Archive for reading – Page 2

Summer Reading – Part 4

This is a continuation of our summer reading series.  Once again, if you are an incoming student that will be starting classes in September and want to give people the ability to read or follow you, send an email with your name, degree program, and blog/Twitter/web addresses where you can be found to [email protected] with the title – Summer Reading.

Here is a cumulative list of those that have submitted information to date.

Pablo Alfaro (Incoming MPA)

Twitter Account: @pfalfaro (in Spanish)

Beibei Bao (Incoming MIA)

ENDLESS ROAD IN CHINA: FROM COUNTRY TO CITY AND BACK, Published by World Policy Journal

http://www.worldpolicy.org/journal/winter2010-2011 (original link but requires an account)

http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_hb6669/is_4_27/ai_n56577388/ (free link to the complete story)

IN CHINA, AN EARNEST APPEAL FOR MERCY KILLING, Published by United Press International

http://www.upi.com/Features/Culture_Society/2010/11/09/In-China-an-earnest-appeal-for-mercy-killing/12893210074623/

Radoslava Dogandjieva (Incoming MPA-DP)

Blog: http://bl00mable.blogspot.com/

Rafael Merchan (Incoming MPA-DP)

Blog:  http://agdes.blogspot.com/

Erin O’Reilly (Incoming MPA-DP)

Tumblr: http://ecoreilly.tumblr.com/

Twitter:  http://twitter.com/ecoreilles

Ramón Peña-Franco (Incoming MPA)

Twitter account: @ramonpenafranco

Blog: ramonpenafranco.wordpress.com

Summer Reading

One question we typically get from admitted applicants this time of year is advice for summer reading prior to the start of the fall term. There are generally two opinions from those I ask at SIPA about this topic.

The first group says something like, “Do as much fun reading as you can!  You won’t have any time to read “fun” stuff while at SIPA because you will be so busy.”  Of course your SIPA reading will be meaningful, but it might not be like reading a page turning popular novel.

The second group offers advice on reading that is directly related to what SIPA is all about.  This can be divided into reading materials specific to courses and reading that is just related to topics in international and public affairs.  A future entry will be posted with information on accessing class listings and example syllabi so you can look forward to that, but for now here are some digital resources for you to consider reading and following in the coming months.

SIPA Faculty Blogging and Online Forums:

Steven Cohen: The Huffington Post
Steven Cohen is director of SIPA’s Energy and Environment concentration; director of the MPA program in Environment Science and Policy; executive director of Columbia University’s Earth Institute.

Stuart Gottlieb: The Arena on Politico

Stuart Gottlieb teaches American foreign policy and counterterrorism.

Gary Sick: Gary’s Choices on Tumblr
Gary Sick is a senior research scholar at Columbia’s Middle East Institute and an adjunct professor at SIPA. He served on the National Security Council for three presidents, and is one of the nation’s foremost authorities on Iran and the Persian Gulf region.

Hassan Abbas: Asia Society and Watandost
Hassan Abbas is Quaid-i-Azam Professor with SIPA and Columbia’s South Asia Institute. He teaches courses focusing on politics, religion and security in South Asia.

Guillermo Calvo: The Ecomomist
Guillermo Calvo is the director of SIPA’s mid-career Program in Economic Policy Management (PEPM).  Professor Calvo’s main field of expertise is macroeconomics of emerging market and transition economies.

Rodolfo de la Garza: WNYC
Rodolfo de la Garza specializes in immigration, Latino political behavior, and public policy. He directs the Project on Immigration, Ethnicity, and Race and is vice-president of the Tomás Rivera Policy Institute at the University of Southern California.

José Antonio Ocampo: Project Syndicate
José Antonio Ocampo is director of Economic and Political Development concentration at SIPA, and a Fellow of the Committee on Global Thought at Columbia University. Professor Ocampo previously served in a number of positions in the United Nations and the Government of Colombia.

Jagdish Baghwati: The American Interest

Jagdish Baghwati is the Arthur Lehman Professor of Economics and a professor of political science.

Benjamin Orlove: Earth Institute’s State of the Planet
Benjamin Orlove focuses on environment and climate change. He is an anthropologist who has conducted field work in the Peruvian Andes, East Africa, the Italian Alps, and Aboriginal Australia.

Tanya Domi: The New Civil Rights Movement
Tanya Domi is Senior Public Affairs Officer at Columbia University’s Office of Communications and Public Affairs. She teaches human rights at SIPA.

Howard Freidman: The Huffington Post

Howard Friedman works as a statistician and health economist for the United Nations, currently focused on the areas of maternal and newborn child health, health expenditures, and fertility at UNFPA. He teaches health economics at SIPA.

Anne Nelson: PBS Media Shift
Anne Nelson specializes in international media development and has worked extensively as an analyst, evaluator, and practitioner in the field.

Ralph Da Costa-Núñez: The Huffington Post

Ralph Da Costa-Núñez is President and CEO of Homes for the Homeless, and President of Institute for Children and Poverty, an independent think tank which focuses poverty, homelessness, and the impact on children and families.

Student and alumni blogging:

SIPA’s student-run blog: The Morningside Post

Thanassis Cambanis’ graduate seminar blog: Writing About War.

Samantha Barthelemy (MIA ’11/Sciences Po dual-degree): SAMANHATTAN.

Michelle Chahine (MIA ’12): First Generation.

Josh Gartner (MIA ’06): China Policy Pod.

Francisco Noguera (MPA DP ’12): Next Billion

Admission Committee Reading Update

We have completed our first sweep of all applications printed and about 80% were completed.  Most of these files were completed because 100% of the information needed was submitted on line via the application Web site.

We are now left with around 20% of the total submitted for our second sweep and this will involve looking for documents submitted to our office off line.

In addition, we are starting to distribute files to Admission Committee readers this week.  As I have mentioned before, not all readers start reading at the same time so if your application is not complete, please do not panic.

As we complete our review of incomplete files we will email applicants if we have a question about a missing document.  We will continue to distribute files to Admissions Committee members over the next few weeks and we are right on schedule.

Seriously, I Do Not have a Cat

You might not think it, but the process of assembling and reading admission files can take a physical toll on those that work in the office.  I have gotten burned by hot printer parts, gouged by staples, strained muscles when lifting boxes of paper with my back instead of my legs, and felt pain in my wrist after using a manual stapler for days on end.  But the most common injury by far is the paper cut.  Actually we took it to a whole new level a year or two ago when we moved from paper admission folders to plastic ones.

Okay, I know I probably just made all those interested in environmental studies and policy cringe with that last sentence . . . but wait, there is logic to it.  When we used to use paper admission folders they were one time use.  We would write all over the front of a file and once the year was done we shred them up and ordered thousands more for the following year. Now we simply reuse plastic file folders year after year and the cover sheet is on the inside of the file, viewable through the plastic.  Take  a look . . .

filefolder

Yes, your file will be placed in a folder just like this one.  All of your precious information is on the inside and when the year is over we can reuse the plastic folder the next year.  Plastic is wonderful for this purpose, but I found out that plastic folders possess the same ability to slice human skin as paper folders.

Little paper cuts are annoying but generally do not cause me a lot of grief.  A single sheet of paper will sometimes slice me and I will wince but move right along because upon initial glance there is an indication of the damage, but little to no blood.  However, there are those paper cuts where I wince, grasp at the cut, and immediately shut my eyes.  From the second the slice occurs I can just tell that what I am going to see when I take my uninjured hand away is not going to be good.

Maybe you know the kind of cut I am talking about.  Like one in the webbing between your thumb and index finger that is really deep and each time you move you can feel the cut separating in the webbing.  Paper cuts from paper folders, which are pretty heavy gauge, can be brutal and it did not take me long to discover that plastic files can be just as potent.

With paper cuts and staple gouging occuring quite frequntly this time of year, I could easily be mistaken a cat owner.  My hands almost appear as if I have tried to give a cat a bath –  something I tried in my childhood when my parents went out one night and learned quickly never to do again.  Although I could be mistaken for a cat owner, I am instead the owner of several thousand admission files . . . some of which like to exact their pound of flesh.

"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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