of RNAi in treating viral and genetic
diseases in humans.
|
Nego
Gato Music & Dance Ensemble
|
The
Nego Gato Music and Dance Ensemble
has been bringing the soothing spiritual
dances of Candomble, the acrobatic
and explosive martial dances of
Maculele and Capoeira and the festival
that is Samba music to audiences
throughout the United States for
the past 20 years. Founded and led
by Jose Sena, known professionally
as Nego Gato (Black Cat), the Ensemble
brings the energy and vibrancy of
Salvador da Bahia, Brazil, to Miami
University and will leave audiences
a little worldlier while dancing,
laughing and having a good time
in the spirit of a Brazilian party.
|
Stephen
Heck
|
Beauty
in Tragedy: Displaced Peoples of
Western Africa A Photographic Essay
by Stephen F. Heck
During
the first semester of my first year
at Miami in 2002 my older sister,
who graduated from Davidson College
in may of 2004, called me and told
me that she had applied for a grant
to go to Ghana and study the language
problems among refugee populations,
and asked if I would go with her.
After agreeing the first thought
that came into my mind was to photograph
(a hobby of mine in high school)
the trip, and try to capture the
emotion and the beauty in the plight
of the displaced peoples living
in a UNHCR run refugee camp called
Krisnan. For eight weeks, my sister
and I were the only non-refugees
living in a camp of 500 African
refugees. We lived in a basic standardized
housing unit sharing in the lives
of the refugees. Upon my return
to the US, I realized that I had
an extremely unique opportunity,
and that sharing my experiences
was my obligation as a citizen of
the world.
|
Mosaic
Youth Theatre of Detroit
|
Founded in 1992, Mosaic
is widely recognized as a national
model for youth development through
the arts, bringing together diverse
young people from over 50 schools
in Metro Detroit for professional
artistic training and development.
Mosaic's breathtaking all-youth
theatrical and musical performances
have toured throughout the country,
including performances at the Kennedy
Center and the White House, and
to Europe, Asia and Africa. The
Mosaic Singers, the musical branch
of Mosaic Youth Theatre of Detroit,
have opened for Al Green, Pete Seeger
and the Temptations. More than 95%
of Mosaic alums have gone on to
college. For more information call
(313) 872-6910, or write Mosaic
Youth Theatre of Detroit on the
campus of University Prep High School
- 610 Antoinette - Detroit, Michigan
48202. The phone number is (313)
872-6910 and the fax number is (313)
872-6920.
|
Esera
Tuaolo
|
For nine years, Esera
Tuaolo excelled in the N.F.L. as
a defensive lineman: he played for
five different teams and went to
Super Bowl XXXIII with the Atlanta
Falcons. He played with some of
football’s greatest, including
Brett Farve, John Randle and Jack
Del Rio. He even sang the national
anthem in uniform at a nationally
televised Monday night game as a
rookie and at the 1999 Pro-Bowl.
But as a gay man in the hyper-masculine
culture of professional football,
Tuaolo was forced to hide his sexuality.
The secret crippled him, leading
him to drink excessively and contemplate
suicide. It also hindered his football
achievements, as he felt that if
he were too good a player, he would
be exposed as a homosexual. He led
a double life that deeply depressed
him, but which he now looks back
on with a new perspective. During
this difficult time, he persevered
by following his mother’s
example and maintaining his strong
spiritual faith.
|
David
Haines, Associate
Professor of Anthropology, George Mason
University, past
chair of the American Anthropological
Association's Committee on Refugees and
Immigrants
|
David W. Haines was born in the
United States in 1947 but moved
with his family to Japan in 1957.
His experience includes translator/interpreter
and rural development specialist
in Vietnam, graduate work in Southeast
Asian Studies and Anthropology from
the American University, working
for the U.S. refugee resettlement
program, and university teaching.
Haines’ research interests
lie in three general areas: the
structures of kinship and locality
(both in the United States and in
Vietnam); the dynamics and problematics
of contemporary migration; and the
processes of governance. He has
published widely in all three areas,
and on the social implications of
computerization, the distinctive
mode of policy seen in the state-based
workers' compensation program, the
history of the U.S. refugee resettlement
program, and the anthropological
research on refugees, immigrants,
and displacees.
Haines’ talk
will explore how the American experience
with refugees over the past sixty-five
years has ranged from acceptance
to rejection, from well-wrought
program efforts to botched policy
decisions, from humanitarian concerns
to crass politics. All this makes
a consideration of the American
experience with refugees highly
complex, but it is also makes it
useful as a window on how morality,
rationality, and expedience interpenetrate
more broadly in American institutions,
attitudes, and social interactions.
This presentation offers an account
of refugees and America that deals
with these broader issues through
an examination of the range of moral
commitments Americans have toward
refugees, the practical challenges
faced in the domestic resettlement
of refugees, and the broader lessons
that emerge in considering the relationship
between America and refugees. The
starting point for the discussion
is 1939 and the ending point 2004
a period of time that illuminates
positive developments in U.S. refugee
programs and also a continuing tendency
to turn against refugees in times
of political uncertainty. That latter
tendency is especially clear in
the sharp reduction in refugee admissions
that occurred after September 11,
2001.
Check out these volumes
that Haines edited on immigration
Illegal Immigration
in America: A Reference Handbook
by David W. Haines (Editor), Karen
E. Rosenblum (Editor), 1999. Greenwood
Press.
Manifest Destinies:
Americanizing Immigrants and Internationalizing
Americans
by David W. Haines (Editor), Carol
A. Mortland (Editor), 2000. Praeger
Publishers.
For more
information:
ASIJ
Libraries, David Haines Bibliography
Manifest
Destinies
|
Dr.
Arachu Castro,
Academic Director of the Program in Infectious
Disease and Social Change in the Department
of Social Medicine, Harvard University
 |
"Between
Poverty and a Hard Place:
Haiti's Environment and AIDS" |
Health conditions
in Haiti are among the worst in
the world. All of Haiti's public
health indices are poor, and it
is not coincidental that Haiti has
the highest incidence of HIV in
the Americas. Health conditions
are aggravated by structural violence,
including lack of food and water--which,
in turn, accelerates the progression
of diseases such as AIDS and tuberculosis.
Haiti's destitute rural poor typically
have no other options for survival
than resorting to burning trees
and harvesting the residual charcoal
to sell at market. As land becomes
increasingly exhausted and scarce,
more and more peasants abandon agriculture
for the lure of wage-labor in urban
areas. But difficult living conditions
in urban slums increase the risk
of becoming infected with HIV, to
be left untreated, and to return--sick
with AIDS and unemployed--to the
original rural setting.
To
read Dr. Castro's article, Understanding
and Addressing AIDS-Related Stigma:
From Anthropological Theory to Clinical
Practice in Haiti, please click
here.
To
read Pearls of the Antilles? Public
Health in Haiti and Cuba, please
click here.
|
Amir
Hussain, Professor
of Religion, California State Northridge
|
"A Message
on the Wind": Learning about
Islam through Audio and Visual Materials
This presentation
discusses the incorporation of visual
and aural material into courses
on Islam. Many people who are interested
in learning about Islam find it
useful to supplement textual material
with audio and visual materials.
This presentation, part of the morning
session on these issues, will concentrate
on the use of comic books, videos,
and music cds. It will begin with
an examination of how network television
(which is often the sole information
source for many of us) constructs
Islam and Muslim lives. Since 9/11,
many people have learned about Islam
only through watching their televisions.
However, network television news
are concerned with ratings and viewer
appeal, and unlike teachers, are
not in the business of education.
This presentation will be of interest
to those who want to use other sources
to learn about Muslims.
|
Rubina
Ramji, Department
of Classics and Religious Studies, University
of Ottawa
|
The Visual Subjugation
of One Sex: The Invention and Exploitation
of the Islamic Woman
For decades, the West
has viewed advocates of Islam as
being barbaric, violent and confrontational,
particularly in its treatment of
women. The custom of veiling and
perceived "oppressive"
position of women in Islam have
come to be perceived as proof of
the inferiority of Islam and the
justification for the West to undermine
Muslim religion and society.
The movie Not Without
My Daughter was released just as
the Gulf War was beginning. Without
any previous major representations
of Islamic religion available, this
media perspective of Islamic life
and culture circulated widely to
a broad audience, reinforcing the
narrow view of "civilized Americans"
versus the "savage Middle Easterners"
who oppress their women. This perspective
continues to reinforce itself and
will be demonstrated in such recent
movies as Aladdin, Executive Decision,
and Three Kings.
Considering that popular
visual forms, such as popular film,
television, and newspapers support
prevalent attitudes, I wish to illustrate
how popular culture's reflection
on cultural stereotypes racializes
and genders representations of Islamic
life, culture and religion.
|
Daniel
Varisco, Associate
Professor of Anthropology, Hofstra University
|
Muslims Online,
Participant Webservation, and CyberIslam
Over the past decade
thousands of websites have been
created by and about Muslims. This
new CyberIslam offers opportunities
for Muslims to create virtual communities
online, often along a sectarian
path. Mainstream organizations are
represented, but so are marginalized
and even persecuted groups like
the Ahmadiyya. A greater variety
of viewpoints, including the most
extremist, can be found online than
in any other place. In the past
year the internet has facilitated
visual propaganda in the warfare
of terrorism, whether made-for-video
postings of beheadings or scenes
of mosque destruction on al-Jazeera.
Anthropologists, who traditionally
conduct ethnographic fieldwork in
Muslim societies cannot ignore the
impact of cyberspace in defining
what people think about Islam and
how Muslims practice. But the creation
of imagined and interactive virtual
communities of Muslims also calls
for a kind of participant webservation
in which the “field”
now comes to the researcher’s
desktop.
|
Geneive
Abdo, Center
for Muslim-Christian Understanding, Georgetown
University
|
Representations
of/by Muslims in the U.S. Print
Media
Since
the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the
media has been the leading force
in increasing racism towards Muslims
and Islam. Opinion polls show that
Americans have a more negative opinion
about Islam and Muslims now than
shortly after 9/11. Television networks,
such as Fox News, are the worst
offenders in their reporting that
creates the impression that radical
Islam is the only interpretation
of Islam. But even coverage on more
mainstream networks, such as CNN,
is also biased. For example, the
Palestinian-Israeli conflict is
often reported primarily through
an Israeli perspective. Newspapers
also tend to highlight stories on
Islam by focusing on suspects accused
of terrorism-related crimes and
the violence committed by Muslim
extremists in the Middle East. Few
articles are written about how the
majority of Muslims live around
the world. The result of this media
bias has caused American Muslims
to conclude they can never fully
assimilate into American society
and Muslims abroad to become anti-American
and to protest U.S. government policies
toward the Islamic world.
|
Pedro
Noguera
 |
|
A
professor in the Steinhardt School
of Education at New York University,
Pedro Noguera is also an urban sociologist
whose scholarship and research focuses
on the ways in which schools are
influenced by social and economic
conditions in the urban environment.
Pedro Noguera presents a dynamic
and profound perspective on the
issues of racial inequality and
diversity in our schools. One of
America's leading experts on education
reform, he takes your audience through
the challenges faced by schools
and students trying to create a
safe, secure, and academically rewarding
environment. Noguera tackles problems
such as race relations within schools,
school violence, desegregation,
and school vouchers. He demonstrates
the problems America faces in providing
equal opportunity in education,
and provides some of the solutions
that are working across America.
Described as a "very charismatic
speaker of great oratorical gifts,"
Professor Noguera possesses the
rare ability to translate social
theory into concise, hip language
with emotional impact. He inevitably
captures both the minds and the
hearts of his listeners.
|
Marian
Wright Edelman
 |
"Investing
in [children] is not a national
luxury or a national choice.
It's a national necessity.
If the foundation of your
house is crumbling, you don't
say you can't afford to fix
it while you're building astronomically
expensive fences to protect
it from outside enemies. The
issue is not are we going
to pay -- it's are we going
to pay now, up front, or are
we going to pay a whole lot
more later on."
Marian Wright Edelman |
Founder and president of the Children's
Defense Fund (CDF), Marian Wright
Edelman has been an advocate for
disadvantaged Americans for her
entire professional career. Under
her leadership, the Washington-based
CDF has become a strong national
voice for children and families.
The mission of the Children's Defense
Fund is to Leave No Child Behind
and to ensure every child a Healthy
Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start,
a Safe Start, and a Moral Start
in life with the support of caring
families and communities. Learning
from the example of her parents,
Marian Wright Edelman has always
fought for equality, freedom, and
civil rights.
|
Ann
Finger, Disabilities
Author and Advocate
|
Do you know how many signers of
the Declaration of Independence
had disabilities? Who were they?
How do we know or not know? Is the
information purposefully hidden
or simply unacknowledged? Is that
good or bad? Please
join us to explore these and other
questions.
|
Robert
Reid-Pharr,
Professor of English, Graduate Center
of the City University of New York
|
Robert Reid-Pharr is the author
of numerous works including Conjugal
Union: The Body, the House, the
Black American (Oxford, 1999),
and more recently, Black Gay
Man (NYU, 2001) . His writing
has appeared in Fuse, Afterimage,
Gay Community News, The
Washington Blade, New York
Native and Outweek.
He lives in Washington, D.C.
|
Claudia
Stevens
|
"A
Table Before Me'" is a musical
drama in one act created by Claudia
Stevens for her one-woman performance
as pianist/singer/actor. A performance
tour de force, with Stevens playing
a variety of characters, the piece
conveys the terror and turmoil experienced
by her mother's family during the
Nazi takeover of Austria in 1938.
PBS/NPR reviewer Cathy Lewis called
it "one of the most profound
theater moments of recent times."
Ultimately a
tribute to her mother's quiet courage
and endurance, the piece concludes
with Stevens taking her mother's
place, "singing her" in
the role of heroine denied to her
sixty years earlier.
"A Table Before Me" has
special significance in the present
climate of anxiety over public safety
and fear of "the enemy within."
It is being presented widely --
under a variety of auspices -- to
address and promote discussion of
potential violation of personal
freedoms in the pursuit of security.
|
Audrey
Smedley, Professor
Emerita, Virginia Commonwealth
University
|
Two
major issues of North American historiography
have been when the concept of “race”
appeared, and what was its relationship
to slavery. These questions raise
both epistemological and methodological
problems that might best be answered
via an anthropological perspective.
This paper argues that “race”
and racism did not exist before
the institutionalization of slavery,
and that colonial North America
had a window of opportunity to evolve
as a “multi-colored”
society but not a “multi-racial”
one. The methodology requires examining
the ethnographic evidence of actual
relationships among populations
we call races before the appearance
of laws establishing slavery for
Africans only. This evidence is
compared with descriptions of relationships
among blacks, whites, and Indians,
after slavery, when all peoples
were ostensibly again free.
|
Gary
Wheeler
|
The
Hopi call them paiyakyamu, others
from various Pueblos call them koshare,
the sacred clown. To many American
Indians the sacred clown provides
a ritual of reversal, challenging
the normal social and cosmic of
things, reflecting the original
chaos that preceded the creation
of the world. The actions of the
clowns may be seen as ritualistic
or humorous, mocking and reverential.
This presentation focuses on specific
visual artists whose work seems
to embody similar reversal rituals
and messages. The power of the paintings
depend on elements of surprise,
humor, and social critique commonly
found in the actions of sacred clowns.
Professor Wheeler will show examples
of typical work by several contemporary
painters and discuss how they serve
in the capacity of social koshares,
sacred clowns.
|
Arturo
Arias, Director and Professor of
Latin American Studies at the University
of Redlands, past President of the Latin
American Studies Association
|
Arias is an internationally
known scholar, author, and screenwriter.
His work in literary theory, criticism
and Central American politics includes
several publications on the Rigoberta
Menchú controversy. From
2001-2003 Arias was president of
the Latin American Studies Association.
Arias has written 15 books, 38 journal
articles, and 47 book chapters.
Two-time recipient of the literature
award Premio Casa de Las Americas,
he has published 15 fictional pieces
(many appearing in Spanish and English),
and two film scripts. Arias will
lead a discussion after the screening
of the film El Norte, for which
he wrote the screenplay.
Suggested Readings
to prepare for Arias’ visit:
"We Thought it Was Only the
Men They Would Kill" an article
appropriate for undergraduate courses
about the atrocities during the
Guatemalan Civil War. (request copies
from Susan Paulson).
John Sayles's movie
"Men With Guns,” a fictionalized
portrayal of Guatemalan civil strife.
Arias important critical
book called Gestos ceremoniales,
narrativa centroamericana 1960-1990.
The Tattooed Soldier,
by Hector Tobar, a gripping novel
about relations among Guatemalan
immigrants in Los Angeles, on which
Arias has worked.
Arias has published
numerous powerful novels that deal
with issues of human rights, revolution,
civil war and Central American diaspora.
Check out Rattlesnake,
After the Bombs, and Sopa
de Caracol, also published
in Spanish as Cascabel,
Después de las bombas,
etc.
Please
click here
for more information about Arturo
Arias.
|
Sandy
Osawa
|
Sandra
Sunrising Osawa. Sandy Osawa, one
of America's premier American Indian
film producers and directors, is
known for documentaries that capture
the heartbeat of contemporary Indian
life and advocate for American Indian
rights. Her award-winning credits
include "Lighting the 7th Fire"
about the spearfishing struggles
of the Chippewa of Wisconsin, "On
& Off the Res with Charlie Hill,"
a profile of the Native American
comedian, "Usual and Accustomed
Places", about treaty rights
in the Pacific Northwest, and "Pepper's
Pow Wow,"about the legendary
Native American jazz musician Jim
Pepper that aired on PBS. Osawa's
works have screened at countless
film festivals including Sundance
and have shown on public and network
television.
Sandy Osawa
is a member of the Makah Indian
Nation in Washington State; she
heads her own production company,
Upstream Productions in Seattle.
|
Dr.
Jonathan Hess,
Professor of German and Director of the
Jewish Center at University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill
|
Jonathan
Hess is Professor of German, Adjunct
Professor of Religious Studies,
and Director of the Jewish Studies
Center at University of North Carolina,
Chapel Hill. He has published widely
on discourses of esthetics and politics
in the German Enlightenment and
on German-Jewish culture and politics
in the 18th and 19th centuries.
His most recent book, Germans,
Jews and the Claims of Modernity
(New Haven: Yale University Press,
2002) has been praised as "a
brilliant and challenging study
that rejects assimilation as the
model of Jewish experience in Germany,
and demonstrates instead the rebellious
and subversive quality of modern
Jewish thought" (Susanna Heschel).
Professor Hess is currendy working
on a book on German-Jewish literature
and identity from the 1830s to the
First World War.
|
Tania
Forte, Department
of Anthropology, MacCalester College
|
Dr.
Forte has worked for the past decade
on ways in which people are moving
about, and trying to create identities
and homes, in areas of Israeli/Palestine
Conflict. Dr. Forte’s ethnographic
interpretations are illuminated
by refugee and transnational experiences
of her own family, encompassing
Egypt, England, France, and Israel.
Currently she teaches Anthropology
at MaCalester College in Minnesota.
| 2002 |
“Shopping
in Jenin: Women, Homes and Political
Persons in the Galilee.”
In: City and Society,
13(2) January 2002. (PDF
version available from Susan
Paulson) |
| 2002 |
"Covering Conflict."
Anthropology News, November
2002 |
| 2003 |
“Consuming Projects
in Uncertain Times: making selves
in the Galilee and in the Wider
World” in Journal
of Historical Sociology.
Summer 2003. |
| 2003 |
“Home in the 1990s Galilee:
an Ethnographic Approach to
the Study of Power Relations”
in: Houses in Motion in
the Middle East. Relly
Shechter, ed. (Palgrave Publishers,
November 2003). |
| 2003 |
"Sifting People, Sorting
Paper: Power, Knowledge and
the Constitution of Expertise
in Palestinian History in Israel."
Comparative Studies of South
Asia, Africa and the Middle
East. 23 (1) 2003. |
| 2003 |
“Consumption Under
Construction: Land Control,
Power and the Production of
Homes in the Galilee.”
in: Carmeli, Yoram, and Applebaum,
eds. Consumption in Israel
(2004, Berg Publishers) |
|
| |
Stuart
Rockefeller,
Visiting Assistant Professor of Anthropology,
Haverford College
|
Stuart
Rockefeller did two years of fieldwork
with Quechua-speaking Bolivians
in the highland of Bolivian region
of San Lucas, and in an immigrant
neighborhood near Buenos Aires,
Argentina where men from San Lucas
travel as migrant workers. His research
is on the creative effects of movement
– the ways that the people
of San Lucas make and remake the
landscape they inhabit through their
own travels and through the circulation
of information, goods, and money.
By focusing on patterns of movement,
he has developed a research project
that encompasses the way San Luqueños
make their agricultural fields through
collective planting parties, the
transformative impact of immigrant
social movements in Buenos Aires,
the impact of migrants on international
borders, and the way information
travels through rumors and gossip.
Currently Dr. Rockefeller teaches
anthropology at Haverford College.
| 2003 |
“Crossing,
Occupying, Creating—Labor
Migrants and the National Spaces
of Bolivia and Argentina”
pp. 188-250 in Where are
you Going? Work, Power and Movement
in the Bolivian Andes by
Stuart Rockefeller, Ph.D. Disseration,
U Chicago, 2003. |
| 1999 |
MIGRACIÓN
BOLIVIANA A BUENOS AIRES Y LA
CREACIÓN DE ESPACIOS
RURALES, URBANOS Y NACIONALES.
Appeared in Migraciones
y procesos de integración
regional. (Papail, Jean
et al). Cordoba, Argentina:
Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
y Universidad de Buenos Aires.
(Text available from Susan Paulson). |
| 1998 |
"THERE
IS A CULTURE HERE": SPECTACLE
AND THE INCULCATION OF FOLKLORE
IN HIGHLAND BOLIVIA. The
Journal of Latin American Anthropology
3(2) 1998. |
| |
POLITICAL INSTITUTIONS
AND THE EVANESCENCE OF POWER:
MAKING HISTORY IN HIGHLAND BOLIVIA.
Ethnology 37(2), Spring
1998. |
| 1995 |
"CULTURA"
Y TRANSFORMACIONES DE LA RELIGIOSIDAD
EN UNA COMUNIDAD CHUQUISAQUEÑA.
Revista del Museo de Etnología
y Folklore, La Paz, Bolivia. |
|
Roberto
Segre
|
Roberto Segre is one of the preeminent
architectural historians focusing
on the architecture of Hispanic
America. A graduate of the Facultad
de Arquitectura y Urbanismo, Universidad
de Buenos Aires, Argentina, he holds
a Doctorate in Arts and Sciences
from the Facultad de Artes y Letras,
Universidad de La Habana, and a
Ph.D. in Regional and Urban Planning,
IPPUR, Universidade Federal do Rio
de Janeiro.
From 1963 to 1994, Dr. Segre was
Professor of History of Architecture
and
Urbanism in the Facultad de Arquitectura,
Universidad de La Habana and Chair
of the Architectural History Department
at the Instituto Politécnico
Superior “José Antonio
Echavarría.” Since
1994 he has been a professor in
the Departamento de Projeto Arquitetônico
at the Federal University of Rio
de Janeiro, Brazil, where he coordinates
the postgraduate program in urbanism.
Segre has been a visiting professor
at the Universidad de Guadalajara,
Mexico
(1981), Columbia University (1982),
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and
State
University (1985 and 1987), Universidad
de São Paulo (1989), University
of Zulia, Maracaibo, Venezuela (1989
and 1992), Escuela Técnica
Superior in Barcelona (1993), Université
de Paris (1993), Rice University
(1995–1996), the University
of Southern California (2004), and
Arizona State University (2005).
In 1985 he received a Research Grant
from the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation.
He lectured at Miami University
during the Latin American Celebration
in 1996–1997.
Among his many publications are
Cuba: Arquitectura de la Revolución
(1970),
Arquitectura y Urbanismo Modernos:
Capitalismo y Socialismo (1988),
América Latina fim de
milênio: raízes e perspectivas
de sua arquitetura (1991),
Havana: Two Faces of the Antillean
Metropolis (with Mario Coyula
and Joseph L. Scarpaci; 1997; revised
edition, 2002), and Arquitetura
brasileira contemporânea =
Contemporary Brazilian Architecture
(2003). His most recent book,
La arquitectura Antillana del
Siglo XX, received first prize
at the Lima Bienal Iberoamericano
de Arquitectura y Urbanismo (2004).
|
Tammy
García
|
A
member of of the renowned and distinguished
Tafoya family of Santa Clara Pueblo
(New Mexico), Tammy learned pottery
from her mother Linda Cain) and
her grandmother (Mary Cain).
Combining traditional
and innovative techniques, she fearlessly
renews the vitality of pueblo pottery,
pushing its creation in uncharted
directions. Even at the height of
her powers, she continues to experiment
and apply her vision and talents
to new media by adding jewelry,
bronze sculpture, and glassblowing
to her repertoire. Her work can
be seen in the National Museum of
the American Indian (Smithsonian
Institution) and is featured in
galleries and private collections
around the country. A book,
Tammy Garcia: Form without Boundaries,
has been written about her and her
work. Garcia has received numerous
awards for her artistry and creativity.
"Rains for the
Harvest", a work she created
in 2002, graces the entry to MacMillan
Hall.
|
Olu
Oguibe
 |
|
Born
in Nigeria, Olu Oguibe has lived
and practiced on three continents
as an artist, art historian, poet,
exhibitions curator, and a leading
theorist. He has also taught literature,
art, and art history in universities
and colleges including Goldsmiths
College London, University of London
School of Oriental and African Studies,
University of lllinois at Chicago
and the University of South Florida
where he held the Stuart Golding
Endowed Chair in African Art. Since
1986, his work has been exhibited
in solo and group exhibitions in
major galleries and museums around
the world including the Whitney
Museum of American Art and the Whitechapel
Gallery, London, as well as biennials
and triennials, most recently the
Busan Biennial in South Korea. He
has made permanent site-specific
works in Germany and Japan. As an
international curator he has curated
exhibitions for the Tate Modem in
London, the Museo de la Ciudad in
Mexico City, and the Latere of the
Venice Biennale, among many others.
His many books include The Culture
Game (University of Minnesota
Press, 2004) and Reading the
Contemporary: African Art from Theory
to the Marketplace (MIT Press,
2000).
|
Laurel
Leff
|
News
of the Holocaust: Why the Press
Didn’t Ask
Laurel Leff
The Center for Holocaust
and Humanity Education at Hebrew
Union College is privileged to be
co-sponsoring a program with The
Center for American and World Cultures
at Miami University on Wednesday,
April 13. Professor Laurel Leff
will be delivering a keynote address
News of the Holocaust: Why the Press
Didn’t Ask based on her new
book on the bookstands this month
entitled Buried by The Times:
The Holocaust and America's Most
Important Newspaper, which
has just been published by Cambridge
University Press.
Laurel Leff is a Professor of Journalism
at Northeastern University. Prof.
Leff has led a rich career as a
reporter for the Wall Street
Journal and the Miami Herald,
and an editor with American Lawyer
Media and the Hartford Courant who
addressed women's issues, issues
of unfairness and inequity, and
opposed patronizing and biased media
treatment of the public.
Her newest research in the back
rooms of the NY Times revealed
that though reporters were openly
reporting on the victimization of
the Jewish People under Nazi Germany,
editors were altering or eliminating
their filed reports, and thus deliberately
downplayed news of the Holocaust
and the Jewish identity of the victims.
Leff discovered that
Holocaust news was consistently
relegated to the Times' back pages.
Only two percent of the articles
during the 12 years of the Nazi
regime appeared on the front page,
and even those articles obscured
the fact that most of the victims
were Jews. The Times never ran a
lead editorial about the Nazi genocide.
... Because of its
importance, the Times helped set
the tone for the rest of the media's
coverage of Holocaust news; the
Times "might have been able
to help bring the facts about the
extermination of the Jews to public
consciousness ... [instead,] the
Times helped drown out the last
cry from the abyss." When the
Nazi death camps were liberated,
the Times' coverage downplayed the
fact that the victims and survivors
were overwhelmingly Jews.
Marvin Kalb,
elder statesman of American journalism,
said Buried by The Times "stands
tall in scholarship, style and importance
... it is an exceptional study of
one of the darkest failures of the
New York Times..."
Leff’s commitment to insuring
that the media is accountable in
telling the truth about hate crimes,
reporting racism, antisemitism and
xenophobia and addresses media literacy
in thinking women and men.
|
Pradyumna
P. (Paul) Karan, University of Kentucky
|
P.
P. Karan's research interest is
in the application of geographic
theories and methodologies to analyze
problems of environment, development,
and social change in non-Western
cultures. His current research involves
analysis of sustainable development
and environmental management paradigms;
models of economy and environment;
nature-society relationships; theories
of multinational corporations' locational
behavior; and the role of multinational
corporations in the environment,
development, and social restructuring
in the Asia-Pacific region. Examples
of Paul's most recent research are
the political economy of environmental
movements; environment and development
in Nepal; regional assessment of
environmental change in the Himalaya;
spatial structure of social networks
and development levels in South
Asia; social construction of nature
and environment in Japanese landscapes;
and social and environmental impacts
of Japanese investments in the Asia-Pacific
region. A Distinguished Professor
(1985-86) in the College of Arts
and Sciences, Paul chairs the UK
Japanese Studies Committee. He is
a charter member of the American
Institute of Certified Planners
and serves as development planning
and environmental management consultant
to governments and international
agencies in the Asia-Pacific region.
Some of his works:
The Non-Western World : environment,
development, and human rights
New
York : Routledge, 2004
Japanese Landscapes
Lexington : University Press of
Kentucky, 1998
The Japanese city
Lexington : University Press of
Kentucky, 1997
The changing
face of Tibet : the impact of Chinese
Communist ideology on the landscape
Lexington : University Press of
Kentucky, c1976
|
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