Archive for May 2009 – Page 2

Global Fellows Program at SIPA

I am pleased to announce a program that has been in the works for quite some time.  SIPA has officially launched a new Global Fellows Program. The program will bring to campus each year a distinguished group of global leaders, each of whom has played a significant role in designing, shaping, or implementing solutions to critical global problems.

The first cohort of SIPA Global Fellows will include Former United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, Former Chancellor of Austria Alfred Gusenbauer, and Tung Chee Hwa, Former and first Chief Executive of Hong Kong.

The Global Fellows will serve as important resources for academic and professional programs across the University through public lectures, seminar meetings with faculty and students, mentoring SIPA students, and providing advice on research and teaching in their areas of knowledge and experience.

“The Global Fellows Program expands on a long tradition at Columbia, in particular at SIPA, of engaging world leaders in the research and educational mission of the university,” according to SIPA Dean John Coatsworth. “From the Columbia World Leaders forum, to special lectures and ongoing collaborative research projects, policymakers from around the world serve as a bridge between Columbia’s faculty, and students and a global community that faces tough policy issues on a daily basis,” he said.

Coatsworth acknowledged the support of Columbia President Lee Bollinger, who helped to recruit Annan and provided support for his new role at the University. Coatsworth also credited SIPA Advisory Board member James Leitner for supporting the appointment of Mr. Gusenbauer as the first Leitner Global Fellow. Gusenbauer presented a series of seminars co-sponsored by the European Institute earlier this month.

For more information on the Columbia-SIPA Global Fellows Program, please click here.

Jeff Sachs on ABC

SIPA professor Jeff Sachs recently appeared on a segment of ABC news to discuss investment in alternative forms of energy.  Professor Sachs is a Special Advisor to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and from 2002 to 2006 was the Director of the UN Millennium Project and Special Advisor to United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan on the Millennium Development Goals, the internationally agreed goals to reduce extreme poverty, disease, and hunger by the year 2015.

To read the article and view the accompanying video, please click here.

Career Opportunities in Public Service Expected to Rise

Several news outlets recently have published good news for those interested in careers related to the public sector.  Career opportunities are expected to rise in the coming years which bodes well for those interested in professional degrees related to public administration and international affairs.  The following comes from a May 11th article in The Chronicle of Higher Education.  The quote is in response to a rise in the number of applications submitted to public policy related programs this past year:

The main reason the schools cited was the expectation that the public sector will be on a hiring spree at a time when the private sector is still laying off workers. Two factors could result in the hiring of an additional 600,000 government workers—representing one-third of the federal government’s current work force—in the next three years, says Tim McManus, vice president for education and outreach at the Partnership for Public Service, a Washington, D.C., group that encourages careers in the federal government,

Baby boomers who entered government service soon after the Kennedy era are beginning to retire, and as President Obama’s economic rescue and recovery plan kicks in, a wave of new government jobs will be created.

Steve Cohen Comments on Earth Day

Steve Cohen, a SIPA administrator and faculty member, was part of a story on Earth Day that was published in USA Today in April.

“When Earth Day started, it was like a national day of protest. There was a counterculture dimension to it . . . it’s no longer an issue of liberal versus conservative.  It’s a mainstream issue.”

Professor Cohen also discusses the Energy and Environment Concentration, the types of students attracted to this concentration,  details of related courses, and internships in a video that can be accessed by clicking here (Windows Media Player Video, time: 4:26).

SIPA Graduation Speaker


General Brent Scowcroft, former National Security Advisor and SIPA Advisory Board member, will deliver SIPA’s 2009 graduation address on May 18. General Scowcroft served as National Security Advisor to Presidents Gerald Ford and George H.W. Bush. A graduate of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, he earned his MA and Ph.D. in International Relations from Columbia University.

As President and founder of The Scowcroft Group and one of the country’s leading experts on international policy, Brent Scowcroft provides Group clients with unparalleled strategic advice and assistance in dealing in the international arena.

"The most global public policy school, where an international community of students and faculty address world challenges."

—Merit E. Janow, Dean, SIPA, Professor of Practice, International and Economic Law and International Affairs

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