Annual Report 2013-14

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Annu al Repor t 2013 –2014



Table of Contents Letter from President Bollinger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Letter from Dean Janow . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 MIA and MPA Concentrations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Economic and Political Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Energy and Environment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 International Finance and Economic Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 International Security Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Urban and Social Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Specialized Degree Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Executive MPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 MPA in Development Practice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 MPA in Environmental Science and Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Program in Economic Policy Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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PhD in Sustainable Development . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Institutes and Centers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Center for Development Economics and Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Center on Global Economic Governance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Center on Global Energy Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Center for International Conflict Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Picker Center for Executive Education . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

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Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Tech & Policy @SIPA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 SIPA’s New Specialization: Gender and Public Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Faculty Publications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Career Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 SIPA at a Glance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Statement of Activities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 SIPA Advisory Board . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Campaign Advisory Council . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Donor List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

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Letter from President Bollinger Columbia’s School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) produces groundbreaking scholarship while engaging the institutions and the people who shape society. During the last year, SIPA served as a gathering place for policymakers and academic leaders grappling with historic shifts in energy policy, chaos in Ukraine, and protests in Hong Kong, among a growing list of sobering challenges facing society. This period also saw SIPA launch the Center for Development Economics and Policy as part of a larger effort to address global poverty. The preeminence of SIPA among the world’s global public policy schools is a testament to the dedication and diverse talents of its faculty, students, alumni, and staff and is in no small measure due to the direction provided by Merit E. Janow, now in her second year as Dean. The School prepares its students to be leaders in the 21st century with an academically rigorous approach to studying policy, an innovative curriculum, and practical training. SIPA pursues its mission with the support of an alumni network spanning 158 countries. Among the SIPA milestones of the past year, one that bears special mention is the 10th anniversary of the PhD in Sustainable Development, a joint program with The Earth Institute that serves as a model for how a faculty-inspired vision can establish a new academic discipline of great public value. Armed with the methods and knowledge of a scientist, an economist, and a public policymaker, a doctoral student graduating from this program is equipped to conduct the research and create the policies we need to meet the many challenges posed by the goal of sustainable development. SIPA occupies a singular place in our University community. Columbia has long taken pride in marshaling its significant resources to better understand the wider world and contribute to its improvement. SIPA is the linchpin in this effort: the school at Columbia most attuned to the great policy questions of our time and most directly focused on answering them. Sincerely,

Lee C. Bollinger President

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Letter from Dean Janow The 2013–14 academic year was an extraordinary time at the School of International and Public Affairs, during which our students, faculty, and alumni engaged in powerfully relevant research and initiatives to address the most serious challenges facing our world. SIPA’s relevance is keenly felt when one surveys the events around us, whether it is the growing number of geopolitical crises around the world, the ongoing global economic and financial problems, the attempts to grapple with the environment and climate change, the escalation of cybersecurity threats, or the challenges of urban management. In an increasingly uncertain world, SIPA’s role and impact have never been more vital. Our Students: Students come to SIPA to make a difference. We provide them with the skills, education, and global perspective to pursue their interests. This year we graduated nearly 700 students from 66 countries. All left SIPA expecting—and expected—to be leaders and problem-solvers. In 2013–14, SIPA students undertook a remarkable array of 78 capstone workshops. Examples include efforts to assess the future of the oil and gas industry in Russia, analyze international security policy in Afghanistan, improve digital diplomacy in Kosovo, promote climate financing in China, and address health needs after Hurricane Sandy. Through these analytical, hands-on projects—as well as access to more than 700 events at SIPA over the past year—our students gained unrivaled exposure to scholars and practitioners from the highest levels of government, the private sector, and nonprofit organizations. New Faculty: Among new SIPA faculty in 2013–14, we welcomed Andrés Velasco, former finance minister of Chile; Rohit “Rit” Aggarwala, formerly New York City’s top sustainability planner; Paul Lagunes, a scholar of Latin American politics and corruption; and Thomas Groll, a lecturer in economics. Professor Takatoshi Ito, an internationally recognized economist and former senior government official in Japan, will join SIPA full time in January 2015. We also welcomed outstanding part-time faculty, senior scholars, and visiting professors, including Peter Clement, an expert on intelligence and the former Soviet Union. As always, SIPA faculty engaged in cutting-edge research and published several nationally reviewed books. Milestones: In February 2014, SIPA and The Earth Institute celebrated the 10th anniversary of the joint PhD in Sustainable Development. In July 2013, our MIA and MPA programs also received official accreditation from the Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs, and Administration (NASPAA), a designation that will enhance SIPA’s leadership role and visibility in the changing landscape of public policy education. New Initiatives: In the fall of 2013, SIPA launched the Center for Development Economics and Policy to support microeconomic research to investigate sources of poverty and inform practical interventions to address them. Through our new Technology and Policy initiative, SIPA is launching new courses and workshops, supporting challenge grants for technology projects that solve urban social problems globally, and funding a start-up lab for alumni entrepreneurs. SIPA faculty, in collaboration with faculty across the University and other experts, also are advancing new research collaborations around cybersecurity and Internet governance. This work would not be possible without the tremendous generosity of SIPA’s donors, whose steadfast support continues to enable current and future generations of SIPA students to attend the most global public policy school and join a network of more than 19,300 alumni in 158 countries. We thank you for your support. I look forward to working with our talented, vibrant community to enhance our legacy as a premier school of international and public policy and to continue to build on our strengths and identify new adjacencies to further extend our reach. Yours truly,

Merit E. Janow Dean, School of International and Public Affairs Professor of Professional Practice in International Economic Law and International Affairs

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MIA and MPA Concentrations



Economic and Political Development Untangling the Web of Poverty and Politics

As economic and social inequality maDe headlines in the United States, students and faculty in SIPA’s Economic and Political Development concentration worked to fight poverty around the world and provide opportunities for growth and development.

At the Forefront In 2013–14, new courses put SIPA students at the leading edge of the field. Alumnus Eric Cantor MIA ’05 and Sara-Jayne Terp joined SIPA in 2013 as adjunct lecturers, teaching Technology Solutions for Development and Social Change. Cantor is an accomplished international technology entrepreneur who started and sold two Internet infrastructure companies and established Africa’s first mobile phone application laboratory in Uganda. Terp serves as director of data projects at Ushahidi, where she is working on communitybased data gathering systems.

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Louise Schneider-Moretto and Camilla Nestor taught Financial Inclusion: Models and Products to Enhance Financial Access for the Poor. Schneider-Moretto serves as managing director of investments at Grassroots Capital Management and has more than 20 years of experience in banking, social investing, and international development. Nestor is senior vice president, Global Solutions at Grameen Foundation, where she is responsible for cross-cutting initiatives around financial services, agriculture, and health. Jyotsna (Jo) Puri taught a short course on Impact Evaluations

in Practice. Puri is a member of 3ie’s senior management team, where she leads the organization’s open, thematic, and policyrelated grant windows.

Faculty in Action Professor José Antonio Ocampo, director of the Economic and Political Development concentration, completed the first year of a three-year term as chair of the United Nations Committee for Development Policy. The Committee for Development Policy is the main technical advisory body to the United Nations Economic and Social Council.

Ocampo was also appointed by Colombian president Juan Manuel Santos to chair his Commission on Rural Development. Alessia Lefébure, adjunct assistant professor and director of Columbia University’s Alliance Program, received the FrenchAmerican Partnership of Excellence Award from the FrenchAmerican Foundation. The award recognizes an individual or organization that has contributed to creating a strong and enduring French-American partnership in business, government, or academia.


Engaging World Leaders on Crucial Issues “New Avenues for Global Illicit Drug Policies” September 25 A lecture and discussion event with Perez Molina, president of the Republic of Guatemala; Luis Fernando Carrera Castro, minister of foreign affairs of Guatemala; and Professor José Antonio Ocampo, director of the Economic and Political Development concentration at SIPA

Empowerment and Entrepreneurship: Capstone Workshops BRAC: Empowerment and Livelihoods for Adolescents: A student team developed recommendations to strengthen the work of the Bangladesh Rehabilitation Advancement Committee (BRAC) to empower adolescent girls in Uganda to improve their socioeconomic status. BRAC is a U.S.-based nonprofit development organization working to alleviate poverty by empowering the poor. The project was recognized with the 2014 Dr. Susan Aurelia Gitelson Award for Human Values in International Affairs. Digital Diplomacy: Students collaborated with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Kosovo and Arbolis Consultants to provide strategic recommendations on strengthening Kosovo’s digital diplomacy efforts and online presence. The team reviewed best practices, assessed current diplomatic activities in Kosovo, and provided advice on improvement. The team’s fieldwork included conferences with high-level officials in the Kosovo government, including President Atifete Jahjaga, Kosovo’s first female president.

KOTO: Know One Teach One: The team conducted an evaluation of this well-respected social enterprise in Vietnam, which trains vulnerable youth for jobs in restaurants and catering companies. Security in Honduras: The team worked with Transparency International’s secretariat in Germany and its chapters in the United Kingdom and Honduras to evaluate Alianza por la Paz y Justicia, a multistakeholder alliance to involve civil society in security and justice-sector reform in Honduras.

From Washington to Silicon Alley All five SIPA finalists for the U.S. Presidential Management Fellows program were Economic and Political Development concentrators: Grace Hoerner and Lauren Sprott ’14; Jasmine Park ’13; and Giancarlo Cavallo and Homa Hassan ’12. The U.S. Presidential Management Fellows program is a highly competitive paid internship at a U.S. government agency. Concentration alumnus Tyler Radford ’12 was awarded a spot in Columbia University’s new Startup Lab, a University initiative designed to engage New York City’s burgeoning startup sector and foster entrepreneurial talent. Chosen from more than 200 submissions by recently graduated alumni, entrepreneurs occupy newly renovated space at the WeWork Soho West location, in the heart of New York City’s own Silicon Alley. Radford created RecoveryHub, a website that helps communities and humanitarian organizations direct relief and recovery efforts. Stubbs is CEO and founder of First Access, a social enterprise that provides credit checks for lowincome borrowers in developing countries based on their prepaid phone card records.

Top: President of Guatemala Perez Molina being interviewed following his lecture Bottom: Recipients of the Dr. Susan Aurelia Gitelson Award for Human Values in International Affairs with Dr. Gitelson (front, second from right) and capstone director Eugenia McGill (second from left)

Featured Internship Young Moon MPA ’14 Ixtatan Foundation “At the Ixtatan Foundation, I was involved in every aspect from fundraising, grant writing, organizing meetings, organizing programs, etc. It was great to experience how things work in the field. My contributions included organizing the agenda and case for the support of a high school’s operational cost from the municipal government, as well as designing and initiating a mentoring program for the youth in Huehuetenango, Guatemala.” 7


Energy and Environment Building the Program’s Strengths

In 2013–14, the Energy and Environment concentration went through a collaborative stakeholder engagement process to rebalance the curriculum across energy and environment, responding to changes in the field and the evolving interests of students and faculty.

Strengthening the Curriculum Changes included: •

Development of a more rigorous foundation for the environment track

Increased focus on methods for students to bolster their analytic proficiencies

Creation of a new track entitled “Energy and Resource Management” (ERM) that integrates energy and environment fundamentals and allows more flexibility for tailoring to specialized career interests

New course offerings such as Environmental Systems Fundamentals (co-taught by Professors Sara Tjossem and Wolfram Schlenker) and International Energy Project Finance (taught by Professor James Guidera, managing director and group head at Crédit Agricole CIB)

Led by concentration director Travis Bradford, faculty, and staff also conducted a benchmarking study to understand the landscape of Energy and Environment offerings, to identify the program’s major competitors, and to articulate how the concentration differs from other programs. The results showed SIPA to have the largest and most diverse program of its kind anywhere.

Travis Bradford, director of the Energy and Environment concentration

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Scott Barrett, Lenfest Professor of Natural Resource Economics at the School of International and Public Affairs and The Earth Institute

Jonathan Chanis, adjunct professor of international and public affairs

Preparing for Future Challenges Outside the classroom, the concentration also boosted student support with “The Program,” an initiative to provide sector-specific career support in collaboration with the Office of Career Services. This initiative encourages students to take a more proactive role in defining their professional objectives. Students electing to participate in “The Program” can schedule one-on-one career advisory sessions with faculty, attend tailored networking and interviewing workshops, and participate in specialized forums to discuss challenges and resources in specific areas within the field. More than 90 percent of job seekers actively participated in “The Program” for the entire year. In 2015, the concentration will expand “The Program” globally. The Global Collaboratory, funded by a faculty grant award plus additional outside support, will send teams of students to China to engage with energy and environment subsectors, lead conversations on solution development, and initiate new professional relationships with NGOs, governments, and industries while leveraging the East Asia Global Center’s local access and expertise. The goal is to launch the Global Collaboratory in at least three more countries next year.

Beyond the Classroom

Featured Internship Eve Jezequel MIA ’14 U.S. Environmental Protection Agency “My main responsibility at the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency was to draft the methodology of an enforcement targeting pilot program evaluation. The work was substantive—it required gathering information, research, and writing. The internship helped me confirm what type of work environment I would like to start my career in and also gave me the opportunity to discover various fields of work that are relevant to my interests.”

Professor Jonathan Chanis, who teaches Geopolitics of Oil and Gas, won a University teaching award. In the spring Professor Chanis led a group of students on a field trip to natural gas drill sites in Pennsylvania and West Virginia. Students spoke with company officials about natural gas developments in the Marcellus Formation and observed how this development affects the local community and the environment. The visit to the drill sites furthered the group’s understanding of natural gas production by allowing everyone to see firsthand the scale and scope of a drilling operation. The concentration hosted a number of exciting events for students and partners this year, including the world-class Annual Energy Symposium in November and the first annual Spring Fling in April to celebrate graduating students.

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Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy Global Advocacy and Universal Justice

Poster for the Guantรกnamo Memory Project workshop at the Columbia Global Centers Turkey-Istanbul

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In 2013–14, the research, teaching, and study of human rights and humanitarian policy at the School of International and Public Affairs continued to transcend traditional academic boundaries, addressing the complexities of these issues in a globalized world.

Perspectives from Africa and the Americas: Capstone Workshop

Human Rights and Humanitarianism: Contradictory or Codependent?

Students worked with the Open Society Justice Initiative to compare two diverse systems of human rights institutions: African and interAmerican. Drawing on literature review and field-based research and analysis, the team advised the client on challenges particular to their areas of advocacy and offered recommendations to strengthen both human rights systems.

What should be the driving forces of humanitarian action? Participants in this conference on October 30, 2013, reflected on the role that a human rights–based approach can play in creating a common set of humanitarian norms and values that bridge these divides.

Guantánamo Bay: Beyond the War on Terror Professor Elazar Barkan, director of the Human Rights and Humanitarian Policy concentration, and Liz Ševčenko, director of the Guantánamo Public Memory Project, jointly conducted a workshop on April 5, 2014, at Columbia Global Centers Turkey-Istanbul, in conjunction with the Guantánamo project at Studio-X Istanbul. Students from 11 universities around the United States collaborated to create the traveling exhibition, more than 100 testimonies, a web platform, and public events. The Guantánamo Public Memory Project—one of several interrelated efforts at Studio X Istanbul—promoted new understanding.

Disaster in Ruritania: Network on Humanitarian Action Simulation At the conclusion of the 2013–14 academic year, six students traveled to Germany to join nearly two dozen European peers to rescue fragile and war-torn Ruritania from the double scourge of earthquake and typhoon. In this simulation—an exercise for a humanitarian crisis response—a small team of faculty members, including SIPA’s Dirk Salomons and Roy Williams, recreated hurdles encountered in a real natural disaster: menacing militias, dysfunctional airports, malcontent beneficiaries, and donors demanding financial reporting in seven currencies according to different templates. Students from SIPA and universities in Europe’s humanitarian network formed lasting friendships and worldwide contacts.

Skye Beare MIA ’15 MADRE

Featured Internship

“At MADRE, a small international women’s human rights organization, I cowrote a high-level briefing memo for an international human rights expert; drafted an amicus brief examining legal instances when gender-based violence has risen to the level of torture, cruel, inhumane, or degrading treatment; and designed a training manual on transitional justice measures in Colombia and Guatemala in English and in Spanish. The entire experience only served to strengthen my desire to work in this field in the future.”

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International Finance and Economic Policy Ingenuity at Work

In 2013–14, world economies grappled with policies to spark growth. Using their ingenuity, students and faculty in SIPA’s International Finance and Economic Policy concentration worked to craft new solutions to build the financial institutions of the future.

Capstone Workshops: Climate Financing and Thinking Small in Latin America

China’s New Leadership, One Year On: An Initial Assessment

In 2013–14, students researched innovative climate financing mechanisms involving publicprivate partnership for the China Ministry of Finance; partnered with the Inter-American Development Bank to help small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Latin America and the Caribbean reach international markets; and worked with the Federal Reserve Bank of New York to analyze how foreign reserves can influence the exchange value of currencies and counter future financial shocks.

October 2013

Hormats on U.S. Foreign Economic Policy

November 21, 2013, Lotos Club

“U.S. Foreign Economic Policy: Recent Developments and Challenges” December 4, 2013 Robert D. Hormats, former U.S. undersecretary of state for Economic Growth, Energy, and the Environment, shared his insights on U.S. foreign economic policy with students. 12

Patrick Chovanec, managing director and chief strategist at New York–based Silvercrest Asset Management, and former associate professor at Tsinghua University’s School of Economics and Management in Beijing, reviewed China’s new leadership and the rise of the nation’s currency, the renminbi.

Meeting, Greeting, and Networking at the Fall Gala Faculty, students, and special guests gathered for this annual event.

Alternative Investing: Greenwich Roundtable Lecture Series In the spring of 2014, the International Finance and Economic Policy concentration introduced a dynamic new lecture series on

alternative investing, organized by the Greenwich Roundtable, an “intellectual cooperative” for asset managers. Four hedge fund managers offered presentations on: •

Pitfalls of Hedge Fund Investing

Hedge Funds and the Due Diligence Process

Understanding Fixed Income

and Credit Strategies •

Portfolio Construction and Managing Complexity

Markets Dialogue: From Unemployment to Dodd-Frank Students inaugurated a “markets dialogue” discussion group. The first gathering focused on U.S. job market data and recent

Featured Alumna Ellen Jarvis Brooks MIA ’14 J.P. Morgan “I am a banking associate for J.P. Morgan Private Bank Europe, Middle East, and Africa team. My degree from SIPA allowed me to pursue course work as varied as my job description and gain a geopolitical foundation of international affairs.”


upheaval in emerging markets. The student-led discussion reviewed the accuracy of employment numbers and how the news relates to the Federal Reserve’s tapering decisions. A second markets dialogue covered international banking topics and the implementation of Dodd-Frank reforms in the financial sector.

Lunchtime Discussions with Faculty Faculty lunches in the spring of 2014 included Steven Mandis, an ex–Goldman Sachs trader, faculty member at Columbia Business School, and author of What Happened to Goldman Sachs. On April 1, he offered students his interpretation of Goldman Sachs’ business tenets. On April 8, William Deringer, lecturer in the history department at Columbia College, covered bubbles, shifts in market behaviors, and ethical standards.

Top: Professor Richard Robb, director of the International Finance and Economic Policy (IFEP) concentration, at the Fall Gala Middle: IFEP students at the Fall Gala Bottom: Professor Andrea Bubula (right), executive director of the IFEP concentration, at the Fall Gala

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International Security Policy Diplomacy and Defense in the 21st Century

Richard K. Betts, Arnold A. Saltzman Professor of War and Peace Studies, director of the Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, and director of the International Security Policy concentration

From the emergence of a brutal religious extremism in Iraq and Syria to the conflict among Ukraine, separatists, and Russia, issues of security and defense lay at the heart of many international events in 2013–14.

Fog of War: Crisis Puts Decisions to the Test Students participated in an annual daylong crisis simulation of a hypothetical U.S. intervention in Syria. Student teams represented states—United States, Israel, Iran, Saudi Arabia,

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or Russia—or a fictional terrorist organization. During the simulation, each team devised a strategy to accomplish specific political objectives while dealing with the constraints and uncertainty that actual decisionmakers might face.

Learning from the Experts During a trip to Washington, D.C., in fall 2013, students visited with leaders at several federal agencies including the Department of Defense, Department

Stephen Sestanovich, Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Professor of International Diplomacy

of State, Department of the Treasury, Department of Energy, National Security Council, Congressional Budget Office, and organizations such as the Center for Strategic and International Studies. Students had an unparalleled opportunity to speak with senior government officials—such as Deputy Secretary of Energy Daniel Poneman—and network with accomplished SIPA alumni in the Washington area.

An Exceptional Mix of Academics, Practice, and Policy At a career panel discussion in spring of 2014, several faculty members shared reflections on their experiences at the CIA, Congressional Budget Office, and U.S. Senate, as well as the RAND Corporation, Brookings Institution, and Aga Khan Foundation. Collectively, their careers have taken them around the world—to Russia, Afghanistan, Iraq, and the Democratic Republic of Congo.


Featured Internship Ryan Beck, MPA ’14 NYPD Counterterrorism Bureau “I am an International Security Policy concentrator, and all of the work done by the NYPD Counterterrorism Bureau is directly relevant to my studies at SIPA. I contributed to the management of the NYPD Domain Awareness System (DAS) and had direct access to high-level leadership, observing their decision-making processes firsthand. This experience will be valuable in any field after I graduate.”

Syria: Good Rebel Governance Jean-Marie Guéhenno and Dipali Mukhopadhyay were awarded a SIPA research grant for their project entitled “Promoting ‘Good Rebel Governance?’ War-fighting, State-building, and Intervention in Syria.” The project examines provisions of U.S. political and material support to the Syrian opposition deemed appropriate as moderate proxies and partners of the West.

Capstone Workshops: Tackling Oil, Afghanistan, and Lone Wolves Assessing the Political Risk and Challenges Facing Western Oil and Gas Companies in Russia: This student team partnered with Barclays Capital to construct a framework for identifying and evaluating risks to current and planned projects in the Bazhenov Formation and the Kara Sea, with emphasis on the crisis in Ukraine. The team

concluded that Western oil and gas firms that create reciprocal relationships with Russian companies are most likely to succeed in the long term. Combatting Lone Wolf Terrorism: Students worked with the UN Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate to combat the phenomenon of lone-wolf terrorism. The group proposed a “hate-speech matrix,” monitoring radical online websites and media, developing counternarratives, and adapting youth and community trust-building

programs to new member states and regions. Post-2014 U.S. Policy in Afghanistan: Working with the U.S. Office of the Vice President, students prepared a white paper with strategic recommendations for the U.S. to meet its interests in Afghanistan after the NATO/ International Security Assistance Force mission concludes.

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Urban and Social Policy Solutions on the Street

With a population of more than eight million, New York is an incubator for big ideas—and major issues—from education and poverty to labor and transportation.

Corruption in Latin America In 2013, Paul Lagunes joined SIPA as assistant professor of international and public affairs. He studies corruption, especially as it affects city governments in Latin America, including corruption’s regressive impact on society, the factors maintaining a corrupt status quo, and the conditions under which anticorruption monitoring is effective. He teaches a course in Comparative Urban Policy with a focus on developing cities.

Growing Access to Green Groceries Professor Ester Fuchs, director of the Urban and Social Policy concentration, and Sarah Holloway, lecturer in international and public affairs, aided by a research team of students from the Urban and Social Policy concentration,

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years in operation,” said Fuchs. “This innovative program is a success for both the vendors and the customers. It’s a net gain for public health and a model program for densely populated urban areas elsewhere in the United States.”

Building a Path to the Middle Class

QUEENS, NEW YORK CITY - AUG. 28: NYC Green Cart on street in Jamaica Queens, NYC seen on August 28, 2012. Green Carts sell only fresh fruits and vegetables to promote healthy eating citywide.

published a policy report evaluating the effectiveness of the NYC Green Cart Initiative on improving access to fresh fruits and vegetables for low-income New Yorkers. Students worked as research assistants and

conducted fieldwork, collecting data and interviewing green cart vendors and customers throughout New York City. “This evaluation represents the first comprehensive review of the Green Carts program after six

Fuchs also published a policy report, along with Dorian Warren, associate professor of political science and international and public affairs, studying the success and potential expansion of pre-apprenticeship programs for minority youth in the building and construction trades as a career pathway to middle class jobs. The study made recommendations to New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio’s administration that could triple the number of apprenticeship openings available to high school graduates.


From left: SIPA Dean Merit E. Janow, Columbia President Lee C. Bollinger, and Professor David N. Dinkins with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio MIA ’87, keynote speaker at the 17th Dinkins Forum

David N. Dinkins Leadership and Public Policy Forum The 17th annual forum on April 25, 2014, featured SIPA alumnus and newly elected New York City mayor Bill de Blasio. De Blasio discussed his entrance into New York City politics, the impact of past administrations, and his plans for the city—including additional units of affordable housing.

Capstone Workshops: Recovery and Repair Assessing Health Needs in Underserved Urban Communities: The Rockaways Post–Hurricane Sandy: More than a year after Hurricane Sandy, Rockaway Peninsula communities in Queens still experienced one of the most difficult recoveries in New York City. Working with Doctors of the World USA, the

SIPA team created and conducted a health needs assessment to provide useful data to inform health care interventions and advocacy efforts. The students recommended expanded clinic services for low-income people who are insured. Using Big Data and Applied Microeconometrics to Improve Policy: Trees and Sidewalks Program: This Capstone Workshop evaluated the NYC Department of Parks and Recreation’s program to repair tree-related sidewalk damage to reduce risks posed by street trees. The team’s recommendations included improvement of data management, revisions of specific protocols, increased transparency, and a monitoring system for the process at the borough and community district level.

Featured Internship Wala Budri MIA ’14 African Development Bank “In my internship at the African Development Bank (AfDB), I benefited most from learning more about the organization’s internal operations and realizing that this is a place where I can see myself working after SIPA. I absolutely love the culture, and the staff is incredibly professional and supportive. One of my responsibilities was to analyze the effectiveness of capacity building and technical assistance of Liberia’s Institute of Public Administration.”

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specialized degree Programs



Executive MPA

A World of Opportunity for Mid-Career Learners

In 2013–14, the Executive Master of Public Administration (EMPA) program welcomed 92 students, the largest class in its history. The class included a dozen international students.

New Research

Global EMPA Brazil Program

In September 2013, William Eimicke, director of the EMPA program, secured a grant from President Bollinger’s Global Innovation fund for the Global Public Management project, a study of best practices in budget-sector management in Brazil, India, and China in addition to the United States, which will be run through SIPA in partnership with Teachers College and the Mailman School of Public Health. The study will use researchers from each country to map policies related to cities, education, and public health and also identify local cases for further study.

The EMPA program secured funding to create a hybrid online and inperson executive MPA degree program, to launch first in Brazil in 2015.

“The whole question of how globalization itself affects the work of public-sector managers around the world has been undertheorized,” Eimicke said. “This project will allow us to find and study examples of public-sector innovation from dynamic, fast-growing BRIC nations and also allow for a ‘South/South’ exchange of ideas across the network of Columbia Global Centers.” An international symposium to address these issues is slated for Columbia in fall 2015.

The program’s media team, led by Adam Stepan, has created two multimedia case studies, one on the use of “big data” by the City of New York under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, and the second on public-private partnerships that developed NYC’s High Line (photo, right bottom) and revitalized Central Park. The case studies will be used in the Global EMPA Brazil program, additional SIPA courses, and in courses at the Graduate School of Journalism.

High-Impact Faculty Howard W. Buffett MPA ’08, a graduate of the EMPA program, joined SIPA, where he teaches courses on management and global philanthropy. Buffet was the executive director of the Howard G. Buffett Foundation and served in the U.S. Department of Defense, overseeing agriculture-based economic stabilization and redevelopment programs in Iraq and Afghanistan. He received the Joint Civilian Service Commendation Award—the highest ranking civilian honor presented by the Joint Chiefs of Staff—and also served as a policy adviser for the White House Domestic Policy Council, where he coauthored President Obama’s cross-sector partnership strategy.

Opposite right: Howard W. Buffett MPA ’08 speaks at the conference on cover crops and soil health, in Omaha, Neb., Feb. 18, 2014. Bottom: The High Line Park in New York.

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MPA in Development Building Societies

Professor Glenn Denning, founding director of the MPA-DP program

Nearly half of the world’s population lives on less than two dollars a day, with debilitating hunger, poor health, environmental degradation, and lack of basic infrastructure. SIPA’s Master of Public Administration in Development Practice (MPA-DP) trains students to understand and manage integrated approaches to these crucial development challenges.

Glenn Denning Honored for Outstanding Teaching Professor Glenn Denning, founding director of the MPA-DP program, received the Presidential Award for Outstanding Teaching from Columbia University President Lee C. Bollinger at the University’s 2014 commencement ceremony.

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Denning, an expert in international agricultural research and development, was one of five professors to receive the award. Dean Merit E. Janow praised his leadership of the MPA-DP program and his use of diverse instructional methods—case studies, debates, field trips, and guest lectures—as an instructor in Global Food Systems, a required course for all MPA-DP students.

Students learn to evaluate stakeholders, institutions, and root causes; map problems; and use geographic information systems, logical framework analysis, and social media, advocacy, and agenda setting.

Development Practice Lab Helps Students Reducing Poverty Sharpen Skills through Farming Designed by Professor André Corrêa d’Almeida and alumna Laura Budzyna MPA-DP ’12, the Development Practice Lab is a series of 10 workshops taught by guest practitioners who use cases from MPA-DP core courses to train students in problem analysis and program design.

Professor Isabelle Tsakok aims to reduce poverty through sustained agricultural development. Tsakok has been a senior economist at the World Bank for 25 years and a consultant for more than 10 years. Her recent book, Success in Agricultural Transformation (Cambridge, 2011), analyzes the


Practice

Newly arrived Syrian refugees wait for their turn to receive mattresses, blankets, and other supplies, and to be assigned to tents, at the Zaatari refugee camp in Mafraq.

policy, institutional, and incentive environments that will transform farming in the coming decades.

A handful of examples: •

A Summer in the Field The MPA-DP program places students with partner organizations in developing countries, where they spend at least 10 summer weeks on an integrated, multisectoral development project. In the summer of 2014, 49 MPA-DP students worked in 24 countries in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, in a diverse range of projects for NGOs, businesses, UN agencies, and governments.

Syrian refugees Raghad al Hasan, 9, left, and Reham Abd al Sattar, 9, pose for a portrait in front of their family tents in an unofficial refugee camp on the outskirts of Amman, Jordan, Jan. 22, 2014.

Monroe Lacerte applied her previous experience with refugee and migrant communities to her work with UNICEF to develop a monitoring and evaluation toolkit that captured programmatic impacts on work readiness and civic engagement for adolescent refugees from Syria and Palestine in Amman, Jordan. As a Boren Fellow and former project manager with Engineers Without Borders, Matt Smith worked on the USAID Financing Ghanaian Agriculture Project with CARANA Corporation, where he designed

agricultural lending and risk reduction tool kits for participating financial institutions and business advisory service providers in Accra, Ghana. •

Annisa Sari, a tax official from Indonesia’s Ministry of Finance, worked with the Myanmar Development Resource Institute’s Centre for Economic and Social Development (MDRI-CESD) to develop and propose changes in tax reform, structures, and administration in Yangon, Myanmar. A business adviser with experience promoting international trade and investment promotion in Brazil, Samir Hamra

Neto worked with social enterprise incubator Socialab to develop a qualitative methodology for ecosystem mapping of the Colombian enterprise landscape in Bogotá, Colombia. •

Allison Lee-Villanueva, a youth development specialist and Returned Peace Corps Volunteer in Indonesia, worked with Pragati Manav Seva Sansthan to design and field-test a maternity health monitoring mobile app for integration into local health initiatives in Ragogarh, India.

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MPA in Environmental Science and Policy Serving and Preserving the Planet

During the summer of 2013, President Barack Obama delivered his first major domestic speech dedicated exclusively to the need to tackle greenhouse gas emissions and other threats to the earth. SIPA’s MPA in Environmental Science and Policy (MPA-ESP) has been training public managers and policymakers to apply innovative, systemsbased thinking to environmental issues. The program educates students to find solutions in local, state, and federal government agencies, as well as nonprofits and the private sector.

Professor Steven Cohen to Serve on NASPAA Council Professor Steven Cohen, professor in the practice of public affairs at SIPA and executive director of The Earth Institute, was elected to a three-year term on the executive council of the Network of Schools of Public Policy, Affairs, and Administration (NASPAA). The organization comprises more than 280 universities in the United States and abroad. Cohen served on NASPAA’s executive council from 1993 to 1995.

Cities, Transit, and the Environment

ESP Alumni Making a Difference in NYC

Creating Change with Capstone Workshops

Rohit T. “Rit” Aggarwala, who works on cities, transportation, and the environment, joined the faculty as professor of professional practice in international and public affairs. Aggarwala also serves as special adviser to the chair of the C40 Cities Climate Leadership Group, leads environmental programs for Bloomberg Philanthropies, and is co-chair of the Fourth Regional Plan of the Regional Plan Association of New York.

Hannah Thonet MPA-ESP ’13 was named chief of staff for the New York City Department of Environmental Protection.

In 2013–14, students:

From 2006 to 2010, Aggarwala served as the chief environmental policy adviser to New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and led the development and implementation of New York City’s sustainability plan, PlaNYC: A Greener, Greater New York.

Haley Rogers MPA-ESP ’11 is engaged in a pilot program for the New York City Department of Sanitation to encourage residents to separate organic food waste from the rest of their garbage. Profiled by the New York Times in 2014, the program sends food waste to compost sites instead of landfills. Rogers joined the Department in 2013.

Top: Rohit Aggarwala, professor of professional practice in international and public affairs Bottom left: Steven Cohen, professor in the practice of public affairs and executive director of The Earth Institute Bottom right: Preparing to rebuild in the Rockaway Peninsula after Hurricane Sandy

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Evaluated the effectiveness of New York’s solar incentive programs in reaching an economically diverse residential customer base

Analyzed the New York City Department of Sanitation’s residential enrollment programs

Promoted energy efficiency in New York State government buildings

Built resilience to natural disasters on New York City’s Rockaway Peninsula


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Program in Economic From All Corners of the World

The PEPM Class of 2014

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Policy Management

The Program in Economic Policy Management (PEPM) Class of 2014 was truly global, with 55 students from more than 30 countries. Students represented a broad spectrum of academic and professional experience. About half had earned master’s degrees in economics, management, or related areas, with an average of six years of work experience in fields ranging from central banking and international economic development to asset management and economic journalism.

Sharing Experiences PEPM initiated a three-part series of alumni/student discussions. Alumni working at the International Finance Corporation, HSBC, United Nations Development Programme, Bank of Japan, BlackRock, and Deutsche Bank spoke with students about their organizations, what makes them successful in their positions, how PEPM prepared them for their current jobs, and what they seek in new hires.

Leading the World Khin Saw Oo PEPM ’99 was appointed deputy governor of the Central Bank of Myanmar in 2013. She previously served the Central Bank as deputy director general of the Regulation and Anti-Money Laundering Department and the Research and Training Department. She is also the head of the nine-member inflation review task force that was formed by order of the President’s Office of Myanmar in August 2014. Huiyu Tian PEPM ’02 is currently the president of China Merchants’ Bank. He took over the position in May 2013 after serving at China Construction Bank as head of the Beijing Branch and deputy general manager of the Shanghai Branch. He has also served as vice president of Bank of Shanghai Co., Ltd and as vice president of China Cinda Trust & Investment Co., Ltd. Vahagn Grigoryan PEPM ’12 was appointed head of the monetary policy department at the Central Bank of Armenia. Previously, Grigoryan was head of the external sector division at the monetary policy department and a macroeconomist at the Central Bank of Armenia. Isolina Rossi PEPM ’14 received the Angelo Costa Prize at a ceremony in Rome. The prize is awarded to the four most deserving graduate theses published in Italy. Rossi’s thesis, Life Satisfaction and Unemployment: An Analysis from the Eurobarometer Survey, addressed the idea that “the wealth and the social progress of a nation . . . is a complex and multidimensional concept [that] requires a broad and comprehensive measurement.” SIPA professor and Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz presented the award, and Rossi’s essay was published in the Italian journal Rivista di Politica Economica.

Addressing Policy Challenges in the Post-Recession World “Fed Tapering and the Fortunes of Nations” September 24, 2013 Professor Guillermo Calvo, director of PEPM, and Professors Jan Svejnar and Andrés Velasco addressed the widespread shock stemming from the capital market in a panel discussion cosponsored by the Center on Global Economic Governance.

“The Latest Research from Latin American” February 7, 2014 Professors Guillermo Calvo, Sara Calvo, and Andrés Velasco (SIPA), Alejandro J. Izquierdo (Inter-American Development Bank), Enrique G. Mendoza (University of Pennsylvania), Carmen Reinhart (Harvard University), and Carlos Vegh (Johns Hopkins University) discussed the importance of liquidity as a primary focus in addressing total factor productivity shocks, growth, and jobless recovery.

“Policy Challenges in Emerging Economies in an Uncertain World” February 18, 2014 Mario Bergara, minister of economy and finance for Uruguay, discussed the challenges faced by a small country—such as Uruguay—because of changes in the current regional and international environment.

“The Road from Academia to Politics: Challenges of Policymaking in Argentina” April 16, 2014 Federico Sturzenegger, a member of the Chamber of Representatives in Argentina’s National Congress and professor at Universidad Torcuato di Tella, provided personal insights on the transition from academia to public office in Argentina.

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PhD in Sustainable Development Ten Years of Seeking Fresh Solutions

On February 27, 2014, SIPA and The Earth Institute celebrated the 10th anniversary of the PhD in Sustainable Development (photo, top right). The first of its kind in the country, the program was established to help scholars bridge the natural and social sciences, explore how we can maintain prosperity, preserve the natural environment, and extend the promise of a better life. The anniversary was marked with a two-day celebration, including a public event in Low Memorial Library that featured a discussion, moderated by Provost John H. Coatsworth, between Professors Jeffrey Sachs and Joseph Stiglitz, who are codirectors of the PhD program. Three of the program’s alumni, including Marta Vicarelli, presented cuttingedge research. The PhD program has become one of the most soughtafter advanced degrees of its kind in the world, with graduates accepting positions as

tenure-track faculty, postdoctoral fellows, or in the private sector.

Research in Action Solomon Hsiang PhD ’11 and PhD candidates Amir Jina and James Rising contributed to a high-profile, nationwide report on the economic costs of climate change. The report, “America’s Climate Prospectus,” estimates the impact of climate change at the county, state, and regional level and shows that communities, industries, and properties across the U.S. face profound risks. PhD candidate Semee Yoon and her coresearcher, Hope C. Michelson of the University of Illinois, presented at the 2013 annual meeting of the American Geophysical Union. Their project, conducted in Mwandama, Malawi, provides insights into the decision-making process of smallholder farmers who face adverse effects of weather variability and low-soil fertility.

PhD candidate Prabhat Barnwal is working on efficient delivery of subsidies in developing countries. Using a fuel-consumption data set and extensive fieldwork, he tracks the fuel black market in India to show how government policy can effectively reduce subsidy leakage in developing countries. PhD candidate Belinda Archibong served on a team with the Columbia Center on Sustainable Investment that worked to develop a regulatory and operational framework to unlock the value of associated petroleum gas (APG) that is currently wasted. Their goal is to improve energy efficiency, expand access to energy, and contribute to climate change mitigation.

Awards and Recognitions The PhD program in sustainable development was awarded a $20,000 research grant from Global Green Growth Institute

on electrification and green development. Solomon M. Hsiang PhD ’11, an assistant professor at the University of California, Berkeley, was awarded the 2013 Science for Solutions Award at the American Geophysicists Union Fall Meeting Honors Ceremony. The award is for “significant contributions in the application and use of Earth and space sciences to solve societal problems.” He was also named to Forbes’ 30 Under 30 in Law and Policy for his study to show that global climate is likely to have a causal effect on global rates of civil conflict. Gordon McCord PhD ’11, an assistant professor at the University of California, San Diego, was named a 2013 Hellman Fellow for his work on malaria and child mortality. He also received a 2013–14 University of California Office of the President Grant on infectious disease and climate change.

Top from left: Provost John H. Coatsworth, with Professors Joseph Stiglitz and Jeffrey Sachs, codirectors of the PhD in Sustainable Development program Bottom: The 10th Anniversary Celebration of the PhD in Sustainable Development program

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Institutes and centers

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Center for Development Initiating Conversations about Global Development

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Launched in 2013, the Center for Development Economics and Policy (CDEP) supports microeconomic research to investigate the sources of poverty and to inform practical interventions to address them.

by the view that one of the best antipoverty programs is a steady job, offering safe working conditions and a wage that supports the basic needs of a household.

The Center began with two primary initiatives. The Human Capital Initiative focuses on understanding the productive potential embodied in individuals—their skills, health, and other capabilities. The Firms and Innovation Initiative is motivated

Soccer-Ball Producers in Pakistan: Organizational Barriers to Technology Adoption

New Research

To study ways of increasing technological diffusion and adoption, a team from SIPA devised a new way to reduce the cost

of producing soccer balls and randomly distributed the method to selected firms in Pakistan. The researchers found that adoption was slow until they offered workers an extra month’s wage if they could demonstrate competence in the new method. The findings suggest that aligning incentives can speed the adoption of new technologies and, potentially, economic growth. The team comprised Eric Verhoogen, codirector of CDEP; Amit

Khandelwal, Columbia Business School; David Atkin, UCLA; and Azam Chaudhry and Shamyla Chaudry of the Lahore School of Economics, Pakistan.

Convening Experts “Poverty and Prosperity: The Challenges of Policymaking in a Globalized World” November 11, 2013 Kaushik Basu, chief economist of the World Bank, addressed students and faculty at the official


Economics and Policy

Left: Professor Eric Verhoogen, codirector of CDEP, watching the production of soccer balls in Pakistan Right: Kaushik Basu, chief economist at the World Bank, speaking at the CDEP launch

launch of the Center. The event was held in collaboration with the Center on Global Economic Governance.

“Understanding Ethnic Cooperation and Elections” April 10, 2014 As part of the Spring 2014 Development Seminar, Ted Miguel of the University of California, Berkeley, discussed changes to individual behavior during election seasons.

“Managerial Capital and Productivity in Bangladesh” April 24, 2014 On the one-year anniversary of the collapse of the Rana Plaza factory building in Savar, Bangladesh, Chris Woodruff, a professor in the economics department at the University of Warwick, discussed methods of improving female representation in the management of Bangladeshi garment factories.

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Center on Global Economic Governance Bridging Economies and Binding Nations

Top, from left: SIPA’s Investcorp Lecture with Dean Merit E. Janow, Martin Wolf, who delivered the talk, and CGEG director Jan Svejnar Bottom: Andrés Velasco, Professor of Professional Practice in International Development

In 2013–14, economic inequality, the ongoing effects of the 2008 financial crisis, and the Eurozone dominated the headlines. The Center on Global Economic Governance (CGEG) convened meaningful discussions and brought thoughtful research to the issues at hand.

President’s Innovation Fund Award In 2013–14, the Center on Global Economic Governance received President Bollinger’s Innovation Fund Award at Columbia University for its efforts to examine the changing role of the state—both in response to the economic crisis and to Europe’s debt crisis. The fund will allow the Center to develop a series of three academic conferences each year through 2016. The award provides support for faculty who wish to use the resources or facilities of one or more of the University’s eight Global Centers for teaching or research activities. The program aims to enable the development of new projects and scholarly collaborations within and across these sites, in order to increase global opportunities for research, teaching, and service.

Building a Global Team The Center on Global Economic Governance added recognized scholars to its impressive roster of renowned faculty associates Christopher J. Blattman Assistant Professor of International and Public Affairs and of Political Science Research Interests: comparative politics and comparative economy, particularly in African states Charles Calomiris Henry Kaufman Professor of Financial Institutions, Columbia Business School, and Professor, School of International and Public Affairs

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Cristian Pop-Eleches Associate Professor of International and Public Affairs Research interests: applied development and labor economics Research interests: banking, corporate finance, financial history, and monetary economics Raymond J. Fisman Lambert Family Professor of Social Enterprise and Director of the Social Enterprise Program, Columbia Business School Research interests: corporate social responsibility, the determinants of altruism, and global corruption Supreet Kaur Assistant Professor of International and Public Affairs and of Economics Research interests: development economics and behavioral economics, with a focus on labor markets Bruce M. Kogut Sanford C. Bernstein and Co. Professor of Leadership and Ethics at Columbia Business School Research interests: governance and corporate compensation, social capital markets and social metrics, and the “political color of boards,” an initiative funded by the National Science Foundation Paul F. Lagunes Assistant Professor of International and Public Affairs Research interests: corruption, particularly city governments in Latin America, urban/subnational politics, comparative politics, and political economy Suresh Naidu Assistant Professor of International and Public Affairs and of Economics Research interests: developmental economics, labor economics, and political economy

Examing Issues of Global Governance

BRICS: The Road Ahead On March 6, 2014, scholars and business leaders convened to discuss the economic performance of BRICS amid growing skepticism about the power of emerging markets. Marcos Troyjo, the BRICLab’s codirector and an adjunct professor of international and public affairs at SIPA, welcomed an audience of students, faculty, media, business leaders, and policymakers. The panel discussed the BRICS countries’ need for shared strategy and institutions. Otaviano Canuto, former vice president and senior adviser at the World Bank, commented, “Middle-income countries seeking to reach the next stage of development can no longer simply import or imitate existing technologies or capabilities; they must build their own. This requires a robust institutional framework— including a strong education system, welldeveloped financial markets, and advanced infrastructure.”

“Saving a Bad Monetary Marriage: The Eurozone after the Crisis” October 21, 2014 Martin Wolf, CBE, associate editor and chief economics commentator for the Financial Times, delivered the SIPA Investcorp Lecture followed by a discussion with Merit E. Janow, dean of SIPA and professor in the practice of international economic law and international affairs; and Jan Svejnar, James T. Shotwell Professor of Global Political Economy and director of the Center on Global Economic Governance, Columbia SIPA.

“SIPA’s Influence on Global Governance: Can Academics Be Presidents?” February 17, 2014 Svejnar, and Andrés Velasco, professor of professional practice in international development, recalled their campaigns for president of the Czech Republic and Chile, respectively.

“Mega Trends in the World Economic System, a Discussion with Jacob A. Frenkel” April 23, 2014 Jacob A. Frenkel, chairman of JPMorgan Chase International and former governor of the Central Bank of Israel, discussed growth in the global economy, trade and balance of payments, the European economic system, and the U.S. and European labor markets.

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Center on Global Energy Policy Research Drawn from the Real World

2013–14 was a transformational time in energy policy: new technology unleashed new oil and gas resources, low-carbon technologies advanced rapidly, and the effects of a changing climate became more evident.

Energy Research: From Mexico to Africa to Iraq In Mexican Energy Reform, Center fellow Adrian Lajous, former CEO of Pemex, examined the impact of Mexico’s recent energy sector reforms on the country’s upstream, midstream, and downstream oil and gas sectors, as well as the electricity sector. The report also identified the policy, institutional, and structural challenges that stand in the way of the reform process. Potential Regional Use of East African Gas, a briefing paper coauthored by faculty affiliate

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Vijay Modi, was supplemented by the Center’s published summary and analysis of a workshop held in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, in June 2014. Iraq Oil Sector: To provide background and context to the deteriorating situation in Iraq, the Center released an issue brief that examined Iraq’s potential production, reserves, current production, pipeline network, refineries, and foreign investment.

Engaging Experts and Leaders in Energy “Policy Address” August 26, 2013 Ernest J. Moniz, U.S. Secretary of Energy

“The Rapid Expansion of Access to Electricity in Mozambique: The Role of Government Policies” October 7, 2013

Salvador Namburete, Energy Minister, Mozambique

“The Changing Landscape of Energy Geopolitics” November 13, 2013 General Stanley A. McChrystal (Ret.), cofounder and principal, McChrystal Group, and former commander of U.S. and international forces in Afghanistan

“Nuclear after Fukushima” January 30, 2014 Lady Barbara Judge CBE, Chairman, Energy Institute at University College London, moderated by Center director Jason Bordoff

One-Year Anniversary The Center on Global Energy Policy celebrated its one-year anniversary with its spring 2014 Energy Policy Conference. The conference featured keynote remarks from Helge Lund, then CEO of Statoil; John D. Podesta,

counselor to President Barack Obama; and other distinguished speakers. The Center also hosted multiple private roundtable discussions focused on pressing policy and market issues and three international roundtables: one each in Istanbul, Turkey (September 3), Beijing, China (January 8), and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (June 2).

Women in Energy In 2013–14, the Center launched its Women in Energy program, bringing in local and international women energy leaders such as Helima Croft, then managing director, Barclays; Lady Barbara Judge CBE; Michelle Haigh, the Carlyle Group; and Caroline McGregor, U.S. Department of Energy for discussions with female students at Columbia. The Women in Energy program aims to provide a full spectrum of


Top: CGEP director Jason Bordoff and Lady Barbara Judge CBE, chairman of the Energy Institute at University College London Bottom: U.S. Secretary of Energy Ernest J. Moniz

programming to support female Columbia students interested in energy-related careers, with the broader goal of increasing the presence and leadership of women in the energy sector.

Increasing Capacity In 2013–14, the Center welcomed Matthew Robinson as director of research publications. Robinson joins the Center after 14 years covering energy at Thomson Reuters as an editor and correspondent. The Center also welcomed two nonresident fellows: Robert Hallman, former deputy secretary for energy and environment for New York governor Andrew Cuomo, and Robert McNally, founder and president of the Rapidan Group and a former top international and domestic energy adviser on the White House staff.

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Center for International Seeking Common Ground for a Global Good

A United Nations peacekeeper stands guard at the entrance to a polling station covered in separatist flags and graffiti supporting the creation of the independent state of Azawad, in Kidal, Mali.

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Conflict Resolution

In 2013–14, conflicts around the world ignited. Israel and Hamas. Ukraine and pro-Russian separatists. Iraq and ISIS. At SIPA, the Center for International Conflict Resolution (CICR) bridged the gap between policymakers, practitioners, and academia in order to end these conflicts and prevent future crises.

Convening Experts “In Conversation with Álvaro de Soto” November 19, 2013 A discussion between Alvaro de Soto, Peruvian diplomat and 25-year veteran at the United Nations, and Chester Crocker, former assistant secretary of state for African affairs, on contemporary challenges facing the field of mediation.

“State-building in South Sudan” February 2014 Jean-Marie Guéhenno, director of the Center, hosted Lise Grande, former resident representative in South Sudan for the United Nations Development Programme, for a special screening of the documentary “State Builders.” The film follows Grande and her UN colleagues as they provide support to the South Sudanese leadership in their first steps to build the newly created state in 2011.

“Mali One Year On: Building an Enduring Peace through Stabilization, Reform, and Development” April 2, 2014 David Gressly, United Nations deputy special representative in Mali, discussed the lessons learned after 12 months of peacekeeping in Mali. Gressly mapped out the enormous humanitarian and security challenges ahead of Mali and particularly the challenges of reconciling the North and the South.

Professor Jean-Marie Guéhenno, director of the Center for International Conflict Resolution

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Picker Center for Executive Education Bringing SIPA to the World

In 2013–14, the Picker Center for Executive Education provided customized training for executives and officials in locations throughout the world, widening the reach of SIPA’s resources and improving the ability of global decision makers to create strong policy.

New Connections in Malaysia In 2013, the Picker Center held its first executive program in innovative public management for senior public officials in Malaysia. The program included sessions in Malaysia and at SIPA focused on big data analytics and crisis management. It provided officials with a strong grounding in policymaking and leadership in an international context.

Supporting Broadcasters in Sub-Saharan Africa The Picker Center trained its first organization from sub-Saharan Africa. The South Africa Broadcasting Corporation sent a dozen staff members to study U.S. best practices in the broadcasting sector. The three-day program featured a mix of classroom-based discussion and field research, including visits to public, private, and new-media broadcasters: PBS, NBC, and Google. Among the speakers were Michael P. Meehan, the president of VennSquared Communications and a member of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, which oversees U.S. international broadcasters like Voice of America and Radio Free Asia; Lisa Cohen, a television producer, director, and writer who is also an adjunct faculty member at Columbia Journalism School; and Kristian Denny Todd, a veteran communications consultant who contributes frequently to SIPA’s executive programs. “It’s exciting to us to be able to assist an expanding media outlet in a developing democracy,” said William Eimicke, founding director of the Picker Center. “They’re aspiring to be the best in the world, and we have some of the best in the world, and we’re glad to show them.”

Connecting with Columbia in Brazil In May 2014, the Picker Center helped celebrate the first anniversary of the Columbia Global Center in Rio de Janeiro by training 35 toplevel city officials in a weeklong intensive workshop on public administration held both on Columbia’s campus and the Global Center.

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William Eimicke, founding director of the Picker Center

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Arnold A. Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies Understanding the “Disastrous Consequences of War”

Last year, war broke out in many regions of the world: Iraq, Syria, Israel, Ukraine, and elsewhere. Through research, publications, and events, the Saltzman Institute and its members worked to increase our understanding of how peace can be achieved and maintained through research, teaching, and discussion.

Acknowledging Faculty Achievements $1.2 Million Department of Defense Minerva Grant Saltzman Institute members Robert Jervis and Gregory Mitrovich received a $1.2 million grant issued by the Department of Defense’s Minerva Initiative for their project, “Culture in Power Transitions: Sino-American Conflict in the 21st Century.” Partnering with the University of Notre Dame and the Central European University, Budapest, Hungary, their three-year project will examine how the United States and China will use “culture” as a means to advance their security interests and wage their hegemonic competition in the 21st century.

Page Fortna Wins Lenfest Distinguished Teaching Award Saltzman Institute member V. Page Fortna received Columbia’s Lenfest Distinguished Teaching Award. She teaches about the aftermath of war, including how wars end, the durability of peace, and the causes and effects of terrorism in civil wars.

Autesserre Wins “Best Article in 2012” from APCG On November 23, the African Politics Conference Group (APCG) announced that Institute member Séverine Autesserre’s article, “Dangerous Tales: Dominant Narratives on the Congo and their Unintended Consequences,” was selected as the “Best Article in 2012.” The article was published in African Affairs in April 2012.

Top: Arnold A. Saltzman (left) with Kofi Annan Middle: Assistant Professor Dipali Mukhopadhyay (left) with Barnett R. Rubin, director of NYU’s Center on International Cooperation Bottom: Professor of Professional Practice Peter Clement

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Providing a Forum for Discussion “The New Global Landscape” February 7, 2014 United Nations Deputy SecretaryGeneral Jan Eliasson spoke about the changing geopolitical and economic landscape facing world leaders in the years ahead.

“A Day in the Life of CIA’s Directorate of Intelligence” February 26, 2014 Professor of Professional Practice Peter Clement described the range of activities undertaken each day by CIA’s analytic directorate to contribute to the president’s daily brief and update senior U.S. policymakers in Congress and the White House.

“Strongman Governance and Afghan Politics, 2001 to Today” April 9, 2014 Dipali Mukhopadhyay, assistant professor of international and public affairs at SIPA, and Barnett R. Rubin, director of the Center on International Cooperation (CIC) at New York University, discussed Mukhopadhyay’s new book, Warlords, Strongman Governors, and the State of Afghanistan, as well as the future of Afghan politics and the country’s evolving role of the international community.


In Memoriam Arnold A. Saltzman The Institute’s namesake, Arnold A. Saltzman, died on January 2, 2014, at the age of 97. A New York native, Saltzman enrolled at Columbia College at the age of 16 and served in the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II. In the 1960s he became CEO of Seagrave, a manufacturer of fire-fighting equipment. Continuing his government service, Saltzman worked intermittently for agencies including the Office of Price Administration and USAID and advised the Office of Economic Opportunity and the Peace Corps. He would eventually serve as envoy for five U.S. presidents. In 1968 he received a Presidential Commendation for his work on the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty. At Columbia, Saltzman received the University Medal and served as chair of the Columbia College Board of Overseers, the Columbia College Fund, and the John Jay Associates. At SIPA he helped establish the first dean’s advisory board. To honor Saltzman’s extensive contributions to the University, the Institute of War and Peace Studies was renamed for Saltzman in 2003. Kenneth N. Waltz was the leading academic theorist of the causes of war and one of the most influential international relations theorists since World War II. He was president of the American Political Science Association, wrote several books including the classics Man, the State and War (Columbia University Press, 1959) and Theory of International Politics (Addison-Wesley, 1979), and taught at Swarthmore, Brandeis, and Berkeley before returning to Columbia. Warner R. Schilling served as director of the Saltzman Institute from 1976 to 1986 and as the James T. Shotwell Professor of International Relations in the Department of Political Science. A legendary teacher, he specialized in U.S. defense policy, decision making, and nuclear strategy, and among other works coauthored Strategy, Politics, and Defense Budgets (Columbia University Press, 1962). Roger Hilsman was director of the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence Research and assistant secretary of state for East Asia under President John F. Kennedy before joining Columbia’s political science department. His books included To Move a Nation (Doubleday, 1967); Strategic Intelligence and National Decisions (Free Press, 1956); and American Guerrilla (Brassey’s, 1990). Waltz, Schilling, and Hilsman were all veterans of the United States Army.

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initiatives 2013–2014

Tech & Policy @SIPA The intersection of technology and public policy holds great promise for both scholars and future leaders. In 2013– 14, Dean Merit E. Janow launched Tech & Policy @SIPA, an initiative to promote the discussion and study of this increasingly significant field through events, sponsored challenges, courses, and new partnerships. The roster of events included a fireside chat with Craig Mundie, senior adviser to the CEO, Microsoft Corp; a series of lectures with Alec Ross, former senior adviser for innovation to Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; and a presentation by Justin Kosslyn, product manager at Google Ideas, on “How Technology Can Help Fight Conflict, Instability, and Repression.” At the “Dean’s Roundtable on Technology, Entrepreneurship, and Urban Innovation,” leading technology entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, and experts in global urban policy discussed the application of digital technology and advanced data analytics to foster improvements to urban environments around the world. The event was hosted by Dean Janow and Silicon Valley entrepreneur Joe Lonsdale, the cofounder of Palantir and founder of Addepar, among other companies. Daniel Doctoroff, CEO and president of Bloomberg LLP and former deputy mayor of New York City, opened the discussion with keynote remarks. For the “Dean’s Seminar on Governance of the Internet,” Dean Janow welcomed Gordon Goldstein, managing director and head of external affairs, Silver Lake Group; Ambassador David Gross, partner, Wiley Rein, LLP; Eli Noam, professor of economics and finance and Garrett Professor of Public Policy and Business Responsibility at the Columbia Business School; and Laura DeNardis, professor and associate dean in the School of Communication at American University and director of research for the

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Global Commission on Internet Governance. SIPA took part in the launch of the Columbia Startup Lab (CSL), a coworking space located on the ground floor of WeWork SohoWest in the heart of SoHo’s Silicon Alley. Recent alumni from SIPA, Columbia Business School, Columbia Engineering, and Columbia College competed for the 71 desks in the Startup Lab–a program of Columbia Entrepreneurship that offers subsidized rent, networking opportunities with founders, technologists, designers, and venture capitalists, as well as classes in related subjects such as start-up law. Dean Janow also launched a competition to develop technological innovations to benefit people in urban settings worldwide. The SIPA Dean’s Public Policy Challenge Grant Program invites students to design cuttingedge projects and, if appropriate, prototypes that use ICT and/or data analytics to solve urban problems. SIPA will provide workshops, mentors, and other support for teams to refine and test their ideas. The Challenge Grant Program, a collaboration with Columbia Entrepreneurship, consists of two competitions, one that began in spring 2014 and a second round beginning in fall 2014. A total of $50,000 in prizes are awarded to the winning team or teams in each year of the competition. The competition is open to current Columbia students, who are encouraged to form cross-disciplinary teams that will bring together students in public policy and other fields at the University, such as computer science and engineering. Teams must include at least one first-year SIPA student in a substantive role. The program seeks to support endeavors with high potential to be implemented, to produce a meaningful impact in a relatively short time frame, and to be

Top: Craig Mundie, senior adviser to the CEO, Microsoft Corp., with Dean Merit E. Janow Bottom: Daniel Doctoroff, CEO and president of Bloomberg LLP and former New Your City deputy mayor. Opposite top: Alec Ross, former senior adviser for innovation to then Secretary of State Hillary Clinton Middle: Dean’s Seminar on Governance of the Internet Bottom: Kickoff of the Columbia Startup Lab

sustainable. Details about the Challenge Grant can be found at sipa.columbia.edu/ challenge-grant. Start-up funding for the Challenge Grant Program has been provided by the Rockefeller Foundation; Silicon Valley entrepreneur Joe Lonsdale; and Juan Navarro, founder, chair, and CEO, the Exxel Group and member, SIPA Advisory Board. Dean Janow noted in announcing the Challenge Grant, “I look forward to our students’ innovations, and I am pleased that we are taking an exciting step as a school.”


Yasmine Ergas

SIPA’s New Specialization: Gender and Public Policy The issue of gender and policy is of increasing interest to organizations, scholars, and students around the world. To address the growing need for policymakers trained in this area, SIPA added a specialization in Gender and Public Policy to the MIA and MPA programs in fall 2013. Yasmine Ergas, a lecturer at SIPA and associate director of the Institute for the Study of Human Rights (ISHR), serves as the specialization’s inaugural director. The addition of the specialization was also driven by student interest and efforts. “As students we had a very influential role in the design of the program—real policy in action,” said Branwen Millar ’14. Dean Merit E. Janow praised the addition. “Gender issues are an important consideration in contemporary public policy,” she said. “Elevating the study of gender and policy to the specialization level gives our students an opportunity to deepen the expertise they will bring to private companies, public-sector agencies, and not-for-profit organizations.”

45


Faculty Publications Hisham Aidi Rebel Music: Race, Empire, and the New Muslim Youth Culture. Pantheon, 2014.

Thomas Groll

Insurgencies: Cops as Counterinsurgents. Edited by C. Christine Fair and Sumit Ganguly. Oxford University Press India, 2014.

“The Pro-Poorness, Growth and Inequality Nexus: Some Findings from a Simulation Study,” with Peter J. Lambert. Review of Income and Wealth 59, no. 4 (Dec. 2013).

Arvid Lukauskas

Environment and Development Economics: Essays in Honor of Sir Partha Dasgupta, with KarlGöran Mäler and Eric S. Maskin. Oxford University Press, 2014. Christopher Blattman

Sylvia Ann Hewlett

“How to Promote Order and Property Rights under Weak Rule of Law? An Experiment in Changing Dispute Resolution Behavior through Community Education,” with Alexandra Hartman and Robert Blair. American Political Science Review 108, no. 1 (2014).

Executive Presence: The Missing Link Between Merit and Success. Harper Business, 2014.

“Transactions Costs and the Employment Contract in the US Economy,” with Daniel Parent. Journal of Law, Economics, and Organization (2014).

Scott Barrett

Charles W. Calomiris Fragile by Design: The Political Origins of Banking Crises and Scarce Credit, with Stephen H. Haber. Princeton University Press, 2014.

Wojciech Kopczuk “Taxation of Wealth and Transfers.” In Handbook of Public Economics, vol. 5. Edited by Alan Auerbach, Raj Chetty, Martin Feldstein, and Emmanuel Saez. Elsevier, 2013.

Sonali Deraniyagala

“What Does Inequality in Inheritances Received Imply for Optimal Estate Taxation?” American Economic Review: Papers and Proceedings 103, no. 3 (2013).

WAVE. Vintage, 2013.

Paul F. Lagunes

David N. Dinkins

“The (Identification) Cards You Are Dealt: Biased Treatment of Anglos and Latinos Using Municipal-issued Versus Unofficial ID Cards,” with Ruth Ditlmann. Political Psychology 10, no. 10 (2013).

A Mayor’s Life: Governing New York’s Gorgeous Mosaic, with Peter Knobler. PublicAffairs, 2013 (photo, right). Ester Fuchs and Sarah Holloway “Innovative Partnership for Public Health: The New York City Green

46

Cart Initiative to Expand Access to Healthy Produce in LowIncome Neighborhoods.” 2014.

Austin Long “The Police in Afghanistan, 2002–2011.” In Policing

Handbook of Trade Policy for Development, edited with Robert M. Stern and Gianni Zanini. Oxford University Press, 2013. W. Bentley MacLeod

University Press, 2014. “Latin American Political Economy: Making Sense of a New Reality,” with Juan Pablo Luna and Andrew Schrank. Latin American Politics and Society 56, no. 1 (2014). Suresh Naidu “When the Levee Breaks: Black Migration and Economic Development in the American South,” with Richard Hornbeck. American Economic Review (2014). Akbar Noman

“Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment in Asia: Mixed Progress and Future Imperatives.” In Ending Asian Deprivations: Compulsions for a Fair, Prosperous and Equitable Asia. Edited by Shiladitya Chatterjee. Routledge, 2013

“Infant Capitalists, Infant Industries and Infant Economies: Trade and Industrial Policies at Early Stages of Industrialization in Africa and Elsewhere.” In The Industrial Policy Revolution II: Africa in the 21st Century. Edited by Joseph Stiglitz, Justin Yifu Lin, and Ebrahim Patel. Palgrave Macmillan, 2013.

Dipali Mukhopadhyay

José Antonio Ocampo

Eugenia McGill

Warlords, Strongman Governors, and the State in Afghanistan. Cambridge University Press, 2014. M. Victoria Murillo “Building Institutions on Weak Foundations: Lessons from Latin America,” with Steven Levitsky. In Reflections on Uneven Democracies. The Legacy of Guillermo O’Donnell. Edited by Daniel Brinks, Marcelo Leiras, and Scott Mainwaring. Johns Hopkins

El desarrollo económico de América Latina desde la Independencia (Seccion de Obras de Economia). Fondo de Cultura Economica, Spanish edition, 2013. Gary Y. Okihiro Editor, Encyclopedia of Japanese American Internment. ABC-CLIO, 2013 Margins and Mainstreams: Asians in American History and Culture. 20th anniversary


Professor David N. Dinkins signing his new book, A Mayor’s Life: Governing New York’s Gorgeous Mosaic

edition, with a new introduction. University of Washington Press, 1994, 2014. Ben Orlove “Fluid Entitlements: Constructing and Contesting Water Allocations in Burkina Faso, West Africa,” with Carla Roncoli, and Brian Dowd-Uribe. In Waterworlds: Anthropology in Fluid Environments. Edited by Kirsten Hastrup and Frida Hastrup. Berghahn Books, 2014.

“Recognitions and Responsibilities: On the Origins of the Uneven Attention to Climate Change around the World,” with Heather Lazrus, Grete K. Hovelsrud, and Alessandra Giannini. Current Anthropology (2014). Kenneth Prewitt What Is Your Race?: The Census and Our Flawed Efforts to Classify Americans. Princeton University Press, 2013.

Anya Schiffrin Editor, Global Muckraking: 100 Years of Investigative Journalism. New Press, 2014. Stephen Sestanovich Maximalist: America in the World from Truman to Obama. Knopf, 2014. Alfred Stepan

of Democracy 25, no. 2 (April 2014). Joseph Stiglitz Creating a Learning Society: A New Approach to Growth, Development, and Social Progress, with Bruce C. Greenwald. Kenneth J. Arrow Lecture Series. Columbia University Press, 2014.

“Democratic Parliamentary Monarchies,” with Juan J. Linz and Juli F. Minoves. Journal

47


York tro

Career Statistics 2013 Master of International Affairs (MIA) Employment Statistics EMPLOYMENT OVERVIEW

Seeking Employment

Total Graduating

233

10.7%

Total Reporting

206

MIA Graduating Students

Percentage of Total Reporting 6,393

Employed/FurtherOther Study

Largest Not Seeking Employment Concentrations Seeking Employment of SIPA Alumni

York tro D.C. on,

7,142

179

86.9%

5

2.4%

22

10.7%

(TOTAL REPORTING) Seeking

10.7% 86.9%

Other

ALUMNI ancisco MetroLargest Japan Concentrations Los Angeles Metro United of Kingdom SIPA China Alumni I. Public Sector Mexico France 2,076 Foreign Government South Korea Canada Governments State/Local on, D.C. India U.S.Germany Government ancisco Metro Switzerland Japan Multilateral Organizations Turkey Los Angeles Metro Spain United Kingdom Colombia China II. Private Sector Mexico Consulting France South Korea Finance/Banking Canada Law India Germany Other—Business Switzerland Services Turkey Spain III. Nonprofit Sector Colombia

7,142 EMPLOYMENT

MIA Graduating Students

(TOTAL REPORTING)

BY SECTOR

Foundations/Institutions

48

Further Study Foreign Government86.9%

Percentage of Total Employed

Median Salary

57

31.9%

$60,000

20

11.2%

$45,000

5

2.8%

$70,000

18

10.1%

$60,000

14

7.8%

$60,000

78

43.6%

$72,500

26

14.5%

$70,500

23

12.8%

$85,000

1

0.6%

-

28

15.6%

$72,500

33

18.4%

$55,750

Total Reporting

University/Education Research/Think Tank State/Local Public Interest/ 6.1% 11.2% GovernmentsEmployed/Further Advocacy Study Nongovernmental U.S. Organizations 9.5% Government 2.8% Alumni Foundations/ Institutions Employment Further Study Multilateral 10.1% University/Education Foreign Governmentby Sector Organizations Research/Think Tank 15.6% State/Local Public Interest/ Other— 6.1% Governments 14.5%11.2% Advocacy Business Services 12.8% Nongovernmental Consulting U.S. Law Organizations 9.5% Government 2.8% AlumniFinance/BankingFoundations/ Institutions Employment Multilateral 10.1% by Sector Organizations 15.6%

4

2.2%

$65,000

17

9.5%

$45,000

Public Interest/Advocacy

4

2.2%

$35,000

Research/Think Tank

5

2.8%

$63,750

University/Education

3

1.7%

$55,750

11

6.1%

-

Nongovernmental Organizations

IV. Further Study

Employment

Not Seeking Employment

Employed/Further Study

2,076

6,393

Not Seeking Employment

14.5%

Consulting

12.8%

Other— Business Services

Law Finance/Banking


2013 Master of Public Administration (MPA) Employment Statistics EMPLOYMENT OVERVIEW

Seeking Employment

Seeking Employment

Not Seeking Total Graduating 10.7% Employment

373

Total Reporting

338

MIA Graduating Students

Employment Employed/Further Study Not Seeking 10.7% Employment Not Seeking Employment

86.9%

Seeking Employment MIA Employed/Further Study

294

87.0%

9

2.6%

35

10.4%

Not Seeking Employment

MPA Graduating Students

Percentage of Total Reporting

(TOTAL REPORTING) Seeking

(TOTAL REPORTING) Seeking

10.4% 87.0%

Employment

Not Seeking Employment

MPA Graduating Students

Employed/Further Study

Graduating Students

(TOTAL REPORTING)

(TOTAL REPORTING)

ALUMNI EMPLOYMENT BY SECTOR

Further Study gn Government86.9%

University/Education Research/Think Tank Total Reporting ate/Local Public Interest/ 6.1% 11.2% rnmentsEmployed/Further Advocacy Study I. Public Sector 114 Nongovernmental U.S. Foreign Government Organizations 46 9.5% ment 2.8% State/Local Governments 17 Alumni Foundations/ Institutions U.S. Government 17 Employment eral 10.1% Further Study University/Education Sector Organizations 34 gn Governmentby Multilateral ons Research/Think Tank 15.6% ate/Local Public Interest/ Other— 6.1% SectorAdvocacy 99 rnments 14.5%11.2%II. Private Business Services 12.8% Nongovernmental Consulting 38 Consulting U.S. Law Organizations 9.5% ment 2.8% Finance/Banking 33 AlumniFinance/BankingFoundations/ Law 1 Institutions

eral ons

10.4%

10.1%

Consulting

Median Salary

38.8%

$62,130

15.6%

$50,000

5.8%

$59,259

5.8%

$65,000

11.6%

$71,500

33.7%

$75,000

12.9%

$75,000

11.2%

$75,000

0.3%

-

27

9.2%

$56,200

III. Nonprofit Sector Other— Business Services Foundations/Institutions

71

24.1%

$53,375

9

3.1%

$57,500

Nongovernmental Law Organizations Public Finance/Banking Interest/Advocacy

19

6.5%

$45,000

15

5.1%

$46,500

Research/Think Tank

8

2.7%

$53,375

University/Education

20

6.8%

$65,000

IV. Further Study

10

3.4%

-

Employment Other—Business Services by Sector 15.6%

14.5%

Percentage of Total Employed

12.8%

Further Study 87.0%

University/Education Research/Think Tank 6.8% Employed/Further Study 15.6% Public Interest/ Advocacy State/Local 5.1% Governments Nongovernmental Alumni 6.5% Organizations U.S. 5.8% Government Employment 3.1% Foundations/ Institutions Further Study by Sector University/Education Foreign Government 9.2% 11.6% Multilateral Research/Think Tank Other— Organizations 6.8% 15.6% Business Services Public Interest/ 11.2% 12.9% State/Local LawAdvocacy 5.1% Governments Nongovernmental Consulting Finance/Banking Alumni 6.5% Organizations U.S. 5.8% Government Employment 3.1% Foundations/ Institutions by Sector Foreign Government

Multilateral Organizations

9.2%

11.6%

12.9%

Consulting

11.2%

Other— Business Services Law

Finance/Banking

49


SIPA at a Glance 2013–2014

Columbia Dual Degree PEPM MPA-ESP

48 55

Columbia Dual Degree 64 GPPN Dual Degree PEPM 70 ColumbiaMPA-ESP Dual Degree 48 55 PEPM MPA-DP 98 GPPN Dual Degree Program 64 MPA-ESP

MIA 417

MIA

SIPA Enrollment by Academic Degree

MIA MIA

417

MPA

396

EMPA

167

48

Group55 64 Program Group Program 396 Group

417 417

MPA

MPA-DP

98

GPPN Dual Degree

70

MPA-ESP

64

396 MPA

PEPM

55

MPA

Columbia Dual Degree Total Students

48

SIPA Enrollment by Gender

43.5%

GPPN Dual Degree MPA-DP EMPA MPA-DP

167 167

EMPA EMPA

Male 56.5%

Female

Male

98

Female

Female

56.5%

70 98 167

396

1,315

Female

70

43.5%

56.5% Gender 43.5% Precentage43.5% 56.5% Gender Precentage Gender Precentage

Male Male

SIPA Enrollment by Citizenship United States

51%

International

49%

Number of Countries Represented

103

United States

International 51%

United States

Citizenship Group 49% 51%Percentage Citizenship49% Group Citizenship Percentage Group Percentage

United States 51%

50

49%

International International


ee

Dual Degree

A-DP

A

onal

The Class of 2009 at the Alumni Day Reunion

Reunion Dinner

Alumni Total Alumni

19,356

Number of Countries

158

New York Metro

6,393

Largest Concentrations of SIPA Alumni

Largest concentrations of sipa alumni New York Metro

6,393

Washington, D.C.

2,076

San Francisco Metro

689

Japan

534

Los Angeles Metro

491

United Kingdom

353

China

255

Mexico

211

France

198

South Korea

182

Canada

174

India

139

Germany

112

Switzerland

111

Turkey

101

Spain

99

Colombia

96

7,142

Other

2,076

Washington, D.C. San Francisco Metro Japan Los Angeles Metro United Kingdom China Mexico France South Korea Canada India Germany Switzerland Turkey Spain Colombia

51


Statement of Activities

Fiscal Year ended June 30, 2014

Revenues (in thousands) 80,000

FY 2013

FY 2014

51,513

58,931

2,540

1,944

272

325

54,325

61,200

Educational Revenues Tuition Other Education Related Receipts Application and Employment Class Fees Seeking Subtotal—Educational Revenues Not Seeking 10.4% Employment Grant Revenues MPA Private Grants Graduating Students Government Grants

(TOTAL REPORTING)

87.0%

70,000

784

593

211

198

Grant Indirect Cost Recovery

105

88

1,100

879

Subtotal—Current Use Gifts Further Study University/Education Government Research/Think Tank Investment Income 6.8% 15.6% Public Interest/ SIPA Endowment Advocacy Income cal 5.1% nts Nongovernmental Non-SIPA Endowments Allocated to SIPA Alumni 6.5% Organizations . Subtotal—Investment Income t 5.8% Employment 3.1% Foundations/ Institutions by Sector

eral ions

9.2%

11.6%

12.9%

Consulting

Funds Transfer to SIPA from Other Columbia Units Other— Business Services 11.2% Law TOTAL REVENUES Finance/Banking (in thousands)

60,000

50,000 45,000 40,000

Employed/Further Study Use Gifts Current

Other Current use

65,000

55,000

Subtotal—Grant Revenues

Annual Giving

75,000

723

921

5,778

5,661

6,501

6,582

3,740

4,047

35,000 30,000 25,000

1,132

848

4,872

4,895

20,000 15,000

1,796

3,737 10,000

68,593

77,294 5,000 0

FY 2013 52

FY 2014


Expenses (in thousands)

80,000

80,000

75,000

70,000

FY 2013

FY 2014

16,960

18,844

Scholarships and Stipends

9,547

10,166

Student Services

4,528

4,695

Direct Expenses Instruction and Faculty Support

65,000

60,000

55,000

General and Financial Administration

3,444

3,822

1,681

1,859

External Affairs and Fundraising

2,214

2,158

795

530

-

12

Research Major Equipment

45,000

Subtotal—Direct Expenses

Other Instruction Related Expenses

40,000

35,000

30,000

25,000

70,000

Information Technology

50,000

3,129

3,660

42,299

45,746

15,328

16,146

7,496

7,383

Budget Allocations to Other Columbia Units

296

368

Other Transfers

957

751

Transfers to Plant (Construction/Renovation)

408

696

Transfers to Endowment (Recapping/(Decapping)

(56)

(92)

Transfers to the Arts and Sciences

65,000 60,000 55,000 50,000 45,000 40,000

Transfers Out of SIPA to Other Columbia Units Transfers to Central University

75,000

35,000 30,000 25,000

20,000

Subtotal—Transfers Out of SIPA

24,431

25,252

20,000

15,000

TOTAL EXPENSES

66,730

70,998

15,000

10,000

10,000

Operating Increase/Decrease 5,000 0

1,864

6,296

Beginning Fund Balance

17,643

19,507

Ending Fund Balance

19,507

25,803

(in thousands)

FY 2013

FY 2014

5,000 0

FY 2013

FY 2014 53


SIPA Advisory Board Charles S. Adams MIA ’83

Richard S. Goldberg

John H. Porter MIA ’83, IF ’82

Reed D. Auerbach MIA ’82

Robert Hormats

Barbara H. Reguero MIA ’86

David Seth Baran MIA ’87

Anuradha Jayanti

Michael M. Roberts MIA ’86

Roger R. Baumann MIA ’85, IF ’84

Nemir Kirdar

Juan A. Sabater

Thierry Berman IF ’86

Robert I. Kopech MIA ’77

Romita Shetty MIA ’89

Kathy Bloomgarden CERT ’74

Harley L. Lippman MIA ’79

Mitchell D. Silber MIA ’05

Matthew P. Boyer MIA ’94

James R. Luikart MIA ’72

David Z. Solomon MIA ’97

Michael J. Brandmeyer MIA ’95, IF ’94

Peter N. Marber MIA ’87

Gregory Stoupnitzky MIA ’80

Edward T. Cloonan MIA ’77

Jorge Morán

Lynn Thoman

David N. Dinkins

Juan Navarro

Michael D. Tusiani

Alexander Georgiadis MIA ’85

Brett A. Olsher MIA ’93

Martin Varsavsky MIA ’84

Susie Gharib MIA ’74

David B. Ottaway IF ’63

Lan Yang MIA ’96

Campaign Advisory Council

54

Michael J. Brandmeyer MIA ’95, IF ’94

Brett Alan Olsher MIA ’93

Joan E. Spero MIA ’68

Arminio Fraga

David B. Ottaway MIA ’63, IF ’62

Maria Teresa Vivas de Mata MIA ’03

Vladimir V. Kuznetsov MIA ’91, IF ’90

John H. Porter MIA ’83, IF ’82

Richard E. Witten

James Leitner MIA ’77

Maurice R. Samuels MIA ’83

Jorge Paulo Lemann

Alejandro Santo Domingo


Donor List Thank You to Our Donors

$1,000,000+

We are deeply appreciative of the alumni and friends of SIPA, whose generosity impacts and strengthens our school. Your support of SIPA’s many initiatives sends a clear message: you are invested in the advancement of our school, of our students, and in the policy contributions that SIPA makes worldwide. With your help, SIPA continues to serve the global public interest by educating students to serve and lead, and to produce and share new knowledge on the critical public policy changes facing the 21st century. Thank you.

Lemann Foundation

Donor List The donor list represents legal donations made during fiscal year 2014—this includes pledge payments as well as outright gifts made from July 1, 2013 to June 30, 2014 (it does not include multiyear pledges so as to avoid double counting).

$500,000+ Cheniere Energy Shared Services, Inc. China International Education and Culture Development Foundation, Ltd. The Estate of Julius G. Blocker MIA ’56

$100,000-$499,999 Anonymous (4) Centre for Economic Policy Research Conoco Phillips The Ford Foundation Arminio Fraga The Estate of Dagmar Gunther-Stirn MIA ’55 Vladimir V. Kuznetsov MIA ’90, IF ’90 John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation NextGen Climate America The Rockefeller Foundation SAGE Publications David John Sainsbury/The Gatsby Charitable Foundation Arnold A. Saltzman/The Saltzman Foundation Alejandro Santo Domingo Statoil UK (Ltd.) Smith Richardson Foundation

55


$25,000–$99,999 Anonymous (4) Georgia Serevetas Adams MIA ’83 and Charles Smith Adams MIA ’83 Adrienne Petite Auerbach and Reed David Auerbach MIA ’81, IF ’81 Michael James Brandmeyer MIA ’95, IF ’94 William Vincent Campbell Citigroup Incorporated Anisa Kamadoli Costa MIA ’98 and Leonard Anthony Costa III MIA ’98 Jerri-Ann and Gary Evan Jacobs Sara Josephine Jacobs MIA ’12, IF ’12 Anuradha Jayanti and Martin C. Milewski Christian A. Johnson Endeavor Foundation Laredo Petroleum Joseph Lonsdale Juan Navarro/Mountscent International Limited The New York Community Trust Vaishali Nigam-Sinha MPA ’94 and Sumant Sinha MIA ’92 Pioneer Natural Resources Company The Christopher Reynolds Foundation Romita Shetty MIA ’89 and Nasser Aziz Ahmad/The Romita Shetty and Nasser Ahmad Foundation Nancy W. and Harry Silver Alfred P. Sloan Foundation Ipek Nur Cem Taha MIA ’93 and Shwan I. Taha Laurie Tisch/Laurie Tisch Foundation Harriett M. and Neale X. Trangucci MIA ’81, IF ’81 Maria Teresa Vivas de Mata MIA ’03, IF ’03 and Andres Mata Osorio Voto Comunicação Elizabeth and Richard E. Witten

$10,000–$24,999 Magzhan Muratovich Auezov MIA ’98 Julie and Roger R. Baumann MIA ’84, IF ’84 Aviva D. Budd Ann C. and John J. Curley IF ’63 Alexander Georgiadis MIA ’85 Michele E. Fabrizio and Robert I. Kopech MIA ’77 Financial Women’s Association of New York Educational Fund Mercedes C. and A. Michael Hoffman MIA ’69, IF ’69 Donald Loyd Holley MIA ’59 Harley L. Lippman MIA ’79 Amira and James Luikart MIA ’72 Andrea and Peter Neill Marber MIA ’87

56

Mayor David Dinkins, Dean Merit E. Janow, with Shree Sinha MIA ’14 at the SIPA Fellowship Luncheon

Jill Miller and Richard S. Goldberg Wednesday Martin and Joel H. Moser Julie Newton St. John MIA ’85 and Marc St. John MIA ’84, IF ’84 Brett Alan Olsher MIA ’93 David B. Ottaway IF ’63 John H. Porter MIA ’83, IF ’82, CERT ’83 Poten & Partners, Inc. Barbara Helen Reguero MIA ’86 Patricia and Michael Murray Roberts MIA ’86 David Zvi Solomon MIA ’97 Joan E. Spero MIA ’68 Marianne J. and Gregory A. Stoupnitzky MIA ’80 Jens Ulltveit-Moe MIA ’68/UMOE The United Nations Economic Commission Lan Yang MIA ’96

$5,000–$9,999 Anonymous (3) David Seth Baran MIA ’87 Norton W. Bell Michael Paul Benz MPA ’10 Pamela Hawkins Casaudoumecq MIA ’89 and John Casaudoumecq Susie Gharib MIA ’74 and Fereydoun F. Nazem/Nazem Family Foundation Merit Elizabeth Janow Marietta Angela Ries Lavicka MIA ’94 Jenik R. Radon Brent Scowcroft, U.S.A.F Toyota Motor North America, Inc.

$2,500–$4,999 Yolande Miracle Colburn and Larry Rodney Colburn MIA ’90 Brent Feigenbaum MIA ’84 M. Guadalupe Granda MIA ’95 and Mark David O ’Keefe MIA ’95 Mary S. Ginsberg MIA ’78, IF ’78 Andrea Lynn Johnson MIA ’89 Karen Knapp MPA ’94 and Frank Knapp Arfan M. K. Malas MIA ’68 /Dextar World Trade LLC Claudette M. Mayer MIA ’76, IF ’76 Constantina Filippeou McCabe MIA ’66 and Robert McCabe Catherine Mulder MIA ’81 Kenneth Prewitt Ellen C. Rogge Schubert and Kirk P. Schubert MIA ’82 Unilever

$1,000–$2,499 Noura Turki Al-Saud MIA ’14 Mashael AlShalan MIA ’14 Lisa S. Anderson CERT ’76 Kifle Bantayehu MIA ’10 Caroline Baudinet-Stumpf MIA ’96, IF ’96 Robin L. Berry MIA ’78 Kimberly B. and Kenneth Lawrence Blacklow MPA ’93 Vera and Donald M. Blinken Matthew Penn Boyer MIA ’94 Gabrielle S. Brussel MIA ’88 and Hugo Presgrave Faria MIA ’88 Elizabeth Cabot MIA ’98 and Blake Cabot Elisa A. Charters MIA ’02 Eric Daniel Chasser MIA ’04

Lucia Choi and Gregory R. Dalton MIA ’94, IF ’94 Yung-Woo Chun MIA ’94, IF ’94 Daniel Moshe Cohen MIA ’04 John J. Costonis IF ’64 Lee Cullum Jeffrey Currie Christian Deseglise MIA ’90 Can Vahit Eksioglu MIA ’01 R. Anthony Elson MIA ’64, IF ’64 Kashiyo Enokido MIA ’78 and Thomas C. Crouse Ivy Lindstrom Fredericks MIA ’98 and William Curtis Fredericks Anthony C. Gooch MIA ’05, IF ’05 Erin S. Gore MPA ’97 Maria Teresa and John D. Greenwald IF ’71 Neal H. Harwood MIA ’61 Ana B. and Peter Alexander Hofmann MIA ’86 George Franz Hollendorfer MIA ’01 Thomas W. Hoya CERT ’69 Douglas R. Hunter MIA ’73 Kirsten Frivold Imohiosen MPA ’03 Mark M. Jaskowiak IF ’77 Karuna Evelyne Shinsho MIA ’94 and Horace P. Jen MIA ’93, CERT ’93 Stuart MacLean Johnson MIA ’67 Kamil Kaluza MPA ’06 Renata and Scott Mitchell Karr MPA ’09 Hisanori Kataoka MIA ’98 Jessie McClintock Kelly MIA ’07 Edward S. Knight Arpad V. Krizsan MIA ’94 Amy Esty Lester and Ryan S. Lester MIA ’01 Amy Kay Lipton MIA ’88


Angie Ma MIA ’96, IF ’95 Eric Rogan Mason MIA ’95 Saroj and Sreedhar Menon Sherwood G. Moe MIA ’48 Linda and Edward L. Morse Hiroko Murase MIA ’91 Neal Barrett Parry MPA ’06 John B. Penney MPA ’93 Henrietta Bartizal Pons MIA ’64 Camille C. and Clyde E. Rankin IF ’74 Peter M. Robinson MIA ’79, IF ’79 Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors Karen Scowcroft MIA ’84, IF ’84 Sandra Shahinian Leitner MIA ’76 Beth and Mitchell Darrow Silber MIA ’05 David Zvi Solomon MIA ’97 Nancy Leys and Alfred C. Stepan IF ’65 Shigemitsu Sugisaki MIA ’67 Douglas Boyd Thomas MIA ’98 Anne B. Waters Efrot Weiss MIA ’89, IF ’89 Enzo Viscusi Zhijing Yin MPA ’03 Wei Victoria Zhao MIA ’11

$500–$999 Simon K. Adamiyatt MIA ’81, CERT ’81 Teresa Aguilar and Sohrab M. Kheradi MIA ’63 Kelly Reynolds Annarella MIA ’92 Arlene Renee Barilec MIA ’84 Jillian Barron MIA ’88 and Jonas K. Simonis Stefan Robert Benn MIA ’95 Maureen R. Berman MIA ’73 Pieter Bierkens MIA ’92 Patrick Francis Bohan Alan L. Brott Deborah Alyse Brown and Jefrey Pollock MPA ’97 Karl Brown MIA ’06 Marcia Beth Burkey MIA ’88 and William Uyeda Daniel F. Burton MIA ’81 Allen L. Byrum MIA ’72 Colin G. Campbell Madeleine Chapman and Vikram Raju MIA ’97 Michael R. Chase MIA ’95 Mark Frenn Conroe MIA ’96, CERT ’96

Bernadette Cruz MIA ’08 Sonia Daccarett MIA ’92 Susan Guheen Desautels and Marc P. Desautels MIA ’66 Yang Diao and Hui Gao MPA ’01 Joyce B. and David N. Dinkins Cecilia Elizabeth Dunn MPA ’93 Kathleen M. Hansen Fallon MIA ’92 William S. Foster MIA ’06 Gerald S. Freedman IF ’62 Meyer S. Frucher Carol J. and Larry S. Gage IF ’71 Shelly Louise Gardeniers MIA ’96 Nina and Sol Glasner MIA ’76, CERT ’76 Adam Spencer Glatzer MPA ’07 Anne W. Hamilton MIA ’79 Henry Joseph Hector MIA ’71, CERT ’71 Joshua Rob Hepola MIA ’00, IF ’00 Patricia M. and Andrew William Higgins MIA ’91 Alik Odinga Hinckson MPA ’04 Morton L. Janklow/Janklow Foundation Zhaohui Jin MIA ’02 Herman N. Johnson MIA ’99 Mary Tyler Johnson MPA ’04

Michone Trinae Johnson MPA ’96 Kathleen Marie Karich MPA ’90 John J. Kerr IF ’76 Mostafa Khezry MIA ’89 Claudia Laviada MIA ’00 and Carlos Rohm George M. Lazarus IF ’69 Catherine Grace Lee MIA ’96 Justin Peter Leous MPA ’06 Sharon and Jay A. Levy IF ’62 John F. Lippmann MIA ’49 Eva Loesche MIA ’92 Jennifer Rebecca Malkin MIA ’96 Sonia P. Maltezou MIA ’70 Raul Kazimierz Martynek MIA ’93 Christopher McCormick Leslie S. Meek MIA ’94 Calvin Marshall Mew IF ’72 Judith Brown Meyers IF ’71 and Michael Meyers Shalini Mimani Marilyn Mitchell Marianne Mitosinka MIA ’81 Thomas John Monahan MIA ’85 Tracey Ellen Morzano MIA ’94 and Gregory Scott Morzano Mary Agnes O’Donnell Hulme MIA ’95

James Luikart MIA ’72, Julie Baumann, Ang Li MIA ’14, Filip Tucek MIA ’15, Roger Baumann MIA ’85, IF ’84 at the SIPA Fellowship Luncheon

57


Amy Elizabeth O’Keefe MIA ’04 and Christoph Wilhelm Heuer MIA ’04 Lynn B. and James Michael O’Neill MIA ’02 Elizabeth and Timothy J. C. O’Shea MIA ’84, IF ’84, CERT ’84 Gwynne Arian Oosterbaan MIA ’97, CERT ’97 Margaret Happel Perry Lisa and Dennis E. Petito MIA ’77 Susan D. and Thomas Guenter Plagemann MIA ’91 Peter William Quinn MIA ’97, IF ’97 Susan B. Rifkin MIA ’69, CERT ’69 Emily Glaser Ross MPA ’12 Ernst J. Schrader MIA ’65 Ira Shapiro Barnet Sherman MPA ’82 Sanford T. Sherman MIA ’82 Nicholas J. Spiliotes IF ’79, CERT ’79 Sheree S. Stomberg MIA ’79 Herbert S. Terrace Maria Tham MIA ’93 and Tu-Chih Tsai Yasmine R. Thiam MIA ’80 Mozelle W. Thompson IF ’79 Frederic Joseph Vagnini MIA ’89 Mehrnaz Vahid MIA ’89 Xinbo Wang MPA ’13 Irene May Wong MPA ’93 Samuel H. Wyman MIA ’63 Marguerite Tabor Yates IF ’80 and David C. Chaffetz MIA ’80, IF ’80 Mischa Alessandro Zabotin MIA ’89 Sanya Zezulin MIA ’85 and Alexander E. Yushkevich Allan Jianjun Zhang MIA ’95 Annie Yang Zhou MPA ’13

$250–$499 Christiana H. Aguiar MIA ’89 Elena M. Alvarez MPA ’84 Sanford Antignas Roberta B. and Michael H. Armacost IF ’61 Jean-Pierre Y. Arnaud MIA ’92 Abbas Baqueri MIA ’91 William B. Barfield IF ’66 Gabriella D. Barschdorff MIA ’99 Matthias Georg Baumberger MIA ’05 Martin H. Belsky IF ’68 Pun Ok Benn and Jorge de Jesus Guttlein MIA ’76, IF ’76 Matthew A. Berg MIA ’98 Kenneth Herbert Blackman MIA ’00 Dale A. Black-Pennington MPA ’89 Tammy Sue Blossom MPA ’96 Saswati Bora MIA ’04 Thomas H. Boast MIA ’72 Jeffrey L. Canfield MIA ’82, CERT ’82 Mark Brock Carmichael MIA ’01 Mary W. Carpenter MIA ’51 Hai-Chiao Chang MPA ’07

58

Ting Ting Chen MPA ’11 Hyun Jung Jung Chin Nancy Chua MIA ’94 Kristen Marie Cleven MIA ’09 and Leonardo Karrer MIA ’09 Irene Borecky Coffman MPA ’82 and Richard Wayne Coffman CERT ’84 F. Bruce Cohen MPA ’91 Luke B. Davenport MIA ’09 Carolyn P. Dewing-Hommes MIA ’86, CERT ’86 John William Dickey MIA ’92 Lucia Adele Domville MIA ’96 Melissa Sawin Donohue MIA ’93 Ruth I. Dreessen MIA ’80 Grant M. Duers MPA ’07 Jennifer Ann Durst MIA ’99 Judith Ann Edstrom MIA ’72, IF ’72 Melinda Miriam Elias MIA ’11 Mayada El-Zoghbi MIA ’94, CERT ’94 Rick Faery MIA ’00 Grace Frisone MIA ’76 and Michael G. Metzger John C. Garrett IF ’66 Stephen Bernt Gaull MIA ’88, CERT ’88 Omar M. Gharzeddine MIA ’95 Sucharita Ghosh MIA ’84, IF ’84 Erin Bass Goldberg and Jeffrey Jay Goldberg MPA ’99 Allan Goldfarb MIA ’79 Lisa G. Goldschmidt MPA ’04 Milena Gomez-Kopp Stephen Grynberg IF ’89 Ashok Kumar Gurung MIA ’93, CERT ’93 Maureen-Elizabeth Hagen MIA ’83, CERT ’83 Scott Praeger Hall MIA ’92 Peter L. Harnik MIA ’75 Bruce Kirkwood Harris MIA ’92 Nadia Hasham MIA ’12 and Al Hasham Gary Edward Hayes MIA ’81, CERT ’81 Rex S. Heinke IF ’74 Patricia Hewitt MIA ’71 and Dale C. Christensen MIA ’71 Christopher John Hirth MIA ’96 Katherine Hale Hovde MIA ’89 Laurel Bowers Husain MIA ’81 Melanie Ann Tung Ian MPA ’96 and Andrew Held MIA ’95, IF ’95 Eric Davis Jacobsen MPA ’06 Syed Wamiq Jawaid Cynthia Lynn Johnson MIA ’04 Richard B. Jones MIA ’80 Caroline C. Kay Brian John Kennedy MPA ’04 Bomsinae Kim MIA ’05 Nancy K. Kintner-Meyer MIA ’89 James Henry Kipers MIA ’02 Hilka Klinkenberg MPA ’09 Bruce M. Kogut MIA ’78 Richard W. Kurz MIA ’77 Laura Losciale Malha MIA ’00

Dan McIntyre and Jan R. Kleeman Joshua William Larson MIA ’92, CERT ’92 Dimitris P. Lazopoulos MIA ’78 Kent David Lee MIA ’88 Andre D. Lehmann MIA ’73, CERT ’73 Oliver Andrew Lennox MIA ’09 George P. Lightbody MIA ’92 Margaret T. Lim MIA ’08 Ping Fong Louie MIA ’85 Edward Michael Luera MPA ’83 John Athanasios Mafoutsis MIA ’90 Stephen D. Maikowski MIA ’77 Jerrold L. Mallory MIA ’83, CERT ’83 James I. Mandel IF ’72 Ida May H. Mantel MIA ’64 Robert B. Mantel MIA ’63 Ann E. March MIA ’99 Dina Maria Tavares Marchioni MIA ’04 Probyn V. Marsh CERT ’61 Anneliese Farrell Mauch MIA ’93, CERT ’93 Laurie N. Mayers MIA ’82 Geraldine Anne Mc Allister MIA ’08 Diana Montero Melis MPA ’08 Alexandra Merle-Huet MIA ’04 Kenneth C. Moore Nancy C. Moran MIA ’99 Andrew John Mueller MIA ’97 Sawa Nakagawa MIA ’09 Stephen S. Nelmes MIA ’73 Peter Damian O ’Driscoll MIA ’97 Haibado Ismael Omar MIA ’10 Murad Asylbek Omoev MPA ’05 Onuwabhagbe Abbey Omokhodion MIA ’00 Jon S. Pearl Patrick Edward Peterson MIA ’07 James Brian Pieri MPA ’07 Brian Gary Prater MPA ’00 Rhonda E. Presser MIA ’79 David C. Ralph MIA ’67 John M. Reid MIA ’64 Robert D. Reischauer MIA ’66 Linda M. Richards MIA ’78 and Stephen G. Richards William James Rigler MIA ’03, IF ’03 Scott Andrew Richman MIA ’91 Robert M. Rodes Celine Solsken Ruben-Salama MPA ’08 Anna Darlene Hayes Rubley MPA ’08 Joseph Andrew Samborsky MPA ’04 Salvatore V. Sampino MIA ’83 Harold Martin Sandstrom MIA ’87, CERT ’87 Deborah Gwen Schein MIA ’88, CERT ’88 Samuel M. Schacher Carlo Dominick Schiattarella MPA ’93 Kurt A. Schreder MIA ’93 George David Schwab Susan Ellen Schorr MPA ’98 Jeannet J. and Harold B. Segel

Jakub R. Semrau MIA ’02, IF ’02 Willard M. Sims MIA ’97 Richard M. Smith IF ’69 Alan Stern MIA ’68 Kulratan R. Stuart MIA ’73 Tara Jayne Sullivan MPA ’86 Jennifer Jaryi Sun MIA ’97 Elizabeth D. Trafelet MIA ’03 Melinda Macdonald Twomey MIA ’84 Donald J. Twombly MIA ’73 Shapari Taxell MIA ’04, CERT ’04 Sharyn Menegus Taylor MIA ’85 William Eunen Tiao MIA ’99 David G. Timberman MIA ’80 Angela Tsai MPA ’09 Andrea Noelle Turner MIA ’07 and Steven Moffitt Ralph W. Usinger MIA ’73 Arnedo Silvano Valera MIA ’90 Maria Melania Vargas MIA ’11 Joseph L. Vidich MIA ’80 Susannah Violino MIA ’81 Hans Herbert Wahl MIA ’95 Carra Lynette Wallace MPA ’12 John C. Weber IF ’65 Jill Sue Wilkins MIA ’91 Frank G. Wisner Chang-Chuan Wu CERT ’69 Jing Wang MPA ’02 Hideo Yanai MIA ’96 Loretta M. Yenson MIA ’82 Lauren Zeltzer MIA ’85 Rachel Zenner Kane MPA ’98 and Bradley Kane Jonathan Zorach CERT ’72

Up to $249 Pamela Aall MIA ’77, CERT ’77 Pamela Yvette Abner MPA ’08 Anne-Charlotte Juliana Adam McLaughlin MIA ’01 John Quincy Adams MIA ’85 David A. Ader MIA ’82 Oliver Daniel Adler MIA ’82 David Marshall Adlerstein IF ’02 Jean H. and Narinder K. Aggarwala MIA ’71 Jennifer Ellen Ahearn-Koch MIA ’90 Kazi Fateha Ahmed MIA ’06 Elizabeth Albino MIA ’00 and Juan M. Bayuelo Delalle Nasr Strateman Alexander MIA ’85 Karen Jeannette Alexander MPA ’90 Marcellin Koffi Alle MPA ’06 Mark Forsyth Allen MIA ’09 Nafeesah Allen MIA ’09, CERT ’09 Patrice L. Allen-Gifford MIA ’81 Douglas Vincent Almond Stephen Altheim IF ’69 Luis Alvarez Renta MPA ’09 Daniel Alvarez MPA ’09 Trevor Graeme Thomas MIA ’04 Bridget Anderson MPA ’04 Darcy Diane Anderson MIA ’02 and Amal Shashikant Patel MIA ’02 G. Norman Anderson MIA ’60


Lauren Emily Andersen MPA ’15 Wesmond Andrews MIA ’98 Shehriyar D. Antia MIA ’03 Adrienne DeVere Antoine MPA ’05 Quentin Laurent Antshel MPA ’03 Melissa Beth Apfelbaum MIA ’94 Olavi Arens CERT ’69 Adrian Marcel Armanini MIA ’99 Adriana Gabriela Armenta MPA ’10 Muneeb Arslan MPA ’08 Alice Woodley Asby MIA ’92, IF ’92 Sarah S. Ashton MIA ’93 Mulan De Quetteville Ashwin MIA ’93 Elizabeth Athey MIA ’71 Paul Francis Augustine MPA ’05 Robert P. Bachmann MPA ’13 Sally Baek MPA ’85 Alieda Maria Baig MIA ’05 Golden Baker MIA ’07 Leonard J. Baldyga MIA ’62 Moran Banai MIA ’06 Elissa Bard MPA ’96 Nicholas Adam Barnard MIA ’04 Wayne M. Barnstone MIA ’79 Alexis Barros MIA ’93 Kimberly Bayer MPA ’02 Nicolas Beauchet MPA ’09 Jordan Michael Becker MIA ’11 Jennifer Beebe MPA ’03 Kenton H. Beerman MIA ’05 Gina E. Behnfeldt MPA ’93 Scott H. Bellows MIA ’79 Yvette E. Benedek MIA ’81 Karin Christina Bennett MIA ’10 Stephen Michael Berk CERT ’72 Lisa Bernard MIA ’89 Shu Zhen Bernardin Jill C. Berry MPA ’99 Genevieve K. Besser MIA ’86 Wendy Lee Kutlow Best MPA ’87 Dorcas Jeanine Bethel MPA ’95 Betsy Shimberg MPA ’97 Muriel C. and Keith W. Betten Richard K. Betts Seymour Beubis Loralee Beubis Peter James Biesada MIA ’86 Sanuber Bilguvar MIA ’06 Alison A. Binkowski MIA ’09 David Lawrence Birnbaum MIA ’98 Sandra Bitar MIA ’12 Alexandra Blair MPA ’12 John Langdon Blakeney MPA ’06 Hannah Joan Bloch MIA ’89, IF ’89 Lisa Zucrow Block MPA ’81 Michael Drury Bodman MIA ’96 Holly Bernson Bogin MIA ’88 James R. Bombard MPA ’81 Ounaida Bongo MIA ’04 Adrienne Montinea Booker MPA ’92 Perla Boord MIA ’00 Michele Helen Bornstein MIA ’15 Rebecca Lynn Boston MPA ’94 Joan Copithorne Bowen MIA ’67 Lori Neal Bowman MPA ’02 Jennifer Marie Bredehoft MPA ’13 Jack Lyman Brown MPA ’07

Julia Brown MIA ’11 William C. Brown IF ’67 Keith Dawayne Brown MIA ’89 Richard M. Brown Thomas F. Brown IF ’65 John P. Bruggen MPA ’00 Cecile R. Brunswick MIA ’54 Fred E. N. Brust MIA ’04, IF ’04 William Ransom Bryant Andrea Bubula Marisa J. Buchanan MPA ’07 Beverley Jeanine Buford MPA ’86 Michele Bulatovic MIA ’94 and Andrew Charles Scobell Jerry Nathan Bullock MPA ’11 Gordon Marshall Burck MIA ’86 Robert K. Burghart CERT ’79 Peter James Burgis MPA ’97 Kevin James Burgwinkle MIA ’06, IF ’06 Deena Mai Burjorjee MIA ’97 Michael Burke MPA ’89 Jonathan Chao Burnston MIA ’11 Frances B. Paul H. Byers IF ’67 Limarie Ventura Cabrera MPA ’07 Gerald A. Cady MIA ’76, CERT ’76 Kristen Klemme Cady-Sawyer MPA ’06 Maria Francesca Casimiro Canivel MIA ’11 Steven Anthony Caputo MPA ’09 Laura Carey MIA ’06 Aubrey Alexander Carlson MIA ’84, IF ’84, CERT ’84 Virginia Kesler Carlson MPA ’91 Donald L. Carpenter CERT ’54 Jessica Carta MIA ’13 Ana Maria Carvajal MPA ’07

Elizabeth Hopkins Cashen MIA ’01 and David V. Cashen Kathryn E. Cashin Carolyn Castro MPA ’09 Barbara Foulke Cates MIA ’84 Isaiah Zimba Chabala MIA ’91 Ricky W. Chan MIA ’73 Shih-Hsin Chang MIA ’04 Jonathan A. Chanis Peggy Chao MIA ’98 and James A. Boyce Martin A. Charwat CERT ’65 Lenia Chaves MPA ’05 Julie Chayet MPA ’95 Wambui Wairimu Chege MIA ’06 Betsy Wan-Chun Chen MIA ’00 Shiliang Thomas Chen MIA ’11 David Xing Cheng MPA ’07 Judy Cheng-Hopkins MIA ’78 and Thomas J. Hopkins Marc W. Chernick MIA ’82, CERT ’82 Kai J. Chin MIA ’78 Muzaffar A. Chishti MIA ’81 Jane Sun Choi Shachi Chopra-Nangia MIA ’00 Paul Brian Christensen MIA ’83 Jadwiga Chrusciel Siew Chuah MIA ’84 and Chjan Chin Lim Sandra G. Chutorian MIA ’82, CERT ’82 Jeff Geefen Chyu MIA ’83 William Ciaccio MPA ’79 Jeannine T. Ciliotta MIA ’72 Azeb Gessesse Clark MIA ’96 William L. Clarke CERT ’63 Peter James Clayton MPA ’90

Eric Clemons MIA ’92 Anna C. Coatsworth Natalie Greenan Coburn MIA ’89 Dillon Lockwood Cohen MIA ’09 Jonathan Alan Cohen MIA ’99 Jonathan D. Cohen Maria Catalina Colmenares MPA ’09 Glenn L. Colville MIA ’75 and Dianne K. Colville Maureen Considine MIA ’86 Daniel Aaron Cook MIA ’06 Edward A. Corcoran CERT ’67 Richard W. Cortright MIA ’82 Daniel Joseph Costello MPA ’01 Steven Costner MIA ’88 Gretchen Irene Cox and Jeffrey Cox MIA ’89 Monica Inez Cramer MIA ’92 Dustin Craven MIA ’93 Robert S. Critchell MIA ’70 Maya Rose Crone MPA ’89 Mercedes Cubas MIA ’81 Carlos Augusto Cuevas MPA ’12 Nikken Cullman MIA ’09 Jennifer Cunningham Victoria R. Cunningham MIA ’75 Ruth C. Curtis MIA ’71 Theodore Albert D ’Afflisio MIA ’71 Stela Maris Dallari MPA ’03 Dolores J. Daly MPA ’95 Karl I. Danga MIA ’71, IF ’71 Anna Daskarev Miner MIA ’05 Joel Davidow IF ’63 Joshua Glenn Davis MIA ’96 Camille Purvis Dawson MIA ’99 Laura A. De Dominicis MIA ’99 John Louis de Leon MIA ’92 Edward N. De Lia MIA ’87

Debora Spar, president of Barnard College; Anne-Marie Slaughter, president and CEO of the New America Foundation; Dean Merit E. Janow; and Alison Wolf, professor of public sector management, King’s College London, participated in a panel at SIPA on women and work.

59


President Lee C. Bollinger with Global Leadership Award honoree Judith Rodin; Dean Merit E. Janow; David Rockefeller Jr., chair, board of trustees, Rockefeller Foundation; and his wife, Susan Rockefeller, at the Plaza Hotel

Toni Elizabeth Dechario MIA ’07 Carol M. Degener Lynch MIA ’84 Katarina Deletis MIA ’00 Diane Leslie Demmler MIA ’87 Gary Francis Di Gesu MIA ’89 Donna Deeprose Diaz and Raphael A. Diaz MIA ’63 Elena Kitaoka Diaz-Bilello MPA ’00 Aaron R. Dibner-Dunlap MIA ’10 John Edmond Dicken MPA ’89 Jessica Ephra Dickler MPA ’04 Peggy P. and Samuel Dickman Richard Albert Dikeman MPA ’99 Maria Dikeos MIA ’92 Beverly W. and Stephen D. Docter MIA ’60 Simon Parish Dodge MIA ’90 Diane Joyce Dolinsky-Pickar MIA ’92 Harriette C. Dorf Linnea Dorin MPA ’12 Christianna Casey Dove MIA ’06 Christine Marian Doyle MIA ’92 Bruce H. Drossman MIA ’82, IF ’82, CERT ’82 Annie M. Ducmanis MPA ’05 Jennifer Bee Dudley MPA ’04 Janet Duni MPA ’94

60

E. Michael Easterly MIA ’68 Joanne Edgar MIA ’68 Wakana Nakagami Edmister MPA ’02 George Jove Ehrhardt MPA ’12 Douglas J. Eisenfelder IF ’63 Sari J. Ellovich MIA ’75 Gail Elaine Emrick MIA ’87 Anita Louise English MPA ’83 Dayna English MIA ’81 Anne Enslow MIA ’78, IF ’78, CERT ’78 Sharon E. Epstein MIA ’71, IF ’71 Kenneth Erickson IF ’64, CERT ’64 Jodi A. Erlandsen MPA ’98 Jacqueline Escobar MPA ’07 Ali Ezzatyar MIA ’04, CERT ’04 James Fahn MIA ’02 Jessica Faieta MIA ’93 Peter Seth Falcier MIA ’07 Joseph Edward Fallon MIA ’80 Yuan Fang MIA ’10 Susan Silver Farley MIA ’78 Jessica Jolene Farmer MIA ’00 Suzanne and Robert S. Faron IF ’75 Aurelius Fernandez MIA ’59

Alexander Patrick Conrad Fernando MIA ’05 Jennifer A. and Craig James Ferrantino MIA ’92 Vincent A. Ferraro MIA ’73, IF ’73 and Priscilla A. Mandrachia Margaret E. Fine-Levy MPA ’83 Diane P. Fink MIA ’79 Yakov Finkelshteyn MIA ’03 Ezra M. Finkelstein MIA ’52 Lawrence P. Finnegan IF ’71 Howard Barrett Flanders IF ’62 Nikolai Flexner MIA ’05 James Fonda MPA ’07 Jennifer Gill Fondiller and David Stewart Fondiller MIA ’92 Anne D. Ford MIA ’05 Aaron Henry Foss MPA ’12 Catherine Starin Foster-Anderson MPA ’04 Donald T. Fox Paul Fraioli MIA ’11, IF ’11 Jackie Frankel MPA ’09 Hugh Corning Fraser MPA ’95 David S. Frick MIA ’01 Caroline Hearn Fuchs MIA ’86 Charles Edward Gagnon MPA ’91 Debra Carbonaro Gaisford MIA ’03

Jesse C. Gale Maria Salome Galib-Bras MIA ’88, CERT ’88 and Duane McLaughlin Carrie Lyn Gallagher MPA ’09 Robert John Gallagher MIA ’90 Alexander Galsky MIA ’10 Fernanda Gamez MPA ’12 Danielle Nicole Garbe MPA ’01 Carolyn Miles Garber MIA ’99 Karina Garcia-Casalderrey MIA ’02 John G. Garrard CERT ’64 Pamela Susan Garrud MIA ’83 Ibrahim Gassambe MIA ’11 Frances X. Gates Susan C. Gates MIA ’94 Toby Trister Gati MIA ’70, CERT ’70 and Charles Gati Joseph G. Gavin MIA ’70 Benjamin D. Geber MPA ’90 Inge Gedo MIA ’93 Ian Mcgee Gershgorn MPA ’12 Ellen Miriam Gertsen MPA ’03 Deepa Rani Ghosh MPA ’04 Christine Wrona Giallongo MIA ’90, CERT ’90 Susan C. Gigli MIA ’87 Thomas J. Gilchrist MIA ’14


William Jeffrey Gimpel MIA ’90 Susan Aurelia Gitelson MIA ’66 Kathryn Glynn-Broderick MIA ’08 Bruce Jay Goldstein MIA ’85 Eric Daniel Goldstein MIA ’86 Grace Ellen Goodell MIA ’69 Andrew Gossen Wallace D. Gossett IF ’69 Nancy L. and Rodney E. Gould IF ’68 Francis Lincoln Grahlfs CERT ’55 Marisa Salamone Greason MPA ’86 Robin Greene Hagey MIA ’80 Richard C. Greenwald MPA ’93 Elizabeth Perschbacher Griffiths MPA ’07 Guy B. Gugliotta MIA ’73 and Carla A. Robbins Susan B. and Daniel A. Gutterman Viktoria Habanova MIA ’08 Michele Anke Haberland MPA ’04 and Thaddeus James Tracy Stacia Janina Hachem MIA ’87 Brian Gerald Hackett MIA ’01 Brigid Flynn Haeckel MPA ’90 W. David Hager IF ’66 Ayesha Saira HaiderMarra MIA ’04 Bonnie Halpern MIA ’72 Richard E. Hammond IF ’69 Bruce Wook Han MIA ’90 Ayelet Klara Haran MPA ’11 Andrew Peter Burnett Harder MIA ’07 Katherine Olivia Hardy MIA ’97 Diane Wallace Harpold MIA ’90 and William Rodgers MIA ’91 Helen Harris MIA ’09 Belal S.K. Hassan MPA ’09 James G. Hatcher IF ’62 Ryan Foster Heath MPA ’10 Lisa Ray Hecht-Cronstedt MIA ’08 Silvia Maria Heller MIA ’99 Judith Gail Hellerstein MPA ’94 Robert J. Hellman CERT ’78 Jennifer Ann Hemmer MIA ’89 and Matthias Schlingmann Alan J. Herbach MIA ’79 Mary L. and Richard Hermanowski Sabrina Hermosilla MIA ’08 Paul Henry Hersh MIA ’13 Peter T. Hess MIA ’80 Garry W. Hesser IF ’64 Antoine Heuty MIA ’02 Stephen Robert Hilbert MIA ’83 Vasana L. and John F. Hildebrand IF ’66 Michele F. Hird MIA ’77 Lily Ho Leavitt MIA ’96 and Andrew Leavitt Joseph Michael Hoban MIA ’86 Michael A. Holubar MIA ’77 Nicole Janine Holzapfel MIA ’94 Joon Seok Hong MIA ’05 Ludovic Hood MIA ’06, IF ’06 Anthony H. Horan IF ’63 Janet Irene Horan MPA ’05

Kaori Takami Hotta MIA ’04 Pamela A. Houghtaling MIA ’74, CERT ’74 Gail Lewis Howard MIA ’84 and James D. Howard William D. Howells MIA ’60, CERT ’60 Henry H. Hsiang MPA ’93 Difei Vivian Hu MPA ’09 Sarah Beth Huber MIA ’06 Christopher P. Hufstader MIA ’96 John Walsh Hughes MIA ’10 Jo Marvel Hull and Richard W. Hull CERT ’65 Heather Hunte MPA ’13 Riham Hussein MIA ’09 Claire Estelle Marie HussonCitanna MPA ’05 Thomas J. Hyra MIA ’76, IF ’76 Kazuyoshi Ikeno MIA ’76 Melissa S. Ingber MIA ’95 Farhod Inogambaev MIA ’07 Robbin Frances Itzler MPA ’84 Hidenori Iwasaki MIA ’01 Devika Iyer MIA ’07 Gloria R. Jacobs MIA ’78 Dara Stacey Jaffee MPA ’95 Pyarali Jamal MIA ’05 Georgette Clynice James MIA ’03, CERT ’03 John W. James Kristi Bahrenburg Janzen MIA ’93, CERT ’93 and Bernd Gunnar Janzen MIA ’92, CERT ’92 Russell M. Jenkins MIA ’80 and Susanne Lingemann Andrew T. Jhun MPA ’04 Jinyuan Jin MIA ’09 Ray Christopher Johnson MPA ’89 Taki Johnson MPA ’06 John Charles Jove MIA ’85 Walter E. Judge MIA ’85, IF ’85 and Jean C. O’Neill Ronald D. Judkoff IF ’76 Christopher W. June MIA ’65 Melissa G. Kadiri MIA ’85 Sharon Kahn-Bernstein MPA ’97 Kai-Joachim Kamrath MPA ’15 Elisa A. Kapell MIA ’79, IF ’79, CERT ’79 and Walter R. Cook Ekrem Karademir MPA ’13 Laura J. Kasa MPA ’00 Jeffrey Shinji Kashida MIA ’76 Farida Kassin MPA ’07 Daniel Lewis Katzive MIA ’92 Peggy Ockkyung Kauh MPA ’01 Stanley P. Kaymen IF ’85 Gail H. Kedrus CERT ’81 Michael Barden Keegan IF ’86 Lauren Jennifer Kelley MIA ’84 Charles Robert Kelly MIA ’83 Julia Metzger Kennedy MIA ’92 Alexandra Alison Kerr Meise MPA ’07 Allan R. Kessler MIA ’82 Donn M. Kessler Clarice J. Kestenbaum Alison Leavitt Khalaf MPA ’04

John F. Khanlian MIA ’69 Michele Llona Wray Khateri MIA ’97 Caitlin Meredith Kieran MPA ’13 Christian Kim MIA ’08, IF ’08 Do-Hyung Kim MIA ’00 Helen W. and Samuel S. Kim MIA ’62 Natasha Suzanne Kindergan MIA ’04, IF ’04 Noelle King IF ’84 Brigitte Lehner Kingsbury MIA ’89 Gordon A. Kingsley MIA ’81 Jacob Funk Kirkegaard MIA ’02 Jean L. Klein Sloan S. and Robert Scott Klein MIA ’98 Rosalind and Bernard Klem MIA ’63 Paulo Francisco Kluber MIA ’08, CERT ’08 Andrew Jerome Koch MIA ’06, IF ’06 Anthony M. Kolankiewicz MIA ’99, IF ’99 Annette Phyllis Kondo IF ’86 Paik Har Kong MIA ’82 and Kevin Peng Chong Sandra Y. Koo MIA ’90 and Jonathan Shaw Stephanie Kosmo MIA ’84 P. Nicholas Kourides IF ’70 Tessa Marie Kratz MPA ’06 Ilana K. Krishnamurti MIA ’67 Bernard Kritzer MIA ’72 Abraham B. Kroma MIA ’97 Karen Sue Krop MPA ’86 Emi Kubota MIA ’08, IF ’08 Rebecca Morris Kuhar MPA ’98 and Robert Kuhar Orin Michael Kurland MIA ’91 Gertrude Ambah Kwabi-Addo MIA ’99 Chrissa Michele La Porte MIA ’05 Elizabeth A. LaBarbera MPA ’10 Darwin R. Labarthe IF ’62 Barbara Labate MIA ’03 Laurin L. Laderoute IF ’66 Polly Nora Lagana MPA ’04 Paul Felipe Lagunes Sergio Thomas Lagunes MIA ’05 Abdelghni Lakhdar MPA ’08 Aikojean Lane MIA ’05, IF ’05 and Haruhisa Ohtsuka MIA ’05 Julie Werner Lane MPA ’92 Kenneth J. Langan IF ’80 Heather Anna Langsner MIA ’02 Brooke Larson Catherine C. and John Lastavica Mel Laytner MIA ’72 Patrick Leahy MIA ’89 April Lee MPA ’10 Inhwa Lee MIA ’05 Joo-Yung Lee MPA ’97 and John E. Wells MPA ’96 Frederick A. Leedy CERT ’52 Timothy Leland IF ’61 Philip J. Lemanski MPA ’86 Amanda V. Leness MIA ’93 Suzanna Lengyel Sandra M. Lennon MIA ’95

Valerie Leon MPA ’09 Julia H. and Roger N. Lester Margaret M. Levchenko CERT ’57 and Andrew Levchenko MIA ’56 Jeffrey Scott Levine MPA ’05 Deborah Jacobs Levy MPA ’92 James John Lewellis MIA ’04 David Yifong Li MIA ’08 Arthur Dominique Liacre MIA ’04 Kenneth F. Liberstein MIA ’83 Robert Charles Lieberman Edith R. Lim CERT ’74 Renee E. Lipski CERT ’81 and Michael Goldberg Megan Lipton-Inga MIA ’01 Alexandre Brites Lira MPA ’08 John Joseph Lis MIA ’96, IF ’96, CERT ’96 Kai-Chun Liu MPA ’82 and ShienChi Chen Robert T. Livernash MIA ’73, IF ’73 Jody London MPA ’90 James Michael Lonergan MPA ’92 Christine M. Loomis CERT ’75 David Chase Lopes MIA ’92 Ronald Dean Lorton MIA ’71, IF ’71 Arul B. Louis Kurt P. Low MIA ’97 Erica Granetz Lowitz MPA ’94 Marcus P. Lubin MIA ’81 William H. Luers Alida Marie Lujan MPA ’11 Cynthia MacDonald IF ’77 Vernon L. Mack MIA ’73 Patricia M. Macken Scott Charles Macmurdo MIA ’12 Paul Mah MPA ’87 Harpreet Mahajan CERT ’80 Michael Thomas Maier MIA ’08 Randolph T. Major MIA ’58 Hama Makino MIA ’10 Lawrence H. Mamiya IF ’68 Francesco Mancini MIA ’03 Harriet Lee Mandel MIA ’85, CERT ’85 Justin Mandel MIA ’09 Sahil Salim Manekia MIA ’10 Katherine and Andrew Thomas Mangan IF ’84 Justin Mankin MPA ’10 Kristine Manoukian MIA ’02, IF ’02, CERT ’02 Sarah Marchal Murray MPA ’04 and Stephen Murray Deena Gabrielle Margolis MPA ’99 Ryan Thomas Marriott MPA ’11 and Amity Elizabeth Marriott Hadley Peer Marshall and Edward Adger Marshall MIA ’03 Michael G. Martinson MIA ’70 Alice Mastrangelo Gittler MIA ’90 Richard Davis Mathera MPA ’11 Leonard Matin Jeffrey Aaron Max MPA ’04 Rodolfo Abelardo Mayer Prieto MIA ’02 Elizabeth Sheafe Mayer MIA ’12 Toby E. Mayman MIA ’65

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Amanda Waring McClenahan MPA ’02 Gordon Carlos McCord David James Dayton McCormick MIA ’09 Alan B. McDougall MPA ’92 C. Andrew McGadney MPA ’06 Eugenia McGill MIA ’00 Fred F. McGoldrick MIA ’66 John B. McGrath MIA ’80, IF ’80, CERT ’80 James D. McGraw MIA ’55 Dawn Maureen McGuinness MIA ’02 John T. McGuire MIA ’63 Anne N. McIntosh MIA ’85, IF ’85 Elizabeth L. McKeveny Cynthia MaeDelore McKnight MPA ’11 Daniel McSweeney MIA ’06, IF ’06 Karen Miller Meacham MPA ’00 and Carl Eduardo Meacham MPA ’99 Stephanie Hope Meade MIA ’02 and Mouad Srifi Laila M. Mehdi MIA ’86 and John Howard Hilfinger Neha Tara Mehta MIA ’13 Joslyn Edelstein Meier MIA ’07 Manuel Nepomuceno Mejia MPA ’04 Jack Mendelsohn CERT ’77 Patricia Bernadette Mendoza MIA ’97 Miten Arun Merchant MIA ’95 Michael G. Merin MIA ’84, IF ’84, CERT ’84 Alexander Matthew Metelitsa MIA ’12 Katherine M. Metres MIA ’97, IF ’97 Jeffrey Peter Metzler MPA ’99 Brian R. Meyers MPA ’06 Beth S. Michelson MIA ’97, IF ’97 Nick Mider MPA ’14 Adin Calis Miller MPA ’96 Harlan Ira Miller MIA ’95 Edmund M. Mitchell MIA ’73 Kiyohiro Mitsui MPA ’01 Andrea Crawford Mody MIA ’04 John Haakon Moe MPA ’12 Kathleen P. Mone MPA ’81 David M. Moniz MIA ’81 Dean D. Monroe MIA ’88 Robin Monteleone MPA ’06 Tamala Treon Montgomery MPA ’03 Giovanni Monti MIA ’04 Hyuk Moon MIA ’84, CERT ’84 Anne Dowd Moretti MIA ’82, IF ’82 Kate Morris MPA ’11 Susan Paige Morrison CERT ’64 and James R. Morrison MIA ’61 James W. Morrison MIA ’63 Kin W. Moy MIA ’90 Meghan Elizabeth Murphy MIA ’07 Francis D. Murray MPA ’14 Rebecca Elizabeth Myers MPA ’07 Robert O. Myhr MIA ’62 James P. Nach MIA ’66

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Yumiko Nakajima MIA ’90 Olga Sell Nakka Meghan W.T. Nalbo MIA ’07 Ambareen Naqvi MPA ’13 Chadwick C. Nehrt IF ’81 Rachel Mary Neild MIA ’89, IF ’89 Meghan Klier Newcomer MPA ’05 M. Diana Newton Geoffrey L. Newton Alicia Ng MIA ’11 Giang Truong Nguyen MIA ’98 David Michael Nidus MPA ’98 Maria M. Nied MPA ’82 and Dennis Nied Keith Robert Nilsson MIA ’99 Aurora M. Noguera-Ramkissoon MPA ’91 Akbar Noman Carolyn M. Nomura MIA ’76 Carletta Nonziato MIA ’84 Martin D. Novar MIA ’84, CERT ’84 Julie Nsanzurwimo MIA ’93 Hannah Fay Nudell MIA ’09, IF ’09 Omayra Nuenz MPA ’05 Rochelle A. Fortier Nwadibia MIA ’82 Mary Joel O’Connell MIA ’00 Patrick O’Connell MPA ’09 Noreen O’Donnell MIA ’97 Annika Linden O’Hara MIA ’91 and Harry John O’Hara MIA ’91, IF ’91 Kevin P. O’Neil MIA ’85 Irvin Washington Oliver MIA ’08, IF ’08 Clarence W. Olmstead IF ’67 Mary Ann Oppenheimer MIA ’69 Daniel T. Orlovsky IF ’69 Ruth G. Ornelas MIA ’80, IF ’80 Angela Ortiz MIA ’08 Ashley Coats Orton MIA ’07, CERT ’07 Bruce A. Ortwine MIA ’78 Joseph Osenni MPA ’79 Poldy Osorio MPA ’08 Mark Jacob Ossenheimer MIA ’95 Laura Otterbourg MIA ’87 Alexander Sutherland Oveis MPA ’10 Ruth Oyen Gwen Meredith Page MIA ’88 John F. Palmer IF ’70 Mariola Panzuela Malgosa MPA ’12 Heather Dennis Parsons MIA ’90 Sara Munro Bryan Pasquier MIA ’08 Marta Passerini MIA ’10 George Patras MIA ’91 Grant R. Patrick MIA ’81 Carol Jean Patterson MIA ’76, CERT ’76 Eliot Highet Patty MIA ’96 Jessica Horan Payne MPA ’02 Andrew Collins Peach MIA ’98 John Edward Peck CERT ’91 John A. Pecoul IF ’64 Richard J. Pera MIA ’79 Julene M. Perez-Gonzalez MIA ’98 Eden Prather Perry MIA ’01 Scott Pesner

Anita O. J. Peter MIA ’84 Sophie Miskiewicz Peters CERT ’76 Ned Peterson MIA ’06, IF ’06 Velika Peterson MPA ’07 Lawrence C. Petrowski IF ’69 Betsy Phillips MIA ’79 Jerome Picard Jeffrey M. Pines IF ’71 Daphne Anne Pinkerson MIA ’85 Vanessa Pino Lockel MPA ’03 Susan Heller Pinto MIA ’93, IF ’93, CERT ’93 Mark Pitts MIA ’93 Sally Soo Hoo Pon MPA ’82 Margaret Edsall Powell MIA ’01 Chandni Sivasriaumphai Prasad MIA ’96 Jessica Meryl Prata MPA ’12 Juliana Juerey Prather MIA ’91, CERT ’91 Eliza Prendzova MIA ’99 Jeffrey D. Pribor IF ’82 Joseph Procopio MIA ’72 Sharon Brender Procopio MPA ’03 Kelly Proctor MPA ’10 Wesley Pulisic MIA ’04, CERT ’04 Michael Pura Sami Qadan MPA ’07 Glenda Quarnstrom MIA ’77, CERT ’77 and Thomas J. Quarnstrom Laura Joan Quigg MIA ’85 Chitra Raghavacharya MIA ’01 Zaki Tiedje Raheem MIA ’08 Thomas Nelson Rains MPA ’11 Allison Joy Ramler MIA ’96, CERT ’96 Timothy Paul Ramsey MIA ’93 Fauzia Rashid MIA ’01 Nate Jellis Rawlings MIA ’12 Gary J. Reardon MPA ’80 Hayes McCarthy Reisenfeld MIA ’87 Richard T. Reiter MIA ’85 Jason Warren Rekate MIA ’00 Janet S. Resele-Tiden MIA ’92 Therese Ruth Revesz MIA ’70 Diana E. Rheault MPA ’05 Michael Rhee MIA ’94 Lucius J. Riccio Russell E. Richey IF ’65 Neal Elliott Rickner MIA ’12 John Rim CERT ’52 Joseph A. Riopel MPA ’80 Kathleen Rithisorn MPA ’13 Eduardo Rivas MIA ’04 Jason Rizzi Richard C. Robarts MIA ’61, IF ’61 Juan Fernando Robayo MPA ’98 Richard G. Robbins CERT ’65 Yoel Robens-Paradise MPA ’92 David James Robertson MPA ’13 Debra Leigh Robertson MPA ’02 Dorena Lynn Rodriguez MPA ’96 Maryellen Rogusky Friedrich Rohde MIA ’04, IF ’04, Jose Luis Rojas Villarreal MIA ’00 Patricia Rooney MIA ’82 James David Rose MPA ’05 Jennifer Ellen Rose MPA ’99

Beth Z. Rosen MIA ’10 Edward S. Rosenbaum MIA ’77 and Davey Rosenbaum Kathryn Ann Rosenblum MIA ’86 Richard H. Rosensweig MIA ’68 Allen F. Ross IF ’74 Jeannette L. Rossoff MIA ’82 and Mack Rossoff Susan Rosthal MIA ’71 Nathalie E. Roth MIA ’00 Elizabeth Rothkopf MIA ’99 Bradford Alan Rothschild MIA ’95, CERT ’95 Richard C. Rowson MIA ’50 Mark A. Ruben MIA ’80 Robert R. Ruggiero Jeanne Tihomirova Rupchina MIA ’07, CERT ’07 Judith Kallick-Russell MIA ’93 and Andrew James Russell MIA ’89 Nona J. Russell MPA ’85 James T. Ryan MIA ’86 Jeffrey Michael Ryan MIA ’07 Margaret Heflin Sabbag MIA ’98 Anthony R. Saccomano MIA ’70 Carol R. Saivetz MIA ’71, CERT ’71 Mark Edward Sajbel MIA ’82 Anne O ’Toole Salinas MIA ’96, CERT ’96 Emily Saltzman Hoffner MPA ’90 and David S. Hoffner Ieva Samsonova MPA ’07 and Scott Elkins Charles Matthew Samul Timothy John Sandole MIA ’12 Leslie Anne Santamaria MIA ’06 Charles Alfred Santangelo MPA ’83 Evelyn Scherr MIA ’10 Mark I. Schickman IF ’73 Carl Schieren MIA ’67 Lilli Debrito Schindler MIA ’90 Paul Schlamm MIA ’68 Scott Ronald Schless MIA ’87 Bonnie Rose Schulman MIA ’09 Matthew Louis Schumann MIA ’07 David J. Schurman IF ’63 Ana S. Schwartz MIA ’82 Lynn A. Seirup MIA ’80 Kaoruko Seki MIA ’93, IF ’93 Katherine J. Sekowski Albert L. Seligmann MIA ’49 Marc Jay Selverstone MIA ’92 Nina Maria Serafino MIA ’76 Karen Serota Lauren C. Serota MIA ’05 Patricia Sevastiades MIA ’86, CERT ’86 Ryan Severino MIA ’04 Anuj A. Shah MIA ’05 Katayoun Mary Shahrokhi MIA ’08 Jennifer Shaoul MPA ’90 Howard Jerome Shatz MIA ’91 Missouri Sherman-Peter MIA ’04 Elisabeth Day Sherwood MIA ’95 Betsy Shimberg MPA ’97 James William Silver MIA ’91 Marilyn Silverstein Melvyn J. Simburg MIA ’71, IF ’71


Sarah Magdeleine Simoneau MIA ’09 Kuldip K. Singh MIA ’77 Thomas Sinnickson MPA ’09 Lori Skapper MIA ’91 Brian Francis Slattery MIA ’03 Richard Quentin Slinn MIA ’91 Alice K. and Joseph C. Small IF ’68 Mary Olive Smith MIA ’96, IF ’96 Sarah Smith MIA ’81 David Burton Snow MIA ’98 Elaine Carol Soffer MPA ’83 and Richard G. Kass Stephanie F. and Richard J. Soghoian IF ’65 Erzen Sogut MIA ’13 Debra E. Soled MIA ’82, CERT ’82 Dorothy Jane Solinger and Thomas Paul Bernstein CERT ’66 Jan Solomon CERT ’75 Wenjie Song Ping Zhou Lasa Sophonpanich MIA ’07 Aimee Duncan Sostowski MIA ’07 Molly Catherine Spencer MPA ’97 Daniel Sreebny MIA ’78

Charles H. Srodes IF ’65 Elizabeth Stabler MIA ’56 Michael J. Stecher MPA ’15 Victor Stepanians Liana Sterling MPA ’11 Amy T. Stockman MPA ’01 Madelyn Storms Jukka-Pekka Strand MIA ’07 Marin Strmecki MIA ’84, IF ’84 Chyi Sun MIA ’97 Syrukh S. and Phillip R. Sutter IF ’81 Ildiko Szilank MIA ’98 Diego Szuldman MIA ’05 Megan Tackney MPA ’12 Nancy Taggart MIA ’97 L. Trigg Talley MIA ’92 Puneet Talwar MIA ’90 and Sarosh Sattar Alice Tan MPA ’01 Yashodhara V. and Vijay S. Tata MIA ’78, CERT ’78 Jane A. and William C. Taubman IF ’63, CERT ’63 Rennie Matless Taylor MPA ’12

Stuart Taylor Myrna Calata Tengco MPA ’05 Todd Thaxton MPA ’15 Nadine Netter Levy MIA ’70 Trevor Graeme Thomas MIA ’04 Paul A. Thompson MIA ’73 Anna Throne-Holst MIA ’06 Maro Virginia Titus MPA ’93 Todor Todorovski MIA ’07 M. Tomaszewski John Christopher Traylor MPA ’89 Cathy Rivara Trezza MIA ’85 Jennifer Trotsko MIA ’97, CERT ’97 Thierry Trottereau Eskenazi MPA ’07 Daniel B. Tunstall MIA ’68 Rebecca Hales Tunstall MIA ’04 Vanessa Claire Tutos MPA ’05 Natalia Udovik MIA ’69 Luis Manuel Uranga MIA ’04 Miguel Urquiola Paola Maria Valenti Marten H. A. Van Heuven MIA ’57 Elizabeth Watling Van Laan Lorenz Lucia Vancura MIA ’06 Eileen D. Vandoros MIA ’70

Reshma Varma MPA ’06 Jeffrey S. Vasser MPA ’94 Christopher Michael Vaughn MIA ’98, IF ’98 Noelle Alejandra Veale MIA ’92 Ann-Ariel Nichiko Vecchio MPA ’04 Elanjelian Venugopal MIA ’01 Margaret L. Venzke CERT ’75 Eric Verhoogen Edward J. Vernoff MIA ’69 Alexander R. Vershbow MIA ’76, CERT ’76 Frederic Pierre Vigneron MIA ’83 Maria Leslie Villegas MIA ’99 Sarita Anne Vollnhofer MIA ’13 Carrie Staub Vomacka MIA ’06 Ilona von Gordon MIA ’09 and Anthony Faulise Piroska Erickson Von Allmen MIA ’94 Conrad Martin von Igel MPA ’07 William Edward Vredenburgh MPA ’10 Matthias Georg Wabl MIA ’02, IF ’02 John M. Waddock MIA ’75 Rajeev M. Wadhwani MIA ’01

Jessi Jou Tseng MIA ’14 speaking at the Global Leadership Awards Gala at the Plaza Hotel

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Joan Spero MIA ’68 accepting a Global Leadership Award from Dean Merit E. Janow at the Plaza Hotel

Clark Wagner MIA ’85 Linda Mary Wagner MPA ’08 Sarah Walbert MIA ’80 Carrie Walker MPA ’09 Laurence Furrey Wallace MIA ’02 Bintao Wang MIA ’02 Deborah Elizabeth Ward MPA ’94 and Ivan de Jesus Gonzalez MPA ’98 Lewis S. Warshauer MIA ’85, CERT ’85 Stephen Lawrence Washington MPA ’88 Robert M. Watts MIA ’80 Rebecca VanLandingham Waugh MIA ’00 Christina Anne Way MIA ’05 Egon E. Weck MIA ’49 Kimberly Anne Wedel MPA ’88 Alicia Deborah Weinstein MPA ’01 Andrea Neidorf Weinstein MIA ’91 Paul J. Weinstein MIA ’87 Erin Marisa Weiss MPA ’05 Rozanne G. Weiss Marilyn S. Wellemeyer MIA ’68 Alison Ondrusek Wescott MIA ’92 Sandra L. West-Williams MIA ’88 Raymond D. White IF ’64 Gordon James Whiting IF ’93 Stephanie Hill Wilchfort MPA ’04

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Elizabeth Roberts Wilcox IF ’94, CERT ’94 H. David Willey IF ’63 Ellen Katherine Wilson MIA ’93 Ronald Eric Wimer MIA ’86, IF ’86 Edward S. Winsor MIA ’54 Merle Wise MPA ’88 Bret Philip Woellner MIA ’07, IF ’07, CERT ’07 William D. Wolle MIA ’51 Sarah Ann Wong MIA ’91 Donna C. Wonnacott CERT ’60 Jonathan M. Woods MIA ’93 Stephen Michel Wunker MPA ’96 Norman G. Wycoff MIA ’50 Margaret D. and Donald Y. Yamamoto MIA ’78, CERT ’78 David Yuriy Yesilevskiy MIA ’09 Suh-kyung Yoon MIA ’05 and Hwan Yoon F. Chung Na Youn Lee MIA ’07 Drew M. Young MIA ’72, IF ’72, CERT ’72 Mark Donald Young MPA ’91 Miriam A. Young MIA ’91, CERT ’91 William Jack Young MPA ’90 Chunyu Yu MPA ’03 Judie Hyun Yu MIA ’95 Alice Freida Yurke and Robert Harding Davis CERT ’87

Christopher K. Zavelo MIA ’80 Michael Shiel Zdanovich MIA ’88 Laura Ellen Zeiger Hatfield MIA ’89 Marc-Claude Zeitoun MIA ’91 Mathias Zeller MIA ’11 Boris Victor Zemtzov MIA ’87 Lori M. Zett MIA ’99 Hong Zhong MPA ’01 and Xi Chen Andrew W. Zimmerman IF ’68

Matching Gift Companies Bank of America Foundation The Bank of New York Mellon Foundation The Boeing Company Carnegie Corporation of New York Chevron Citizens Charitable Foundation Constellation Energy Group Foundation, Inc. Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation Cleveland H. Dodge Foundation Dow Jones & Company, Inc. EOG Resources Esurance Insurance Service, Inc. Fidelity Foundation Franklin Templeton Investments

GE Foundation Goldman Sachs & Company Edison International Fidelity Charitable Gift Fund HSBC Bank USA IBM International Foundation J.P. Morgan Chase Foundation The Johnson Family Foundation MasterCard International, Inc. MBIA Foundation, Inc. The McGraw-Hill Companies Foundation, Inc. W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. The PIMCO Foundation Public Service Electric and Gas Company RBC Capital Markets Corporation The Rockefeller Foundation Sempra Energy State Street Foundation Textron Charitable Trust The Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi UFJ, Ltd. TIAA-CREF Employee Giving Program Tyco Verizon Foundation Wells Fargo Foundation 234 Moonachie Corporation




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