University of California, Berkeley A0001 B0001

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

University of California, Berkeley A0001 B0001 U.S. Department of Education Washington, D.C. 20202-5335 APPLICATION FOR GRANTS UNDER THE National Resource Centers and Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowships CFDA # 84.015A PR/Award # P015A180001 Gramts.gov Tracking#: GRANT12651687 OMB No. , Expiration Date: Closing Date: Jun 25, 2018 PR/Award # P015A180001 **Table of Contents** Form Page 1. Application for Federal Assistance SF-424 e3 2. Standard Budget Sheet (ED 524) e6 3. Assurances Non-Construction Programs (SF 424B) e8 4. Disclosure Of Lobbying Activities (SF-LLL) e10 5. ED GEPA427 Form e11 Attachment - 1 (1239-NRC GEPA statement 2018--final) e12 6. Grants.gov Lobbying Form e17 7. Dept of Education Supplemental Information for SF-424 e18 8. ED Abstract Narrative Form e19 Attachment - 1 (1234-NRC ABSTRACT 2018) e20 9. Project Narrative Form e22 Attachment - 1 (1236-NRC NARRATIVE 2018--Final) e23 10. Other Narrative Form e73 Attachment - 1 (1235-Other_Attachments) e74 11. Budget Narrative Form e222 Attachment - 1 (1237-NRC Budget Justification 2018--Final2) e223 Attachment - 2 (1238-NRC FINAL 2018-2021 Budget with FLAS) e227 This application was generated using the PDF functionality. The PDF functionality automatically numbers the pages in this application. Some pages/sections of this application may contain 2 sets of page numbers, one set created by the applicant and the other set created by e-Application's PDF functionality. Page numbers created by the e-Application PDF functionality will be preceded by the letter e (for example, e1, e2, e3, etc.). Page e2 OMB Number: 4040-0004 Expiration Date: 12/31/2019 Application for Federal Assistance SF-424 * 1. Type of Submission: * 2. Type of Application: * If Revision, select appropriate letter(s): Preapplication New Application Continuation * Other (Specify): Changed/Corrected Application Revision * 3. Date Received: 4. Applicant Identifier: 06/14/2018 5a. Federal Entity Identifier: 5b. Federal Award Identifier: State Use Only: 6. Date Received by State: 7. State Application Identifier: 8. APPLICANT INFORMATION: * a. Legal Name: The Regents of the University of California * b. Employer/Taxpayer Identification Number (EIN/TIN): * c. Organizational DUNS: 94-6002123 1247267250000 d. Address: * Street1: c/o Sponsored Projects Office Street2: 1608 Fourth Street, Suite 220 * City: Berkeley County/Parish: USA * State: CA: California Province: * Country: USA: UNITED STATES * Zip / Postal Code: 94710-5940 e. Organizational Unit: Department Name: Division Name: Inst of East Asian Studies f. Name and contact information of person to be contacted on matters involving this application: Prefix: * First Name: Erin Middle Name: * Last Name: Lentz Suffix: JD Title: Contracts and Grants Officer Organizational Affiliation: Sponsored Projects Office * Telephone Number: Fax Number: (510) 643-2152 (510) 642-8236 * Email: [email protected] PR/Award # P015A180001 Page e3 Tracking Number:GRANT12651687 Funding Opportunity Number:ED-GRANTS-052518-001 Received Date:Jun 14, 2018 12:19:46 PM EDT Application for Federal Assistance SF-424 * 9. Type of Applicant 1: Select Applicant Type: H: Public/State Controlled Institution of Higher Education Type of Applicant 2: Select Applicant Type: Type of Applicant 3: Select Applicant Type: * Other (specify): * 10. Name of Federal Agency: Department of Education 11. Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance Number: 84.015 CFDA Title: National Resource Centers Program for Foreign Language and Area Studies or Foreign Language and International Studies Pr * 12. Funding Opportunity Number: ED-GRANTS-052518-001 * Title: Office of Postsecondary Education (OPE):National Resource Centers Program CFDA Number 84.015A 13. Competition Identification Number: 84-015A2018-1 Title: National Resource Centers and Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowships 84.015A and 84.015B 14. Areas Affected by Project (Cities, Counties, States, etc.): Add Attachment Delete Attachment View Attachment * 15. Descriptive Title of Applicant's Project: EAST ASIA NATIONAL RESOURCE CENTER & EAST ASIA FOREIGN LANGUAGE AND AREA STUDIES FELLOWSHIPS Attach supporting documents as specified in agency instructions. Add Attachments Delete Attachments View Attachments PR/Award # P015A180001 Page e4 Tracking Number:GRANT12651687 Funding Opportunity Number:ED-GRANTS-052518-001 Received Date:Jun 14, 2018 12:19:46 PM EDT Application for Federal Assistance SF-424 16. Congressional Districts Of: * a. Applicant CA-013 * b. Program/Project CA-013 Attach an additional list of Program/Project Congressional Districts if needed. Add Attachment Delete Attachment View Attachment 17. Proposed Project: * a. Start Date: 08/15/2018 * b. End Date: 08/14/2022 18. Estimated Funding ($): * a. Federal 558,081.60 * b. Applicant 0.00 * c. State 0.00 * d. Local 0.00 * e. Other 0.00 * f. Program Income 0.00 * g. TOTAL 558,081.60 * 19. Is Application Subject to Review By State Under Executive Order 12372 Process? a. This application was made available to the State under the Executive Order 12372 Process for review on . b. Program is subject to E.O. 12372 but has not been selected by the State for review. c. Program is not covered by E.O. 12372. * 20. Is the Applicant Delinquent On Any Federal Debt? (If "Yes," provide explanation in attachment.) Yes No If "Yes", provide explanation and attach Add Attachment Delete Attachment View Attachment 21. *By signing this application, I certify (1) to the statements contained in the list of certifications** and (2) that the statements herein are true, complete and accurate to the best of my knowledge. I also provide the required assurances** and agree to comply with any resulting terms if I accept an award. I am aware that any false, fictitious, or fraudulent statements or claims may subject me to criminal, civil, or administrative penalties. (U.S. Code, Title 218, Section 1001) ** I AGREE ** The list of certifications and assurances, or an internet site where you may obtain this list, is contained in the announcement or agency specific instructions. Authorized Representative: Prefix: * First Name: Erin Middle Name: * Last Name: Lentz Suffix: * Title: Contracts and Grants Officer * Telephone Number: Fax Number: (510) 643-2152 (510) 642-8236 * Email: [email protected] * Signature of Authorized Representative: Erin Lentz * Date Signed: 06/14/2018 PR/Award # P015A180001 Page e5 Tracking Number:GRANT12651687 Funding Opportunity Number:ED-GRANTS-052518-001 Received Date:Jun 14, 2018 12:19:46 PM EDT U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION OMB Number: 1894-0008 BUDGET INFORMATION Expiration Date: 08/31/2020 NON-CONSTRUCTION PROGRAMS Name of Institution/Organization Applicants requesting funding for only one year should complete the column under "Project Year 1." Applicants requesting funding for multi-year grants should complete all The Regents of the University of California applicable columns. Please read all instructions before completing form. SECTION A - BUDGET SUMMARY U.S. DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION FUNDS Budget Project Year 1 Project Year 2 Project Year 3 Project Year 4 Project Year 5 Total Categories (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) 1. Personnel 109,400.00 140,168.00 142,971.36 145,830.79 538,370.15 2. Fringe Benefits 39,720.00 51,946.40 52,985.33 54,045.02 198,696.75 3. Travel 2,400.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2,400.00 4. Equipment 5. Supplies 36,000.00 17,500.00 17,500.00 15,500.00 86,500.00 6. Contractual 7. Construction 8. Other 57,000.00 40,000.00 35,750.00 35,000.00 167,750.00 9. Total Direct Costs (lines 1-8) 244,520.00 249,614.40 249,206.69 250,375.81 993,716.90 10. Indirect Costs* 19,561.60 19,969.15 19,936.54 20,030.06 79,497.35 11. Training Stipends 294,000.00 294,000.00 294,000.00 294,000.00 1,176,000.00 12. Total Costs (lines 9-11) 558,081.60 563,583.55 563,143.23 564,405.87 2,249,214.25 *Indirect Cost Information (To Be Completed by Your Business Office): If you are requesting reimbursement for indirect costs on line 10, please answer the following questions: (1) Do you have an Indirect Cost Rate Agreement approved by the Federal government? Yes No (2) If yes, please provide the following information: Period Covered by the Indirect Cost Rate Agreement: From: 07/01/2011 To: 06/30/2016 (mm/dd/yyyy) Approving Federal agency: ED Other (please specify): DHHS The Indirect Cost Rate is 57.00 %. (3) If this is your first Federal grant, and you do not have an approved indirect cost rate agreement, are not a State, Local government or Indian Tribe, and are not funded under a training rate program or a restricted rate program, do you want to use the de minimis rate of 10% of MTDC? Yes No If yes, you must comply with the requirements of 2 CFR § 200.414(f). (4) If you do not have an approved indirect cost rate agreement, do you want to use the temporary rate of 10% of budgeted salaries and wages? Yes No If yes, you must submit a proposed indirect cost rate agreement within 90 days after the date your grant is awarded, as required by 34 CFR § 75.560. (5) For Restricted Rate Programs (check one) -- Are you using a restricted indirect cost rate that: Is included in your approved Indirect Cost Rate Agreement? Or, Complies with 34 CFR 76.564(c)(2)? The Restricted Indirect Cost Rate is 8.00 %. PR/Award # P015A180001 ED 524 Page e6 Tracking Number:GRANT12651687 Funding Opportunity Number:ED-GRANTS-052518-001 Received Date:Jun 14, 2018 12:19:46 PM EDT Name of Institution/Organization Applicants requesting funding for only one year should complete the column under "Project Year The Regents of the University of California 1." Applicants requesting funding for multi-year grants should complete all applicable columns. Please read all instructions before completing form. SECTION B - BUDGET SUMMARY NON-FEDERAL FUNDS Budget Categories Project Year 1 Project Year 2 Project Year 3 Project Year 4 Project Year 5 Total (a) (b) (c) (d) (e) (f) 1.
Recommended publications
  • Download This Issue As A
    MICHAEL GERRARD ‘72 COLLEGE HONORS FIVE IS THE GURU OF DISTINGUISHED ALUMNI CLIMATE CHANGE LAW WITH JOHN JAY AWARDS Page 26 Page 18 Columbia College May/June 2011 TODAY Nobel Prize-winner Martin Chalfie works with College students in his laboratory. APassion for Science Members of the College’s science community discuss their groundbreaking research ’ll meet you for a I drink at the club...” Meet. Dine. Play. Take a seat at the newly renovated bar grill or fine dining room. See how membership in the Columbia Club could fit into your life. For more information or to apply, visit www.columbiaclub.org or call (212) 719-0380. The Columbia University Club of New York 15 West 43 St. New York, N Y 10036 Columbia’s SocialIntellectualCulturalRecreationalProfessional Resource in Midtown. Columbia College Today Contents 26 20 30 18 73 16 COVER STORY ALUMNI NEWS DEPARTMENTS 2 20 A PA SSION FOR SCIENCE 38 B OOKSHELF LETTERS TO THE Members of the College’s scientific community share Featured: N.C. Christopher EDITOR Couch ’76 takes a serious look their groundbreaking work; also, a look at “Frontiers at The Joker and his creator in 3 WITHIN THE FA MILY of Science,” the Core’s newest component. Jerry Robinson: Ambassador of By Ethan Rouen ’04J, ’11 Business Comics. 4 AROUND THE QU A DS 4 Reunion, Dean’s FEATURES 40 O BITU A RIES Day 2011 6 Class Day, 43 C L A SS NOTES JOHN JA Y AW A RDS DINNER FETES FIVE Commencement 2011 18 The College honored five alumni for their distinguished A LUMNI PROFILES 8 Senate Votes on ROTC professional achievements at a gala dinner in March.
    [Show full text]
  • Annual Report 2009–2010 Columbia University Columbia 2009–2010 Report Annual Nstitute
    WEATHERHEAD ANNUAL REPORT 2009 – 2 010 E AST A SIAN I NSTITUTE ANNUAL REPORT 2009–2010 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Weatherhead East Asian Institute Columbia University International Affairs Building, 9th floor MC 3333 420 West 118th Street New York, NY 10027 Tel: 212-854-2592 Fax: 212-749-1497 www.columbia.edu/weai TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 LETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR 1 2 THE WEATHERHEAD EAST ASIAN INSTITUTE AT COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2 3 THE RESEARCH COMMUNITY 3 4 PUBLICATIONS 26 5 RESEARCH CENTERS AT THE WEATHERHEAD EAST ASIAN INSTITUTE AND AFFILIATED COLUMBIA PROGRAMS 30 6 PUBLIC PROGRAMMING 34 7 GRADUATE AND POSTDOCTORAL STUDIES 39 8 STUDENTS 43 9 ASIA FOR EDUCATORS PROGRAM 47 10 AdMINISTRATIVE STAFF OF THE WEATHERHEAD EAST ASIAN INSTITUTE 50 11 FUNDING SOURCES 51 12 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY MAP: MORNINGSIDE CAMPUS & ENVIRONS 52 1 LETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR Over the past year, the Weatherhead East Asian Institute’s leading position in regional studies was amply reaffirmed. A fitting finale to our 60th anniversary celebrations was the June 13, 2010, symposium in Taipei, “Taiwan in the Twenty-first Century: Politics, Economy and Society.” This symposium continued WEAI’s outreach programs in East Asia to local Columbia alumni and to all prior visiting scholars, professional fellows, or participants at WEAI. The first three symposia were held in Beijing, Tokyo, and Seoul during May and June of 2009, and planning is now under way for a May 2011 sym- posium to take place in Hong Kong. As with the earlier events, the Taipei symposium involved close cooperation with the Columbia Alumni Association. The local signifi- cance of the symposium was underscored by the keynote speaker, Vincent Siew, vice president of the Republic of China (Taiwan), and by the meeting on the following day of symposium panelists and speakers with ROC President Ma Ying-jeou.
    [Show full text]
  • Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[Ongoing]
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/tf3d5nb07z No online items Guide to the Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[ongoing] Processed by The Bancroft Library staff University Archives University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: 510) 642-2933 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/UARC © 1998 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. CU-149 1 Guide to the Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[ongoing] Collection number: CU-149 University Archives University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: 510) 642-2933 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/UARC Finding Aid Author(s): Processed by The Bancroft Library staff Finding Aid Encoded By: GenX © 2011 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Collection Summary Collection Title: Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley Date: 1952-[ongoing] Collection Number: CU-149 Creator: University of California, Berkeley. Office of the Chancellor Extent: circa 200 boxes Repository: The University Archives. University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, CA 94720-6000 Phone: 510) 642-2933 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://www.lib.berkeley.edu/BANC/UARC Abstract: The Records of the Office of the Chancellor, University of California, Berkeley, 1952-[ongoing], includes records for the chancellorships of Clark Kerr, Glenn T. Seaborg, Edward W. Strong, Martin Meyerson, Roger Heyns, and Albert H. Bowker.
    [Show full text]
  • Celebrating Years of 60Science Welcome to the 60Th Anni- Versary Symposium of the Miller Institute
    Celebrating Years of 60Science Welcome to the 60th Anni- versary Symposium of the Miller Institute. In an age of ever increasing special- ization, the Miller Institute stands apart as one of the very few enterprises to embrace all of Science as its purview. For 60 years the Miller Institute has provided generous sup- port to some of the lead- ing postdoctoral fellows in all fields of science, has supported extended visits from famous scientists from around the world, and has provided critical adminis- trative and teaching relief for Berkeley faculty at par- ticularly important points in their career. This grand tradition lives on, even in the face of ever-greater challenges, with a refresh- ing emphasis on clarity in cross-discipline communi- cation. We have assembled a panel of eight luminaries drawn from past and pres- ent members of the Miller Institute each of whom leads their field with cre- ative research at the fron- tiers of human knowledge. So relax, enjoy, and be sure to ask that question that you always wanted to have answered. Jasper Rine, Professor of Genetics and Developmental Biology Chair, Miller Institute 60th 60th Anniversary Agenda Friday, January 15 – Sunday, January 17, 2016 Friday evening - Alumni House 5:00 - 7:00 Reception Saturday – Stanley Hall 8:00 - 8:45 Registration 8:45 - 9:00 Welcome 9:00 - 11:45 Maha Mahadevan: “On growth and form: geometry, physics and biology” Alice Guionnet: “About Universal Laws” Roger Bilham: “Earthquakes and Money: Frail Buildings, Philanthropic Engineers and a Few Corrupt Bad Guys
    [Show full text]
  • Report for the Academic Year 1999
    l'gEgasag^a3;•*a^oggMaBgaBK>ry^vg^.g^._--r^J3^JBgig^^gqt«a»J^:^^^^^ Institute /or ADVANCED STUDY REPORT FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1998-99 PRINCETON • NEW JERSEY HISTORICAL STUDIES^SOCIAl SC^JCE LIBRARY INSTITUTE FOR ADVANCED STUDY PRINCETON, NEW JERSEY 08540 Institute /or ADVANCED STUDY REPORT FOR THE ACADEMIC YEAR 1 998 - 99 OLDEN LANE PRINCETON • NEW JERSEY • 08540-0631 609-734-8000 609-924-8399 (Fax) http://www.ias.edu Extract from the letter addressed by the Institute's Founders, Louis Bamberger and Mrs. FeUx Fuld, to the Board of Trustees, dated June 4, 1930. Newark, New Jersey. It is fundamental m our purpose, and our express desire, that in the appointments to the staff and faculty, as well as in the admission of workers and students, no account shall be taken, directly or indirectly, of race, religion, or sex. We feel strongly that the spirit characteristic of America at its noblest, above all the pursuit of higher learning, cannot admit of any conditions as to personnel other than those designed to promote the objects for which this institution is established, and particularly with no regard whatever to accidents of race, creed, or sex. ni' TABLE OF CONTENTS 4 • BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE 7 • FOUNDERS, TRUSTEES AND OFFICERS OF THE BOARD AND OF THE CORPORATION 10 • ADMINISTRATION 12 • PRESENT AND PAST DIRECTORS AND FACULTY 15 REPORT OF THE CHAIRMAN 18 • REPORT OF THE DIRECTOR 22 • OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR - RECORD OF EVENTS 27 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 41 • REPORT OF THE SCHOOL OF HISTORICAL STUDIES FACULTY ACADEMIC ACTIVITIES MEMBERS, VISITORS,
    [Show full text]
  • University of the People
    UNDERGRADUATE CATALOG UNIVERSITY OF THE PEOPLE September 1, 2019 – August 31, 2020 595 E. Colorado Blvd., Suite 623 Pasadena, CA 91101 www.UoPeople.edu [email protected] Tel. +1 626 264 8880 Table of Amendments (Ongoing) Section Amended (Nature of change) Page Number Effective Date Diversity and Inclusivity Policies (Partial Removal) 25 November 14, 2019 Demonstrating English Proficiency (Addition) 38 November 14, 2019 Registration Guidelines – Degree Seeking Students 121 November 14, 2019 Previous versions of the UoPeople Catalog can be found on the UoPeople website. UoPeople Catalog | September 1, 2019 – August 31, 2020 2 Administration President Mr. Shai Reshef Provost Dr. David H. Cohen Chief Financial Officer Mr. Paul Affuso General Counsel Mr. Jeffrey Fromm, Esq. Senior Vice President for Enrollment Mr. Asaf Wolff Senior Vice President for Operations Mr. Rami Ish-Hurvitz Vice President for Strategic Planning Mr. Yoav Ventura Vice President for Business Development Ms. Pascaline Servan-Schreiber Board of Trustees Mr. Ashok J. Chandrasekhar, Goldfarb Seligman & Co., Chair Hon. Justice Christine M. Durham, Utah Supreme Court Mr. Daniel J.H. Greenwood, Hofstra University Dr. Gabriel Hawawini, INSEAD Mr. Shai Reshef, President, University of the People Ms. Pascaline Servan-Schreiber, Vice President for Business Development, University of the People President’s Council President Emeritus John Sexton, New York University, Chair UoPeople Catalog | September 1, 2019 – August 31, 2020 3 President Emerita Lisa Anderson, American University in Cairo Chancellor Nicholas Dirks, UC Berkeley Rector Emerita Mrs. Michèle Gendreau-Massaloux, Academy of Paris President Emerita Catharine Bond Hill, Vassar College Director Professor Devang Khakhar, Indian Institute of Technology Vice-Chancellor Emeritus Abdul Waheed Khan, Indira Gandhi National Open University President Emerita Jane McAuliffe, Bryn Mawr College Principal Timothy O'Shea, University of Edinburgh President Eduardo Padrón, Miami Dade College President Emerita Pamela T.
    [Show full text]
  • Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology Working Papers
    MAX PLANCK INSTITUTE FOR SOCIAL ANTHROPOLOGY WORKING PAPERS WORKING PAPER NO. 141 PATRICE LADWIG RICARDO ROQUE OLIVER TAppE CHRISTOPH KOHL CRISTIANA BASTOS FIELDWORK BETWEEN FOLDERS: FRAGMENTS, TRACES, AND THE RUINS OF COLONIAL ARCHIVES Halle / Saale 2012 ISSN 1615-4568 Max Planck Institute for Social Anthropology, PO Box 110351, 06017 Halle / Saale, Phone: +49 (0)345 2927- 0, Fax: +49 (0)345 2927- 402, http://www.eth.mpg.de, e-mail: [email protected] Fieldwork Between Folders: fragments, traces, and the ruins of colonial 1 archives Patrice Ladwig, Ricardo Roque, Oliver Tappe, Christoph Kohl, Cristiana Bastos2 Abstract This essay conceptualises the colonial archive as a product of processes of ruination. Taking its inspiration from recent studies of archival spaces, the three case studies on Portuguese, French, and Guinea-Bissauan colonial archives explore the ruptures, discontinuities, and silences inherent in such archives. With reference to Walter Benjamin’s writing of history and its recent applications in anthropology and history, the authors investigate the conditions, possibilities, and limitations of fieldwork in archives. Fragmentation, ruptures, and decay are not only understood as negative, but as productive processes. This perspective helps to shed light on the relevance of the historical materials that have survived as colonial debris and can provide traces that allow for developing unusual perspectives on the colonial past. By proposing methodologies to deal with these fragments, and by pointing to parallels in ethnographic fieldwork, the essay emphasises the processual character of data collection in the archive and the materials and documents themselves. Archives are, in this sense, less the static places of where facts lie waiting to be rescued, but places of the recurrent regrouping and transformation of facts through on-going ruination and fragment accumulation.
    [Show full text]
  • Berkeley City Council Agenda & Rules Committee Special
    BERKELEY CITY COUNCIL AGENDA & RULES COMMITTEE SPECIAL MEETING MONDAY, AUGUST 31, 2020 2:30 P.M. Committee Members: Mayor Jesse Arreguin, Councilmembers Sophie Hahn and Susan Wengraf Alternate: Councilmember Ben Bartlett PUBLIC ADVISORY: THIS MEETING WILL BE CONDUCTED EXCLUSIVELY THROUGH VIDEOCONFERENCE AND TELECONFERENCE Pursuant to Section 3 of Executive Order N-29-20, issued by Governor Newsom on March 17, 2020, this meeting of the City Council Agenda & Rules Committee will be conducted exclusively through teleconference and Zoom videoconference. Please be advised that pursuant to the Executive Order, and to ensure the health and safety of the public by limiting human contact that could spread the COVID-19 virus, there will not be a physical meeting location available. To access the meeting remotely using the internet: Join from a PC, Mac, iPad, iPhone, or Android device: Use URL - https://us02web.zoom.us/j/82373336588. If you do not wish for your name to appear on the screen, then use the drop down menu and click on "rename" to rename yourself to be anonymous. To request to speak, use the “raise hand” icon on the screen. To join by phone: Dial 1-669-900-9128 and Enter Meeting ID: 823 7333 6588. If you wish to comment during the public comment portion of the agenda, press *9 and wait to be recognized by the Chair. Written communications submitted by mail or e-mail to the Agenda & Rules Committee by 5:00 p.m. the Friday before the Committee meeting will be distributed to the members of the Committee in advance of the meeting and retained as part of the official record.
    [Show full text]
  • Maxime Du Camp's Ph
    The Pennsylvania State University The Graduate School College of Arts and Architecture BEYOND THE FAÇADE: MAXIME DU CAMP’S PHOTOGRAPHS OF EGYPT A Thesis in Art History by Whitney A. Izzo © 2009 Whitney A. Izzo Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts May 2009 ii The thesis of Whitney A. Izzo was reviewed and approved* by the following: Nancy Locke Associate Professor of Art History Thesis Adviser Brian Curran Associate Professor of Art History Craig Zabel Associate Professor of Art History Head of the Department of Art History *Signatures are on file in the Graduate School. iii Abstract The photographs of Egypt from Maxime Du Camp’s photographic book Egypt, Nubie, Palestine et Syrie (1852) are at once a reminder of the West’s storied, and often sordid, history of colonialism and treatment of the “Other,” and also of France’s very specific imperial relationship with Egypt. From written works and popular media to visual imagery, Du Camp’s images are part of an established Orientalist vocabulary. More importantly, however, Du Camp’s photographs continue to reference France’s language of dominance laid out by Napoleon in his 1798 invasion and scientific expedition into Egypt. Rather than focusing specifically on the physical conquests of colonization—as is commonly the case when examining Western Orientalism—I will discuss Du Camp’s work with an emphasis on its relation to cultural hegemony. Just as relevant as physically occupying and dominating the “Other,” cultural colonization connects Western superiority with controlling and establishing structures of knowledge. In comparing Du Camp’s images with Francis Frith’s photographs of Egypt and Napoleon’s Description de l’Egypte, I will demonstrate the relation of Du Camp’s photographs to France’s attempt to present itself as an imperial power.
    [Show full text]
  • TRANSFORMATIONS Comparative Study of Social Trawfoh
    TRANSFORMATIONS comparative study of social trawfoh CSST WORKING PAPIERS The University of Michigan Ann Arbor "1s Vice Versa? Historical Anthropologies and Anthropological Historiesn Nicholas Dirks CSST Working CRSO Working Paper #53 Paper #443 October 1990 IS VICE VERSA? HISTORICAL ANTHROPOLOGIES AND ANTHROPOLOGICAL HISTORIES Nicholas B. Dirks The University of Michigan "The problem now is to explode the concept of history by the anthropological experience of culture." Marshall Sahlins "To articulate .the past historically does not mean to recognize it 'the way it really was.' It means to seize hold of a memory as it flashes up at a moment of danger. Only that historian will have the gift of fanning the spark of hope in the past who is firmly convinced that even the dead will not be safe from the enemy if he wins." Walter Ben jamin PART I. The Concept of Culture The concept of culture has been anthropology's signal -- and perhaps single most important -- contribution to recent social theory. In American cultural anthropology, the name most recently and most clearly associated with the development of culture as a concept is Clifford Geertz, who has provided elegant definitions of culture and inspired much of the most interesting work in cultural analysis. Geertzl definition of culture has always been a semiotic one, predicated on the notion that culture has to do with meaning, with the way experience is construed rather than with some unmediated notion of experience itself, with the centrality of symbols for conducting and expressing meanings that are systematic as well as shared. Although Geertz gave culture a new set of glosses and spins, he developed his sense of the concept out of certain fundamental traditions in anthropology, as also out of his ethnographic encounters in Indonesia and Morocco, not to mention Chicago and Princeton.
    [Show full text]
  • Projects, Publications, Meetings & Donors to the Academy 2016–2017
    Projects, Publications, Meetings & Donors to the Academy 2016–2017 With Appreciation . Academy projects, publications, and meetings are supported by gifts and grants from Members, friends, foundations, corporations, Affiliates, and other funding agencies. The Academy expresses its deep appreciation for this support and to the many Members who contribute to its work. Published by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, September 2016 Contents From the President 3 Projects, Publications & Meetings Science, Engineering, and Technology Overview 4 New Models for U.S. Science & Technology Policy 4 The Public Face of Science 7 Human Performance Enhancement 11 The Alternative Energy Future 13 Global Security and International Affairs Overview 16 New Dilemmas in Ethics, Technology, and War 17 The Global Nuclear Future 21 Civil Wars, Violence, and International Responses 27 Understanding the New Nuclear Age 30 The Humanities, Arts, and Education Overview 33 Commission on the Future of Undergraduate Education 33 Commission on Language Learning 38 The Lincoln Project: Excellence and Access in Public Higher Education 41 Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences 47 The Humanities Indicators 48 Exploratory Initiatives 51 Regional Program Committees 56 Discussion Groups 59 Meetings and Events 61 Affiliates of the American Academy 72 Donors to the Academy 75 From the President dvancing knowledge and learning in service to the nation has been the mission A of the Academy since its founding in 1780. Through the study of social and scien- tific
    [Show full text]
  • 2015-16 University of the People Catalog FINAL
    CATALOG UNIVERSITY OF THE PEOPLE September 1, 2015 - August 31, 2016 225 S. Lake Ave., Suite 300 Pasadena, CA 91101 www.UoPeople.edu [email protected] Tel. +1 626 264 8880 Administration President Mr. Shai Reshef Provost Dr. David H. Cohen Chief Financial Officer Mr. Paul Affuso General Counsel Mr. Dvir Langer, Esq. Vice President for Strategy and Planning Mr. Yoav Ventura Board of Trustees Mr. Ashok J. Chandrasekhar, Goldfarb Seligman & Co., Chair Hon. Justice Christine M. Durham, Utah Supreme Court Mr. Daniel J.H. Greenwood, Hofstra University Dr. Gabriel Hawawini, INSEAD Mr. Tom Healy, Fulbright Scholarship Board Mr. Shai Reshef, President, University of the People President’s Council President John Sexton, New York University, Chair Chancellor Nicholas Dirks, UC Berkeley Rector Emerita Mrs. Michèle Gendreau-Massaloux, Academy of Paris Chancellor Emerita Martha J. Kanter, Former U.S. Under Secretary of Education Director Professor Devang Khakhar, Indian Institute of Technology Vice-Chancellor Emeritus Abdul Waheed Khan Vice Chancellor Emeritus Sir Colin Lucas, University of Oxford President Emeritus Roger Mandle, Rhode Island School of Design President Emerita Judith R. Shapiro, Barnard College President Emeritus Torsten N. Wiesel, Rockefeller University President Emeritus Stephen Joel Trachtenberg, George Washington University UoPeople Catalog | September 1, 2015 – August 31, 2016 2 Advisory Boards Business Administration Dr. Russell S. Winer, New York University, Chair Dr. Ogechi Adeola, Lagos Business School Mr. Stephan Chambers, University of Oxford Dr. Kriengsak Charoenwongsak, Harvard University Mr. John Gerzema, BAV Consulting Dr. Gabriel Hawawini, INSEAD Mr. Ken Marlin, Marlin & Associates Dr. Albert Wenger, Union Square Ventures Ms. Toby Winer, Financial Consultant Computer Science Dr.
    [Show full text]