Archive for Meet Seeples – Page 84

What I Did This Summer: Entry #7

Abibata Shanni Mahama is a second year MPA student concentrating in Economic and Political Development.  I asked her to share about her internship this past summer and she wrote the following.

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A_Mahama1My summer vacation was in two folds. On the one hand, it was fun and exciting to re-unite with my family after being away in school for several months. I spent quality time  with my kids and husband, friends and other family members for about a month. However, after this period, I got very tight with my internship at the Institute of Economic Affairs, Ghana. It offered me the opportunity to relate my academic work to industry because the organization has four main departments: Economic and Policy Analysis, Governance, Research and Programs.

I had insight into the processes involved with the formulation and implementation of government policies from the series of round table discussions that were held at the organization by eminent professionals. My passion for teamwork was mostly at play by my engagement in consultative and round table discussions that characterized programs of the organization.

My duties at the Institute of Economic Affairs included the following:

1.    Prepared a contact list of all members of parliament of Ghana containing the names, political parties, constituencies and the contact addresses and a segregated list of leadership of the house of parliament.

2.    Built a list of cabinet and non-cabinet Ministers with their respective ministries locations and contact details.

3.    Assisted in compiling the list of leadership of select stakeholder institutions in civil society and public sector, as well as distributing invitation letters and contacting them on phone to remind them of in-house and off-site workshops or meetings that are organized by the Institute of Economic Affairs.

4.    Helped in organizing logistics and preparing venues for meetings that are to be held at the IEA.

5.    Worked as scribe in caucus and platform meetings with the leadership of political parties where government policies are evaluated  and debated.

6.     Took part in discussions of the various meetings and discussions, most of which were of significant national interest. This was a great learning experience for me.

The Institute of Economic Affairs has contributed immensely to the deepening of democracy and promotion of good governance as the premier organization in public policy in Ghana. The tremendous effort that the Institute has installed in the Ghanaian populace regarding issues of democracy is highly remarkable. IEA creates among others, forums where opposition parties and the ruling party meet to deliberate on issues of national importance once every month.

In my view, this practice enriches democracy and paves the way for transparency. They also hold workshops, seminars and round table discussions with stakeholders, politicians and experts periodically at their premises where I benefited tremendously because I had the opportunity in participating actively to discussions at these forums. Besides, I gained a lot of experience in public policy concerns, professional ethics and I built a great network with stakeholders, policy makers and experts from different fields.

Being a citizen of Ghana, I was able to provide significant input on policy guidelines needed to shape local issues particularly relating to my native region, the Northern region of Ghana. In fact, IEA is a great institution that does my course-related policy and governance issues. My internship with them has indeed received commendation across board.

The following are photographs of me at round table discussion on “Improving the Trade Policy in Ghana”.

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Capstone Workshop: Women and Property Rights in Uganda

Workshops at SIPA apply the practical skills and analytical knowledge learned to a real-world issue. Students are organized into small consulting teams and assigned a substantive, policy-oriented project with an external client.  Clients include public agencies (from the local to national level), international NGOs and multi-national organizations, and major firms in the private sector.  Student teams, working under the supervision of a faculty expert, answer a carefully defined problem posed by the client.  Each team produces an actionable report at the close of the workshop that is designed to translate into real change on the ground.

Essentially, capstone workshops give students not only a chance to further refine their skills and knowledge, but to make a positive contribution to the world around them.  And capstone projects provide valuable experience and contacts for post-graduate employment.

One example of  a workshop took some SIPA students to Uganda.  People and communities who understand their property rights are usually more empowered to defend them. In a SIPA Capstone Workshop, a student team traveled to Uganda to develop a system intended to track the progress of the Women’s Land, Housing and Property Rights Project. The project is attempting to empower and educate women about their rights with respect to land, housing and property ownership. You can read the team’s final report by clicking here.

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What I Did This Summer: Entry #6

Anesa Diaz-Uda is a second year MPA student concentrating in Management and Institutional Analysis.  I asked her to share about her internship this past summer and she wrote the following.

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AnesaI spent my summer in Washington, DC working as a Summer Associate for Deloitte Consulting. Deloitte is one of the largest professional services organizations in the world and is one of the Big Four auditors.  However, in DC I worked solely with the Federal Consulting Practice.   It was a pleasure applying the skills I’d garnered at SIPA, and I’m very grateful for the opportunity.  Here’s what I was up to…

My client was the Under Secretary of Defense for Intelligence (USD(I)), and I worked with their staff on a Research and Development effort focused on cultural awareness programming.   We sought to employ commercial methodologies to rapidly build source networks capable of providing information to help frame issues in a rich socio-cultural context to answer Department of Defense (DoD) requirements.

The project had three distinct phases, and I was able to assist in the first two.  When I first started I conducted an online survey of Internet and classified systems to discover and catalog DoD programs providing cultural awareness products to DoD personnel. Upon completion, we created a metric to determine what programs constituted the DoD’s leading practices, and began conducting personal interviews of the top programs.

At this point, I was able to go out on my own to meet with the leadership of these various programs to better determine the strengths and weaknesses of each one.  From here, we began to synthesize our findings to offer a comparative analysis that would eventually become a commercial methodology for DoD cultural awareness programming.  Unfortunately, I had to leave at this point to return to SIPA, but I was impressed and proud of the work I was able to offer our client.

I never imagined myself working for DoD, but it was an exciting opportunity, and an area of our federal government I hope to learn much more about. As you can imagine, I was very apprehensive when I first started.  However, my team did an amazing job preparing me with the proper clearances as well as familiarizing me with necessary information and protocol.  I enjoyed my team immensely, and was constantly impressed by their level of expertise and knowledge as well as their kindness.

I also got to know my fellow interns.  There were seven of us from public policy programs around the country, and it was great to share stories about our schools, as well as learn more about the different projects we were staffed on.  Deloitte is growing its public policy community within the Consulting practice, and it was an exciting time to be with the firm as well and in DC.  I was and continue to be very pleased with my decision to work for Deloitte this past summer.

What I Did This Summer: Entry #5

Kristoffer Tangri is a second year MIA student concentrating in International Security Policy.  I asked him to share about what he did during the summer break and he wrote the following and sent along the pictures as well.

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It is 86 degrees Fahrenheit with an early morning breeze and the sun is rising over an endless sea of sand and granite rocks. Wadi Rum, a vast desert valley in southwest Jordan awakes to a magnificent spectacle of colors that already captivated T. E. Lawrence. While most SIPA students are off in search of work experience, I decided to travel the Middle East instead: Jordan, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey in two months. The Middle East has always fascinated me, its rich culture and history but also its current political, economic and security situation. This blog entry is too short to share all the many impressions and observations of my trip but can give a short introduction into this unique part of the world.

My first stop of the summer was Istanbul, Turkey’s grand city at the Bosporus and former capital of the Ottoman Empire. The city lives its history and at every corner you find magnificent remainders of its Roman and Ottoman eras. The Hagia Sophia, arguably Istanbul’s most superb landmark, was build as a patriarchal basilica in the 6th century and later turned into a mosque during the Ottoman Empire. In the 1930s, it was made a public museum under the secular movement of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk. The Hagia Sophia now stands in Turkey’s most modern and secular city.

The Sultan Ahmed Mosque also known as the Blue Mosque in Istanbul, Turkey

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My next stop was Amman, the capital of Jordan, a city that has been around for several thousand years but has only grown into a real metropolis over the last decades, partly due to the economic rise of Jordan but also due to the influx of Palestinian and Iraqi refugees. Jordan, unlike its neighbors Lebanon and Syria, has diplomatic relations with Israel and has an important partnership with the United States. You can see American made police cars everywhere and Israeli tourist frequently come to visit one of the many historical and religious sites of the nation. Petra, the lost city, is without a doubt the highlight of the country. Tucked away in a valley hidden behind great mountains, the Western world has been unaware for centuries of the two thousand year old world heritage side’s location until it was rediscovered in 1812 by the Swiss explorer Johann Ludwig Burckhardt.

Petra, a city mainly carved into stone, was once erected as the capital of the Nabataeans and is now Jordan’s most important source of tourist income. Other highlights in Jordan include a trip to the Red Sea at Aqaba, the Dead Sea, the Jordan river and of course Wadi Rum.

The ancient city of Petra, Jordan

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The ancient city of Petra, Jordan

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From Jordan I traveled onwards to Damascus, the capital of Syria. I stayed three weeks in Syria and enrolled in a summer school on Middle East politics, financed by the German and Syrian governments with German and Syrian students. Syria is a country with a highly ambivalent global reputation. Some people will think of the wonderful old town of Damascus with one of Islam’s oldest and most holy mosques, the Ummayad Mosque. They will speak of friendly people, the desert city of Palmyra, famous Crusader castles and the food in Aleppo. Other people will be reminded of George Bush’s “Axis of Evil” remarks in 2002, comment on the political system in the country and speak about Syria’s involvement in Lebanon and Iraq and the fact that Syria does not accept the existence of the state of Israel.

I travelled to Syria to learn more about both sides. I had the opportunity to meet foreign diplomats and Syrian government officials and went on several field trips, for example to a Palestinian Refugee camp or Queneitra at the Golan Heights. Sentiments against Israel and to some extend the United States are still widespread but people are fairly open minded and religious tolerance is rooted deep within the countries politics and society. Syria has mainly avoided civil unrest and religious conflicts within their own territory (with the major exception of Hama in 1982), but did get involved more heavily in their neighboring countries.

Visiting the Syrian parliament and meeting the president of the parliament with a delegation of students

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Israel-Syrian border at the Golan Heights in the United Nations Disengagement Observer Force Zone

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Lebanon was the last stop of my Middle East trip and it was somewhat different than I had expected. Syria is still a more traditional society with very affordable living costs and people rarely speak English. Lebanon and especially Beirut, on the contrary, are highly modern, people speak fluent French or English and the prices in some parts of Beirut were even higher than in New York. Lebanon seemed to me like a surreal place. Only three years ago the country has been at war with Israel and less than two decades ago the bloody civil war ended.

Yet, besides the highly sectarian political system and its history and the fact that you have to pass dozens of military checkpoints with tanks while travelling through the country, Lebanon has established itself as a safe and welcoming tourist and party location. When going out to one of the endless clubs in Beirut you get checked frequently by police and when going to Baalbek, the ancient temple ruins in the Bekaa Valley of Lebanon, you will find a stage for Western rock concerts next to a Hezbollah exhibition.

The Martyrs’ Statue in downtown Beirut

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Hezbollah exhibition in Baalbek

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I had a wonderful time traveling the Middle East and have learned a lot about the region’s culture, history and politics. At SIPA I am concentrating on International Security Policy and Post-Conflict Development and my travels have helped me gain a deeper understanding of the conflicts of the Middle East region. Upon returning to Columbia I will be taking a course on Middle East history and politics and do a part time internship during my fourth semester. SIPA is very flexible with your internship requirement and many students do it part-time to replace or in addition to the summer internship.

Thank you very much, Kristoffer

What I Did this Summer: Entry #3

Josh Huneycutt is a second year MIA student concentrating in Energy and Environmental Policy.  I asked him to share about the process of finding a summer internship and he wrote the following.

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As many of you will learn, obtaining a summer internship while at SIPA can often be a trying process filled with surprises and shifting outcomes.  After months of applying and interviewing for various sustainability- and environmentally-focused internships, I finally landed a position with a well-respected environmental policy institute.   Relieved, I phoned a week later to iron out the details, only to discover that an emergency budget meeting earlier that day had resulted in a good chunk of their staff on the chopping block, and funding for my research project (and thus my internship) abruptly eliminated.

In a state of shock and dismay for a number of hours, my rapidly snowballing and irrational fears of a summer spent living with my parents  were soon allayed by an email offering employment in the COO’s office of the New York Power Authority (NYPA), a state-owned electric utility that generates and transmits approximately one quarter of New York State’s electricity, mostly in the form of hydropower from the Niagara and St. Lawrence rivers.  Desiring experience in the energy sector, and given that I’d be working on issues I’d come to SIPA to explore more deeply (e.g. corporate sustainability, renewable energy, climate change) I accepted the offer and ordered my Metro North commuter rail pass for the daily trip I’d be making to White Plains, New York.

My internship was part of NYPA’s “Developmental Internship Program,” in which approximately 25 interns from around the country are brought into the organization and given both a mentor and substantive responsibilities for the summer.  As an intern in the Special Projects and Business Integration unit of the COO’s office, I had the opportunity to work on initiatives that had wide-ranging impacts on the organization and nearly all of its employees and activities.

After spending a week or so getting up to speed on the science, technology, policy and politics behind generating and transmitting electricity, I dove directly into helping the new chief sustainability manager to craft, finalize, and present NYPA’s comprehensive corporate sustainability plan to the CEO and the trustees.

As you might imagine, creating such a plan for an organization with billions of dollars in revenues, many hundreds of employees, and facilities scattered over a wide geographical area was a challenge in balancing various interests, ideals, and operational and budgetary realities.  In the end, we were able to successfully craft and present a truly robust plan that built on NYPA’s successes and set a bold agenda for action on various sustainability initiatives, such as carbon footprint reduction and renewable energy promotion.

Aside from my responsibilities related to the sustainability plan, I had the opportunity to work closely with the director of energy policy on a number of exciting and rapidly-developing projects, including federal smart grid funding applications and advice regarding shore power for idling cruise ships in New York City.  One of the most rewarding experiences was my involvement with the NYC Mayor’s Office Climate Change Adaptation Task Force energy working group, where NYPA and NYC worked together with other NYC energy-sector stakeholders to address potential climate change impacts.

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All told, it was a fantastic experience.  I learned an incredible amount about various aspects of the energy sector, built meaningful relationships with talented and knowledgeable individuals, had the opportunity to tour hydroelectric and fossil fuel generating facilities throughout the state, and felt that I made a marked impact on the organization.  Not only was I able to gain a wealth of new knowledge, I often referred to coursework and experience gained during my first year at SIPA related to climate change and sustainability in order to tackle difficult questions and challenges.

Despite not being exactly what I’d set out to do with my summer, it was an invaluable and highly-rewarding experience, and an example of how an unexpected turn of events in the sometimes-daunting internship search process can lead to something bigger and better than you might have imagined.

"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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