March 2, 2004
Kudos!
Recognition of the awards, honors, and recent publications
of the GW faculty and staff
Acknowledgements:
Dean Kessmann, assistant professor of photography,
CCAS, will present his first Washington, DC, solo exhibition entitled
Cover to Cover at Conner Contemporary Art through March 27.
Stephen Lubkemann, assistant professor of
anthropology, CCAS, recently received research grants from the Harry Frank
Guggenheim Foundation and from the United States Institute for Peace for
a research project entitled The Politics of Conflict in Nations
Beyond Borders: The Liberian Diaspora in War Making and Peace Building.
Christina Puchalski, associate professor
of medicine and director of GWish, SMHS, has been certified in Hospice
and Palliative Medicine.
Roger Whitaker, dean, College of Professional
Studies, and professor, Department of Educational Leadership, GSEHD, was
named President-elect for 2004 and President for 2005, for the University
Continuing Education Association (UCEA). In October, he delivered the
keynote speech, Why Be Bold?, at the UCEA Mid-Atlantic Regional
Annual Conference, and, in January, presented a paper entitled Creating
Crosswalks: Competencies and Curricula at the 2004 Workforce Development
Forum, San Francisco, CA. In January Whitaker accepted the award of four
Council of Graduate Schools feasibility planning grants from the Ford
and Sloan foundations for development of innovative professional masters
degree programs in the humanities, social sciences and the sciences.
Appointments:
James Bailey, associate professor of organizational
behavior and development, SB, was named editor of the Academy of Management
Learning and Education Journal. Bailey also was invited to keynote BMWs
annual conference, the theme of which was Executive Development
and Learning.
Awards:
Jerome Barron, Harold H. Greene Professor
of Law, LS, was awarded the Fulbright Distinguished Chair in Law at the
University of Trento, Italy.
Robert J. Cottrol, professor of law, Harold
Paul Green Research Professor of Law, LS, and of history, and of sociology,
CCAS, received the 2003 Langum Project for Historical Literature Prize
for his book, Brown v. Board of Education: Caste, Culture and the
Constitution, (University Press of Kansas, 2003), co-authored by
Raymond T. Diamond and Leland B. Ware.
Publications:
Gregory Ludlow, professor of French and international
affairs, CCAS/ESIA, published The Legacy of the Spanish Conquest
of the New World in the Histoire des deux Indes: the Case of the Indigenous
Peoples, in Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century,
pp. 215-232 (Oxford: Voltaire Foundation, 2003).
Larry Ray, senior instructor of law, LS,
co-wrote The Conflict Resolution Program (Jossey Bass/John
Wiley Publishers).
Send feedback to: bygeorge@gwu.edu
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