Author Archive for Columbia SIPA – Page 39

Technology and Policy at SIPA

You normally don’t correlate cyberspace with policy but contrary to belief, it is closely tied together.   I was reminded in a meeting today about all the great work SIPA is doing and the now many courses on the impact of technology on policy and cyber security issues.

SIPA was granted a $1 Million grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York to help link academics to policymakers.  SIPA will expand its role as a key global hub for research and consultation on policy.  Drawing on Carnegie support, SIPA will promote multi-disciplinary research in the growing area of cyber policy and internet governance, drawing together faculty from across the University and engaging them with senior practitioners in both the public and private sectors around the world.

“Because cyber security has become such a highly visible problem for governments, companies, and individuals, the development of cyber policy and governance is a high priority,” said Dean Merit E. Janow.

“As the hub of global policy studies at Columbia, SIPA is well-positioned to draw upon leading thinkers at Columbia University and around the world and bring scholars and practitioners together across disciplines to generate fresh ideas and policy recommendations,” said Dean Janow.

Among other initial activities, the grant will be used to support two of SIPA’s newest scholars—Herb Lin, a senior fellow in cybersecurity, and Andrew McLaughlin, a senior fellow in technology and public policy.

 

On this date: November 1

Columbia University’s School of International Affairs (SIPA) was founded in 1946.  But did you know since that year on November 1, this happened:

1947 UN trusteeship for Nauru granted to Australia, NZ & UK
1948 Mao’s Red army conquerors Mukden, Manchuria
1954 India takes over administration of 4 French Indian settlements
1954 US Senate admonishes Joseph McCarthy because of his slander campaigns
1954 The Front de Libération Nationale fires the first shots of the Algerian War of Independence against France
1956 Nobel for physics awarded to Shockley, Brattain & Bardeen
1960 Benelux treaty goes into effect
1960 John F. Kennedy announces Peace Corps idea while camping
1962 Greece enters European Common Market
1969 The Beatles’ “Abbey Road” album goes #1 in US & stays #1 for 11 weeks
1974 UN affirms independence of Cyprus
1977 US President Jimmy Carter raises minimum wages of $2.30 to $3.35
1998 The European Court of Human Rights is instituted
2012 Google’s Gmail becomes the world’s most popular email service
2014 SIPA MIA/MPA (inaugural) EARLY ACTION Deadline

Don’t miss it.  Apply Now.

 

SIPA Announces its 2015 Graduation Speaker

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SIPA announced this week that Caroline Kennedy, the U.S. Ambassador to Japan and a 1988 graduate of Columbia Law School, will be the featured speaker at SIPA’s graduation ceremonies in May 2015.

Ambassador Kennedy, who is the first female U.S. Ambassador to Japan, was warmly received upon assuming office on November 19 of last year.

Her current position is the latest step in a life devoted to public service. She previously worked as vice chair of the board of directors and honorary director of the Fund for Public Schools in New York City and as chief executive of the Office of Strategic Partnerships of the New York City Department of Education.

Ambassador Kennedy has also served numerous nonprofit organizations, boards, and foundations, including the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation, the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts.

We’re looking forward to welcoming her back to Columbia this spring.

SIPA is on Instagram!

On our Admissions Blog, we love sharing deadline reminders, scholarship announcements, and Seeple profiles with you. But we realize there are more ways to connect in this digital landscape. So we are now extending our reach, and will be sharing more admissions-related info on our Facebook and Twitter feeds. (Don’t go anywhere, as there’s still plenty of information to learn from our blog!) 

But that’s not all. To show you more about student life at SIPA, we are now even on Instagram! For the latest images about SIPA student life and events, follow our username @Columbia.SIPA or find us at http://instagram.com/columbia.sipa.

Here’s a taste of the images to come:

Rainy day, instagram image

Stay dry today Seeple!

-Admissions Staff

Seeple Snapshot: Oscar Pocasangre, MPA

Oscar Pocasangre

Master of Public Administration (MPA)
Concentration: Economic and Political Development (EPD)
Specialization: Advanced Policy and Economic Analysis (APEA)
Oscar speaking at a panel on emerging markets at the OECD as a representative for SIPA’s Center on Economic and Global Governance (CGEG)

Oscar speaking at a panel on emerging markets at the OECD as a representative for SIPA’s Center on Economic and Global Governance (CGEG)

 

What did you do before SIPA?

Prior to SIPA, I worked for two years at the MIT Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL) as a policy and training analyst in their Chile office. I focused on creating courses on randomized trials for policymakers and also worked with governments and NGOs throughout the region in promoting the use of good evidence when crafting public policies. I was also able to write up various policy publications, including a book chapter on conditional cash transfers.

What has been the best part of your SIPA experience?

There have been many highlights! Academically, I think the highlight has been taking a class with Andrés Velasco, a former finance minister of Chile and former presidential candidate during the Chilean primaries in 2013. He was very accessible as a professor and he was able to combine rigorous theories from political economy and game theory with his personal experience in politics to explore issues that policymakers face in practice. Another highlight was being able to represent SIPA at two conferences in Paris sponsored by the Center on Global Economic Governance. There were many distinguished speakers at the conferences, including Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz, the Minister of Finance of France, representatives from the UN and the OECD, among many others. It was a great opportunity to hear what these experts think about the world’s current problems and how to solve them.

What kind of work do you hope to do when you graduate?

I want to be a university professor and do research on the political economy of development, governance, and ways of using experimental methods to answer questions of political science. So, that’s a cool way of saying that I hope to stay in school after I graduate.

Can you describe the nature of the SIPA curriculum?

The SIPA curriculum is flexible enough that you can choose to focus on the areas that interest you the most and approach these areas from both theoretical and practical perspectives. SIPA does tend to emphasize practical experience. One of the big values and strengths of the SIPA curriculum is that it requires students to take a series of economics and statistics courses, which I think, are vital for anyone involved in policymaking.

Do you feel like you have gotten to know some of the faculty members?

Yes! This has been one of the other highlights of my time at SIPA. I find that professors here are very accessible and willing to help and offer advice. Many students don’t take much advantage of the office hours of the faculty, but these are great opportunities to get to know professors. I’ve been able to work closely with one faculty member on a research project. As an aspiring academic, this has been an incredible experience and opportunity.

 

"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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