Archive for Columbia University – Page 43

The Writing on the Wall

Posted by Molly Powers

In many areas, SIPA is ahead of the curve on paperless and wireless innovation. Classrooms are multimedia, occasionally even connecting lecturers and other classrooms from around the world. Your readings and the lion’s share of research materials are online, papers are submitted via a course dropbox, students collaborate on projects over google docs, lucid charts, and prezi.  But perhaps because SIPA students’ inboxes are so constantly brimming, when it comes to publicizing school-wide events, we tend to resort to old-fashioned forms of marketing, i.e. posters.

It is one of the great frustrations of my SIPA experience that each day as I walk from the 4th floor to the 6th floor café, I read about all the amazing things that are happening on campus that I won’t be able to attend because, oh yeah, I have to go to classes. A seminar on digital politics in Tibet. A film screening of Food Inc. by the SIPA Food Group. A speakers panel on Rio +20 with the UN Ambassador from Brazil. A public policy forum on voters’ rights with the NAACP President. A workshop on salary negotiation.  I find myself wishing that for a semester, instead of taking courses, I could attend every interesting panel or seminar. But then the courses are pretty good too.

 

Here’s a taste of what’s on the wall this week.

 

Humanitarian Negotiations Revealed: The MSF Experience

Monday, March 19 from 6pm to 9pm

Humanitarian negotiations are life-and-death issues for people in need, but they also raise troubling political and ethical dilemmas for the organizations that are engaged in them. In the forthcoming book Humanitarian Negotiations Revealed: The MSF Experience, published by Columbia University Press, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) takes a critical look at how its teams have negotiated to gain access to people in urgent need of lifesaving medical assistance in the 40 years since MSF was founded, including recent case studies from Somalia, Afghanistan, Sri Lanka, and Myanmar.

Please join us at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs for a moderated panel discussion of these issues with John Fiddler, an experienced MSF aid worker; Sophie Delaunay, the Executive Director of MSF-USA; and the iconoclastic author David Rieff (A Bed for the Night). They will describe the often complicated process of negotiating with governments, armed groups, public health officials, international actors, community leaders, and local officials; as well as the struggle to define what compromises are acceptable in order to run programs in crisis zones.

Sponsored by Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières, SIPA’s Humanitarian Affairs Program, and SIPA’s International Organizations Specialization.

SIPAWESOME TRIVIA NIGHT

Wednesday March 21, 9pm- Midnight at the Harlem Tavern

SIPA Students vs. Engineering School Students: who will win when the battle when analysts and engineers match wits? I guess we’re hoping that most of the trivia questions are not word problems, huh SIPA? $15 Ticket includes drink and food. Live music until 10, followed by trivia, with prizes for the winning team.

SHOOT THE WASTE

March 5- April 2

A Photo Competition for the best and worst examples of sustainability in New York and beyond. Awards Ceremony April 9 at 8pm.

 

  1. Focus on objects, not people 
  2. Upload all photos to the facebook page with your name, UNI, and a 1-2 sentence description of why the photo fits into its category
  3. You must be the photographer, but the photo does not have to be recent. Look in past albums.
  4. Open to everyone in the SIPA community. 

Sponsored by SIPA Food Group, Net Impact, and SIPA Environmental Coalition

 

 

 

SIPA Life on a Friday

The following post was written by Andrea Bustard, a second year MIA student concentrating in Urban and Social Policy. Her involvement in the Southeast Asia Student Initiative, SIPA Students of Color and the Migration Working Group has proven to be an enriching experience while at SIPA.

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SIPA offers a wealth of avenues to prepare students with the needed skills for their careers after graduation. Courses range from Cost Benefit Analysis to Policy and Practices of Humanitarian Assistance, and this doesn’t include the classes offered through other schools such as Columbia Business School or Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia. And with over 40 student organizations, you’re bound to find at least one that matches an interest. As a second year, while I’ve felt the courses have taught me skills, having an opportunity to get involved in student groups has given me a chance to work with like-minded professionals and expand my network.

Few classes meet on Fridays, so students often take advantage of the time to attend SIPA related events. Here’s a snapshot of my Friday:

8am Arrive at the Localizing Global Justice conference in the International Affairs Building and greet incoming presenters and help with check-in for registered guests as a board member of the Southeast Asian Student Initiative.

10am-4pm Hear from panelists at the conference about law and human rights issues in Southeast Asia. Highlights included the presentation “Keeping it Up and Keeping it Down – Broadcasting Rights at Thai Protests” by Benjamin Tausig.

4pm-530pm Attend a reception for the panelists from the conference. I especially enjoyed a poetry and cello performance by Professor McCargo’s wife.

6pm-9pm Network at the Alumni of Color Reception hosted by SIPA Students of Color attended by graduate students and alumni from various schools. The highlight was hearing from SIPA alum and candidate for Congress in New York, Vince Morgan, but the food catered from a nearby Côte d’Ivoire restaurant was a close second.

11pm-2am Support SIPA Pan-Africa Network by going to their African Diplomatic Forum fundraiser party at the Empire State Building. On the way back, we stopped at a pizza place outside the subway station before catching a train home. It was a great way to end the event-filled night.

Attend an event at SIPA

I believe you can learn a lot about a school by visiting it — wander around campus, visit a class and speak to our students.   You may feel the same energy and excitement that I experience every day here as you walk across campus and enter the SIPA building.   There always seems to be something happening here!

Aside from classes and SIPASA activities, as a SIPA student you also have the opportunity to attend several thought-provoking SIPA events on campus each week, ranging from general information sessions on internships, panel forum on police reform, lecture on energy,  a film screening and commentary on conflict resolution .  This week’s feature event is on Thursday, December 1, 2011; 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm: “The U.S. and Global Growth Challenges ” a lecture with Lawrence H. Summers, Charles W. Eliot University Professor of Harvard University. Register.

If you are interested in learning more about SIPA, our programs and how to apply, you can attend one of our information sessions on campus.  They are held weekly on Monday evenings and Friday afternoons, excluding holidays.  If you are interested in visiting us, please contact our office at 212.854.6216 or at [email protected].

Hope to see you around!

Advanced Consortium on Cooperation, Conflict, and Complexity

One of the great things about being a student at SIPA is the vast number of activities and resources that are part of Columbia University.  One great example is the Advanced Consortium on Cooperation, Conflict, and Complexity (or AC4) housed at the Earth Institute.  AC4 is a consortium of existing programs, centers, institutes, and faculty at Columbia.

AC4 brings together faculty, students, scholars, researchers, and practitioners to stimulate innovative and interdisciplinary research in conflict resolution, violence, peace-building, and sustainable development.   There are many tangible benefits for SIPA students, including the funding of projects.  Each fall as many as 12 projects are funded by AC4.   Below is a flyer for an upcoming event and for more information please visit their web site.

SIPA Video

The following video, featuring administrators, students, faculty, and alumni, is a great introduction to all that SIPA has to offer.  Enjoy.

"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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