The Arthur Levitt Public Affairs Center
   of Hamilton College  
A DOORWAY TO THE WORLD

 
 
Mission and History
Information and Facilities
Staff
Levitt Scholars
Speakers and Conferences
Faculty/Student Research
Field Schools and Trips
Surveys
Analysis Projects

 

Speakers come to campus :

Planning is underway for speakers for the fall semester 2002. The theme will be: Immigration and Global Citizenship.

Some of the speakers planned for the fall include:

Economist George Borjas on September 12

Historian David Horowitz on September 18

Sociologist Douglas Massey on October 14


During the academic year 2001-2002, the Levitt Center contributed all or part of the expenses of the following speakers. (Co-sponsors are shown in parentheses.)


Speakers in Spring 2002

February - Dr. Richard Rabinowitz, Founder and President of the American History Workshop in New York City, organizer of the proposed National Underground Railroad and Freedom Center in Cincinnati

"The Empty Gallery: Why American Museums Can't Interpret the History of Slavery."


The following speakers came to campus in March 2002:

Prof. Robert Frank, H.J. Louis Professor of Economics, Cornell University

"Does Rising Inequality Harm the Middle Class?"

Susan Bordo, Professor of English and Women’s Studies, University of Kentucky

“Beauty on the Brain”

Richard Betts, Director of the Institute of War and Peace at Columbia University

"Problems and Opportunities in Counterterrorism"

Prof. Quinnggua Jia, Associate Dean of the School of International Affairs at Beijing University and Visiting Fellow at the Brookings Institution

“The improvement of Sino-American relations after 9/11: is it sustainable?"


The following speakers came to campus in April 2002:

Ambassador James Lilly, Former ambassador to China

“The United States and China: the Anatomy of a Relationship”

Richard Perlstein, freelance writer for The Nation, New York Times, Newsday, Village Voice and others,author of Before the Storm: Barry Goldwater and the Unmaking of the American Consensus

“Before the Storm.”


The following speakers took part in the conference: “‘Cracking India’: Literary and Historical Perspectives on Partition":

Kamila Shamsie, Pakistani novelist,

Ved Mehta, Indian-born writer for the New Yorker and author of The Ledge Between the Streams,”

Gyanendra Pandy, professor at Johns Hopkins University and author of Remembering Partition: Violence, Natonalism, and History of India.


Stephen Ndegwa, Associate Professor of Government at the College of William and Mary and currently Governance Fellow at the World Bank

"Constitutional Reform in Kenya."

Joseph Nocera, senior editor at Fortune magazine,currently writing a book on Enron with Bethany McClean, the Fortune reporter who first broke the story.

“The Enron Scandal”

Randy Cohen, New York Times columnist; Jeffrey McArn, Hamilton Chaplain; and Roderick Long, Auburn University

Roundtable discussion: “Everyday Ethical Problems.”

Quansheng Zhao, Associate Dean, School of International Affairs at Beijing University

“George W. Bush and the US-Japan-China Triangle”

Prof. Robert Polin, University of Massachusetts

“A living wage”


Speakers in Fall 2001

The War in Afghanistan and the Global Refugee Crisis" was addressed by Lavinia Limon, Interim Executive Director of Immigration and Refugee Services of America at a luncheon sponsored by the Levitt Center in November.

Public Affairs Journalism

(The following series was co-sponsored with the Department of English and the Department of Communications Studies)

Sam Fulwood III - columnist for the Cleveland Plain Dealer and author of Waking from the Dream: My Live in the Black Middle Class

Bernard Lefkowitz - author of Our Guys: The Glen Ridge Rape and the Secret Life in the Perfect Suburb

Mark Hertsgaard - author of Nuclear, Inc.: The Men and the Money Behind Nuclear Energy; On Bended Knee: The Press and the Reagan Presidency; and Earth Odyssey: Around the World in Search of Our Environmental Future

 Past speakers:

2001



  Community Research Programs

       Recent projects include the  Communities That Care Report and the Domestic Violence Services in Oneida County Report.

     Faculty/student research builds collaborative opportunities for applied social research between community human services and post secondary institutions. more


Other Programs

Levitt Home

Hamilton Home

Past speakers:

2001

2000