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Lisa Anderson by Lorlene Hoyt
Leaders in the Civic Engagement Movement: American University in Cairo President Lisa Anderson by Lorlene Hoyt May signals the eleventh installment of our Leaders in the Civic Engagement Movement series. This issue features Dr. Lisa Anderson, American University in Cairo President and member of the Talloires Network’s Steering Committee. According to Dr. Lisa Anderson, her parents, “like many people in mid-twentieth century America, believed that science was the key to progress.” Both parents were “progressive, hopeful, and generous people who dedicated themselves to service.” Her father worked at a national laboratory and her mother “taught science to 11- and 12-year olds in the local public school.” Dr. Anderson served as Provost at the American University in Cairo (AUC) beginning in 2008 before the Board of Trustees voted unanimously to appoint her as AUC’s 11th and first female President in January 2011. Early on, she “went to college planning to become a civil rights lawyer,” but instead launched her “lifelong focus on North Africa” as an undergraduate at Sarah Lawrence College in New York “when a professor assigned a research paper on Egypt.” In the mid-1970s, Dr. Anderson studied Arabic for a summer at AUC. “It was a hot and dusty summer before air conditioning was widespread,” she explained, “I remember thinking, correctly it turns out, I would never, ever master the language I was here to study.” Dr. Anderson then turned her attention to earning a Masters degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and a doctorate in Political Science at Columbia University where she later served as Dean of the School of International and Public Affairs. -
Congress of Vienna Program Brochure
We express our deep appreciation to the following sponsors: Carnegie Corporation of New York Isabella Ponta and Werner Ebm Ford Foundation City of Vienna Cultural Department Elbrun and Peter Kimmelman Family Foundation HOST COMMITTEE Chair, Marifé Hernández Co-Chairs, Gustav Ortner & Tassilo Metternich-Sandor Dr. & Mrs. Wolfgang Aulitzky Mrs. Isabella Ponta & Mr. Werner Ebm Mrs. Dorothea von Oswald-Flanigan Mrs. Elisabeth Gürtler Mr. & Mrs. Andreas Grossbauer Mr. & Mrs. Clemens Hellsberg Dr. Agnes Husslein The Honorable Andreas Mailath-Pokorny Mr. & Mrs. Manfred Matzka Mrs. Clarissa Metternich-Sandor Mr. Dominique Meyer DDr. & Mrs. Oliver Rathkolb Mrs. Isabelle Metternich-Sandor Ambassador & Mrs. Ferdinand Trauttmansdorff Mrs. Sunnyi Melles-Wittgenstein CONGRESS OF VIENNA 2015 | 2 Presented by the The CHUMIR FOUNDATION FOR ETHICS IN LEADERSHIP is a non-profit foundation that seeks to foster policies and actions by individuals, organizations and governments that best contribute to a fair, productive and harmonious society. The Foundation works to facilitate open-minded, informed and respectful dialogue among a broad and engaged public and its leaders to arrive at outcomes for a better community. www.chumirethicsfoundation.ca CONGRESS OF VIENNA 2015 | 2 CONGRESS OF VIENNA 2015 | 3 CONGRESS OF VIENNA 2015 | 4 UNDER THE DISTINGUISHED PATRONAGE OF H.E. Heinz Fischer, President of the Republic of Austria HONORARY CO-CHAIRS H.E. Josef Ostermayer Minister of Culture, Media and Constitution H.E. Sebastian Kurz Minister of Foreign Affairs and Integration CHAIR Joel Bell Chairman, Chumir Foundation for Ethics in Leadership CONGRESS SECRETARY Manfred Matzka Director General, Chancellery of Austria CHAIRMAN INTERNATIONAL ADVISORY COUNCIL Oliver Rathkolb HOST Chancellery of the Republic of Austria CONGRESS OF VIENNA 2015 | 4 CONGRESS OF VIENNA 2015 | 5 CONGRESS OF VIENNA 2015 | 6 It is a great honor for Austria and a special pleasure for me that we can host the Congress of Vienna 2015 in the Austrian Federal Chancellery. -
Italy to California Italian Immigration
CONTENTS Letter from Nancy Pelosi 2 Foreword by Mark D. Schiavenza 3 The Italians Who Shaped California by Alessandro Baccari 4 Introduction 6 THE FIRST WAVE: Working Life IN CERCA DI Agriculture & Food Processing 7 UNA NUOVA VITA Winemakers 7 ITALY TO CALIFORNIA Inventors & Entrepreneurs 8 Making A Living 8 ITALIAN IMMIGRATION: 1850 TO TODAY Story of a Sicilian Fisherman 10 Organized Labor 10 OCT. 16, 2009 – JAN. 17, 2010 Women Workers 10 Story of a Pioneer Woman 12 MUSEO ItaloAmericano Gold Country: The Miners 12 Fort Mason Center, Building C, San Francisco, CA 94123 Teresa’s Place 12 Gold Country: The Boardinghouses 13 THE FIRST WAVE: City Life The Italian District: North Beach 14 Italian Opera 14 Italian Language Press 16 Scavenging 16 Business & Banking 17 The Earthquake 17 THE FIRST WAVE: Social Life Family & Community 19 Church & School 19 THE SECOND WAVE: A Different Kind of Immigrant The Middle Class Immigration 20 Starting Over 20 Escaping Racial Laws 21 Displaced Persons 21 PHOTOS: FRONT COVER Photo: FIRST WAVE – Italian Immigrants THE THIRD Wave on Ferry from Ellis Island, 1905. Photo by Lewis W. Hine. Courtesy The Third Wave by Paolo Pontoniere 22 of George Eastman House Third Wave Immigrants: 22 THIS PAGE: SECOND WAVE – Papa Gianni Giotta (on the left) and Marco Vinella at opening day of Caffe Trieste, 1956. Courtesy A Global Tribe of Artists, Scientists, of the Giotta family Entrepreneurs, & Explorers INSIDE COVER Photo: THIRD WAVE – TWA’s First Flight from From Social Unrest to Technological 25 Fiumicino International Airport to JFK with a Boeing 747. -
Speaker Biographies
SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES Adrian, Melanie Merkx, Gilbert W. Akıncı, Özgül Napoli, Grace Anderson, Lisa Noorda, Sijbolt Axworthy, Lloyd Picq, Manuela L. Becker, Jonathan Prewitt, Kenneth Buess, Matthias Provost, René Campbell, Bonnie Quinn, Robert Catoni, Karolina Rafiee, Maryam Cheung, Alvin Riseth, Inga Marie Nymo Cukier, Wendy Rumbley, Laura E. DeBrabander, Firmin Sarmento, Simone Dejonckheere, Kris Shahin, Emad de Lange, Ella Sharom, Azmi Des Rosiers, Nathalie Shattuck, John du Pont, Yannick Sheldon, Barbara Egner, Marit Stewart, Penni Epstein, Irving Stimpson, Catharine R. Gonzo, Farai Stone, Geoffrey R. Guldvog, Ragnhild Oien Tokuzlu, Lami Bertan Haberkorn, Tyrell Valentini Di Girolamo, Fabio Luigi Habib, Adam Webster, Ben Hartmann, Pamela Wilson, John K. Himbara, David Winichakul, Thongchai Jowi, James Otieno Wong-Arthichart, Rackchart Lewis, Shaundra Wordsworth, Stephen Mathur, Chandana Yenigün, Halil İbrahim Martel, Émile Ziadeh, Radwan Mégret, Frédéric Melanie Adrian’s work critically examines the tensions which arise when a general religious right is applied in a specific context and what this application signifies for national identity and cultural norms. She looks in her writing at minority rights and their manifestation in relationship to international and national human rights norms and respect for national values. Her book, Religious Freedom at Risk: The EU, French schools, and Why the Veil was Banned, takes up these issues in France and the wider European context. Dr. Adrian holds her Ph.D. in Social Anthropology and the Study of Religion from Harvard University (USA), an M.A from Essex University (U.K), an A.M from Harvard University (USA), and a B.A from the University of Waterloo. (Canada). Dr. Adrian is currently on faculty in the Department of Law and Legal Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa. -
Communicating Europe: Italy Manual
Communicating Europe: Italy Manual Information and contacts on the Italian debate on EU enlargement in the Western Balkans Supported by the Global Opportunities Fund – Reuniting Europe of the UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office 19 May 2008 Contents ABOUT THIS MANUAL ...................................................................................................................... 1 A. MEDIA ...................................................................................................................................... 2 1. ELECTRONIC MEDIA: TV AND RADIO ......................................................................................... 2 2. PRINT MEDIA: NATIONAL PRINT MEDIA ..................................................................................... 8 2.1. The quality dailies .............................................................................................................. 9 2.2. Weeklies ........................................................................................................................... 12 2.3. Press Officers of EU Institutions in Italy ............................................................................ 13 2.4. Online Media ................................................................................................................... 14 2.5. News Agencies ................................................................................................................ 14 2.6. Regional print media ..................................................................................................... -
Archived News
Archived News 2008-2009 News articles from 2008-2009 Table of Contents New Dean of the College Named at Sarah Erica Newhouse ’03 ......................................... 24 Lawrence............................................................. 7 Graduate Student Christine Meyers.................. 24 Alumnus Rahm Emanuel '81 Addresses Sarah Beth Webb Hart ’98.......................................... 24 Lawrence College Class of 2009 ........................ 8 Literature Faculty Nicolaus Mills..................... 24 Liz Page Stitzel Wins Prestigious Academic Awards .............................................................. 10 Caroline Lieber, Director of Human Genetics Program ............................................................ 25 Mia Kai Moody ’08 .......................................... 11 President Karen Lawrence, Rosie Young ’12, Music Faculty Eddye Pierce-Young ................. 11 Kayleigh Salstrand ’12, and Max Teicher ’11.. 25 Courtney Hunt ’86 ............................................ 11 Sahra Motalebi ’99 ............................................. 0 Alexandra Avakian ’83..................................... 11 Warren Green ................................................... 25 Spanish Faculty Maria Negroni ........................ 12 Laura Weil, Interim Director of Graduate Health Local Couple Creates Scholarship Fund........... 13 Advocacy ......................................................... 26 Literature Faculty Nicolaus Mills ..................... 14 Sarah Lawrence College.................................. -
COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY | JUNE 2006 Sipanews Sipanews VOLUME XIX No
SCHOOL OF INTERNATIONAL AND PUBLIC AFFAIRS | COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY | JUNE 2006 SIPAnews SIPAnews VOLUME XIX No. 2 JUNE 2006 Published biannually by School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University From the Dean From the Editors contents his is a special issue of SIPA News, one that is intended both to con- s SIPA’s newest graduates, we are honored to contribute to the A HISTORY p.42 ALUMNI p.82 p.96 p.110 School’s history in this 60th anniversary special edition of SIPA City Councils from PROFILES Mexican Alumni in Adam Klauber: The Road Yang Lan: China’s vey the flavor of the first 60 years of the School’s history and to p.2 invite a conversation with our alumni and friends about who we News. When we first chose the subject for this issue, we had lit- Coast to Coast, by Politics: The Future of Taken, by Rebecca Oprah, by Paula T A 60 Years of the School Jason Stramaglia p.66 Mexican Democracy Has Leicht Margulies have been and what we should be. There are far more people and momen- tle idea of the magnitude of the task ahead or of the adventure of explo- of International and Bill Root: Life Before, SIPA as Its Middle tous events omitted than included in these pages, and at each turn we had ration on which we were about to embark. We soon discovered two Public Affairs, by Lisa p.44 During and After Name, by Gustavo Cano p.98 p.112 Anderson Columbia’s School of to make difficult choices about what we could include and what we had to things: that the history of the School and the depth and breadth of its The Money Makers: Alan Grafman: Archie Alumni Snapshots SIPA Alumni at the International Affairs, p.84 and the Gang Find Life influence on our world are even richer than we could have imagined, leave out. -
Conley KPII Interior V3 Italy.Pdf
– 57 – Case Study Italy For the past 75 years, Italy and Russia have enjoyed positive economic and po litical relations due in large measure to Moscow’s ties with one of Europe’s strongest communist parties, the Italian Communist Party. These “ideological sympathies” pa ralleled Italy’s growing dependency on Russian energy. Italian firms such as Fiat (now Fiat Chrysler) and statecontrolled Italian energy firm ENI were early European investors in the Soviet Union. Italy’s foreign and trade policy toward the Soviet Union and then Russia was designed to first and foremost protect Italian business interests. These es tablished relationships have only strengthened since the collapse of the Soviet Union as Russia has reinforced its strategic partnerships with important Italian economic and political players. Today, Italy is Russia’s thirdlargest commercial partner in Europe and its fourth in the world. Trade flows have doubled since 2005, peaking in 2013 before falling slight ly due to sanctions and the negative impact of lower energy prices on bilateral flows (though oil and gas prices have recovered since 2017).1 Italian companies have impor tant economic interests in Russia: from 2005 to 2013, exports to Russia grew from €6 billion to almost €11 billion, and outward FDI stocks to Russia went from €1.7 billion in 2007 to €11 billion in 2016. These investments come from some of the structurally most important Italian businesses, from ENI (oil and gas) and ENEL (electricity generator) to Pirelli (tires).2 Entities like Pirelli and ENI have reportedly attempted to shape the Italian government’s policies indirectly in relation to the imposition and rollover of EU sanc tions on Russia by underscoring the risk of retaliatory sanctions and their impact on the companies’ bottom lines.3 But while Russian economic ties with Italy have grown, Italy’s economic situation has stagnated and its governance standards, institutional malaise, and chronic corrup tion—already lagging behind other EU member states—have grown even more sclerotic. -
View Full Festival Program
updated 12 May THE RETURN OF THE STATE Businesses, communities and institutions TRENTO 2021 3-6 June PROVINCIA AUTONOMA DI TRENTO The relationship between the state and the economy has always been something of a seesaw. As a general rule, in times of crisis – and here we need only think of the Wall Street crash in 1929, but also the 2008 international financial crisis – public authorit- ies have had to intervene to sort out the disasters caused by a market without rules, or with rules that are too ineffective. In contrast, in times of expansion, the “invisible hand” of the market is usually left free to act, creating and redistributing wealth. Hence the state is invited to take one or several steps back, limiting itself to “regulating the traffic”, creating the most fa- vourable conditions for economic forces to free all their energy, and their aggression, ultimately considered to be beneficial. The pandemic undoubtedly took us back to the first of the two scenarios, but this time in a particular context: on this occasion the state entered the fray not to deal with the negative effects of a recession, but rather to combat a deadly serious health emer- gency, of the kind not faced by the world for around a century. Inevitably, however, the health emergency has also led to a devastating economic crisis. Consequently, the state has been called on to act in two contexts: in the field of health, but also in rela- tion to economic recovery, which must be brought about, encouraged and stimulated at all costs. -
ENGLISH Programme 27May
+ SIXTH EDITION THE BORDERS OF ECONOMIC FREEDOM TRENTO 26 May NAPLES 28 May TRENTO/ROVERETO 2-5 June 2011 1 2 AUTONOMOUS PROVINCE OF TRENTO The sixth edition of the Festival of Economics marks another step forward for Trentino, which responded to the crisis by strengthening the traditional activities that continue to make it a competitive and strategic territory. The anti-crisis package adopted by the Autonomous Province contains several strong points recognized as innovative both within Italy and abroad. On the social policy front, we have introduced an income safety-net programme to combat processes of impoverishment and urban decay, while our pro-business investment strategy is designed to support and promote the utilization of human resources and new technology for relaunching competitiveness across the province. One issue that is particularly close to our heart is knowledge; indeed, it should surprise no-one that the Autonomy Statute makes provision for a new provincial law on universities. In our vision for the future, even more than it already is today, Trentino will be a European region of knowledge, which aspires to achieve a virtuous equilibrium between the various engines on which the region’s development depends: research, training, universities, businesses, politics and institutions. Only if these engines work at full speed can this “systemic architecture” be built and strengthened to enable it to fulfil its enormous potential. Once again, it is the dual global and local track that helps us to think in terms of development and international openness. Indeed, only in a perspective that values local specificities while simultaneously aiming to attract high-quality investors from the rest of the world, can Trentino successfully navigate the choppy waters of globalization. -
Leaders in the Civic Engagement Movement
Leaders in the Civic Engagement Movement By Dr. Lorlene Hoyt, Director of Programs and Research, Talloires Network and John Pollock, Consultant, Youth Economic Participation Initiative, Talloires Network As published in the Talloires Network Newsletter Leaders in the Civic Engagement Movement TABLE OF CONTENTS Page No. I. Lisa Anderson, President of American University in Cairo 2 II. Scott Cowen, President of Tulane University 4 III. Mark Gearan, President of Hobart and William Smith Colleges 6 IV. Budd Hall, UNESCO Co-Chair in Community Based Research and Social 7 Responsibility in Higher Education at the University of Victoria V. Shamsh Kassim-Lakha, Founding President of Aga Khan University 8 VI. Anthony Monaco, President of Tufts University 10 VII. Olive Mugenda, Vice-Chancellor of Kenyatta University 11 VIII. Maria- Nieves Tapia, Founder And Director, Latin American Center for 12 Service-Learning IX. Janice Reid, Vice-Chancellor, University of Western Sydney 14 X. José María Sanz Martínez, Rector of the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid 15 XI. Sharifah Hapsah Shahabudin, Vice-Chancellor, Universiti Kebangsaan Malaysia 16 XII. Jerome Slamat, Senior Director of Community Interaction, Stellenbosch University 17 XIII. Rafael Velasco, Rector of the Universidad Católica de Córdoba 18 XIV. John Wood, Secretary General of the Association of Commonwealth Universities 19 1 Leaders in the Civic Engagement Movement Lisa Anderson American University in Cairo President by Lorlene Hoyt May signals the eleventh installment of our Leaders in the Civic -
Italy, Europe and the European Presidency of 2003
President: Jacques DELORS ITALY, EUROPE AND THE EUROPEAN PRESIDENCY OF 2003 Roberto DI QUIRICO Research and European Issues N°27 July 2003 STUDY AVAILABLE IN FRENCH AND ENGLISH http://www.notre-europe.asso.fr/Etud27-fr.pdf http:/:www.notre-europe.asso.fr/Etud27-it.pdf © Notre Europe, July 2003. This publication benefits from the financial support of the European Commission. Nevertheless its content is the sole responsability of the author. Niether the European Commission nor Notre Europe are to be held responsible for the manner in which the information in this text may be used. This may be reproducted if the source cited. Roberto Di Quirico Born in 1964, Roberto Di Quirico is holder of a History degree from the University of Pisa and of a PhD in History from the European University Institute (Florence). He is also a Jean Monet scholar at the Robert Schuman Centre of the European University Institute. He is currently a researcher in the Department of History of the University of Pisa and has taught Italian economic history at the University of Pisa and the history of monetary integration at the University of Florence. Author of numerous studies in Italian and English and of a book on the history of banks and other Italian financial organisations under the fascist regime, he is currently working on the influence of European integration on local administrations and on the consequences of monetary integration on the construction of the European Union. Notre Europe Notre Europe is an independent research and policy unit whose objective is the study of Europe – its history and civilisations, integration process and future prospects.