Annual Report 2013-2014 goih
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Letter from the Director It is my pleasure to present the 2013-‐2014 Annual Report of the BMW Center for German and European Studies of the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University. The full range of Center programs, activities, and ambitions is on display in the pages that follow – in every way, the BMW Center continues to serve as a focal point at Georgetown University and in Washington, D.C. for vibrant and sustained research, learning, and dialogue on Europe. Our students, alumni, faculty, staff, and visitors all contributed to this wonderful accomplishment. 2013-‐2014 was another banner year for the faculty and the staff. Professor Anna von der Goltz was promoted to Associate Professor with tenure. Professor Abraham Newman, MAGES Director, and Julia Sylla, Supervisor of Academic Programs, continued their excellent partnership, with special emphasis on career planning and recruiting. Assistant Director Christina Ruby and program assistant Tyler Lopez implemented a flurry of new administrative and financial reporting systems introduced by the University without a hitch, keeping the Center on a comfortable, even keel. Phoebe Wood, our Events and Publications Coordinator, organized a year-‐long program of 50 lectures, roundtables, and conferences that once again set the benchmark for event programming at Georgetown. We have a fantastic team in place here on the fifth floor of the Intercultural Center. Finally, I’m pleased to announce that in April 2014, the BMW Center finalized a $1.3 million bequest from the estate of Michael Cohnitz Olshausen, a long-‐time friend of the Center who passed away in 2012. The gift will support event programming on Europe, under the auspices of the Michael C. Olshausen Lecture Fund. As the BMW Center approaches its twenty-‐fifth anniversary year, we take great pride in our past accomplishments, and we eagerly anticipate the achievements that are to come. Without the generous support of the German government and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) during the first ten years of the Center’s existence, and the BMW Group over the past 14 years, none of this would be have been possible. Sincerely yours,
Jeffrey J. Anderson Graf Goltz Professor and Director BMW Center for German and European Studies
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Partnerships The BMW Center for German and European Studies thanks our generous partners w ho have contributed to our continued strength and growth as the premier center of its kind in North America. BMW BMW’s endowed gift provided the foundation that supports a strong, successful center in which faculty have ample resources to conduct their research, the center leadership is able to organize an ambitious events program to draw pre-‐eminent scholars, policymakers and dignitaries, and most important, students have the necessary financial support to pursue their educational and professional goals. 86% of students at the BMW Center receive scholarship funds, and in some cases were able to attend only because of this scholarship support. As we draw closer to the 25th Anniversary of the BMW Center, not only are we grateful for BMW’s continued support and partnership over the last decade, but we are also excited about new opportunities for collaboration. This year, the BMW Group created a government affairs summer internship for our students in W ashington, D.C., and BMW continued their successful signature internship program for the third year at BMW headquarters in Munich as they produced the world launch o f the BMW i3 electric car in China.
Finally, we were happy to support BMW’s global sustainability strategy by hosting a group dialogue at Riggs Library this past May. Senior BMW Group leaders, Georgetown students, and Georgetown alumni participated in a lively discussion on “Electromobility, Mobility Services, and Sustainability Leadership”. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) In 1990, the year CGES was founded as one of three US-‐based “Centers of Excellence” by the German Government, we joined a growing network of DAAD North American academic centers. The partnership between the Center and the DAAD has strengthened and deepened over the years. In 2013, the BMW Center received funding under the DAAD’s “Promoting German and European Studies” program, which supported the following activities in 2013-‐2014: § Conference convened by Jeffrey Anderson and Eric Langenbacher on “Exploring the Rise of German Power in the Post-‐Cold War Era” in December 2013, with a follow-‐up roundtable in Berlin June 2014; § Financial support for two short-‐term visiting researchers: Justus Dreyling (Freie Universität Berlin) and Matus Lohaus (Berlin Graduate School for Transnational Studies, Free University) (see Attachment G in the Appendix); § Transatlantic Policy Symposium, Graduate Student Conference on “Hot Wars & Cold Wars: Europe’s Near Abroad”;
Bryan Jacobs speaking at the MAGES Graduation Reception Italian Embassy May 15, 2014
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Our students thank BMW for their support “Interning with the BMW Group has given me an amazing opportunity to experience firsthand the inner workings of a major international company. From the outset, I have been treated as a full-‐fledged team member, learning about everything from corporate identity and messaging to regulatory and trade issues. The projects I am working on are both fascinating and incredibly pertinent to my field of study and professional aspirations. The experience I am gaining with the BMW Group is truly invaluable and will certainly remain a milestone on my career path.”
Kelsey Bensch United States MAGES Class of 2015 BMW Washington, D.C. Internship
"During the summer of 2013, I had the opportunity to intern with the BMW Group in Munich, as part of a BMW Center for German and European Studies Signature Internship. I was placed in the Corporate Communications department and worked on over thirty speeches and presentations for delivery by Board Members and other executives. The support and mentoring that I received during those twelve weeks was overwhelming. The high point of my BMW Group experience was traveling to Beijing, China for the W orld Premier of the BMW i3 to assist the speechwriter on location. I cannot thank the BMW Group enough for my 2013 internship and the experience of working in such a welcoming environment." Amy Soderquist United States MAGES Class of 2014 BMW Munich, Germany Internship "Coursework in International Business Diplomacy strengthened m y understanding of the stakeholder interactions in business-‐government negotiations, while regional expertise acquired at the BMW Center allowed me to see a greater picture behind each transaction and project. In summer 2013, I came back to Kiev as an intern at the Global Subsidiaries Group at Citi Ukraine, where I conducted a detailed research on macroeconomic dynamics prevalent in Eastern Europe and political economy of Ukraine. My Georgetown education allowed me to feel on par while interacting with the senior management of the bank and its international clients. Today, as a young professional in the field of global development, I feel confident in my ability to analyze, present, and communicate c urrent political and socio-‐economic dynamics in Europe in order to better design development programs in the region. I feel empowered to make a change as a professional and a citizen through the knowledge gained at the BMW Center and the School of Foreign Service, through the connections I established and the ideas I have been exposed to. I hope that my current work in monitoring and evaluation of development projects with Social Impact will help me to empower other women and men around the world." Svitlana Orekhova Ukraine MAGES Class 2014 BMW Scholarship Recipient
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French Embassy Network of Centers of Excellence Since 2012, the BMW Center has been a member of the French Embassy Network of Centers of Excellence (FENCE). Membership offers a ready set of opportunities to partner with the French Embassy here in Washington, D.C. on a range of initiatives and provides a source of outside funding for events and activities related to France and the Francophone world. In the spring of 2014, the BMW Center and Georgetown, in partnership with The George Washington University, organized an event program marking the 70th anniversary of the D-‐Day landing in Normandy, France. For a complete list of FENCE-‐sponsored events, see the 2013-‐2014 List of Center Events in the appendix. Prince of Asturias Chair in Spanish Studies In recognition of Georgetown University's longstanding commitment to the study of Europe and international affairs, Endesa, S.A. established the Prince of Asturias Chair in Spanish Studies in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service in 1997, as part of an ongoing program to promote Spanish culture in academia. Endesa's generous gift, named in honor of His Royal Highness Prince Felipe de Borbón y Grecia, supports the appointment of leading scholars at Georgetown and provides a focus for programs and activities in Washington that enhance U.S.-‐Spanish relations. We welcomed the twelfth Prince of Asturias Chair in December, Professor Jorge Garces Ferrer, from the University of Valencia, who is a wonderful addition to our faculty. Professor Garces put together a successful event entitled, "Remembering Adolfo Suarez and the Spanish Democratic Transition", featuring remarks by Antonio Alvarez-‐ Couceiro, Co-‐founder of Fundación para las Relaciones Internacionales y el Diálogo Exterior (FRIDE). The lecture was attended by Spanish Ambassador Ramón Gil-‐Casares.
§ Editorial support for German Politics and Society Journal; and § An interdisciplinary conference with lectures, roundtables, public screenings, and performances on “Performing Blackness in the Transatlantic World: Germany, Race, Intermediality”, convened by Katrin Sieg. (See Attachment E in the Appendix for the full program).
The BMW Center for German and European Studies continues to collaborate with the DAAD to co-‐fund Professor Asiye Kaya for a five-‐year DAAD visiting professorship (Gastdozentur) through spring 2015. CGES faculty and students have appreciated the opportunity to have an additional faculty resource within CGES, and we look forward to future collaborations with the DAAD to bring another visiting professor to the Center after Prof. Kaya’s appointment concludes in 2014-‐2015. “Dr. Kaya is a thoughtful, insightful, and engaging professor. Her course was incredibly dynamic and allowed students to grapple with a variety of diverse but connected concepts. She is also one of the most supportive professors I have encountered. She advised a large-‐scale research project of mine and was an invaluable resource. She not only provided constructive feedback and guidance on the scope and depth of my research but also challenged me to deeply understand the social and political structures at play in my research. Her unwavering support and dedication to helping students achieve their academic potential is astounding. “ Rukmani Bhatia MAGES Class 2015 American Consortium o n European Union Studies The BMW Center is a member of the American Consortium on European Union Studies (ACES), an EU-‐sponsored network of area universities involved in research and outreach relating to European integration and transatlantic relations. The BMW Center participates in ACES by including it as a co-‐sponsor in many events relating to the European Union. ACES provided support for the annual graduate student conference. ACES also conferred a Certificate in European Union Studies to the 18 graduating MAGES students in 2014 for successfully completing 15 credits of EU-‐relevant course work.
Prince Felipe at G eorgetown University on March 18, 2009
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In June, we were delighted to learn that Prince Felipe was crowned King of Spain, and we extend our most sincere congratulations to him, to the Spanish royal family, and to the Spanish people. For more information on His Royal Highness’ connection to Georgetown University and reflections on his coronation, see http://www.georgetownstories.com/alumnus-‐ prince-‐felipe-‐next-‐king-‐of-‐spain/ Italian Fulbright Visiting Professor The BMW Center for German and European Studies and the Italian Department have continued their long-‐standing agreement with the Italian Fulbright Commission by hosting an Italian Fulbright professor, Alberto DeSanctis, in the fall of 2013. Professor DeSanctis is an Associate Professor in the Department of Political Sciences of the University of Genoa. He received his Ph.D. at the University of Rome (La Sapienza) in History of Political Thought and won a competition for a post of Associate Professor at the University of Turin. He published a monograph in English: The “Puritan” Democracy of Thomas Hill Green, which has been reviewed in various academic journals, amongst them Victorian Studies; a monograph in Italian: Il socialismo morale di Aldo Capitini and other edited books: Un dibattito politico su religione e socialismo (1908-‐ 1910); La religione nelle idee politiche contemporanee; La fede ribelle; Il mondo in conflitto by L.T. Hobhouse (The World in Conflict). In addition to teaching his two classes, Professor DeSanctis gave a public lecture last fall on "Web Democracy versus Representative Democracy: Beppe Grillo's Case and its Peculiarities.”
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Center Programs The Center’s event program seeks to complement the academic pursuits of the MAGES students, and provides important impulses for intellectual dialogue on European affairs and the transatlantic relationship within the School of Foreign Service. In 2013-‐14, the Center hosted over 50 academic, social, and policy-‐related events, ranging from lunchtime lectures to multi-‐day conferences. This year, the Center’s special events theme focused on “Austerity and Precarity in Europe,” featuring discussions led by Richard Sennett, Wolfgang Streeck, Kathleen Thelen, Anne Marie le Gloannec, and David Cameron (see more information on the event flyer in the Appendix, Attachment D). The Center also organized two academic conferences:
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“The Rise of German Power in the Post Cold War Era” with Professors Jeff Anderson and Eric Langenbacher, and “Performing Blackness in the Transatlantic World” with Professor Katrin Sieg. Other notable gatherings included a lecture with author Christopher Clark, part of The W ar to End All Wars lecture series led by Professors Peter Pfeiffer and Anna von der Goltz; a discussion with Lord Lothian from the House of Lords in the United Kingdom about how the West lost the Middle East; and an event celebrating the 70th anniversary of the D-‐Day landing with Olivier Wieviorka in partnership w ith the French Embassy.
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Above: Daniel Kojo Schrad performs ‘Afronauts and Umbrellas on Blueberry Hill’ during the “performing blackness in the transatlantic world” conference on February 28, 2014 at the Goethe Institut in Washington, D.C.
Above: Richard Sennett, London School of Economics and New York University, September 5, 2013
Below: Michele Sewers, Georgetown University; Rafal Trzaskowski, European Parliament; Jeff Anderson, Georgetown U niversity; October 29, 2013
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Above: Christopher Clark, University of Cambridge, April 10, 2014 Right: Olivier Wieviorka, Institut Universitaire de France, April 29, 2014 Below: Jens Henefeld, Deputy Chief of Mission, Embassy of the Federal Republic of G ermany, December 9, 2013
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Above: Ambassador Deborah A. McCarthy (MSFS 1979), United States Ambassador to Lithuania, March 6, 2014 Below: Wolfgang Streeck, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Society in Cologne, November 22, 2013
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Alumni Networking The CGES Alumni Association (CGESAA) continues to play an active role in and on behalf of the Center. Alumni planned a variety of events throughout the 2013-‐2014 academic year to support students’ professional development. CGESAA also convened regularly, held social events to bring alumni together, and provided support for the Graduate Student Conference. CGESAA members attended the MAGES Final Colloquium in April 2014, at which the second-‐year students presented their MAGES projects. CGESAA is responsible for giving out the Jill Hopper Award at the Colloquium each year. The Alumni Association’s president, Zachary Wynne, coordinated the Hopper Award process. Created in 1999 to honor the memory of Jill Alexandra Hopper (Class of 1996), the Hopper Award recognizes dedication to academic service and scholarship. Second-‐year MAGES students are selected via a two-‐tiered process of peer nomination. The 2014 Jill Hopper Award recipient was Emily Sieg, whose project was entitled “Multi-‐level Electoral Campaigning in the European Union: How Far Right Parties Compete in Local, National and Supranational Elections.”
Alumni Outreach The CGES campaign to reach out and connect with our alumni near and far continued this year. The Center hosted alumni events in Washington, D.C. and in Berlin, Germany in May and June 2014. Approximately 30 MAGES alumni attended the D.C. Alumni event at Bluejacket Brewery on May 22. The event included a tour of the brewery followed by a tasting of the brewery’s original beers and a reception hosted by Center Director Jeff Anderson. In June, the Center headed back to Berlin for a very successful program of events. The Center partnered with the Hertie School of Governance to present a panel focused on Careers in Europe, featuring four MAGES and Hertie School alumni, to a group of 30 American and European interns based in Berlin. The discussion was extremely informative, engaging, and interactive as the interns took the opportunity to ask about career paths, degree opportunities, and other areas of advice. The Center then co-‐hosted a reception with Cultural Vistas and the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) at the Allianz Forum on the Pariser Platz for nearly 50 alumni from all of the programs. It was a w onderful opportunity not only to reconnect with the Center’s partners in Berlin, but also for our students and alumni to connect with others in the transatlantic relations field. Finally, the Center could not depart Berlin without watching a World Cup match! The Center invited current and past MAGI to the historic Prater beer garden to watch the match between Colombia and Greece.
Hopper Award recipient Emily Sieg (center right) with CGESAA board member Hanne Bursch, award nominees Stephanie Shoemaker and Jacqueline Viselli, Professor Jeff Anderson, and CGESAA board member Nili Yossinger.
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Academics MAGES Admissions Overview 2014 prospective students, sending HTML emails to prospective students, and developing a presentation on all eight SFS degree programs that can be MAGES representatives attended several graduate digitally displayed during admissions fairs. school fairs held in Washington, D.C., Boston, and Additionally, the new MAGES website was launched New York City last fall, organized either by the with updated pages for Admissions and Academics., Association of Professional Schools in International Twitter was integrated into our recruitment efforts Affairs (APSIA) or Idealist. We also participated in and the Center began a weekly post on the MAGES the European Studies fair sponsored by European program that included the hashtag Voice in Brussels, Belgium on February 7th and 8 th, “#MAGESMondays.” 2014. Two MAGES alumni who were working in Brussels, Leila Stehlik-‐Barry (MAGES 2011) and The MAGES program received 45 applications for Rachel Kimmel (MAGES 2013), represented CGES fall 2014 admission. The Admissions Committee and spoke to many interested prospective students admitted 35 of those from around Europe Five-‐Year Incoming Student Averages candidates and waitlisted who attended the fair. four applicants. 22 students (2010-‐2014) enrolled for fall 2014. From March 14th -‐16th, CGES participated in Male: 43% Applicants to the MAGES the Council for Female: 57% program applied to over 20 European Studies U.S. Citizen: 84% other schools and programs. annual conference in Non-‐U.S. Citizen: 16% Among those other Washington, DC. In programs, our biggest addition to staffing a Average Years of Work Experience: 2 competitors were George table with CGES Washington University’s materials and speaking GRE Verbal: 160 Elliot School of with numerous faculty GRE Quantitative: 154 International Affairs, Johns who were attending GRE Writing: 4.9 Hopkins University’s School the conference, we Average Undergrad GPA: 3.6 of Advanced International also put together a Average Applications per Year: 53 Studies (SAIS), and panel for young CES Average Enrolled: 22 American University’s fellows that featured School of International two MAGES alumni Percent o f E nrollees w ith M erit-‐Based Aid: 83% Service (SIS). Applicants who went on to also considered Columbia complete PhDs after University, Tufts University, Boston University, New their MA degrees and who work at think-‐tanks in York University, the University of North Carolina, the Washington, DC area, Peter Engelke (MAGES Chapel Hill, Boston University, Toronto University, 2005) and Steven Watts (MAGES 1998). The School University of Washington, University of Pittsburgh, of Foreign Service supported advertisements in and the Graduate Institute of Geneva (Master of magazines and other print publications such as International Affairs). Foreign Policy. In addition, many candidates visited the BMW Center throughout the summer and fall to Applicants learned about the BMW Center primarily learn about the MAGES program in person, sit in on through web searches (47%), undergraduate classes, and meet w ith current students. advisors/faculty (21%), MAGES alumni (12%), and graduate admissions fairs (8%). CGES continued to utilize online platforms for recruitment by participating in webinars for
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CGES is pleased to w elcome 22 incoming students to the MAGES class of 2016 this fall. The students are from Germany and the United States, and they attended 21 different colleges and universities throughout the United States, including Bowdoin College, Tufts University, Wake Forest University, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Spelman College, and Rice University.
MAGES 2014 Incoming Class Profile Class Size: 22 Students Countries of Origin: Denmark, Germany, Trinidad and Tobago, United States Undergraduate Institutions: American University, Belmont University, Bowdoin College, DePauw University, Dresden University of Technology, Fordham University, George Washington University, Georgetown University, Rice University, Rollins College, Smith College, Southern Connecticut State University, Spelman College, Tufts University, University of Delaware, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, University of South Carolina, University of South Florida, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Wake Forest University Undergraduate Majors: Anthropology, Economics, German/German Studies, Government, International Relations, Music, Peace Studies, Political Science
Dual Degree Students Among the MAGES classes of 2015 and 2016, we are pleased to have seven dual degree students. Two students are enrolled in the dual German Ph.D. program (Class of 2015), and four students are enrolled in the dual MAGES/Masters in Public Policy (MPP) Program (two in the Class of 2015, and two in the Class of 2016). One student in the Class of 2016 is enrolled in the BSFS/MAGES program. Undergraduate Students The European Studies Certificate program for undergraduates in the School of Foreign Service and the College successfully graduated two students in the spring of 2014. The BMW Center offers courses to undergraduates in the fields o f political economy, cultural studies, government and history. Scholarships MAGES students are automatically considered for merit scholarships as part of the admissions process. Pending the availability of funds, additional scholarships may be awarded after each semester of the program based on their academic performance. 86% of MAGES students are receiving scholarship support from the MAGES program ranging from one-‐quarter tuition to full tuition awards. Curricular Initiatives At the spring 2012 faculty retreat, a change was proposed to the MAGES oral examinations that all students are required to pass before graduation. The updated format for the exams encourages students to provide an opening statement that relates to the CGES special event theme of the previous year and to explore how it relates to the interdisciplinary nature of the MAGES program. The new oral examination format was optional for the MAGES class o f 2 014 and two students chose to take the exam in the fall with the new exam format. The entire class of 2015 will take the oral exams this fall reflecting on the 2013-‐2014 event theme “Austerity and Precarity in Europe.”
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Professional Development Events The MAGES program integrates professional development into the academic experience throughout the two years of the program. CGES also organizes events for each class to help them stay on track with their professional development, and brings in alumni and other professionals to network and to speak on panels about their careers and ways for MAGES students to successfully enter the professional marketplace. Each fall, CGES sponsors an annual Speed Networking evening for the current students to meet MAGES alumni and learn about career opportunities in the Washington, D.C. area. Additionally, there are several customized events for each class. First-‐year students learn how to craft their career narratives with the director of the Graduate Career Services Office during "Okupational Oktoberfest." Second-‐year students discuss job search strategies during a "Job Search 101" session. Finally, students support each other during the internship and job search process. Second-‐year students share their summer internship experiences with the incoming students during the annual "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" event. CGES also hosted several information sessions on prestigious fellowship opportunities such as the Bosch Fellowship and the German Chancellor Fellowship, as well as an information session on options for pursuing a PhD. Internships MAGES students are encouraged to hold internships while at Georgetown, especially during the summer between their first and second years of study. In 2013-‐2014, MAGES students held internships in Washington, D.C. and abroad. In the summer of 2014, 52% of MAGES students interned outside of the United States in Germany, Poland, and China, and 48% of students interned in the United States in Washington, DC or Atlanta, Georgia. CGES is grateful to the SFS Dean’s Office for supplemental financial support for MAGES students’ summer internships, which are funded primarily through the BMW Center’s Flynn Summer Grant program.
In conjunction w ith select employers, CGES runs the MAGES Signature Internship Program, which gives us an opportunity to strengthen partnerships within the transatlantic community in Washington, D.C. and give our students the best internship experiences possible. The program aims to provide employers with high quality and reliable graduate student interns whenever they are needed. In turn, employers agree to give interns a valuable experience to enrich their professional and academic development. The MAGES Signature Internship Program employers this year included BMW AG, UNESCO-‐IIEP, and the Bank of New York Mellon, Frankfurt. In addition to our Signature Internship Program, students intern at a wide variety of other organizations to complement their academic studies and professional goals. Below is a sample of other organizations where MAGES students interned in 2013-‐2014: American Friends of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Banyan Global Bertelsmann Foundation CNN International Deutsche Welle Overseas Private Investment Corporation (OPIC) Social Impact United States Department o f Commerce United States Agency for International Development United States Department o f State
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MEET RUKMANI BHATIA
"I had the opportunity to participate in two summer programs. I served as an intern for the Human Rights Department within Vital Voices Global Partnerships. Vital Voices is a non-‐profit organization focused on identifying, investing in, and bringing visibility to extraordinary women around the world. The three main goals of Vital Voices are to mentor emerging women leaders, equip women with the skills to become agents of change, and work with them to end violence against women worldwide. Within the human rights team, I mainly focused on the issue of human trafficking and sexual assault. I created all of the news research for the department during my internship, constantly following up on ongoing news stories or providing the team with new information about rape, trafficking or domestic violence cases that related to one of Vital Voices past programs or a Vital Voices woman. The majority of my internship was spent in helping the team organize and coordinate the first ever Global Freedom Exchange program, sponsored by Hilton Worldwide. This program brought 26 emerging women leaders from 13 different countries to the USA. They all work to combat child sex trafficking and thus, came to the US and visited DC, NYC and Dallas, attending meetings with NGOs and governmental organizations to learn what the best practices are in the US and how they can implement similar programs in their own countries. M y role was to conduct a great deal of administrative work, including creating all the distribution materials for the participants that ranged from information about the cities they were visiting to writing summaries of the US laws against child trafficking to providing them with debriefing information for the various meetings they would be attending. Additionally, after the program was completed at the end of June, I created the post-‐program survey to be sent to all participants to determine whether the program achieved its targeted goals and what changes should be made in the future. The post-‐program survey also addressed the impact the Global Freedom Exchange had on the participants with regards to their work in their organizations. Finally, the last major project for my internship involved interviewing a participant from the Global Freedom Exchange from Mumbai, India. Her work is unique from the other participants, in that she addresses the inter-‐generational cycle of sex workers in brothels. I created questions for her, which she answered, and then I wrote a narrative about her work and her organization. This will be p osted on the Vital Voices website soon under the “Featured Voices” section. My summer experience with Vital Voices strengthened me academically, professionally, and personally. I expanded my professional skills through my tasks at Vital Voices. My understanding of trafficking has evolved tremendously and my passion for studying the reconciliation process within South East Europe has intensified. It would not have been possible for me to participate in both of these experiences without the summer grant." Rukmani graduated from the MAGES program in 2014 and was selected as the first Hillary Rodham Clinton Research Fellow for the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security.
Rukmani Bhatia M.A. Candidate, German and European Studies, 2014 Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University Summer 2013 Internship: Vital Voices/International Summer School Sarajevo Location: Washington, DC/Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
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MEET JAKUB HLAVKA
"This summer, I had the opportunity to work both for the Czech Ministry of Finance in Prague and RAND Corporation in Cambridge, UK. Both work experiences had a common denominator – European and transatlantic affairs – and I used them to deepen my knowledge of several different areas: regulation of financial markets, international financial institutions, defense procurement and cyber security. Through both positions, I honed my skills and analytical thinking as well as met successful people from different industries, US and European governments and international institutions. Overall, both opportunities allowed me learn about many different career paths in the public, private and non-‐profit sector, travel all around the continent and gain useful insights into current policy debates in Europe. While working for the Czech Ministry of Finance, I assisted the Head of the Financial Markets Unit. This role included researching US and Luxembourgian capital markets law and helping transpose the Alternative Investment Fund Managers Directive in the Czech legal system. I also participated in briefings on the proposed Financial Transactions Tax and the negotiations of an updated financial instruments law (MiFID II/MiFIR) in the EU. In addition, I was also given an opportunity to spend some time in another department of the Ministry. My decision to learn more about Czech foreign aid provided me with insights into our bilateral relations with developing countries in Africa and Asia and I had a chance to learn first-‐hand about Czech participation in the World Bank Group from its representatives and top ministry officials. My internship at RAND Europe consisted of work on defense-‐related projects commissioned by the European Defense Agency and the British government. Specifically, I contributed to comprehensive reports on EU exports of advanced technologies to third countries, cyber defense in Europe and R&D investment in the UK. Throughout my internship at RAND, I worked with seasoned researchers on tasks including quantitative cost estimates of proposed policy measures that would make European companies more competitive in global markets, assisted during stakeholder engagement of over 30 senior officials from European and American ministries and leading defense industry companies, assisted during multiple client meetings and participated in a host of internal RAND expert workshops. My analysis of 15 terrorism suspect interviews is now part of a unique study RAND Europe is undertaking on the topic of internet radicalization. In addition to working from Great Britain, I also spent some time in RAND Europe’s office in Brussels, meeting European institutions officials and joining RAND’s project teams in the cyber security realm. In sum, an internship at RAND Europe provided me with abundant opportunities to learn in depth about policy analysis and various project methodologies applied in the consulting industry as well as many specific issue areas in the field of defense and international security. My summer experiences would not have been p ossible without a generous support of the Walsh School of Foreign Service and the BMW Center for German and European Studies. Through my internships, I not only expanded my knowledge of specific industries and international issues, but also deepened my interest in helping improve how some domains of our societies function and how the public and private sectors work together towards ambitious goals in areas ranging from trade and capital markets regulation to security and defense issues." Jakub graduated from the MAGES program in 2014 and will be starting a PhD in Public Policy at the Rand Graduate School this fall. Jakub Hlávka M.A. Candidate, German and European Studies, 2014 Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University Summer 2013 Internship: RAND Europe and Ministry of Finance of the Czech Republic Location: Cambridge, UK; Brussels, Belgium; Prague, Czech Republic
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concentrations from “International Business Diplomacy” to “Transatlantic Security.” Students entered MAGES with an average of two years of work experience, and most of them had worked or studied in Europe prior to matriculation. Although it is no longer mandatory for students to test in the German language, most students chose German as one of their two MAGES languages. Students also tested in Czech, French, Italian, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, and Turkish. The MAGES graduating class of 2014 has already experienced success finding professional employment in their areas of interest, including one graduate who will be entering the U.S. Department of State Foreign Service this summer, one who was selected as the first Hillary Rodham Clinton Research Fellow with the Georgetown Institute for Women, Peace and Security, several who have started positions with top-‐level consulting firms, and others who are working at the German Marshall Fund or other non-‐profit organizations.
Career Services The BMW Center is committed to assisting students in various aspects of their job search prior to graduation. Students utilize the SFS Career Development Center for career guidance, as well as the Supervisor of Academic Programs for feedback on resumes, cover letters and mock interviews. In 2013-‐14, students had the opportunity to attend various MAGES and SFS career events, where speakers from different job sectors spoke about their career paths and gave advice to students. CGES alumni continue to provide excellent support to students in the area of professional development. Career Achievement The MAGES program graduated 18 students in 2014. Among the class were students from the Czech Republic, Ukraine, and the United States. Representing the diversity of the MAGES program, students in this class pursued a wide range of
MAGES Career Achievements 2006-‐2013
18%
19%
Public Private
9%
Nonprofit
22%
Public Private Nonprofit PhD Unknown
2006 17% 22% 35% 17% 9%
2007 12% 29% 41% 0% 18%
2008 14% 24% 19% 14% 29%
29%
2009 29% 33% 10% 10% 14%
PhD
18
Unknown
2010 20% 20% 10% 15% 35%
2011 25% 45% 15% 5% 5%
2012 15% 25% 25% 0% 20%
2013 21% 37% 21% 11% 11%
Average 19% 29% 22% 9% 18%
MAGES Class of 2014 Back row: Rukmani Bhatia, Jessica Cuy, Justin Schafer, Kathryn Goetz, Brandon van Hoff, Emily Sieg, Luke Suczewski, Joshua Dill, Jakub Hlávka, Lauren Corallo Front row: Professor Jeff Anderson, Neil Walther, Ginamarie Volluci, Amy Soderquist, Lorelei Gaus, Jacqueline Viselli, Stephanie Shoemaker, Svitlana Orekhova, Melissa Nunez
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Research Faculty Research The Center faculty cover a wide range of issues in their research, bolstering the interdisciplinary underpinnings of our core curriculum. Core Faculty Jeffrey Anderson, Director and Graf Goltz Professor: Comparative politics/comparative political economy of Europe; European integration Abraham Newman, Director of the MAGES Program and Associate Professor; Senior Editor of International Studies Quarterly: International regulation, d ata privacy, European Union, financial regulation, foreign bribery, homeland security Katrin Sieg, Professor: German cultural studies, European culture, contemporary theater and performance, feminist and queer studies, critical race studies
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Anna von der Goltz, Assistant Professor: Political and cultural history o f Germany in the 20th century, on myth, memory, and commemoration, political activism in both German states in the 1960s and 1970s, oral history, and the history of generations Holger Wolf, Associate Professor: German economy, the European economy, history of money and finance, exchange rate regimes Prince of Asturias Distinguished Visiting Professor Jorge Garces: Comparative Social Policy in Europe, especially on ageing and social innovation and on the increase of efficiency and effectiveness of long-‐term care policies in Europe DAAD Visiting Assistant Professor Asiye Kaya: Migration studies with a focus on Europe, critical race studies, gender studies, social inequality, formation of belongings, minority-‐majority figurations, intergenerational relations, qualitative and interpretative research methods and methodologies Visiting Italian Fulbright Professor Alberto DeSanctis: Victorian Idealism, New Liberalism, Social Liberalism in Britain and Fascist Italy, and Pacificism in Italian Twentieth-‐Century political thought
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Gregory Flynn Visiting Professor Pierre Grosser: Cold W ar History, International History, World politics and Foreign Policy Decision-‐ Making Adjunct Faculty
Spencer Boyer: National and international security, transatlantic relations, European and Eurasian affairs, U.S. public diplomacy and public affairs, and international organization affairs Dieter Dettke: German foreign, economic, and security policy, Europe and European-‐Russian relations, transatlantic relations Richard Kuisel: Modern French history, 20th century European history, the Americanization of Europe Eric Langenbacher: Political culture, collective memory, politics and film, German politics, European politics, comparative politics
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Gale Mattox: Transatlantic relations, German foreign and security policy, NATO and European security, US national security Lindsay P ettingill: German Politics, Civic and Political Participation, Immigration
William R. Smyser: Kennedy and German policy, European economy, European politics
Visiting Researchers Each year, the Center receives many requests from scholars who seek affiliation with the BMW Center while undertaking their research in the nation’s capitol. In addition to hosting many independent researchers, the BMW continued its partnership with PACT and hosted our first DAAD-‐sponsored researchers. PACT Researchers The PACT-‐Project (Cities as laboratories of innovative Governance in Europe and the USA) seeks to identify innovative practices of public policy and public administration in Germany, Denmark and the United States. The goal is to contribute to the future development of an effective and capable public sector. The project is a collaboration between the BMW Center at Georgetown University, Aalborg University (Aalborg, Denmark), and the Westphalian Wilhelms University (Muenster, Germany). Funded through the Marie Curie Program of the European Commission, the project focuses on the varieties of
local social innovation and its importance on the background of the competitiveness of cities and regions. § Patrick Boadu, Germany § Morten Friedriksen, Denmark § Daniele Gluns, Germany § Lars Skov Henriksen, Denmark § Randi Riis Michelsen, Denmark § Jost Henryk Morgenstern, Denmark § Katharina Obuch, Germany § Friedrich Paulsen, Germany § Anne Juul Pederson, Denmark § Bjarke Refslund, Denmark § Joern Soenderholm, Denmark § Janine Tratzki, Germany DAAD Researchers The BMW Center for German and European Studies received a grant to host two DAAD-‐funded short-‐ term research stays (6-‐10 weeks) for doctoral or postdoctoral students from German universities. The grants were open in terms of academic field. Priority was given to students whose research
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connected to the work of the faculty at the Center. We were pleased to welcome our first DAAD researchers (find their CVs in Attachment G): § Justus Dreyling, Germany § Mathis Lohaus, Germany Independent Researchers § Floriane Blanc, France § Zsuzsanna Gedeon, Hungary § Pablo Leon, Spain § Sarah Perrett, France § Sara Pina, Portugal German Politics and Society Since 2003, the BMW Center has served as editorial home of German Politics and Society, an interdisciplinary journal published by Berghahn Books. Journal Editor Jeffrey Anderson and Managing Editor Eric Langenbacher oversee journal operations at the Center. In 2013-‐2014, GP&S published on a diverse array of topics, including special issues on the 2013 federal elections, German-‐Polish borderlands, and West Germany’s Cold W ar radio. Graduate Student Conference
committee changed the format of the conference into a one-‐day policy-‐oriented symposium. The 2014 Transatlantic Policy Symposium was titled, “Hot Wars and Cold Wars: Europe's Near Abroad”, and featured two student panels and two expert panels discussing the relevant policy issue of Europe’s relationship with its neighbors amidst unrest in Ukraine and other regional conflicts. The 2014 Transatlantic Symposium was well attended, with over one hundred students, faculty and professionals in attendance. MAGES Master’s Projects Students are required to complete a Master’s Project to graduate from the MAGES program. Students present their MAGES project research each spring as part of the annual MAGES Colloquium. This spring, the 18 graduating MAGES students presented their thesis research on April 25, 2014. The four panels were titled: Foreign Policy; Culture and Identity; Economic Policy; Energy and the Environment; Electoral Politics; and Cultural History. First year students, selected prior to the Colloquium, reviewed papers and gave comments to generate conversation for each panel. MAGES faculty members served as moderators.
The 18 th annual Graduate Student Conference took place on February 7th, 2014. With the guidance of CGES faculty, this year’s student conference
Jessica Cuy presents her MAGES Project entitled, “Naming, Shaming, and Divestment: Assessing the Impact of the Norwegian Council on Ethics,” her peers and the CGES faculty.
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Advancement Gregory Flynn Scholarship Fund In 2013-‐2014, for the first time in its history, the BMW Center launched a fund-‐raising drive directed at alumni and friends of the Center. The goal is to endow a scholarship fund named after Gregory Flynn, one of the founding directors of the Center who passed away tragically and unexpectedly in 2003. The background to this initiative is presented in the letter sent to MAGES alumni by Center Director Jeffrey Anderson in November 2013. To date, the fundraising drive has resulted in almost $7,000 in contributions. We remain committed to the goal of endowing the Flynn fund, and we are grateful to those who contributed to the new “culture of giving” at the Center. Olshausen Gift In the fall of 2013, Georgetown University finalized a $1.3 million bequest to the BMW Center from the estate of Michael Cohnitz Olshausen, a long-‐time friend of the Center who passed away in 2012. The gift will establish the Michael C. Olshausen Lecture Fund, an endowment that will support event programming on Europe. Members of the CGES community celebrated the gift at a reception and dinner held in April 2014; those in attendance included members of the Olshausen family.
Ynez Olshausen, Michael Olshausen’s cousin, speaks about him at the reception in honor of his gift to the Center on April 2, 2014.
The article above a ppeared in SFS M agazine in December 2012.
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FUNDRAISING LETTER TO MAGES ALUMNI, NOVEMBER 2013
Dear CGES Alumni, Greetings from the Hilltop! I hope this letter finds you and yours in good health and spirits. I’m writing because, for the first time in the 23-‐year history of the Center, we need your h elp. The Center has always been special. I noticed this first thing when I arrived in the fall of 2000 as a one-‐year visiting professor. Everything about the place, and especially the MAGES program, reflected a care and concern for quality. Now this is not necessarily unique; many MA programs, in SFS and beyond, stress quality. What makes us distinctive is that quality is combined with a quintessential Georgetown value: cura personalis, or “care of the whole person”. Even casual visitors to the Center come away impressed with the warm and welcoming climate, the open doors of faculty and staff offices, and the strong bonds that exist between and among the students, which actually resemble attachments more commonly associated with the undergraduate experience. This powerful ethos was forged during the first decade of the Center’s existence, and my main goal as Director since 2002 h as been to preserve and strengthen it. One of my responsibilities as Center Director is to think about the long term health o f the Center and its central mission, the MAGES program. I am pleased to report that our future is promising. The Center is on a firm financial foundation, drawing on stable endowment and tuition revenue flows. Thanks to grant writing and a recent bequest/gift to the Center, we are on the cusp of creating a new core faculty position in the Center, focusing on business economics/political economy. The number of applicants and the size of our entering classes have held steady over the years, bucking broader downward trends in higher education in the United States, and the quality of our entering classes continues to impress. And thanks to an engaged faculty and professional staff, the MAGES curriculum and broader professional development program remain innovative, nimble, and relevant in a changing and challenging environment. There is a cause for concern in this upbeat narrative, and it relates to the MAGES program’s ability to attract international students. Up until 2005, we could expect stable proportions in the admissions cycle: approximately one-‐ third of our applicants and a corresponding fraction of the matriculating class hailed from overseas, almost always Europe. Since then, these proportions have dropped steadily and in tandem, to the point where we are now down to ten percent international. The reasons behind this decline are clear and, I regret to say, beyond the control of the Center; they include rising graduate tuition costs, declining availability of student loans to non-‐US citizens, and the growth of low-‐cost options for master’s level study in Europe. We all benefit immensely from having a critical mass of international students who participate in the rich and variegated intellectual life of the Center. International students bring unique perspectives and experiences into the classroom, which enrich the learning environment for American students. And the opportunity to study alongside Americans in Washington, DC is a transformative experience for our international students. The resulting ties-‐that-‐bind are not just a microcosm of the larger transatlantic relationship, they are part and parcel of that relationship. My fear – shared by colleagues as well as alumni I have talked to – is that we are now perilously close to losing our critical mass of international students. To address this worrisome situation, the Center is launching a long-‐term fundraising campaign to create endowed tuition scholarships for international students. The scholarship support will be given in the name of Dr. Gregory Flynn, a co-‐founder of the center back in 1990 and the architect of the M AGES program. Greg, w ho passed away ten years ago in November, was fiercely and passionately devoted to the MAGES students, and to the mission of the Center in furthering their education and their careers. We want to honor Greg’s devotion by naming these critically important scholarships in his name. Please consider making a tax-‐deductible charitable donation to this worthy endeavor, using the gift envelope provided by the Georgetown University Office of Advancement. This is a standard template, so please don’t be put off by the high end of the donation range! We would be grateful for any amount you feel you can contribute. We thank you for your support of the Center and its important mission. Stay connected through the newsletter sent out via email by Julia Sylla, Supervisor of Academic Programs, and our website. And please stop by and visit us should your travels take you near the Hilltop!
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Governance and Administration Advisory Council The annual Advisory Council meeting was held on October 11, 2013; the following Council members attended: Cathryn Cluver, Thomas Hughes, Josef Kersher, Caroline King, John E. Rielly, and Hans Graf von der Goltz. Professors Anderson and Newman presented on the future of the Georgetown and the School of Foreign Service, changes to the MAGES program (MAGES 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0) and the changing financial landscape of the University. The Advisory Council was pleased that the Center has started to find other sources of funding to ensure financial stability. At the meeting, Hans Graf von der Goltz announced that this would be his last advisory council meeting. We would like to take this opportunity to thank him for his gracious years of service and thoughtful advice. Hans Graf von der Goltz grew up in Berlin and studied law at the University of Munich. He served as Director of the Quandt group until 1997. Prior to this role, Graf von der Goltz served in senior management at Quandt Holding from 1971-‐1982 and as General Manager of Klöckner & Co. in Duisburg for several years prior to that. He was appointed as CEO of VARTA AG in 1979, Chairman of the Board at BMW in 1993, and joined the boards of Dresdner Bank and Gerling Insurance Group. Mr. Graf von der Goltz retired in 1997, and continues to write and publish personal recollections and novels drawing on his deep experience as a senior manager. We wish him a happy retirement! Center Faculty Professor Anna von der Goltz, who has a dual appointment in the School of Foreign Service and the Department of History, was granted tenure and promoted to the rank of Associate Professor in June. Anna’s promotion is recognition of her outstanding achievements in research, teaching, and service at Georgetown University and in her broader profession. Congratulations, Anna!
Professor Abe Newman is now the senior editor of International Studies Quarterly. School of Foreign Service It is with great sadness that we announce the resignation of Carol Lancaster, Dean of the School of Foreign Service, due to a serious illness. James Reardon-‐Anderson, former Dean of the School of Foreign Service in Qatar, has been named interim. Jeffrey Anderson, BMW Center Director, was elected by his SFS colleagues to serve a three-‐year term as Faculty Chair of the School of Foreign Service, beginning in 2013-‐2014.
Dean Carol Lancaster speaking to MAGES graduates at the Finnish Embassy in May 2013
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Appendix Attachment A: Members of the Advisory Council (with bios) and Executive Committee Advisory Council 2013-‐2014
Jeffrey J. Anderson Jeffrey Anderson is the Graf Goltz Professor & Director of the BMW Center for German and European Studies in the Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service and Professor of Government, Georgetown University. He also serves as Faculty Chair o f the School of Foreign Service. Anderson works at the intersection of comparative political economy and European integration. He is the recipient of the 2000 DAAD Prize for Distinguished Scholarship in German Studies. His publications include German Unification and the Union of Europe (Cambridge University Press, 1999) and The Territorial Imperative (Cambridge University Press, 1992), an edited volume entitled Regional Integration and Democracy (Rowman and Littlefield, 1999), and a co-‐edited volume (with G. John Ikenberry and Thomas Risse) entitled The End of the West? (Cornell University Press, 2008). In 2009 he turned his attention to the 20th anniversary of German unification; the results of this collaborative work were published in a co-‐edited volume with Eric Langenbacher, From Bonn to the Berlin Republic (Berghahn, 2010). Britta Baron Britta Baron is Vice-‐Provost and Associate Vice-‐President (International) at the University of Alberta where she spearheads the international initiatives and activities of the University. Through collaboration internally w ith students, faculty and staff and externally with agencies, governments and businesses, Ms. Baron works to forward the University’s international goals in areas such as partnership development, recruitment, student and staff mobility and alumni relations. A widely recognized expert in international education, Britta Baron has held a number of senior leadership positions in Brussels, London, Bonn, and New York. Prior to coming to the University of Alberta, Ms. Baron served as the Director of the Canadian Universities’ Centre in Berlin and worked as an independent senior consultant in international education for several German institutions. From 1983 to 2004, she served in various leadership roles in the German Academic Exchange Service (Deutscher Akademischer Austausch Dienst or DAAD), most recently as Director of its New York Office. Ms. Baron was also appointed visiting professor in the Department of Modern Languages at the University of Keele in the United Kingdom and taught in the Master’s program in International and Comparative Education at the Institute of Education of the University of London. In addition to degrees in Italian, French, History, and German from the University of Florence and the University of Bonn, Ms. Baron holds an honorary doctorate from Oxford Brookes University. She has participated as a member on a number of selection and review committees, including the 2004 Scotiabank-‐ AUCC Awards of Excellence in Internationalization expert panel and the Advisory Council to the BMW Centre for German and European Studies at Georgetown University. Kurt Biedenkopf After studying law and economics in the US and in Munich and Frankfurt with doctorate and habilitation in 1964, Prof. Dr. Kurt Biedenkopf was appointed as Professor of Commerce, Economic, and Labour Law at the Ruhr-‐University Bochum. In the fall of 1970 Dr. Biedenkopf became a member of the central management of Düsseldorf chemical group Henkel in the economy. In the spring of 1973 he was elected Secretary-‐General of the CDU. 1976 Dr. Biedenkopf was first elected to the German Bundestag. There he took over the office of economic policy spokesman of the CDU / CSU parliamentary group. After the fall of the Berlin Wall on November 9, 1989, Dr. Biedenkopf engaged in the process of German reunification. In January 1990 he was appointed by the former Karl Marx University in Leipzig, a visiting professor of economic policy. The Saxon State Parliament elected Dr. Biedenkopf in October 1990 as the first Prime Minister of the Free State. He served in this position until April 17, 2 002. Since 2003 he has been chairman since 2010 as Honorary Chairman of the Trustees of the Hertie School of Governance, engaged in the construction of this first German Professional School for Public Policy in
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Berlin. He is also the founding president and now honorary president of the Dresden International University . In 2011, Dr. Biedenkopf took a research professor at the Science Centre Berlin for Social Research on "Democracy as a d raft and cultural achievement." Cathryn A. Clüver Ms. Clüver is the Executive Director of the Future of Diplomacy Project at the Harvard Kennedy School, a research program focusing on diplomacy, negotiation, and statecraft in international politics. Prior to joining the Kennedy School in 2010, she worked for European Policy Centre in Brussels, Belgium as both the Communications Executive on the management team and as the Deputy Editor for the Centre’s public policy journal, ‘Challenge Europe’. In 2005, she moved to Roland Berger Strategy Consultants in Hamburg, Germany, where she worked on public policy issues and branding and communication strategies. Ms. Clüver has an MPA from the Kennedy School, a Masters degree in European Studies from the London School of Economics, and a BA in International Relations and French Civilization from Brown University. Alexander Ercklentz A native New Yorker, Mr. Ercklentz graduated from Yale University in 1959 with a B.A. in History. From 1959 to 1962, he attended the NYU Graduate School of Business Administration. Mr. Ercklentz joined Brown Brothers Harriman & Co. in 1959 and held various positions in the firm’s Foreign Investment Department. In 1975, he moved to Beirut, Lebanon to establish the firm’s Representative Office in the Middle East. He became a Partner in 1978 and his responsibilities included supervising the firm’s international investment activities. From 1996 to 1998, he was resident in London as Chairman of Brown Brothers Harriman Ltd. In addition, he served as Chairman of Brown Brothers Harriman (Hong Kong) Ltd. and as a Director of Brown Brothers Harriman Services AG, Zurich. He is a Director of DB US Holding Corporation and a member of the Supervisory Board of Union Investment Privatfonds GmbH in Frankfurt. He is a member of the Advisory Council of the BMW Center for German & European Studies and the Center for Contemporary Arab Studies at Georgetown University. He is a Trustee Emeritus of the American University of Beirut where for many years he served as Vice Chair and Trustee. He previously was a Director of the Signode Corporation, the Detroit & Canada Tunnel Corporation, the Colonia Insurance Co., DWS Investment GmbH and AXA Art Insurance Corporation as well as President of The Friends of the Atlantik-‐Bruecke E.V. Foundation, President of the American Berlin Opera Foundation and Chairman of the American Friends of Covent Garden and The Royal Ballet. Mr. Ercklentz stepped down from the Advisory Council at the end of the 2013-‐2014 academic year. Hans Graf von der Goltz Hans Graf von der Goltz, who grew up in Berlin and studied law at the University of Munich, served as a Director of the Quandt group until 1997. Prior to this role, Graf von der Goltz served in senior management at Quandt Holding from 1971-‐1982 and as General Manager of Klöckner & Co. in Duisburg for several years prior to that. He was appointed as CEO of VARTA AG in 1979, Chairman of the Board at BMW in 1993, and joined the boards of Dresdner Bank and Gerling Insurance Group. Mr. Graf von der Goltz retired in 1997, and continues to write and publish personal recollections and novels drawing on his deep experience as a senior manager. He stepped down from the Advisory Council at the end of the 2013-‐2014 academic year. Andrew Gundlach Mr. Andrew Stephen Gundlach is a Director of Arnhold and S. Bleichroeder Advisers, LLC. He joined Arnhold and S. Bleichroeder Advisers, LLC in September 2006. Prior to joining the firm, Mr. Gundlach was a Partner at Artemis Advisors, an investment firm based in New York City. He formerly worked at Morgan Stanley and JPMorgan. Mr. Gundlach is a Member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and a Trustee of the American Academy in Berlin. He received his M.B.A. from Columbia Business School and his B.S. and M.S. degrees from Georgetown University's School o f Foreign Service. Thomas Hughes Thomas L. Hughes is a graduate of Carleton College, Oxford University, and Yale Law School. He served as Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence and Research in the Kennedy and Johnson administrations, and as DCM and Minister in the US Embassy London under Nixon. He w as president of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace for twenty years. He is currently a senior visiting research scholar at the German Historical Institute.
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Josef Kerscher Josef Kerscher is President of BMW Manufacturing Co. He began his career with BMW in 1979 and has served in management positions across the company from group leader to department head at the company’s Landshut plant to Managing Director of the Munich plant. He is a graduate of the Technical University Munich with a mechanical engineering degree with an emphasis on environmental engineering. Kerscher and his w ife have two children. Dr. Caroline King Caroline King is the Director of International Government Relations at SAP. She joined SAP in Executive Communications in 1999. She initiated and developed the global Public Affairs program, which later became Government Relations and Corporate Social Responsibility. Today Ms. King is responsible for the management of SAP’s International Government Relations programs, with a focus on Asia and Eastern Europe. She is the chief liaison to the German government on International Affairs. From 2005-‐2007 Caroline was on leave from SAP and established and managed the German office of the World Childhood Foundation, founded by Queen Silvia of Sweden. She is still in the Project Advisory Board of the organization today. Caroline King holds an MA in German and European Studies and a Ph.D. in Government from Georgetown University, Washington DC. She did her undergraduate and first graduate degrees at McGill and McMaster Universities in Canada. Caroline is a member of several associations, teaches Political Science for the Free University summer school, and runs her own communications consultancy w ith a partner in Berlin. Carol Lancaster Carol Lancaster assumed the deanship of the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in 2 010 after serving as interim dean for the previous year. She is a professor, scholar and practitioner of international politics, having served in government for thirteen years, including as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Africa, and Deputy Administrator of USAID – a Presidential appointment. Her scholarly work includes ten books and numerous articles on foreign policy, the politics of foreign aid and the politics of development. She is currently working on two books: an edited volume on the Politics of Development for Oxford University Press, and Barak Obama’s Foreign Aid for the Center for Global Development. She has been a Fulbright Fellow, a Congressional Fellow, a Twentieth Century Fellow and a Carnegie Fellow among others. Dean Lancaster is Vice Chair of the Board of Vital Voices, and Vice Chair of the Joint Advisory Board of the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service in Qatar. She also serves on the boards of the American Academy of Diplomacy, the Society of International Development, the American University of Afghanistan and other organizations. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a non-‐resident fellow at the Center for Global Development. She is a graduate of the School of Foreign Service and received her Ph.D. from the London School of Economics. Due to complications arising from a serious health condition, Dean Lancaster resiged as Dean in the spring of 2014. Arnold Picot Arnold Picot is Professor of Business Administration at Munich School of Management (Ludwig-‐ Maximilians-‐Universität – LMU) Munich/Germany and Director of the Institute for Information, Organization and Management (http://www.iom.bwl.uni-‐muenchen.de/index.html). He has taught at universities in Germany, Switzerland (St. Gallen), France (Strasbourg) and the United States (Stanford, Georgetown). His research focuses on the interdependencies between information and communication technologies and structures of organizations and markets. He has published numerous books and articles dealing with information and communication management and the evolution of strategies and organizational forms, including topics such as office communication, electronic data interchange, telecommunications, electronic markets, virtual organization, and regulation. His theoretical work is complemented by various research and consulting projects in the industry and the public sector. He holds several editorial positions and is a member of the Bavarian Academy of Sciences. He is a chairperson or member of advisory boards to various institutions including Federal Network Agency (Bundesnetzagentur), Münchner Kreis (Munich Circle) – Supranational Association for Communications Research, Zentrum für Europäische Wirtschaftsforschung (ZEW), Wissenschaftliches Institut für Infrastruktur und Kommunikationsdienste (WIK), Fraunhofer Group of ICT Institutes, as well as of several boards in academia and industry.
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Norbert R eithofer Dr. –Ing Norbert Reithofer, Chairman of the Board of Management of BMW AG, has been with the company since 1987, serving as President of the BMW Manufacturing Corporation USA from 1997-‐2000 and Member of the Board of Management of BMW AG, Production from 2000-‐2006. Dr. Reithofer studied production engineering and science of management at Munich Technical University and graduated with his doctorate degree from the Institute for Machine Tools and Science of Management at Munich Technical University in 1987. John E. Rielly Current: President Emeritus, the Chicago Council on Foreign Relations; Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Northwestern University; and Visiting Professor, Graduate School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego. President, Chicago Council on Foreign Relations 1971 to 2001. Foreign Policy Assistant to Senator and Vice President Hubert Humphrey 1963-‐69. PhD Harvard., Visiting Fellow: Center for International Affairs, Harvard 1976, Editorial Board, Foreign Policy; editor: American Public Opinion and US Foreign Policy, six editions-‐1975-‐1999. Consultant, National Security Council. Board member Harvard HAA, Harvard GSAS, American Ditchley Foundation., BMW Center , Georgetown University. Jeffrey Alan Thinnes Mr. Thinnes is the founder and CEO of JTI, Inc., a professional services firm created in 1999 that provides counsel on business strategy, ethics and compliance, and strategic communications in the global arena. His clients include some of Germany and France’s largest public and private companies. He has also founded a non-‐profit called Breakthrough Art Organization, along with the largest Rotary Club to be started worldwide in several years. Prior to his current work, Mr. Thinnes practiced law and taught courses on European Integration at the Thunderbird American Graduate School of International Studies before moving on to serve as the Deputy Director of the Aspen Institute Berlin and the Vice President of the Aspen Institute in Aspen, Colorado. He joined Daimler-‐Benz in 1996 until it merged w ith Chrysler in 1999. Mr. Thinnes holds a BA in Political Science from the University of Notre Dame, an MPA from Harvard University, a law degree from Indiana University, and a Masters of European Union Law from the Universität des Saarlandes.
Executive Committee of the BMW Center, 2013-‐2014 • • • • • • • • • • •
Jeffrey Anderson Matthew Canzoneri Richard Kuisel Abraham Newman (on leave Spring 2014) Peter Pfeiffer Christina Ruby (non-‐voting) Katrin Sieg (teaching assignment in Alanya, Turkey campus, Fall 2013) Julia Sylla (non-‐voting) Anna von der Goltz (on sabbatical Spring 2014) Kathryn Goetz, student representative 2013-‐2014 Holger W olf
Attachment B: Personnel
Core Faculty: • Jeffrey Anderson, Graf Goltz Professor and Director of the BMW Center for German and European Studies, School of Foreign Service; Faculty Chair, School of Foreign Service; Professor, Department of Government • Abraham Newman, Associate Professor, School of Foreign Service and Department of Government; Director, Master of Arts in German and European Studies
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• • •
Katrin Sieg, Professor, School of Foreign Service and Department of German Anna von der Goltz, Assistant Professor, School of Foreign Service and Department of History Holger W olf, Associate Professor, School of Foreign Service
Visiting Faculty: • Alberto DeSanctis, Italian Fulbright Visiting Professor, Fall 2013 • Jorge Garces, Prince of Asturias Distinguished Visiting Professor in Spanish Studies • Pierre Grosser, Gregory Flynn Visiting Professor • Asiye Kaya, DAAD Visiting Professor Adjunct Faculty: • Spencer Boyer, Visiting Scholar and Senior Fellow, Center for Transatlantic Relations, SAIS, Johns Hopkins • Jon-‐Christopher Bua, Huffington Post UK Correspondent • Dieter Dettke, PhD, University of Bonn • Richard Kuisel, PhD, University of California, Berkeley • Eric Langenbacher, PhD, Georgetown University • Gale Mattox, PhD, University of Virginia • Lindsay Pettingill, PhD Candidate, Georgetown University • William R. Smyser, PhD, The George Washington University Staff: • Tyler Lopez, Program Assistant • Christina Ruby, Assistant Director of Finance and Administration • Julia Sylla, Supervisor of Academic Affairs • Phoebe W ood, Events and Publications Coordinator
Attachment C: Faculty Publications
Mark, James and Anna von der Goltz. "Encounters." Europe’s 1968: Voices o f Revolt. Ed. Robert Gildea, James Mark, Anette W arring. Oxford: O xford University Press, 2013: 131-‐163. Mark, James, Anna von d er Goltz, Anette W arring. "Reflections." Europe’s 1968: Voices of Revolt. Ed. Robert Gildea, James Mark, Anette Warring. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013: 283-‐325. Newman, Abraham and Henry Farrell. “Domestic Institutions Beyond the Nation State: Charting the new interdependence approach.” World Politics. 66(2): 331-‐63. 2014. Newman, Abraham and David Bach. “The European Union as a Hardening Agent: Soft law and the diffusion o f financial regulation.” Journal of European Public Policy, 21(3): 430-‐52. 2014. Newman, Abraham and Henry Farrell. “Forget Me Not: What the EU’s New Internet Privacy Ruling Means for the United States.” ForeignAffairs.com. May 19, 2014. Newman, Abraham. “Privacy Pretense: How Silicon Valley Helped the NSA,” ForeignAffairs.com. November 6, 2013. Newman, Abraham and Henry Farrell. “Senseless Spying: The NSA’s self-‐defeating espionage against the EU.” ForeignAffairs.com. July 10. 2013. Oseka, Piotr, Polymeris Voglis, and Anna von der Goltz. "Families." Europe’s 1968: Voices of Revolt. Ed. Robert Gildea, James Mark, Anette Warring. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013: 46-‐71.
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Attachment D: CGES/MAGES Events List 2013-‐2014
August August 23-‐24: MAGES Orientation ICC 501 August 25: Welcome Back Party Mid-‐Campus Terrace 2 August 27: PD: Kaffee and Kuchen ICC 501 September September 5: “Beyond the Crisis: The European Social Compact Comes Apart” Austerity and Precarity in Europe event series Richard Sennett, London School of Economics 7th Floor ECR Boardroom, ICC September 15: Flynn Memorial Soccer Game Multi-‐Purpose Field, Georgetown University September 20: PD: How I Spent My Summer Vacation ICC 501 October October 1: “2013 Transatlantic Trends: a survey by the German Marshall Fund o f the United States” Ivan Vejvoda, German Marshall Fund of the United States ICC 302-‐P October 1: “How the W est Lost the Middle East” Lord Lothian PC QC DL, Life Peer, House of Lords, United Kingdom ICC 450 October 3: “The 2013 German Federal Election: Results and Analysis” Jack Janes, American Institute for Contemporary German Studies, Johns Hopkins University Eric Langenbacher, Government Department, Georgetown University 7th Floor ECR Boardroom, ICC October 4: PD: O kupational Oktoberfest and Happy Hour ICC 501 October 10: Alumni Panel Drew Brooks ('09), Susan Fratzke ('12), and Christopher Porter ('98) 7th Floor ECR Boardroom, ICC October 11: Annual Advisory Council Meeting Clare Boothe Luce Room and the BMW Center for German and European Studies October 16: “Hungary's Jobbik Party and the Challenge of Right Wing Nationalism for Europe” Dieter Dettke, Adjunct Professor, BMW Center ICC 302-‐P
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October 21:
October 29:
November November 1: November 5:
“Brussels' Backdoor Diplomats: The European Parliament's Informal Foreign Policy Powers” Lorinc Redei (MAGES '03), Lyndon B. Johnson School o f Public Affairs, University o f Texas at Austin ICC 450 “Function (and Dysfunction) in the Modern Democratic Legislature: Lessons from the US Congress and the European Parliament” Michele Swers,Government Department, Georgetown University Rafal Trzaskowski, Member of the Standing Committee on Constitutional Affairs, European Parliament Philodemic Room, Healy Hall
Thanks-‐o-‐Ween ICC 501 PD: Job Search 101 ICC 302-‐P
November 13: PD: Speed Networking ICC Atrium November 19: “The Integration Debate in Germany: Myths vs Reality” Ali Aslan (BSFS '96), Deutsche Welle TV ICC 450 November 20: “Web Democracy vs Representative Democracy: Beppe Grillo's Case and its Peculiarities” Alberto DeSanctis, Visiting Italian Fulbright Professor, Georgetown University Department of Political Science, University of Genoa ICC 550 November 22: “Germany in Europe: Between Prosperity and Austerity” Austerity and Precarity in Europe event series Wolfgang Streeck, Director of the Maxx Planck Institute for the Study of Societies, Cologne CCAS Boardroom, ICC 241 December December 6: Holiday Party ICC 501 December 9: “Exploring the Rise of German Power in the Post-‐Cold W ar Era” ECR 7 th Floor Boardroom January January 16: “Varieties of Liberalization and the New Politics of Social Solidarity,” Austerity and Precarity in Europe event series Kathleen Thelen, MIT ICC 302-‐P
34
8
February February 6 :
February 7 : February 7 :
February 2 4:
February 2 5:
February 2 6:
“Pacifism and the Rise of Stalinism in France: A Legacy of World War 1” Andrew Sobanet, Georgetown Co-‐sponsored w ith the Department of German ICC 462 18th Annual Graduate Student Conference: Hot Wars and Cold wars: Europe’s Near Abroad? Copley Hall The Politics of Economics of an Adjustment Program – The Case of Portugal Carlos Moedas, Secretary of State to the Prime Minister of Portugal Co-‐sponsored w ith the Department of Government, MA in Democracy and Governance, and Luso-‐American Development Foundation McGhee Library, ICC 3 01 ‘»Kulturkrieg«: Germany’s Crusade Against »Civilization«’ Helmut Schneider, Bonn and Rutgers Co-‐sponsored w ith the Department of German ICC 450 The European Union and the United States as Human Rights Actors Stavros Lambinidis, EU Special Representative for Human Rights Co-‐sponsored w ith the Master of Science in Foreign Service Program Mortara Center Dr. Jürgen Rüttgers Former Prime Minister of North Rhine-‐Westphalia, Germany; Board Member of Konrad-‐ Adenauer-‐Stiftung
February 2 7-‐March 1:
March March 4: March 6:
March 20:
March 27:
Conference: Performing Blackness in the Transatlantic World: Germany, Race, and Intermediality Organized by Katrin Sieg, Georgetown Goethe Institut
FREEDOM -‐ What is Our Role? Jan Palach, Selfless Acts and the World Stage Co-‐sponsored w ith the Center for Eurasian, Russian, & East European Studies Copley Formal Lounge Beyond Vilnius: The Eastern Partnership Ambassador Deborah McCarthy, US Embassy, Lithuania Co-‐sponsored w ith the Master of Science in Foreign Service Program ECR, ICC 7th Floor “Ottoman Stories from the First W orld War” Mustafa Aksakal, Georgetown Co-‐sponsored w ith the Department of German Healy Hall 104 A More German Union Austerity and Precarity in Europe event series Anne Marie le Gloannec ECR, ICC 7th Floor
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9
April April 1 : April 2 : April 4 : April 9 :
April 1 0:
April 1 1:
April 2 3:
April 2 5: April 2 6: April 2 8:
April 2 9: April 3 0:
May May 1 3: May 1 4:
Interdisciplinary Faculty Roundtable CGES Faculty Old North 205 Inauguration of the Michael Cohnitz Olshausen Lecture Fund CGES Lounge Admitted Student Open House ICC 450, CGES Lounge Austerity and the Erosion of Democratic Legitimacy in the EU Austerity and Precarity in Europe event series David Cameron, Political Science, Yale University CCAS Boardroom, ICC 241 “The Sleepwalkers of July 1914” Chris Clark, Cambridge Co-‐sponsored w ith the Department of German and the Department of History McNair Auditorium Political Impact of Chinese Foreign Direct Investment in the European Union on Transatlantic Relations Sophie Meunier, Co-‐director of the European Union Program, Princeton University Co-‐sponsored w ith the Asian Studies Program ICC 302-‐P Remembering Adolfo Suarez and the Spanish Democratic Transition Antonio Alvarez-‐Couceiro, cofounder of FRIDE (Fundación para las Relaciones Internacionales y el Diálogo Exterior) Mortara Center MAGES Colloquium ECR Boardroom MAGES Happy Hour at Buffalo Billiards A Return to Serfdom o r the Golden Age: Poland’s 10 Years in the EU Bartosz M. Rydlinski, Cardinal Stefan Wyszynski University, Warsaw Co-‐sponsored w ith the Center for Eurasian, Russian and East European Studies ICC 302-‐P 70th Anniversary of the D-‐Day Landing Olivier W ieviorka ECR, ICC 7th Floor Facing West with an Eye on the East: Romania’s Security Challenges Dr. Dennis Deletant, Visiting Ion Ratiu Professor Co-‐sponsored w ith the Center for Eurasian, Russian and East European Studies April 3 0th, 2014
Town Hall Faculty Retreat
36
0
May 1 5: May 1 6: May 2 2: June June 12-‐14: June 13:
Graduation Reception Italian Embassy Commencement Georgetown University DC Alumni Outreach Event Bluejacket Brewery
Berlin Alumni Outreach Events Berlin, Germany Exploring German Power in the Post-‐Cold W ar Era: Ukraine, the Eurozone, and Beyond Jeff Anderson and Eric Langenbacher, Georgetown University DAAD, Berlin, Germany
37
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38
1
Attachment E: ‘Performing Blackness in the Transatlantic World: Germany, Race, Intermediality’ Program performing blackness in the transatlantic world: germany, race, intermediality an interdisciplinary conference with lectures, roundtables, public screenings, and performances All events are free and open to the public, but rsvp is required through conference website at http://cges.georgetown.edu/pbtw thursday, february 27 8 We are Proud to Present a Presentation about the Herero of Namibia, formerly South West Africa, from the German Südwestafrika, between the years 1885-‐1915, by Jackie Sibblies Drury. Woolly Mammoth Theater, 641 D Street NW. Post-‐show discussion to follow. friday, february 28 9 welcome and introduction (Katrin Sieg) 9:30-‐12 histories Moderator: Soyica Colbert, Georgetown University Loren Kruger, University of Chicago: “African Modernities at the World Fairs: The Transvaal-‐Ausstellung in Berlin, 1897” Priscilla Layne, University of North Carolina: ““Don’t Look So Sad Because You’re a Little Negro”: Marie Nejar, Afro German Stardom and Negotiations with Black Subjectivity"
39
2
12-‐1 1-‐3 3:30-‐5:30
Jonathan Wipplinger, North Carolina State University: “Blackness in the Construction of German Cabaret Culture”
lunch
Daniel Kojo Schrade, lecture-‐performance: Afronauts and Umbrellas on Blueberry Hill
roundtable discussion with Soyica Colbert (Georgetown University), Kirsten Bowen, Peter Howard, and Ursula Dawn (Woolly Mammoth), Isaiah Wooden and Nehemia Markos (Black Theater Ensemble, Georgetown University)
7:30 screening: Dreckfresser/Dirt for Dinner (dir. Branwen Okpako, 73 mins) saturday, march 1, 2013 9:30–11 performances Moderator: Mary Helen Dupree, Georgetown Universitys Katrin Sieg, Georgetown University, “Blackfacing in contemporary German theater” Jamele Watkins, University of Massachusetts, “Writing the Diaspora: Olumide Popoola’s Also by Mail” 11-‐12 lunch 12-‐2:30 screens Branwen Okpako Angelica Fenner, University of Toronto, “Racial Remediation in Günther Wallraff’s Black on White” Barbara Mennel, University of Florida, Gainesville: “Love and Law in Austria: Anja Salomonowitz's Die 727 Tage ohne Karamo” 2:30 break 3-‐4:30 screening: The Education of Auma Obama (80 mins) 4:30-‐5:30 concluding discussion
40
1 2
Undergraduate Courses
Attachment F: Overview of MAGES Courses Fall 2013 Courses
MAGES Core Courses First Year: GEST 541 Modern German & European History Professor Anna von der Goltz GEST 590 European Union Professor Jeffrey Anderson GEST 547-‐02 European Economy Professor Holger Wolf Second Year: GEST 547-‐01 European Economy Professor Holger Wolf Elective Courses HIST 646 Collective Identities in Europe, 20th c. Professor Richard Kuisel INAF 478 Race, Ethnicity, and Migration in Europe Professor Asiye Kaya INAF 553 Politics of Difference in Europe Professor Asiye Kaya INAF 658 Left and Right in Europe Professor Alberto deSanctis INAF 674 Transatlantic Public Diplomacy Professor Spencer Boyer INAF 907 MAGES W ash DC Internship Tutorial SEST 582 Politics of European Security Professor Dieter Dettke and Professor Gale Mattox
INAF 100-‐04 SFS Proseminar Professor Anna von der Goltz INAF 100-‐06 Prosem: Pol of Intl Econ Competition Professor Abraham Newman INAF 307 Political Economy of Eur Integration Professor W .R. Smyser Spring 2014 Course Schedule MAGES Core Courses First Year: GERM 5 10 Theorizing Culture Professor Katrin Sieg Second Year: GEST 980-‐01 MAGES Seminar Professor Katrin Sieg GEST 980-‐02 MAGES Seminar Professor Holger Wolf Elective Courses INAF 506 Politics & the Media: American-‐European Perspective Professor Jon-‐Christopher Bua INAF 592 Diplomacy and Statecraft Professor W .R. Smyser INAF 598 Social Policy in Europe Professor Jorge Garcés INAF 608 History in Foreign Policy Analysis Professor Pierre Grosser INAF 615 German Model, German Power Professor Eric Langenbacher
41
3 1
INAF  739  Qualitative  Research  Methods    Professor  Asiye  Kaya   INAF  741  Quantitative  Methods  in  Practice    Professor  Lindsay  Pettingill   INAF  907  MAGES  W ash  DC  Internship  Tutorial    Undergraduate  Courses   HIST  435  Americanization  of  Europe   Professor  Richard  Kuisel   INAF  419  Citizenship,  Belonging  and  Mobility  in  Europe  Professor  Asiye  Kaya   INAF  454   European  Studies  Certificate    Professor  Peter  Pfeiffer   INAF  480  German  Economy  in  the  21st  Century   Professor  Holger  Wolf  Â
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Panel  One:  "A  Continent  of  M any  Languages  Learns  to  Speak  with  One  Voice"  75$16$7/$17,& 32/,&< 6<0326,80 $7 *(25*(72:1 81,9(56,7<  Many  in  the  w orld  would  like  to  see  the  European  Union  speak  in  +27 :$56 &2/' :$56 a  single  voice.  However,  are  such  expectations  realistic  when  28  countries  need  to  consistently  agree  on  a  common  foreign  policy  approach  to  individual  problems?  Has  the  decision-Ââ&#x20AC;?making  (;3(57 3$1(/,676 :,// ,1&/8'( 678'(17 3$1(/,676 )520 $UPHQLD process  in  Common  Foreign  and  Security  Policy  become  more  &KULVWRSKHU &KLYYLV 5$1' &RUSRUDWLRQ
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8QLWHG 6WDWHV and  doctrinal  reforms  may  help  achieve  this  goal?  It  will  also  consider  the  recommendations  of  the  2013  EEAS  review  and  the  practical  implications  of  the  December  2 013  Summit  of  the  European  Council,  particularly  in  the  security  and  defense  field.   Expert  Panel  Featuring:  F.  Stephen  Larrabee,  Distinguished  Chair  in  European  Security-Ââ&#x20AC;?  RAND  Corporation  7+ *5$'8$7( 678'(17 &21)(5(1&( Jean  François  Pactet,  Visiting  Fellow,  Europe  Program  -Ââ&#x20AC;?  Center  for  Strategic  &  International  Studies  (CSIS)         François  Rivasseau,  Deputy  Head  of  Delegation  -Ââ&#x20AC;?  Delegation  of    the  European  Union  to  the  United  States   3KRWR E\ (YJHQ\ )HOGPDQ
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Panel Two: "Building New B ridges: E U Neighborhood Policy 10 Y ears Later" In 2004, the EU launched the European Neighborhood Policy w ith the stated intent of promoting ‘stability, security, and well-‐being for all.’ This panel will evaluate the success of the ENP thus far. Has the ENP succeeded or failed in making the EU’s neighborhood more stable and secure? What about the world outside of the EU’s immediate neighborhood? How do the interventions in Libya and Mali fit into Neighborhood Policy or conflict with it? What does this mean for the future of the EU’s neighborhood? Student Panel Featuring: Jacob Schrot, Humboldt University Volha Charnysh, Harvard University Marta M ylyan, University of Konstanz Elnur Ismayilov, University of Münster Keynote Speech with Richard Kauzlarich, Non-‐Resident Senior Fellow at Brookings Institution, Former U.S. National Intelligence Officer for Europe (2003-‐2011), Former U.S. Ambassador to Bosnia & Herzegovina (1997-‐ 1999) and to Azerbaijan (1994-‐1997) Panel Three: "Greater than the Sum of its Parts? Taking the Long View on the Common Foreign and Security Policy" Since the introduction of the Common Foreign and Security Policy, European Union member states have increasing opportunities to harness shared diplomatic resources to engage the wider w orld. But should they? The near future will indicate w hether the CFSP presents immense opportunities for a supranational diplomatic framework, or whether it will dilute the foreign policy initiatives of sovereign member states. How w ill the priorities of national foreign policies shift as a result of the CFSP? Will the transatlantic partnership with the United States remain a priority, particularly in the w ake of transatlantic surveillance and security breaches? Or will the European Union orchestrate a collective pivot of their own? Join our expert panel to discuss the future of (shared?) foreign policy in Europe. Expert Panel Featuring: Christopher Chivvis, Senior Political Scientist -‐ RAND Corporation Angela Stent, Director, Center for Eurasian, Russian & East European Studies -‐Georgetown University Kenneth Yalowitz, Professor and former U.S. ambassador to the Republics of Belarus and Georgia -‐ Georgetown University Dieter Dettke (Moderator), Adjunct Professor, Center for Security Studies -‐ Georgetown University Panel Four: "Is it a Zero-‐Sum Game? The Contest for Influence over Eastern Europe and Central A sia" The EU’s recent quest for building closer ties with neighboring post-‐Soviet countries and the Caucasus region has increased tensions with Russia. This panel will discuss the role of the Eastern Partnership and other EU initiatives, the prospects for further EU expansion eastward, and the tensions surrounding the Vilnius Summit of November 2013. Will the growing tension between Russia and the EU result in countries having to pick between the two for partnerships? Or is there a way for Russia and the EU to share influence in this region without challenging the other’s authority? How could this tension affect the EU’s foreign policy in the future? Student Panel Featuring: Tomasz Dziadkowiec and Greta Butaviciute, Johns Hopkins SAIS Hasmik Grigoryan, Yerevan State University Jana Vránková, University of Economics, Prague Noah Solomon, Georgia Institute of Technology
43
Appendix G: DAAD Researcher CVs
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