From RROSS@vax.clarku.edu Fri Apr 1 09:34:52 1994 Received: from JACK (jack.clarku.edu [140.232.1.3]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id JAA11011; Fri, 1 Apr 1994 09:34:50 -0700 Received: from vax.clarku.edu by vax.clarku.edu (PMDF #12289) id <01HANQUEE8B48ZE34Y@vax.clarku.edu>; Fri, 1 Apr 1994 11:33 EST Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 11:33 EST From: "ROBERT J.S. (BOB) ROSS, CHAIR OF SOCIOLOGY" Subject: cookie monster To: psn@csf.colorado.edu, wsn@csf.colorado.edu Message-id: <01HANQUEE8B48ZE34Y@vax.clarku.edu> X-VMS-To: PSN,WSN From: IN%"gross1@cc.swarthmore.edu" 31-MAR-1994 22:08:59.48 To: IN%"lengel@minerva.cis.yale.edu" "Ann Lengel", IN%"RROSS@vax.clarku.edu", IN%"ETHAN@UNCMVS.OIT.UNC.EDU", IN%"jmrothst@husc.harvard.edu" "Jesse Rothstein", IN%"SJK9321@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu", IN%"BB3V@MUSICB.MCGILL.CA" "OPPENHEIM, LEAH", IN%"MKUKLICK CC: Subj: cookies (fwd) Received: from oak.cc.swarthmore.edu by vax.clarku.edu (PMDF #12289) id <01HAMYQJWMXS8Y65P2@vax.clarku.edu>; Thu, 31 Mar 1994 22:08 EST Received: from [130.58.20.53] (mac03.cornell.swarthmore.edu [130.58.20.53]) by oak.cc.swarthmore.edu (8.6.8.1/8.6.6) with SMTP id WAA00125; Thu, 31 Mar 1994 22:07:25 -0500 Date: Thu, 31 Mar 1994 22:07:25 -0500 From: gross1@cc.swarthmore.edu (Gabriel Ross) Subject: cookies (fwd) To: Ann Lengel , RROSS@vax.clarku.edu, ETHAN@UNCMVS.OIT.UNC.EDU, Jesse Rothstein , SJK9321@ocvaxa.cc.oberlin.edu, "OPPENHEIM, LEAH" , MKUKLICK@wesleyan.edu, mickey_m@ies.su.se, fireman14@aol.com, seth_rn@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu, nicollka@ac.wfunet.wfu.edu Message-id: <199404010307.WAA00125@oak.cc.swarthmore.edu> X-Mailer: Eudora 1.3.1+Swarthmore >Date: Wed, 30 Mar 1994 16:52:25 -0500 >From: Lauren M Lagrega >Subject: cookies (fwd) >To: gabriel mb ross >Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII > > > > >---------- Forwarded message ---------- >Date: Sun, 27 Mar 1994 13:10:26 -0500 >From: WALRUS >To: lagrega@jhunix.hcf.jhu.edu >Subject: cookies > >From: RITVAX::DAB1387 "there is a time for everything under the >heavens" 21-MAR-1994 20:41:07.78 >To: AJP4796 >CC: >Subj: forward > >From: IN%"payne9@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu" 21-MAR-1994 18:12:47.14 >To: IN%"kcuster@muselab.ac.runet.edu" >CC: IN%"bbryan@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu", IN%"bwjones@acacia.itd.uts.edu.au", >IN%"dab1387@ritvax.isc.rit.edu", IN%"schiebs@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu" >Subj: recipie > >------------ Forwarded message > Date: Wed, 16 Mar 1994 15:58:32 -0500 > From: Eric Walton > > > My daughter & I had just finished a salad at Neiman-Marcus Cafe > in Dallas & decided to have a small dessert. Because our family > are such cookie lovers, we decided to try the "Neiman-Marcus > Cookie". It was so excellent that I asked if they would give me > the recipe and they said with a small frown, "I'm afraid not." > Well, I said, would you let me buy the recipe? With a cute > smile, she said, "Yes." I asked how much, and she responded, > "Two fifty." I said with approval, just add it to my tab. > > Thirty days later, I received my VISA statement from > Neiman-Marcus and it was $285.00. I looked again and I > remembered I had only spent $9.95 for two salads and about $20.00 > for a scarf. As I glanced at the bottom of the statement, it > said, "Cookie Recipe - $250.00." Boy, was I upset!! I called > Neiman's Accountig Dept. and told them the waitress said it was > "two fifty," and I did not realize she meant $250.00 for a cookie > recipe. I asked them to take back the recipe and reduce my bill > and they said they were sorry, but because all the recipes were > this expensive so not just everyone could duplicate any of our > bakery recipes....the bill would stand. I waited, thinking of > how I could get even or even try and get any of my money back. > > I just said, "Okay, you folks got my $250.00 and now I'm going to > have $250.00 worth of fun." I told her that I was going to see to > it that every cookie lover will have a $250.00 cookie recipe from > Neiman-Marcus for nothing. She replied, "I wish you wouldn't do > this." I said, "I'm sorry but this is the only way I feel I could > get even," and I will. > > So, here it is, and please pass it to someone else or run a few > copies....I paid for it; now you can have it for free. > (Recipe may be halved.): > > 2 cups butter 4 cups flower > 2 tsp. soda 2 cups sugar > 5 cups blended oatmeal** 24 oz. chocolate chips > 2 cups brown sugar 1 tsp. salt > 1 8 oz. Hershey Bar (grated) 4 eggs > 2 tsp. baking powder 3 cups chopped nuts > 2 tsp. vanilla (your choice) > > Cream the butter and both sugars. Add eggs and vanilla; mix > together with flour, oatmeal, salt, baking powder, and soda. Add > chocolate chips, Hershey Bar and nuts. > Roll into balls and place two inches apart on a cookie sheet. > Bake for 10 minutes at 375 degrees. Makes 112 cookies. > > ** measure oatmeal and blend in a blender to a fine powder. > > Have fun!!! This is not a joke --- this is a true story.. > ************************************************************ > That's it. Please, pass it along to everyone you know, single > people, mailing lists, etc..... > > > Eric Walton > ewalton1@cc.swarthmore.edu > > >------------ End of forwarded message > >Return-path: >Received: from uxa.cso.uiuc.edu by ritvax.isc.rit.edu (PMDF V4.2-12 #5325) id > <01HA8RK61FA8936B2P@ritvax.isc.rit.edu>; Mon, 21 Mar 1994 18:12:34 EDT >Received: by uxa.cso.uiuc.edu id AA28483 (5.67b/IDA-1.5 for > dab1387@isc.rit.edu); Mon, 21 Mar 1994 17:11:37 -0600 >Date: Mon, 21 Mar 1994 17:11:37 -0600 >From: payne9@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu >Subject: recipie >To: kcuster@muselab.ac.runet.edu >Cc: bbryan@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu, bwjones@acacia.itd.uts.edu.au, > dab1387@ritvax.isc.rit.edu, schiebs@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu >Message-id: <199403212311.AA28483@uxa.cso.uiuc.edu> >Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT > > From dassbach@mtu.edu Fri Apr 1 10:22:54 1994 Received: from mtu.edu (root@mtu.edu [141.219.70.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id KAA11889 for ; Fri, 1 Apr 1994 10:22:53 -0700 Received: from social2.mtu.edu (social2.yth.mtu.edu) by mtu.edu with SMTP id AA02359 (5.65c/IDA-1.4.4); Fri, 1 Apr 1994 12:22:47 -0500 Date: Fri, 01 Apr 1994 12:22:40 From: dassbach@mtu.edu (Carl Dassbach) To: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU (WSN) Subject: Re: Cookie Update Message-Id: I heard the cookie story about two weeks ago and reposted it. This is the most recent things that I have seen on the NM cookies, suggesting it is a joke. Carl Dassbach Forwarded message follows: ----------------- >> AA16822; Fri, 25 Mar 1994 16:42:14 -0500 >>Date: Fri, 25 Mar 1994 16:42:14 -0500 >>From: Jim Andreoni >>Subject: Fw: Preston McAfee >>Sender: femecon-l@bucknell.edu >>To: Multiple recipients of list >>Errors-to: jshackel@bucknell.edu >>Reply-to: femecon-l@bucknell.edu >>Message-id: <199403251201028143.james@vms2.macc.wisc.edu> >>Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT >>Originator: femecon-l@bucknell.edu >>Precedence: bulk >>X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0c -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas >>X-Comment: Feminist Economists Discussion Group >> >> >> >>----------------------------Original message---------------------------- >>For your amusement, the wit of Preston McAfee: >> >>_______________________ >> >>THE COOKIE CAPER >> >>by R. Preston McAfee >> >>Acting on information provided by alert recipient Michael >>Williams, this reporter phoned Neiman-Marcus in Dallas, which >>claims to have never sold a cookie recipe, much less sold a recipe >>for >>$250.00. >> >>The tale is as sleazy as expert testimony. Dobscha's story is as >>accurate as Arthur Laffer's vita. The story of how this fraud was >>brought to light, by a reporter as unbiased as a Tobacco Institute >>study and as serious as the Western Economic Association, is a >>fascinating drama, signifying as much as an advertisement for a new >>edition of a principles text. >> >>Williams, hoping to get to try a $250 cookie, brought the recipe home >>to his wife, Sheila. Sheila said that the $250 Neiman-Marcus cookie >>recipe is an urban myth, like the alligators in the New York sewers, >>cats dried in the microwave, and good microeconomics papers in the >>JPE. >> >>Williams, knowing that my interest in empirical research is as >>profound as an Economics Letters paper, promptly phoned me. I called >>information and received the number of the downtown Dallas >>Neiman-Marcus store, which is (214) 741-6911. I called N-M. This is >>what I heard [I'm not making this up]: >> >> This is Francie. I'll be out of the office until March 28, >>so please leave a message on my voice mail. Thank you. >> >>Francie spoke in a drawl as thick as an experimental economist's >>manuscript, but much more comprehensible. >> >>I contacted Southwestern Bell's Dallas operator, who verified that >>I had the main number for the downtown Neiman-Marcus. I called >>again, to insure that I hadn't misdialed, and got Francie again. I didn't >>leave a message. The number was as phony as a trade theory proof. >> >>I again called Southwestern Bell, and established that N-M has a >>store in a Dallas suburb named Prestonwood. This sounded as >>promising as a REStud revise and resubmit, but I called them anyway. >> >>Surprisingly, the phone was answered by an operator saying >>"Neiman-Marcus," in a voice so husky, it could have pulled a >>dogsled. I could tell my luck had turned. I explained the situation. "I've heard about that," the operator barked, "but I don't think we sell >>recipes. Let me transfer you to Epicure." She put me on hold for a >>while. Godot arrived, got bored, and left again. The Roman Empire >>was built, then fell. I received a response from the QJE. >> >>The name Epicure was as obscure to me as a Prescott seminar. But I >>spoke with a pleasant woman, one Amy Lerks, who assured me that >>Neiman-Marcus was as likely to sell cookie recipes as J Math Ec is to >>publish intuitive ideas. "We do sell cookbooks, is that what you're >>after?" she inquired. I asked what the most expensive cookbook they >>sell costs. "About $45," she informed me, "but it's of coffee-table >>quality." >> >>I had no idea they made cookbooks that large. At $45, it's a steal, >>but kind of unwieldy in the kitchen. >> >>Amy promised to check with the suppliers to find out if N-M has ever >>sold recipes, and to call me Wednesday. >> >>Meanwhile, I re-examined the original email. The originator of the >>story, a Susan Dobscha, had no identified address. However, it >>appeared that her message came from Bucknell University, which >>turns out to be in Lewisburg, PA, area code 717. A call to the phone >>company revealed that no Susan Dobscha lives within a Burke >>neighborhood of Lewisburg. >> >>[editor's note: a Burke neighborhood is named after a now infamous >>incident in which UT Professor Jon Burke was invited to a conference >>in Spain. He combined the trip with a vacation for his family, so >>arrived in Spain with his wife and three children, only to find out >>he had arrived on the correct day one year early. Ever since, a Burke >>neighborhood has represented an area larger than Sandy Grossman's >>ego.] >> >>I sent Susan Dobscha an email, asking her to fax a copy of her credit >>card receipt, and insinuating that I was Mike Wallace from 60 >>minutes. I was as convincing as a psychological explanation. >> >>Meanwhile, I logged into the Michigan gopher, hoping to track down >>the email address vtvm1.cc.vt.edu, where Susan Dobscha allegedly >>resided. The gopher system is as simple as an IER paper. After >>several hours, I decided the gopher was as useful as an existence theorem. >> >>Meanwhile, emails to a colleague and to Hal Varian, the person who >>sent me the Dobscha recipe, produced the result that vt was Virginia >>Tech. This makes as much sense as the statistics in a medical study. >>Since the name of the university is Virginia Polytechnical >>Institute and State University and Exceedingly Boring Place to >>Reside, one might have hoped for a more sensible appellation like >>VPI, but that's like expecting lawyers to write in english. >> >>It turns out that email addresses are available from the gopher for >>VPI, so I asked for a listing on Dobscha. The list came up as empty >>as a MBA's head. >> >>Feeling that I'd accomplished as much as a federal bureaucrat, I >>called it a night. >> >>I woke up as optimistic as an entering graduate student. The phone >>company had numbers for a Susan M. Dobscha in Blacksburg and for the >>economics department at VPI. My call to the econ department was as >>useful as a referee's report: no Susan Dobscha was in the department. >> >>However, a Susan Dobscha is a graduate student the marketing >>department. Hmm. As they say at Caltech, the Plott thickens. I >>left a message. >> >>Soon after, I received an email from Dobscha. "I was not the >>originator of the by a long shot" this missive asserted, as free of >>errors as a JET galley, "and since I mailed it out have found out >>that this scenario is exactly as you said - contemporary urban legend. >>So,no need to worry - I wasn't duped." >> >>Dobscha may not have been duped, but what about the millions of >>internet users, baking away? Displaying all the morals of an >>attorney, Dobscha felt no obligation to correct the error she >>propagated, which shows that a marketing education has some effect. >>She has a promising future as a spokeswoman for Philip Morris. >> >>So the recipe, alas, joins the ranks of the spider eggs in BubbleYum, >>the worms in McDonald's hamburgers, and the Journal of Economic >>Perspectives as one of the greatest frauds perpetrated on an >>unsuspecting audience. >> >> >> >> >> >> >> >>----- End Included Message ----- From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Sun Apr 3 18:47:22 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id SAA24213 for ; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 18:47:21 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404040047.SAA24213@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 6706; Sun, 03 Apr 94 20:47:19 EST Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 6705; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 20:47:14 -0500 Resent-Date: Sun, 03 Apr 94 20:47:03 EST Resent-From: CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Resent-To: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1236; Fri, 1 Apr 1994 08:32:25 -0500 Received: from csf.Colorado.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Fri, 01 Apr 94 08:32:23 EST Received: from (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id GAA09541; Fri, 1 Apr 1994 06:33:28 -0700 Date: Fri, 1 Apr 1994 06:33:28 -0700 Message-Id: Errors-To: gimenez_m@gold.colorado.edu Reply-To: dhenwood@panix.com Originator: psn@csf.colorado.edu Sender: psn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Precedence: bulk From: Doug Henwood To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Re: Grand Illusions X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas X-Comment: PROGRESSIVE SOCIOLOGISTS NETWORK ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Paul Cockshott is exactly right. Proceeding from Marx's analysis of capitalism, whose outlines can hardly be improved upon, I think we've got to get down tot he hard work of figuring out what the hell to do about it. Politically, the right has, in many countries, run out of ideas; the world they created over the last 15 years has proven to be a disaster in almost every sense - and yet there is no left worthy of the name to step into the vacuum. Scary folks like Berlusconi are taking advantage of this vacuum - the Italian left had nothing to offer but support for privatization and austerity, and deserved their electoral drubbing. As the man said, what is to be done? Doug Doug Henwood [dhenwood@panix.com] Left Business Observer 212-874-4020 (voice) 212-874-3137 (fax) On Thu, 31 Mar 1994, Paul Cockshott wrote: > Whilst I agree with Rics general thrust in opposing Ted on the > viability of the bourgeois notion of reform, I feel he has failed > to get to the heart of Ted's objection. > > The socialist movement internationally is at present unable > to present any coherent vision as to how the world could be > differently organised to today. The right has a coherent > vision provided by liberal political economy. Marxist political > economists have wasted far to much time on abstract critiques of > capitalism and have not spent nearly enough time constructing > a positive theory of how a socialist system could be made to > work. Insofar as attempts at constructing a socialist economic > theory have been made, they have been mainly by left liberals > who accept most of the market axioms of the right. > > Is anyone interested in debating what the alternatives are? > > -------------------------------------------------------------------- > Paul Cockshott , WPS, PO Box 1125, Glasgow, G44 5UF > Phone: 041 637 2927 wpc@clyder.gn.apc.org > wpc@cs.strath.ac.uk > From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Sun Apr 3 18:56:44 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id SAA24377 for ; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 18:56:39 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404040056.SAA24377@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 6758; Sun, 03 Apr 94 20:56:38 EST Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 6757; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 20:56:38 -0500 Resent-Date: Sun, 03 Apr 94 20:56:22 EST Resent-From: CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Resent-To: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 4016; Thu, 31 Mar 1994 11:17:52 -0500 Received: from emx.cc.utexas.edu by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Thu, 31 Mar 94 11:17:50 EST Received: (from daemon@localhost) by emx.cc.utexas.edu (8.6.8.1/8.6.6/emx-1.1) id JAA29923 for lasnet-xxx; Thu, 31 Mar 1994 09:53:00 -0600 Received: (from ilasut@localhost) by emx.cc.utexas.edu (8.6.8.1/8.6.6/emx-1.1) id JAA01987 for lasnet-outbound; Thu, 31 Mar 1994 09:52:55 -0600 Received: from umailsrv1.UMD.EDU (umailsrv1.umd.edu [128.8.10.53]) by emx.cc.utexas.edu (8.6.8.1/8.6.6/emx-1.1) with SMTP id HAA06795 for ; Fri, 25 Mar 1994 07:42:55 -0600 Received: by umailsrv1.UMD.EDU (5.57/Ultrix3.0-C) id AA28097; Fri, 25 Mar 94 08:40:15 -0500 Message-Id: <9403251340.AA28067@umailsrv1.UMD.EDU> Date: Fri, 25 Mar 94 08:38 EST From: Latin.American.Studies.Center@emx.cc.utexas.edu Subject: `Social Change in Latin America: Toward the Year 2000' Conference To: on-campus@umail.umd.edu, off-campus@umail.umd.edu Sender: lasnet-request@emx.cc.utexas.edu ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- UNIVERSITY OF MARYLAND AT COLLEGE PARK Social Change in Latin America: Toward the Year 2000 The workshop on ``Social Change in Latin America. Toward the Year 2000,'' organized by Roberto Patricio Korzeniewicz (Sociology, UMCP), will be held April 8-9, 1994 (please note the change in dates), at the University of Maryland at College Park. Co-sponsored by the North- South Center of the University of Miami, and UMCP's Sociology Department and Latin American Studies Center, this workshop will examine the more salient social transformations shaping Latin America as we approach the year 2000, and the future relationship between these transformations and ongoing processes of democratization and economic restructuring. For more information, please call Prof. Korzeniewicz at (301) 405-6398. Friday, April 8 0105 Conference Center (Center for Adult Education) 9:00 ~ 9:30 am: Opening Remarks Daniel Fallon (Vice President for Academic Affrs and Provost) 9:30 ~ 11:30 am: Session 1 Gonzalo Falabella (PET): ``After the Deluge: Labor Movements in Rural Latin America'' Liliana Goldin (University at Albany ~ SUNY): ``Economic Re- structuring and New Forms of Market Participation in Rural Latin America'' Ramon Lopez (UMCP): Discussant 1:00 ~ 3:00 pm: Session 2 Alvaro Diaz (Centro de Estudios Sociales Sur): ``Economic Restructuring and New Social Practices in Latin America'' Elizabeth Jelin (Universidad de Buenos res): ``Emerging Citizenship or Exclusion? Social Movements and NGOs in the 1990s'' Ramon Daubon (A.I.D.): Discussant Maria Patricia Fernandez-Kelly (Johns Hopkins University): Discussant 3:15 ~ 5:15 pm: Session 3 Diane Davis (New School for Social Research): ``When New Social Movements Confront Old Party Structures: Recasting Politics and Society in Neoliberal Latin America'' Alejandro Portes and Jose Itzigsohn (Johns Hopkins University): ``The Party of the Grassroots: A Comparative Analysis of Urban Political Participation'' Edy Kaufman (UMCP): Discussant 5:30 pm: Reception Saturday, April 9 2112 Conference Center (Center for Adult Education) 9:30 ~ 11:30 am: Session 4 Ian Roxborough (SUNY ~ Stony Brook): ``The Possibilities for Social Practices Under Neoliberalism'' Sergio Zermeno (UNAM): ``Modernizacion y modernidad en el Mexico Norteamericano'' William Smith (University of Miami): Discussant 1:00 ~ 3:00 pm Session 5 Roberto P. Korzeniewicz (UMCP): ``States, Markets and Social Movements: A Comparative Approach'' Juan Carlos Torre (Instituto Torcuato Di Tella): ``The Politics of Transformation in Historical Perspective'' Jeremy Adelman (Princeton University): Discussant 3:15 ~ 5:15 pm: General Discussion From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Sun Apr 3 19:01:01 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id TAA24488 for ; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 19:00:59 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404040100.TAA24488@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 6784; Sun, 03 Apr 94 21:00:58 EST Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 6782; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 21:00:57 -0500 Resent-Date: Sun, 03 Apr 94 21:00:48 EST Resent-From: CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Resent-To: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1911; Wed, 30 Mar 1994 12:51:46 -0500 Received: from JHMAIL.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Wed, 30 Mar 94 12:51:24 EST Received: from csf.Colorado.EDU by JHMAIL.HCF.JHU.EDU (PMDF #12543) id <01HAKSMNG7C0000YL2@JHMAIL.HCF.JHU.EDU>; Wed, 30 Mar 1994 08:52 EST Received: from (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id GAA01298; Wed, 30 Mar 1994 06:47:03 -0700 Date: Wed, 30 Mar 1994 06:47:03 -0700 From: KARP@vms.cis.pitt.edu Subject: Labor Notes and Cross-Border Organizing Sender: psn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU To: Multiple recipients of list Errors-to: gimenez_m@gold.colorado.edu Reply-to: KARP@vms.cis.pitt.edu Message-id: <01HAKS0VTFIAC3T9J0@vms.cis.pitt.edu> Originator: psn@csf.colorado.edu Precedence: bulk X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas X-Comment: PROGRESSIVE SOCIOLOGISTS NETWORK ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- This is just a note to inform those of you interested in NAFTA, and the larger area of "consciousness-raising" that Labor Notes -- under the direction of Mary McGinn and Kim Moody -- are sponsoring what they are calling a "Cross-Border Organizing School" in the middle of May (I believe something like the 18th through the 21st?) in Ciudad Juarez, Mexico -- just across the border from El Paso, TX. The school/conference targets labor leaders specifically, and is intended to facilitate successful union organizing both within and across nation-states. The cost of the program -- not including transportation to and from El Paso -- is (I'm almost sure) $250, which includes ground trans- portation, meals, lodging, and even a visit to a maquilladora plant. For those of us who believe that praxis is paramount -- and lacking among many of us -- this is an opportunity to help ferment (and possibly radicalize) class-consciousness "globally". Mike-Frank Epitropoulos Pitt ...Struggle! From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Sun Apr 3 19:08:28 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id TAA24706 for ; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 19:08:27 -0600 Message-Id: <199404040108.TAA24706@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 6831; Sun, 03 Apr 94 21:08:25 EST Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 6829; Sun, 3 Apr 1994 21:08:25 -0500 Date: Sun, 03 Apr 94 21:08:13 EST From: CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU To: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU >To:wsn@csf.colorado.edu >From:ms44@cornell.edu (mark selden) >Subject:World Social Change >Cc:psn@csf.colorado.edu > >I enclose an announcement of a new series in formation on Social Change in >Global Perspective to be published by Westview. > >Suggestions for works to be included in the series, including your own work, >that of others, or published works that merit translation from other >languages, would be most welcome. > > Social Change in Global Perspective > > Mark Selden, Series Editor, Westview Press > > >Exploring the relationship between social change and social structures, this >series considers the theory, praxis, promise, and pitfalls of movements in >global and comparative perspective. The historical and contemporary social >movements considered here challenge patterns of hierarchy and inequality of >race, gender, nationality, ethnicity, class, and culture. The series will >empha-size textbooks as well as broadly interpretive and synthetic works. > >Proposed volumes > >Amrita Basu ed. on Women's Movements in Global Perspective >Lucien Bianco on Chinese Peasant Movements in the Twentieth Century >Bernard Chavance on The Soviet Economic System >Bernard Chavance on The Transformation of Communist Systems: Eastern Europe >Stephen Chiu, Kong-Chong Ho, Tai-lok Lui on City States in the Global > Economy. Industrial Restructuring in Hong Kong and Singapore. >Catherine Coquery-Vidrovitch on Women in Africa >Edward Friedman on The Politics of Democratization in East Asia >Stevan Harrell on The Human Family >KANAI Yoshiko on Moving Mountains: Women and Feminism in Japan >KAYANO SHIGERU on Our Land Was a Forest. An Ainu Memoir >KUMAZAWA Makoto on Japanese Labor and Labor Movements >Mark Lupher on Power Restructuring in China and Russia >Mieke Meurs, D. Deere, T. Shanin et al. on Social Relations, State Policy and Collectivization of Agriculture >MUTO Ichiyo on Popular Movements in Contemporary Japan >Elizabeth Perry and LI Xun on Workers in the Cultural Revolution >Anibal Quijano on Culture and Power in Latin America >Alvin So and Hsin-Huang Michael Hsiao on The Chinese Triangle and the Future of the Asia-Pacific Region >Ivan Szelenyi, D. Deere, M. Meurs, M. Selden et al. on After Collectivization: Socialist and PostSocialist Agrarian Transformations >WADA Haruki on The World of the Russian Peasant >Peter Zarrow on Twentieth Century China. An Interpretive History. > > > >Mark Selden, Department of Sociology, Binghamton University, Binghamton, NY 13902; Tel: 607-257-5185; Fax: 607-257-5185; e-mail: ms44@cornell.edu. > From gsearle@uoguelph.ca Mon Apr 4 15:13:29 1994 Received: from herman.cs.uoguelph.ca (herman.cs.uoguelph.ca [131.104.92.15]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id PAA04108; Mon, 4 Apr 1994 15:13:22 -0600 Received: by herman.cs.uoguelph.ca (1.37.109.8/16.2) id AA00873; Mon, 4 Apr 1994 17:14:14 -0400 Date: Mon, 4 Apr 1994 16:55:50 -0400 (EDT) From: Gregory Searle Subject: Re: Hypertext proposal To: Dick Chadwick , ipe@csf.colorado.edu, wsn@csf.colorado.edu Cc: fredr@uhunix.uhcc.Hawaii.Edu, malkia@uta.fi In-Reply-To: Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII On Mon, 4 Apr 1994, Dick Chadwick wrote: > Dear Greg, > > Just a footnote to hypertext methodology and an inquiry. I am a long > standing user of hypertext and am a fan of Neil Larson's software Ah, yes, my first contact with hypertext was through Neil's software, and I still admire and study his guide to constructing hypertext. > the hytelnet software freely available via gopher. You might want to > compare that system with www and/or think in terms of PC-based systems > that could be updated with an ftp package. I have found both www and > hytelnet to be poorly indexed and slow (presumably both problems will fade > into history). If you have started a hypertext somewhere in www, please > let me know the path along which to retrieve it. PC-based systems are indeed faster and generally easier to manage, but the important thing about the WWW is that literally millions of users can browse through you documents. WWW is sometimes slow because it is dependant on the Internet connection to serve up the hypertext. > Turning to other matters, since I teach international relations, I am > particularly interested in you effort, especially as regards the database > development. Let me suggest that you or your faculty advisor might > consider setting up a Bitnet list (e.g., COVERT-L) on your host computer > (ask your computing center staff to do it), for factual contributions. > These could then be hypertexted. The mere existence of COVERT-L would > attract widespread attention and assist you enormously in your data > gathering efforts. That's a good observation, but the paper/project (I neglected to mention that it's a 4th-year undergrad paper) is due in a few short days and I won't have time to do that sort of thing. I've found ACTIV-L archives very helpful, and also the APC networks (Association for Progressive Communications). Judging by the response to my inquiry, there's no reason why CSF couldn't maintain a similar database to which various individuals contributed and collaborated on an international level. It might make a good project for a class or a working group of students, since there's obviously a lot more which can be done than I'll be tackling. In fact, I'd be interested in investigating how groups of people with similar interests might collaborate together on such an 'internet publication' which would be publicly accessible - the key here would be unrestricted public access to material which, through its simultaneous micro and macro level approaches, might serve as an important learning tool to familiarize people with world events, such as American interventionism in Central America. It's a very do-able proposal, and it could be repeated with subjects relating to the Cold War, colonialism and imperialism, etc... CSF could perhaps become a collaborative learning centre in which theorists could map out for Net citizens a kind of meta-understanding of world events, employing events data, various conceptual mappings of the same historical terrain (application of different theories to the same scenarios), etc. A sort of vibrant, practical networked documentary of the collective understanding of events as interpreted by academics and activists from around the world. Why not? > Email: chadwick@uhunix.uhcc.hawaii.edu Fax: 1-808-956-6877 By the way, I am a huge fan of Dr. Tehranian, who you surely must know there at Univ. of Hawaii. Cheers, Greg Searle @@@@ =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= [DUBIOUS DISCLAIMER tm] c'o-o | : Gregory L. Searle : Any heresy, iconoclasm, > \ || : Computing and Communications Services : or subversion expressed / o __/ : Political Studies : above is my own, and is (___) : University of Guelph, CANADA : not to be confused with { } : searle@uoguelph.ca : that of my employer(s). (~_|_~) =- http://general.uoguelph.ca:3333/gs/ -= ||||_CopyLeft_1993_|||| .............................................................................. Global Village Co-operative - Telecommunity for collaborative communication telnet general.uoguelph.ca 8888 | http://general.uoguelph.ca:3333/ From @EMUVM1.CC.EMORY.EDU:SOCBX522@EMUVM1.CC.EMORY.EDU Thu Apr 7 20:44:09 1994 Received: from vaxf.Colorado.EDU (vaxf.Colorado.EDU [128.138.129.9]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id UAA07175 for ; Thu, 7 Apr 1994 20:44:08 -0600 Received: from EMUVM1.CC.EMORY.EDU (MAILER@EMUVM1) by VAXF.COLORADO.EDU (PMDF V4.2-12 #5062) id <01HAWNMDGKO00008DI@VAXF.COLORADO.EDU>; Thu, 7 Apr 1994 20:41:05 MDT Received: from EMUVM1 (NJE origin SOCBX522@EMUVM1) by EMUVM1.CC.EMORY.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1630; Thu, 7 Apr 1994 22:02:03 -0400 Date: Thu, 07 Apr 1994 21:48:56 -0400 (EDT) From: "Thomas D. Robinson" Subject: NATIONAL TELEVOTE EXPERIMENT To: World System Network Message-id: <01HAWNP8PXWG0008DI@VAXF.COLORADO.EDU> Organization: Emory University - Atlanta, Georgia, USA X-Envelope-to: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT X-Acknowledge-To: A non-profit organization called the Electronic Congress is holding their 2nd National Referendum from April 23-30. This is an experiment in televoting that uses conventional equipment (i.e., voting by telephone). Participation is easy and free. Anyone wishing to register to participate should follow the instructions below: Dial 1-800-YOU-VOTE (968-8683) and tell the recording the following information: 1. Your Name 2. Your Address (include zip code) 3. Your Telephone Number (include area code) 4. Your Congressional Representative or Congressional District Also, please spell out difficult to spell words. Anyone wanting further information on this project please contact Thomas D. Robinson (SOCBX522@EMUMV1 or SOCBX522@EMUVM1.cc.emory.edu). I'll be happy to answer any other questions you might have. Thomas D. Robinson Emory University From DKELLY@ucs.indiana.edu Mon Apr 11 07:30:01 1994 Received: from PO3.indiana.edu (PO3.Indiana.Edu [129.79.10.63]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id HAA00781 for ; Mon, 11 Apr 1994 07:30:01 -0600 Message-Id: <199404111330.HAA00781@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from LOCAL:.prism.DECnet by PO3.Indiana.EDU; id AA06811 (5.65c+jsm/2.5.1jsm); Mon, 11 Apr 1994 08:29:38 -0500 Date: Mon, 11 Apr 94 08:30:01 EST From: David Kelly X-To: PO%"wsn@csf.colorado.edu" Subject: Seeking papers for Northeast ISA panel. To: wsn@csf.colorado.edu REQUEST FOR PAPERS --------------------------- NORTHEAST REGIONAL INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE NOVEMBER 10 - 12 PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND -------------------------- I would like to invite anyone you may be interested to submit a paper proposal for a panel tentatively entitled "World System Processes and Their Empirical Effects." We are most interested in recording and explaining the effects of continuous dynamic processes at the world system level. I am in need of one or two more papers to complete the panel. The two papers which have been included so far examine the role of the global leader/hegemon in creating regional order and in actively diffusing democratic government throughout the system. These papers focus largely on the Long Cycle school of systemic analysis as developed by George Modelski, William Thompson, and Karen Rasler. Proposals may also focus on the Long Cycle or may focus on any of the other schools of systemic thought such as those centered around the work of Immanuel Wallerstein, Andre Gunder Frank, A.K.F. Organski, Jacek Kugler, or Robert Gilpin. I would also like to invite any interested persons to contact me about being a discussant for the panel. I can be contacted at : Department of Political Science Indiana University Woodburn Hall 210 Bloomington, IN 47405 or dkelly@ucs.indiana.edu From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Wed Apr 13 16:01:18 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id QAA28907 for ; Wed, 13 Apr 1994 16:01:15 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404132201.QAA28907@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 1088; Wed, 13 Apr 94 18:02:47 EDT Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1087; Wed, 13 Apr 1994 18:02:46 -0400 Resent-Date: Wed, 13 Apr 94 18:02:30 EDT Resent-From: CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Resent-To: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 9129; Tue, 12 Apr 1994 02:41:22 -0500 Received: from csf.Colorado.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Tue, 12 Apr 94 02:41:21 EST Received: from (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id AAA09177; Tue, 12 Apr 1994 00:41:03 -0600 Date: Tue, 12 Apr 1994 00:41:03 -0600 Message-Id: <199404120634.AAA09010@csf.Colorado.EDU> Errors-To: gimenez_m@gold.colorado.edu Reply-To: rfma@union3.su.swin.edu.au Originator: psn@csf.colorado.edu Sender: psn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Precedence: bulk From: Radio Farabundo Marti Australia To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Revista Farabundo Marti X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas X-Comment: PROGRESSIVE SOCIOLOGISTS NETWORK ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- REVISTA FARABUNDO MARTI Melbourne, Australia Revista Farabundo Marti is a magazine covering international current affairs, with special focus on El Salvador and the North-South Conflict. It also aims to be a forum for the free expression and debate of ideas regarding the most important issues facing the world today. The stories published in the Revista come from a variety of disciplines and perspectives, including politics, sociology, economics, media studies, geography, history, archeology and anthropology. We believe that all disciplines are interrelated and we rely on all of them to analyse current developments in society and to build up our theoretical framework. Revista Farabundo Marti (Australian Edition) is published by the Australian representation of Radio Farabundo Marti (RFMA). Radio Farabundo Marti is the former guerrilla station of the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN). During the civil war RFM operated underground from the hills of Northern Chalatenango and was a constant military target of the Salvadoran army. 19 RFM correspondents were killed defending the radio. Today, as the product of the peace accords between the Government of El Salvador and the FMLN, Radio Farabundo Marti has become a legal radio station. It is not longer a voice for the FMLN, but an independent community radio station at the service of the most oppressed sectors of Salvadoran society. If you would like to receive our Revista please let us know. E-mail subscriptions are free. We would like to post to this newsgroup, but do not wish to disrupt the interesting debates taking place. To subscribe please send a reply message. Thanks. Yours in solidarity Jose Gutierrez Editor RFM From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Wed Apr 13 16:03:58 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id QAA29000 for ; Wed, 13 Apr 1994 16:03:57 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404132203.QAA29000@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 1172; Wed, 13 Apr 94 18:05:28 EDT Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1171; Wed, 13 Apr 1994 18:04:10 -0400 Resent-Date: Wed, 13 Apr 94 18:03:54 EDT Resent-From: CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Resent-To: WSN@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 9779; Tue, 12 Apr 1994 03:20:08 -0500 Received: from csf.Colorado.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Tue, 12 Apr 94 03:20:06 EST Received: from (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id BAA09430; Tue, 12 Apr 1994 01:19:29 -0600 Date: Tue, 12 Apr 1994 01:19:29 -0600 Message-Id: <199404120713.AAA20988@igc.apc.org> Errors-To: gimenez_m@gold.colorado.edu Reply-To: rosary@igc.apc.org Originator: psn@csf.colorado.edu Sender: psn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Precedence: bulk From: Rosary College To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Note to PSN'ers RE: Opportunity to Visit Cuba in Summer, '94 X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas X-Comment: PROGRESSIVE SOCIOLOGISTS NETWORK ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- The FLACSO-CUBA Program announces: II CUBAN-NORTH AMERICAN ENCOUNTER OF SOCIAL SCIENTISTS "Participation and Social Change" July 18-22, 1994 Havana, CUBA During august of 1993, a group of social scientists associated with the SSSP and ASA engaged in a fruitful academic exchange concerning various problems of urgency in the current international setting and Cuba's situation in particular. One of the results of this encounter was an accord to continue the debate into the present year, opening it to scholars from other academic associations. To this end, we announce the convocation of our second meeting: This year's meeting will include two days (July 18-19) dedicated to an encounter of North Americans and Cubans. The following three days will unite the two groups with colleagues from other countries of Latin America and Europe who will be arriving to FLACSO-CUBA for the international workshop: "III LATIN AMERICAN AGENDA FOR THE XXI CENTURY." COSTS: The registration fee for North American participants will be $100. which includes the entire program of July 18-22. Arrangements have been made for an accommodations package which includes 7 nights/8 days in two plans: University Residences (double or triple rooms) $209. Class "A" Hotel $290. Both plans include airport-to-hotel transfers, breakfast and dinner daily, transportation to official activities, and sightseeing tours. Current roundtrip airfare Miami-Havana-Miami is $290. This encounter is open to all North American social scientists who have a professional interest in Cuba but space is limited. Air travel to Cuba can be arranged through MARAZUL TOURS, INC.; 250 W 57 St. - Suite 1311; New York, NY 10107. (800) 223-5334 or FAX: 212-541-6102. For more information and application forms, respond ASAP to: Lic. Roberto Rosado Delgado Gerente de Viajes Especializados MARCADU, S.A. Calle 13 No. 951 Esq. 8 VEDADO CP 12300 La Habana, CUBA Tel. (537) (7) 333893 or 333087 FAX (537) (7) 333028 or 333090 Telex 513130 mercadu cu or Richard A. Dello Buono, Ph.D. Sociology Department, Rosary College 7900 West Division St. River Forest, IL 60305 USA 708-524-6778 (24 hr) FAX: 708-366-5360 E-Mail: rosary@igc.apc.org From dasmith@orion.oac.uci.edu Wed Apr 13 16:45:34 1994 Received: from orion.oac.uci.edu (dasmith@orion.oac.uci.edu [128.200.80.20]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id QAA29970 for ; Wed, 13 Apr 1994 16:45:32 -0600 Received: by orion.oac.uci.edu id AA01100 (5.65c/IDA-1.4.4 for world-system network ); Wed, 13 Apr 1994 15:45:13 -0700 Date: Wed, 13 Apr 1994 15:45:12 -0700 (PDT) From: David Smith Subject: FDI data (fwd) To: world-system network Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII My colleague Jim Rauch (an economist at UC-San Diego who has been working with me and some other folks in an interdisciplinary working group focussing on economic growth organized by Peter Evans and funded by Russell Sage) sent the following message to me. If anyone on WSN has ideas about where he can get this data, either send them out on the network and I can pass them along, or reply directly to him (see the address below). David A. Smith Sociology, UC-Irvine ---------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Wed, 13 Apr 1994 11:55:27 -0700 From: James Rauch To: dasmith@orion.oac.uci.edu Subject: FDI data David, I am looking for foreign direct investment data for all the major source countries giving destinations, e.g., U.S. FDI (stocks and flows) into Brazil, Japanese FDI into Malaysia, British into Nigeria, etc. I thought it conceivable that some world-systems person could have assembled all of this together as part of some network-style analysis. Could you please let me know if you are aware of any such data set? If not, do you at least know of machine-readable data sets for individual source countries such as the U.S. and Japan? Thanks, Jim From leden@ccs.carleton.ca Thu Apr 14 05:27:56 1994 Received: from alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (alfred.ccs.carleton.ca [134.117.1.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id FAA05504 for ; Thu, 14 Apr 1994 05:27:54 -0600 Received: from superior.YP.nobel (superior.ccs.carleton.ca) by alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (4.1/SMI-4.0) id AA03657; Thu, 14 Apr 94 07:27:55 EDT From: leden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) Received: by superior.YP.nobel (4.1/Sun-Client) id AA12275; Thu, 14 Apr 94 07:25:44 EDT Message-Id: <9404141125.AA12275@superior.YP.nobel> Subject: FDI data (fwd) To: wsn@csf.colorado.edu (World Historical Systems Network) Date: Thu, 14 Apr 94 7:25:43 EDT Cc: Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11] David Smith writes: > From wsn@csf.colorado.edu Wed Apr 13 18:48:57 1994 > Errors-To: @jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu:podobnik@jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu > Date: Wed, 13 Apr 1994 16:46:59 -0600 > Message-Id: > Errors-To: @jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu:podobnik@jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu > Reply-To: dasmith@orion.oac.uci.edu > Originator: wsn@csf.colorado.edu > Sender: wsn@csf.Colorado.EDU > Precedence: bulk > From: David Smith > To: Multiple recipients of list > Subject: FDI data (fwd) > X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas > X-Comment: WORLD SYSTEMS NETWORK > > My colleague Jim Rauch (an economist at UC-San Diego who has been working > with me and some other folks in an interdisciplinary working group > focussing on economic growth organized by Peter Evans and funded by > Russell Sage) sent the following message to me. If anyone on WSN has > ideas about where he can get this data, either send them out on the > network and I can pass them along, or reply directly to him (see the > address below). > > David A. Smith > Sociology, UC-Irvine > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > Date: Wed, 13 Apr 1994 11:55:27 -0700 > From: James Rauch > To: dasmith@orion.oac.uci.edu > Subject: FDI data > > David, > > I am looking for foreign direct investment data for all the major source > countries giving destinations, e.g., U.S. FDI (stocks and flows) into Brazil, > Japanese FDI into Malaysia, British into Nigeria, etc. I thought it > conceivable that some world-systems person could have assembled all of this > together as part of some network-style analysis. Could you please let me > know if you are aware of any such data set? If not, do you at least know > of machine-readable data sets for individual source countries such as the > U.S. and Japan? > > Thanks, > > Jim > > -- ====================================================================== The US outward FDI data set is available on CD ROM in most of our libraries [if the library has a CD ROM collection and reader]. You can find it on the disk THE NATIONAL TRADE DATA BASE - THE EXPORT CONNECTION. The disk is updated everyfew months. Look for the directory OPERATIONS OF US PARENT COMPANIES AND THEIR FOREIGN AFFILIATES published by the US Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. All the tables are out in paper form also but much later. The data is in two sets. The first set is for all US owned foreign affiliates, whether majority owned or not. The bulk of the data is in the second set for MOFAs, majority owned foreign affiliates. There is a wealth of data here, everything from wages bills to R&D expenditures to taxes paid to sales data, some is by country some by industry. There is also another set on the disk for INBOUND FDI, called FOREIGN AFFILIATES IN THE UNITED STATES. I know little about other countries statistics on outward bound FDI. Canada's data is poor and kept primarily in the balance of payments statistics. You might contact Karl Sauvant at the United Nations Centre for Transnational Corporations [it has a new name now that no one remembers]. The phone number is 41-22-907-01-94. They have moved to Geneva. Excuse me, that was the FAX number. The PHONE number is 41-22-907-57-07. The UNCTC has published a three volume set on FDI by region that should be in your library. In each of the region books are specific countries and tables of data by country, but it's not of course on the computer. I don't know whether the UNCTC allows access to the data in machine readable form. Hope this is some help. ------------- Lorraine Eden Professor of International Affairs The Norman Paterson School of International Affairs Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6 CANADA Phone 613-788-2600x6661 Fax 613-788-2889 Email leden@ccs.carleton.ca From dhenwood@panix.com Thu Apr 14 08:23:21 1994 Received: from panix.com (panix.com [198.7.0.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id IAA07647 for ; Thu, 14 Apr 1994 08:23:20 -0600 Received: by panix.com id AA25089 (5.65c/IDA-1.4.4 for Multiple recipients of list ); Thu, 14 Apr 1994 10:23:04 -0400 Date: Thu, 14 Apr 1994 10:21:36 -0400 (EDT) From: Doug Henwood Subject: Re: FDI data (fwd) To: David Smith Cc: Multiple recipients of list In-Reply-To: Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII US data is published in the Survey of Current Business, and is available electronically on the Commerce Dept's Economic Bulletin Board. International data can be found in the UN's World Investment Reports, published annually. I don't think electronic versions are available, though. Doug Doug Henwood [dhenwood@panix.com] Left Business Observer 212-874-4020 (voice) 212-874-3137 (fax) On Wed, 13 Apr 1994, David Smith wrote: > My colleague Jim Rauch (an economist at UC-San Diego who has been working > with me and some other folks in an interdisciplinary working group > focussing on economic growth organized by Peter Evans and funded by > Russell Sage) sent the following message to me. If anyone on WSN has > ideas about where he can get this data, either send them out on the > network and I can pass them along, or reply directly to him (see the > address below). > > David A. Smith > Sociology, UC-Irvine > > ---------- Forwarded message ---------- > Date: Wed, 13 Apr 1994 11:55:27 -0700 > From: James Rauch > To: dasmith@orion.oac.uci.edu > Subject: FDI data > > David, > > I am looking for foreign direct investment data for all the major source > countries giving destinations, e.g., U.S. FDI (stocks and flows) into Brazil, > Japanese FDI into Malaysia, British into Nigeria, etc. I thought it > conceivable that some world-systems person could have assembled all of this > together as part of some network-style analysis. Could you please let me > know if you are aware of any such data set? If not, do you at least know > of machine-readable data sets for individual source countries such as the > U.S. and Japan? > > Thanks, > > Jim > > From hernan@cc.gatech.edu Thu Apr 14 18:32:38 1994 Received: from burdell.cc.gatech.edu (root@burdell.cc.gatech.edu [130.207.3.207]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with ESMTP id SAA14574 for ; Thu, 14 Apr 1994 18:32:37 -0600 Received: from taurus.cc.gatech.edu (hernan@taurus.cc.gatech.edu [130.207.112.65]) by burdell.cc.gatech.edu (8.6.4/8.6.4) with ESMTP id UAA20787 for ; Thu, 14 Apr 1994 20:32:37 -0400 Received: from localhost (hernan@localhost) by taurus.cc.gatech.edu (8.6.4/8.6.4) id UAA15302 for wsn@csf.colorado.edu; Thu, 14 Apr 1994 20:32:33 -0400 From: hernan@cc.gatech.edu (Hernan Astudillo R.) Message-Id: <199404150032.UAA15302@taurus.cc.gatech.edu> Subject: New Database on Slave Trade To: wsn@csf.colorado.edu Date: Thu, 14 Apr 1994 20:32:32 -0400 (EDT) Reply-To: hernan@cc.gatech.edu X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.4 PL23] Content-Type: text Content-Length: 4774 WSN-ers, I received this from H-LATAM, and I thought it might be interesting to share. --hernan > Sender: Latin American History discussion list > From: Phil Mueller > Subject: New Database on Slave Trade > > From: "John Saillant, IEAHCNET" > Subject: New Database on Slave Trade > > Research Note on the Atlantic Slave Trade Database Project > > [This note comes courtesy of the following two IEAHCNET > subscribers--JS] > > Stephen D. Behrendt, Drake University, sb4331r@acad.drake.edu > David Eltis, Queen's University, eltisd@qucdn.queensu.ca > > In 1993 the W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Afro-American Research > at Harvard University received a grant from the National Endowment > for the Humanities to create a consolidated database on the Atlantic > slave trade. The aim of the project is to computerize voyage data > on most of the slave voyages that sailed from Africa to the Americas > from the sixteenth century to the 1860's. The core data will consist > of over 200 fields of information, including fields for the names > of vessels, captains and shipowners, regions and dates of trade > in Europe, Africa and the Americas, and the number, age and gender > of slaves confined on the Middle Passage. When the project is completed > in three to five years, data on the Atlantic slave trade will be > available through computer networking services such as Internet. > > The first stage of the project established fields of information and > integrated numerous computerized data-sets of Atlantic slave voyages > that historians have compiled over the past twenty-five years. > These sets include: Herbert S. Klein on the slave trades to Havana > (1790-1820), Rio de Janeiro (1795-1811) and Virginia (1727-1769), and > the Angola slave trade (1723-1771); Svend E. Green-Pedersen on the > Danish slave trade (1698-1789); David Eltis on the Atlantic slave > trade (1811-1867); and Johannes Postma on the Dutch slave trade > (1675-1802). > > The second stage of the project will computerize published and > unpublished sets of slave voyage data compiled by Jean Mettas > (French slave trade), Jay Coughtry (Rhode Island slave trade), > James Rawley and Joseph Inikori (British slave trades), and then > will integrate several new British slave trade data-sets > created by Stephen D. Behrendt, David Eltis and David Richardson. > Well over half of all transatlantic slave voyages--including the > majority of British, French and Dutch slave voyages--soon will be > recorded in machine-readable format. > > The major tasks in the project are the matching of fields of > information created from widely different sources often for > different purposes, and the elimination of duplicate voyages. > When completed, the core set of more than 20,000 transatlantic > slave voyages will constitute the largest data source for the > long-distance movement of peoples before the twentieth century. > Refined demographic data on the volume of the trade (and thus of > pre-colonial African populations) and the spatial distribution > of African peoples throughout the Atlantic world will allow scholars > to assess more accurately questions of African state formation, > agricultural and ecological change, African cultural survivals, > and the development of the Atlantic economies. Sub-sets of > information on vessel tonnage, slave age/gender ratios, and > crew/slave mortality will permit a more thorough analysis of shipping > productivity, patterns of family structures, and disease transmission > in the Atlantic world. > > The database has been organized so that additional information on slave > voyages can be added easily to the set and so that related information, > such as African climatic patterns, slave phenotypes, slave rebellions, > or slave prices, can be linked to the main data-set through a > common variable such as the vessel name or the voyage identification > number. Building related files will broaden the scope of analysis > from the slave voyage to the impact of the transatlantic slave trade > in the creation of the modern world. Indeed, it eventually may > be possible to relate individual Africans or groups of Africans to > the vessel from which they disembarked in the Americas, as has > been done with other migrant groups. > > The project organizers welcome additional data on transatlantic > slave voyages to include in the consolidated data-set. > > -- | Hernan Astudillo R. | "Computers are useless. They can only give you hernan@cc.gatech.edu | answers." -- Pablo Picasso College of Computing, Georgia Tech, Atlanta GA 30332 / (404) 853-9390 From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Fri Apr 15 19:50:15 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id TAA01006 for ; Fri, 15 Apr 1994 19:50:11 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404160150.TAA01006@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 1805; Fri, 15 Apr 94 21:51:35 EDT Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1804; Fri, 15 Apr 1994 21:51:35 -0400 Resent-Date: Fri, 15 Apr 94 21:51:17 EDT Resent-From: CHRIS CHASE-DUNN Resent-To: wsn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 4213; Thu, 14 Apr 1994 15:09:55 -0400 Received: from csf.Colorado.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Thu, 14 Apr 94 15:09:53 EDT Received: from (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id NAA11286; Thu, 14 Apr 1994 13:00:41 -0600 Date: Thu, 14 Apr 1994 13:00:41 -0600 Message-Id: <199404141853.MAA11158@csf.Colorado.EDU> Errors-To: lgonick@mach1.wlu.ca Reply-To: ipe@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Originator: ipe@csf.colorado.edu Sender: ipe@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Precedence: bulk From: David Kelly To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Request for Papers. X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas X-Comment: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- REQUEST FOR PAPERS --------------------------- NORTHEAST REGIONAL INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION CONFERENCE NOVEMBER 10 - 12 PROVIDENCE, RHODE ISLAND -------------------------- I would like to invite anyone who may be interested to submit a paper proposal for a panel tentatively entitled "World System Processes and Their Empirical Effects." We are most interested in recording and explaining the effects of continuous dynamic processes at the world system level. I am in need of one or two more papers to complete the panel. The two papers which have been included so far examine the role of the global leader/hegemon in creating regional order and in actively diffusing democratic government throughout the system. These papers focus largely on the Long Cycle school of systemic analysis as developed by George Modelski, William Thompson, and Karen Rasler. Proposals may also focus on the Long Cycle or may focus on any of the other schools of systemic thought such as those centered around the work of Immanuel Wallerstein, Andre Gunder Frank, A.K.F. Organski, Jacek Kugler, or Robert Gilpin. I would also like to invite any interested persons to contact me about being a discussant for the panel. I can be contacted at : Department of Political Science Indiana University Woodburn Hall 210 Bloomington, IN 47405 or dkelly@ucs.indiana.edu From leden@ccs.carleton.ca Sat Apr 16 10:15:35 1994 Received: from alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (alfred.ccs.carleton.ca [134.117.1.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id KAA06120; Sat, 16 Apr 1994 10:15:32 -0600 Received: from superior.YP.nobel (superior.ccs.carleton.ca) by alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (4.1/SMI-4.0) id AA26597; Sat, 16 Apr 94 12:15:32 EDT From: leden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) Received: by superior.YP.nobel (4.1/Sun-Client) id AA26053; Sat, 16 Apr 94 12:13:19 EDT Message-Id: <9404161613.AA26053@superior.YP.nobel> Subject: call for IPE-sponsored papers for 1995 ISA Annual Conference To: ipe@csf.colorado.edu (IPEnet), isafp@csf.colorado.edu (Foreign Policy Section of ISA Network), pew@mach1.wlu.ca (Pewnet), femisa@csf.colorado.edu (FEMISA [Feminist Theory and Gender Studies]), trade@csf.colorado.edu (trade@csf.colorado.edu), polcan@vm1.yorku.ca (Canadian Political Science Discussion Group), wsn@csf.colorado.edu (World Historical Systems Network) Date: Sat, 16 Apr 94 12:13:18 EDT Cc: Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11] CALL FOR PAPERS INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION (IPE/ISA) l995 ISA CONVENTION IN CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, USA FROM: Lorraine Eden, IPE President and Section Chair International Affairs, Carleton University Email: leden@ccs.carleton.ca TO: Individuals interested in participating in the 1995 ISA conference in Chicago, Illinois (you do not have to be an ISA member to participate in the program). DATE: April 16, 1994 1. PROGRAM THEME The next annual meetings of the International Studies Association will be held in Chicago, February 22-26, 1995. The overall theme of the 1995 International Studies Association annual conference is BEYOND SOVEREIGNTY: CHALLENGES AND RESPONSES IN A CHANGING WORLD. The general theme focuses on problems that once used to be considered domestic concerns but now have a global reach. Within this theme, the ISA Program Chairs have identified several individual themes as having particular interest at this conference (see the forthcoming ISA NEWSLETTER for details of these themes): 1. ecological crises 2. ethnopolitical conflicts 3. humanitarian crises 4. democratization 5. economic disparities 6. crime 7. militarization 8. integration and disintegration 9. agenda setting 10. implications for theory and methodology The general theme BEYOND SOVEREIGNTY directs attention to the challenges that affect individuals and communities at every level of the global system. The ten individual themes highlighted above are complex in origin and transnational in impact. The perspectives and analytic skills of all social sciences (and often the physical and biological sciences as well) are required to understand them; policies responding to these issues necessarily involve a variety of different levels of political organization. The ISA's 1995 program will provide an opportunity for participants to explore these topics from many disciplinary and theoretical perspectives. Individuals in all academic areas related to international studies (for example, political science, economics, psychology, international business, the environmental sciences) and/or involved in international policy formulation and implementation at all levels are encouraged to participate. The 1994-95 ISA President is Ted Gurr, Political Science, University of Maryland. The ISA Program Chairs are Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt, Political Science, University of Kansas. The ISA President and Program Co-Chairs intend to organize a significant portion of the program around individual and linked panels dealing with aspects of the ten themes outlined above. ISA members are encouraged to organize clusters of two or three panels in which subsets of a network of participants present papers to an audience consisting, in part, of the paper-givers and discussants from the other panels. These linked panels will be highlighted in the program and scheduled on the same day in successive time-slots. Proposals for linked panels that focus on aspects of the ten thematic issues are particularly encouraged. Note that, while proposals related to the ten themes are welcome, proposals for international studies topics that are not on one of the ten individual themes are also welcome. 2. SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS ON GENERAL CONFERENCE THEME If you are submitting a paper or panel proposal under the GENERAL THEME, these proposals can go directly to the Program Co-Chairs. The deadline for receipt of INDIVIDUAL PAPER proposals is JUNE 1, 1994; for PANEL proposals it is JULY 1, 1994. Proposals received after these dates have virtually no chance for inclusion in the final program. GENERAL PAPERS AND PANELS SHOULD BE SUBMITTED TO: Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt ISA Program Co-Chairs Department of Political Science 504 Blake Hall University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas USA 66045. Phone (before May 15): 913-864-3523 Phone (after May 15): 913-864-3654 Fax: 913-864-5208 Email: isaconf@ukanvm.cc.ukans.edu 3. SUBMISSION TO INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION The International Studies Association has over 2,800 members from more than 60 countries. The International Political Economy section, with approximately 750 members, is the largest of the ISA sections. At the 1994 ISA conference there were 292 panels in total, 80 percent of which were sponsored by 12 ISA sections. There were 44 IPE-sponsored panels, one-fifth of the section-sponsored panels. The number of IPE panels exceeded the number (38) of General Theme panels. >From these statistics you can see that the IPE section was very actively involved in the 1994 conference program. I expect the same will be true for 1995. Therefore it is critical that proposals for papers and panels to be sponsored by the IPE section be submitted early and be well prepared. IF YOU ARE SUBMITTING A PAPER OR PANEL TO BE SPONSORED BY THE INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION OF ISA, THESE PROPOSALS SHOULD GO DIRECTLY TO: Lorraine Eden, IPE President and Program Chair School of International Affairs 2A56 Paterson Hall Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6, CANADA Phone: 613-788-2600 x6661 (office) 613-788-6655 (dept) Email: leden@ccs.carleton.ca PAPER PROPOSALS MUST BE RECEIVED BY THE IPE PROGRAM CHAIR ON OR BEFORE WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1, 1994. PANEL PROPOSALS MUST BE RECEIVED ON OR BEFORE FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1994. A HARD COPY BY MAIL IS REQUIRED FOR ALL PROPOSALS. To ensure that your proposal arrives before the cut-off date, I recommend: (1) that you use first class mail (use airmail from outside Canada or the United States). (2) that you also email your proposal to the address: leden@ccs.carleton.ca on or before the due date. (3) Faxed proposals are not acceptable due to the costs involved (I have to pay for all faxes, both in and out). PLEASE NOTE THAT PROPOSALS SUBMITTED EARLIER THAN THESE DATES AND THAT FOLLOW THE GUIDELINES BELOW WILL HAVE A GREATER CHANCE OF ACCEPTANCE. PROPOSALS RECEIVED AFTER THESE DATES HAVE VIRTUALLY NO CHANCE FOR INCLUSION IN THE FINAL PROGRAM. 4. GUIDELINES FOR SUBMITTING AN IPE-SPONSORED PAPER PROPOSAL Please follow the format below when submitting a PAPER PROPOSAL for sponsoring by IPE/ISA. PROPOSAL FOR PAPER ON THE TOPIC _________________________ Submitted by: ____________ (name, department, university) Date submitted: ________________________________ KEY WORDS THAT DESCRIBE PAPER Region: _______ (e.g. Europe, East Asia) Topic: ________ (e.g. debt, GATT, services, MNEs) Method: _______(e.g. statistics, theory paper, historical) Theme area: _______(e.g. #1 ecological, #6 crime, #11 OTHER) Linked paper: (if yes) linked with _____________________ PAPER ABSTRACT (200-300 WORDS) AUTHOR ADDRESS (repeat for each author) Family name________________Given name________ Institutional affiliation_________________ Full mailing address ___________________ (if moving, indicate dates and addresses where you can be reached up until end of February 1995) Office phone _______________ Home phone ________________ Fax _________________Email_________________________ I ____am ____am not a member of the ISA. (Nonmembers are encouraged to participate. This information is required for mailing purposes only.) I have ___ have not __ made a proposal for co-sponsorship of this paper with the ISA Section________________. If this paper is to be co-sponsored by the World Historical Systems subsection of IPE, please send a duplicate of this proposal to Bob Denemark, Political Science, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware USA 19716. Phone 302-451-2009. Fax: 302-831- 2828. Email: denemark@ravel.udel.edu. I am ____ am not _____ willing to chair a panel in the following area(s)______________________________(Please enclose a brief resume if you are willing to chair.) I am ____ am not _____ willing to be a discussant in the following area(s)______________________________(Please enclose a brief resume if you are willing to be a discussant.) I do ___ do not ___ require a letter of invitation for exit visa purposes. (If a letter is required attach address and date by which letter is required.) Scholars from outside North America who wish to request financial support should contact ISA Headquarters, 216 Herald R. Clark Building, Brigham Young University Provo, Utah, USA 84602 by October l, l994. Limited funds are available. See the ISA NEWSLETTER for details. 5. GUIDELINES FOR SUBMITTING AN IPE-SPONSORED PANEL PROPOSAL Please follow the general format below when submitting PANEL PROPOSALS to IPE/ISA. PROPOSAL FOR PANEL ON THE TOPIC _________________________ Submitted by: __________ (name, department, university) Date submitted: ________________________ KEY WORDS THAT DESCRIBE PANEL Region:__________(e.g. Europe, East Asia) Topic:______(e.g. debt, GATT, services, MNEs) Method: __________(e.g. statistics, theory paper, historical) Theme:_______(e.g. #1 ecological, #6 crime, #11 OTHER) Linked panel: (if yes) linked with _____________________ GENERAL OUTLINE OF PANEL AND PANELLISTS Chair: (name, university) Papergivers: (repeat for each paper) (title; name, university) Discussants: (repeat for each discussant) (name, university) PANEL ABSTRACT (ENCLOSE AN ABSTRACT OF MAXIMUM 200 WORDS) INDIVIDUAL ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS (repeat for each paper) Paper title, author Abstract (maximum one page) for each paper PARTICIPANT ADDRESSES (repeat for each participant) Full name, role in panel (chair, discussant, papergiver) Full mailing address, including phone, fax and email numbers ISA member: yes ___ no____ (Chairs are responsible for sending any address changes, particularly for themselves, until the conference in February 1995 to the IPE Section Chair and ISA Program Co-Chairs.) OTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THE PANEL Do any members of your panel require letters of invitation for visa purposes? If yes, provide details. If members of your panel are willing to be panel chairs or discussants in other sessions, please have them write to the Program Chair, providing details and a brief resume. Is an overhead projector required for your panel? yes __ no __ I have ___ have not __ made a proposal for co-sponsorship of this panel with the ISA Section________________. If this panel is to be co-sponsored by the World Historical Systems subsection of IPE, please send a duplicate of this proposal to Bob Denemark, Political Science, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware USA 19716. Phone 302-451-2009. Fax: 302-831- 2828. Email: denemark@ravel.udel.edu. Scholars from outside North America who wish to request financial support should contact ISA Headquarters, 216 Herald R. Clark Building, Brigham Young University Provo, Utah, USA 84602 by October l, l994. Limited funds are available. See the ISA NEWSLETTER for details. -- ------------- Lorraine Eden Professor of International Affairs The Norman Paterson School of International Affairs Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6 CANADA Phone 613-788-2600x6661 Fax 613-788-2889 Email leden@ccs.carleton.ca From leden@ccs.carleton.ca Sat Apr 16 13:10:00 1994 Received: from alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (alfred.ccs.carleton.ca [134.117.1.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id NAA08144; Sat, 16 Apr 1994 13:09:55 -0600 Received: from superior.YP.nobel (superior.ccs.carleton.ca) by alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (4.1/SMI-4.0) id AA02773; Sat, 16 Apr 94 15:09:48 EDT From: leden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) Received: by superior.YP.nobel (4.1/Sun-Client) id AA04327; Sat, 16 Apr 94 15:07:34 EDT Message-Id: <9404161907.AA04327@superior.YP.nobel> Subject: REVISED call for papers [new DEADLINES FOR ISA PROPOSALS] To: ipe@csf.colorado.edu (IPEnet), isafp@csf.colorado.edu (Foreign Policy Section of ISA Network), pew@mach1.wlu.ca (Pewnet), trade@csf.colorado.edu (TRADEnet), wsn@csf.colorado.edu (World Historical Systems Network), femisa@csf.colorado.edu (FEMISA [Feminist Theory and Gender Studies]), polcan@vm1.yorku.ca (Canadian Political Science Discussion Group) Date: Sat, 16 Apr 94 15:07:34 EDT Cc: Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11] CALL FOR PAPERS (REVISED) RE: REVISED CALL FOR PAPERS FOR IPE-SPONSORED PANELS AT THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION CONVENTION, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS, FEB. 22-26, 1995 FROM: Lorraine Eden, IPE President and Section Chair International Affairs, Carleton University Email: leden@ccs.carleton.ca TO: Individuals interested in participating in the 1995 ISA conference in Chicago, Illinois (you do not have to be an ISA member to participate in the program). DATE: April 16, 1994 ============================================== This morning, I sent out an email with the information for submitting paper and panel proposals for the IPE section of ISA. I PUT THE WRONG DEADLINES IN MY EARLIER MEMO. MY EARLIER MEMO SAID THE FOLLOWING: June 1 - deadline for submission of paper proposals to ISA Program Co-Chairs and Section Chairs July 1 - deadline for submisssion of panel proposals to ISA Program Co-Chairs and Section Chairs The CORRECT DEADLINES are the following: June 1 - deadline for submission of paper AND panel proposals to ISA PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS (i.e. to Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt, University of Kansas). July 1 - deadline for submission of paper AND panel proposals to ISA SECTION CHAIRS (e.g. to Lorraine Eden for IPE-sponsored panels). August 10 - deadline for section chairs to submit section-sponsored panels to the ISA program Co-Chairs (e.g. by this date Lorraine Eden must submit all IPE- sponsored panels to Profs. Gerner and Schrodt). The revised Call for Papers follows. My apologies to one and all for any inconvenience this may have caused. Sincerely, Lorraine Eden ================================================= 1. PROGRAM THEME The next annual meetings of the International Studies Association will be held in Chicago, February 22-26, 1995. The overall theme of the 1995 International Studies Association annual conference is BEYOND SOVEREIGNTY: CHALLENGES AND RESPONSES IN A CHANGING WORLD. The general theme focuses on problems that once used to be considered domestic concerns but now have a global reach. Within this theme, the ISA Program Chairs have identified several individual themes as having particular interest at this conference (see the forthcoming ISA NEWSLETTER for details of these themes): 1. ecological crises 2. ethnopolitical conflicts 3. humanitarian crises 4. democratization 5. economic disparities 6. crime 7. militarization 8. integration and disintegration 9. agenda setting 10. implications for theory and methodology The general theme BEYOND SOVEREIGNTY directs attention to the challenges that affect individuals and communities at every level of the global system. The ten individual themes highlighted above are complex in origin and transnational in impact. The perspectives and analytic skills of all social sciences (and often the physical and biological sciences as well) are required to understand them; policies responding to these issues necessarily involve a variety of different levels of political organization. The ISA's 1995 program will provide an opportunity for participants to explore these topics from many disciplinary and theoretical perspectives. Individuals in all academic areas related to international studies (for example, political science, economics, psychology, international business, the environmental sciences) and/or involved in international policy formulation and implementation at all levels are encouraged to participate. The 1994-95 ISA President is Ted Gurr, Political Science, University of Maryland. The ISA Program Chairs are Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt, Political Science, University of Kansas. The ISA President and Program Co-Chairs intend to organize a significant portion of the program around individual and linked panels dealing with aspects of the ten themes outlined above. ISA members are encouraged to organize clusters of two or three panels in which subsets of a network of participants present papers to an audience consisting, in part, of the paper-givers and discussants from the other panels. These linked panels will be highlighted in the program and scheduled on the same day in successive time-slots. Proposals for linked panels that focus on aspects of the ten thematic issues are particularly encouraged. Note that, while proposals related to the ten themes are welcome, proposals for international studies topics that are not on one of the ten individual themes are also welcome. 2. SUBMISSION OF PROPOSALS ON GENERAL CONFERENCE THEME If you are submitting a paper or panel proposal under the GENERAL THEME, these proposals can go directly to the Program Co-Chairs. The deadline for receipt of INDIVIDUAL PAPER AND PANEL proposals is JUNE 1, 1994. Proposals received after these dates have virtually no chance for inclusion in the final program. GENERAL PAPERS AND PANELS SHOULD BE SUBMITTED TO: Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt ISA Program Co-Chairs Department of Political Science 504 Blake Hall University of Kansas Lawrence, Kansas USA 66045. Phone (before May 15): 913-864-3523 Phone (after May 15): 913-864-3654 Fax: 913-864-5208 Email: isaconf@ukanvm.cc.ukans.edu 3. SUBMISSION TO INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION The International Studies Association has over 2,800 members from more than 60 countries. The International Political Economy section, with approximately 750 members, is the largest of the ISA sections. At the 1994 ISA conference there were 292 panels in total, 80 percent of which were sponsored by 12 ISA sections. There were 44 IPE-sponsored panels, one-fifth of the section-sponsored panels. The number of IPE panels exceeded the number (38) of General Theme panels. >From these statistics you can see that the IPE section was very actively involved in the 1994 conference program. I expect the same will be true for 1995. Therefore it is critical that proposals for papers and panels to be sponsored by the IPE section be submitted early and be well prepared. IF YOU ARE SUBMITTING A PAPER OR PANEL TO BE SPONSORED BY THE INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION OF ISA, THESE PROPOSALS SHOULD GO DIRECTLY TO: Lorraine Eden, IPE President and Section Chair School of International Affairs 2A56 Paterson Hall Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6, CANADA Phone: 613-788-2600 x6661 (office) 613-788-6655 (dept) Email: leden@ccs.carleton.ca ALL PROPOSALS MUST BE RECEIVED BY THE IPE SECTION CHAIR ON OR BEFORE ON OR BEFORE FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1994. A HARD COPY BY MAIL IS REQUIRED FOR ALL PROPOSALS. To ensure that your proposal arrives before the cut-off date, I recommend: (1) that you use first class mail (use airmail from outside Canada or the United States). (2) that you also email your proposal to the address: leden@ccs.carleton.ca on or before the due date. (3) Faxed proposals are not acceptable due to the costs involved (I have to pay for all faxes, both in and out). PLEASE NOTE THAT PROPOSALS SUBMITTED EARLIER THAN THESE DATES AND THAT FOLLOW THE GUIDELINES BELOW WILL HAVE A GREATER CHANCE OF ACCEPTANCE. PROPOSALS RECEIVED AFTER THESE DATES HAVE VIRTUALLY NO CHANCE FOR INCLUSION IN THE FINAL PROGRAM. 4. GUIDELINES FOR SUBMITTING AN IPE-SPONSORED PAPER PROPOSAL Please follow the format below when submitting a PAPER PROPOSAL for sponsoring by IPE/ISA. PROPOSAL FOR PAPER ON THE TOPIC _________________________ Submitted by: ____________ (name, department, university) Date submitted: ________________________________ KEY WORDS THAT DESCRIBE PAPER Region: _______ (e.g. Europe, East Asia) Topic: ________ (e.g. debt, GATT, services, MNEs) Method: _______(e.g. statistics, theory paper, historical) Theme area: _______(e.g. #1 ecological, #6 crime, #11 OTHER) Linked paper: (if yes) linked with _____________________ PAPER ABSTRACT (200-300 WORDS) AUTHOR ADDRESS (repeat for each author) Family name________________Given name________ Institutional affiliation_________________ Full mailing address ___________________ (if moving, indicate dates and addresses where you can be reached up until end of February 1995) Office phone _______________ Home phone ________________ Fax _________________Email_________________________ I ____am ____am not a member of the ISA. (Nonmembers are encouraged to participate. This information is required for mailing purposes only.) I have ___ have not __ made a proposal for co-sponsorship of this paper with the ISA Section________________. If this paper is to be co-sponsored by the World Historical Systems subsection of IPE, please send a duplicate of this proposal to Bob Denemark, Political Science, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware USA 19716. Phone 302-451-2009. Fax: 302-831- 2828. Email: denemark@ravel.udel.edu. I am ____ am not _____ willing to chair a panel in the following area(s)______________________________(Please enclose a brief resume if you are willing to chair.) I am ____ am not _____ willing to be a discussant in the following area(s)______________________________(Please enclose a brief resume if you are willing to be a discussant.) I do ___ do not ___ require a letter of invitation for visa purposes. (If a letter is required attach address and date by which letter is required.) Scholars from outside North America who wish to request financial support should contact ISA Headquarters, 216 Herald R. Clark Building, Brigham Young University Provo, Utah, USA 84602 by October l, l994. Limited funds are available. See the ISA NEWSLETTER for details. 5. GUIDELINES FOR SUBMITTING AN IPE-SPONSORED PANEL PROPOSAL Please follow the general format below when submitting PANEL PROPOSALS to IPE/ISA. PROPOSAL FOR PANEL ON THE TOPIC _________________________ Submitted by: __________ (name, department, university) Date submitted: ________________________ KEY WORDS THAT DESCRIBE PANEL Region:__________(e.g. Europe, East Asia) Topic:______(e.g. debt, GATT, services, MNEs) Method: __________(e.g. statistics, theory paper, historical) Theme:_______(e.g. #1 ecological, #6 crime, #11 OTHER) Linked panel: (if yes) linked with _____________________ GENERAL OUTLINE OF PANEL AND PANELLISTS Chair: (name, university) Papergivers: (repeat for each paper) (title; name, university) Discussants: (repeat for each discussant) (name, university) PANEL ABSTRACT (ENCLOSE AN ABSTRACT OF MAXIMUM 200 WORDS) INDIVIDUAL ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS (repeat for each paper) Paper title, author Abstract (maximum one page) for each paper PARTICIPANT ADDRESSES (repeat for each participant) Full name, role in panel (chair, discussant, papergiver) Full mailing address, including phone, fax and email numbers ISA member: yes ___ no____ (Chairs are responsible for sending any address changes, particularly for themselves, until the conference in February 1995 to the IPE Section Chair and ISA Program Co-Chairs.) OTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THE PANEL Do any members of your panel require letters of invitation for visa purposes? If yes, provide details. If members of your panel are willing to be panel chairs or discussants in other sessions, please have them write to the Program Chair, providing details and a brief resume. Is an overhead projector required for your panel? yes __ no __ I have ___ have not __ made a proposal for co-sponsorship of this panel with the ISA Section________________. If this panel is to be co-sponsored by the World Historical Systems subsection of IPE, please send a duplicate of this proposal to Bob Denemark, Political Science, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware USA 19716. Phone 302-451-2009. Fax: 302-831- 2828. Email: denemark@ravel.udel.edu. Scholars from outside North America who wish to request financial support should contact ISA Headquarters, 216 Herald R. Clark Building, Brigham Young University Provo, Utah, USA 84602 by October l, l994. Limited funds are available. See the ISA NEWSLETTER for details. -- ------------- Lorraine Eden Professor of International Affairs The Norman Paterson School of International Affairs Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6 CANADA Phone 613-788-2600x6661 Fax 613-788-2889 Email leden@ccs.carleton.ca From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:BSILVER@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Sat Apr 16 16:51:15 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id QAA10627 for ; Sat, 16 Apr 1994 16:51:14 -0600 Message-Id: <199404162251.QAA10627@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 1606; Sat, 16 Apr 94 18:52:40 EDT Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin BSILVER@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1605; Sat, 16 Apr 1994 18:52:39 -0400 Date: Sat, 16 Apr 94 18:45:38 EDT From: BSILVER@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU To: wsn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU PEWS SECTION DISSERTATION AWARD--SUBMISSION DEADLINE--MAY 15, 1994 The Political Economy of the World System section of the American Sociological Association invites nominations for the first PEWS section dissertation award. The prize is intended to recognize important contributions to the development of world-systems studies by graduate students. Dissertations completed during either 1992-1993 or 1993-1994 academic years are eligible for consideration. Dissertations should normally be nominated by the student's advisor or the scholar most familiar with the student's research. Nomination letters should detail the nature and the merits of the work. Members of the 1994 award committee are Beverly J. Silver (chair), Johns Hopkins University, Walter Goldfrank, University of California at Santa Cruz, and William Martin, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Letters of nomination, dissertation abstracts and one copy of the dissertation should be sent to Beverly Silver, Sociology Department, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD 21218. Additional copies of the dissertation may be requested at a later date. The deadline for nominations is May 15, 1994. E-mail contact: BSILVER@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU From leden@ccs.carleton.ca Sun Apr 17 13:12:16 1994 Received: from alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (alfred.ccs.carleton.ca [134.117.1.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id NAA17108; Sun, 17 Apr 1994 13:12:13 -0600 Received: from superior.YP.nobel (superior.ccs.carleton.ca) by alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (4.1/SMI-4.0) id AA02823; Sun, 17 Apr 94 15:12:11 EDT From: leden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) Received: by superior.YP.nobel (4.1/Sun-Client) id AA11734; Sun, 17 Apr 94 15:09:57 EDT Message-Id: <9404171909.AA11734@superior.YP.nobel> Subject: email address for the Australian Journal of Intl Affairs To: ipe@csf.colorado.edu (IPEnet), wsn@csf.colorado.edu (World Historical Systems Network), pew@mach1.wlu.ca (Pewnet) Date: Sun, 17 Apr 94 15:09:56 EDT Cc: Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11] Would anyone happen to know whether or not the editors at THE AUSTRALIAN JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS have an email address? Much appreciated. Lorraine Eden [the editor is James Cotton] -- ------------- Lorraine Eden Professor of International Affairs The Norman Paterson School of International Affairs Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6 CANADA Phone 613-788-2600x6661 Fax 613-788-2889 Email leden@ccs.carleton.ca From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Tue Apr 19 03:37:06 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id DAA05675 for ; Tue, 19 Apr 1994 03:37:05 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404190937.DAA05675@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 0833; Tue, 19 Apr 94 05:38:27 EDT Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 0832; Tue, 19 Apr 1994 05:38:27 -0400 Resent-Date: Tue, 19 Apr 94 05:35:13 EDT Resent-From: CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Resent-To: comrades Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 8640; Mon, 18 Apr 1994 19:16:59 -0400 Received: from csf.Colorado.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Mon, 18 Apr 94 19:16:57 EDT Received: from (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id RAA00725; Mon, 18 Apr 1994 17:10:29 -0600 Date: Mon, 18 Apr 1994 17:10:29 -0600 Message-Id: <59108CE32000E681@fpsp.fapesp.br> Errors-To: lgonick@mach1.wlu.ca Reply-To: ipe@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Originator: ipe@csf.colorado.edu Sender: ipe@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Precedence: bulk From: IFBEM@fpsp.fapesp.br To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Braudel Papers via Gopher X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas X-Comment: INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY tHIS WILL MAKE YOU BLINK. It appears the Jeffrey Sachs (world famous in Poland) has stolen our ancestor and has a leg up on internet access. Can we sue? chriscd ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- Please forward: ======================================= *BRAUDEL PAPERS AVAILABLE VIA H-LATAM GOPHER ======================================= *Braudel Papers*, the bi-monthly publication of research and opinion of the Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics in Sao Paulo, Brazil, is now available in English editions via the H-Latam gopher system. Each issue of *Braudel Papers* contains a major essay and related commentary. Recent issues, now available through the H-Latam gopher, include: No. 1- "Politics and Markets." A dialogue on economic reform in Brazil and Russia between Professor JEFFREY SACHS, a founding member of the Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics, and NORMAN GALL, the Institute's executive director and editor of *Braudel Papers*. No. 2-"Brazilian Federalism and Inflation." Features an article by Professor ASPASIA CAMARGO, president of IPEA (the Brazilian government's economic research institute), drawn from a book written for the Fernand Braudel Institute on structural imbalances in Brazil's political system. Other contributors include MAILSON DE NOBREGA, former Brazilian Finance Minister, and JUAN DE ONIS, Latin American correspondent for the New York Times. No.3-"The Brazilian Concept of Money." This issue, which investigates the fiscal and monetary policies which have led to the present inflationary crisis, features work by Professor CELSO MARTONE, as well as Professor THOMAS SARGENT's "Letter to Another Brazilian Finance Minister." ------------------------------------------------------ TO CONNECT TO *BRAUDEL PAPERS* ON H-LATAM: 1.-Telnet to the gopher site nearest to you. Suggestions: Australia: info.anu.edu.au Colombia: tolten.puc.cl Ecuador: ecnet.ec Sweden: gopher.chalmers.se U.S.A.: consultant.micro.umn.edu U.S.A.: ux1.cso.uiuc.edu (login: gopher) U.S.A.: panda.uiowa.edu (login: panda) 2.-At the login prompt type gopher (unless specified otherwise) and the top-level Gopher menu for that site will be displayed. 3.-Go to Other Sites: North America: United States: Illinois: University of Illinois--Chicago: The Researcher: History: H-net: H-Latam. 4.-For those who have trouble getting through, try telnetting directly to the University of Illinois at Chicago (ux1.cso.uiuc.edu). ------------------------------------------------------ The index of available texts will be updated with each new edition. Hard copies of *Braudel Papers* are available by subscription through the Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics. For further information about the Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics or *Braudel Papers*, please contact: Matthew Taylor, Coordinator Fernand Braudel Institute of World Economics Rua Ceara 2 * 01243-010 Higienopolis * Sao Paulo, Brazil Phone: (55-11)824-9633 * Fax:(55-11)825-2637 Email: IFBEM@FPSP.FAPESP.BR From leden@ccs.carleton.ca Tue Apr 19 06:05:21 1994 Received: from alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (alfred.ccs.carleton.ca [134.117.1.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id GAA06325; Tue, 19 Apr 1994 06:05:15 -0600 Received: from superior.YP.nobel (superior.ccs.carleton.ca) by alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (4.1/SMI-4.0) id AA28971; Tue, 19 Apr 94 08:04:13 EDT From: leden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) Received: by superior.YP.nobel (4.1/Sun-Client) id AA05551; Tue, 19 Apr 94 08:01:57 EDT Message-Id: <9404191201.AA05551@superior.YP.nobel> Subject: IPE President's Report on 1994 ISA Meetings To: ipe@csf.colorado.edu (IPEnet), wsn@csf.colorado.edu (World Historical Systems Network), Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden), vicki_golich@csusm.edu (Vicki Golich), goddardr@mhs.t-bird.edu (Roe Goddard), denemark@strauss.udel.edu (Bob Denemark) Date: Tue, 19 Apr 94 8:01:57 EDT Cc: Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden), isaconf@ukanvm.cc.ukans.edu (1995 ISA Conference Program Chairs), isa@byu.edu (ISA Executive Headquarters), tgurr@bss2.umd.edu (Ted Gurr) X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11] THE INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY SECTION OF THE INTERNATIONAL STUDIES ASSOCIATION (IPE/ISA) ============================================================ From: Lorraine Eden, President and Section Chair, IPE/ISA School of International Affairs, Carleton University To: Members of the International Political Economy Section of the International Studies Association (IPE/ISA) Re: REPORT ON THE 1994 ANNUAL MEETING OF THE IPE SECTION Date: April 19, 1994 ============================================================ 1. BRIEF REPORT ON THE 1994 IPE/ISA MEETINGS The 1994 annual meetings of the International Studies Association were held at the Washington Hilton on March 28-April 1. The ISA has over 2,800 members from more than 60 countries. More than 1,300 people from just under 50 countries held a formal role on this year's program. There were 292 sessions in total, 80 percent of which were sponsored by individual sections of ISA. The IPE section sponsored 44 sessions, one-fifth of all the sessions sponsored by the various sections of ISA. IPE, with 723 members as of the conference, has just surpassed the International Security Studies section and is now the largest single section of ISA. The IPE Junior Scholar this year was Janet Cherry from Rhodes University, South Africa. She presented a paper on "Civil Society, Ethnicity, and Political Participation in South Africa: The Eastern Cape - 1980 to Present". I would like to thank the members of the Junior Scholar committee (Tim Shaw at Dalhousie University and Lev Gonick at Wilfrid Laurier University) for their efforts. The IPE Eminent Scholar was Raymond Vernon of the Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, honoured for his work on multinational enterprises in the global political economy. The panel was chaired by Lorraine Eden (Carleton). Panel participants were Joseph Nye (National Intelligence Council), Theodore Moran (State Department), Bob Kudrle (Minnesota), Stephen Kobrin (Pennsylvania) and Ray Vernon (Harvard). THE REVIEW OF INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY (RIPE), the new journal sponsored by IPE/ISA, was launched in Washington at the ISA meetings. The first issue is complimentary to IPE members, by writing to: The Editors, RIPE, University of Newcastle, Room 458, Claremont Bridge, Newcastle upon Tyne, NE1 7RU, England, UK. RIPE can be contacted through Lynn Craig at the email address: l.m.craig@newcastle.ac.uk. ISA members can purchase a year's subscription to RIPE for $US 35.00, compared to the regular price of $US 60.00, with similar savings in pound sterling. David Rapkin and William Avery, University of Nebraska, are completing their terms as IPE YEARBOOK editors. Volume 8 on Competitiveness will be released shortly. On behalf of the IPE section, I would like to thank Professors Rapkin and Avery for their outstanding work as editors of the IPE YEARBOOK. Three proposals were submitted for editorship of the next volume of the IPE YEARBOOK. I would like to thank all teams for their submissions. The next editorial team is a group of four faculty members: Mary Ann Tetrault, International Studies, Old Dominion University; Bob Denemark and Kurt Burch, Political Science, University of Delaware; and Kenny Thomas, Political Science, University of Missouri at St. Louis. II. MEMBERS OF THE 1994-95 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Ken Stiles (Political Science, Loyola University-Chicago) retired this year after a two-year term as IPE President and Section Chair. Mark Denham (Political Science, University of Toledo) is also retiring after a three-year term as editor of the IPE NEWSLETTER. On behalf of the association, I would like to thank them both for their active stewardship and commitment. The following people were elected to, or continue in their, IPE section offices. (I am delighted to note the diversity of disciplines -- e.g. economics, international business, international affairs/studies, political science, sociology -- on the executive committee and involved in the IPE section). PRESIDENT AND SECTION CHAIR (1994-96) Lorraine Eden, School of International Affairs, Carleton University, Canada. VICE PRESIDENT (1994-96) Vicki Golich, Political Science, California State University - San Marcos, USA. PAST PRESIDENT (1994-96) Ken Stiles, Political Science, Loyola University - Chicago, USA SECRETARY AND IPE NEWSLETTER EDITOR (1994-96) Roe Goddard, International Studies, THUNDERBIRD, The American Graduate School of International Management, USA. IPE GOVERNING COUNCIL MEMBERS (1993-95) Kurt Burch, Political Science, University of Delaware, USA. Dimitris Stevis, Political Science, Colorado State University, USA. (1994-96) Lev Gonick, Political Science, Wilfrid Laurier University, Canada. Marianne Marchand, University of Amsterdam, Netherlands. Kenny Thomas, Political Science, University of Missouri at St. Louis, USA. SENIOR/JUNIOR SCHOLAR SELECTION COMMITTEE (1994-95) Vicki Golich, University of California at San Marcos, USA (Chair) Philip Cerny, Political Science, University of York, UK. Renee Marlin-Bennett, School of International Service, The American University, USA. Roger Tooze, International Studies, Nottingham Trent University, UK. WORLD HISTORICAL SYSTEMS SUB-SECTION CHAIR Bob Denemark, Political Science, University of Delaware, USA. III. OTHER INFORMATION ABOUT THE IPE SECTION a) THE IPE NEWSLETTER The IPE NEWSLETTER has moved from the University of Toledo to THUNDERBIRD, as the editorship has shifted from Mark Denham to Roe Goddard. Individuals wishing to have items included in the IPE NEWSLETTER should direct them to: Roe Goddard, International Studies, THUNDERBIRD, The American Graduate School of International Management, Phoenix, Arizona, USA 85306. Phone 602-978-7181 Fax 602-439-9622 Email: goddardr@mhs.t-bird.edu b) ELECTRONIC NETWORKS There are two very active electronic mail networks which are sponsored by IPE/ISA (we have no financial responsibility): IPEnet, which is the general emailnet for IPE members, and WSnet, the email net for the World Historical Systems subsection of IPE. The following individuals are their systems operators (SYSOPs): IPE EMAIL NET (IPENET) SYSOP Lev Gonick, Political Science, Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3C5. Phone 519-884-1970 x3860 Fax 519-746-7908 Email IPEnet: ipe@csf.colorado.edu Email L. Gonick: lgonick@mach1.wlu.ca To subscribe to IPEnet send the following message: sub ipe Yourname to the email address: listserv@csf.colorado.edu. WORLD SYSTEMS EMAIL NET (WSNET) SYSOP Christopher Chase-Dunn, Sociology, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland USA 21218. Phone 301-338-7633 Fax 301-338-7590 Email WSnet: wsn@csf.colorado.edu Email C.Chase-Dunn: chriscd@jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu To subscribe to WSnet send the following message: sub wsn Yourname to the email address: listserv@csf.colorado.edu. c) SOCIETY OF WOMEN IN IPE (SWIPE) SWIPE had its luncheon meeting on Thursday, March 31, 1994, as part of the ISA Convention. The Co-chairs of SWIPE are: Christine Ingebritsen, Scandinavian Department, DL 20, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA 98195. Phone 206-543-0675 Fax 206-685-9173 Email: ingie@u.washington.edu Audie Klotz, Political Science, University of Illinois, 1007 W Harrison, Chicago, Illinois USA 60607-7137. Phone 312-996-3105. Email: u27903@uicvm.cc.uic.edu d) IPE CO-SPONSORSHIP OF REGION MEETINGS The IPE section is co-sponsoring the meetings of ISA-West Region, along with the Society of Women in IPE (SWIPE), to be held October 14-15, 1994, at the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. The ISA West president and conference organizer is Christine Ingebritsen (see address above). Please contact Christine directly and as soon as possible if you are interested in participating in this conference. IV. PLANNING FOR THE 1995 ISA ANNUAL CONFERENCE a) SUBMITTING PAPER AND PANEL PROPOSALS The IPE section was very actively involved in the 1994 conference program; in fact, it sponsored the second largest number of sessions (44). I expect the numbers will be similar in 1995. Therefore it is critical that proposals for papers and panels to be sponsored by the IPE section be submitted early and be well prepared. THE FORMAT FOR SUBMITTING PAPER AND PANEL PROPOSALS FOLLOWS IN A SEPARATE FILE. The next annual meetings of the International Studies Association will be held in Chicago, February 22-26, 1995. The 1994-95 ISA President is Ted Gurr, Political Science, University of Maryland. The general theme of the 1995 conference is BEYOND SOVEREIGNTY: CHALLENGES AND RESPONSES IN A CHANGING WORLD. The DEADLINES for paper and panel submissions are: June 1 - deadline for receipt of individual paper AND panel proposals under the GENERAL THEME by ISA Program Co-Chairs. Mail proposals to: Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt, ISA Program Co-Chairs, Department of Political Science, 504 Blake Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas USA 66045. Phone (before May 15): 913-864-3523 Phone (after May 15): 913-864-3654 Fax: 913-864-5208 Email: isaconf@ukanvm.cc.ukans.edu July 1 - deadline for receipt of individual paper AND panel proposals for potential sponsorship by the IPE section of ISA. Mail proposals to: Lorraine Eden, IPE President and Section Chair, School of International Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1S 5B6. Phone 613-788-2600x6661 (office) or 613-788-6655 (dept) Email leden@ccs.carleton.ca August 10 - deadline for SECTION CHAIRS to submit section- sponsored panels to the ISA PROGRAM CO-CHAIRS (e.g. by this date I will have put together the IPE-sponsored panels and submitted them to Deborah Gerner and Philip Schrodt) b) THE EMINENT AND JUNIOR SCHOLARS We need nominations for the IPE Junior Scholar and the IPE Eminent/Senior Scholar as soon as possible. In the case of the Junior Scholar we are looking for a good, young scholar from a developing country who wants to give an IPE paper but who would find it difficult to afford the costs of attending the ISA meetings. In the case of the Senior Scholar we are looking for an individual who has made a important and sustained contribution to the field of IPE, and who is still active in the field. In this case, the nominator is responsible for organizing a panel in honour of the Scholar, so the proposal should include the names of persons who might be willing to participate on the panel. Please send your suggestions to: Vicki Golich, Vice President and SS/JS Committee Chair, Department of Political Science, California State University- San Marcos, San Marcos, California, USA 92096-0001. Phone 619- 752-4144 Fax 619-752-4111. Email: vicki_golich@csusm.edu. c) LINKS WITH THE INTERNATIONAL SECURITY STUDIES SECTION Jose Ciprut (a member of ISSS and IPE) is interested in forming standing working groups on the interface between security and economics where national defense and IPE most highly correlate. He would like to help organize jointly sponsored IPE-ISSS panels for the 1995 meetings, possibly around topics such as: Development Economics and Security; National Security and Economic Externalities; National Security and IPE: Approaches, Methods, Models and Techniques; National Security-Economic Security: Redefining Security in the 1990s. Please contact him at 215-898- 2648, fax: 215-898-4477. d) HOW TO JOIN IPE/ISA IF YOU ARE NOT A MEMBER If you are not a member, please consider joining the association. ISA membership varies by the individual's income and ranges from $25.00 (incomes below $20,000) to $65.00 per year (incomes above $50,000). Student memberships are $20.00. ISA membership includes a one-year subscription to INTERNATIONAL STUDIES QUARTERLY, INTERNATIONAL STUDIES NOTES and the MERSHON INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW. Membership in the IPE section is an additional $5.00 for an individual and $3.00 for a student, and includes all of the above publications plus the IPE NEWSLETTER. Membership inquiries should be directed to: ISA Headquarters, 216 Herald R. Clark Building, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah USA 84602 (email: isa@byu.edu). (All figures are in U.S. dollars.) In conclusion, I look forward to your paper and panel proposals for the 1995 annual meetings, and to working with you to improve and expand the IPE section of the ISA. Best wishes, Lorraine Eden, IPE President and Section Chair -- ------------- Lorraine Eden Professor of International Affairs The Norman Paterson School of International Affairs Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6 CANADA Phone 613-788-2600x6661 Fax 613-788-2889 Email leden@ccs.carleton.ca From leden@ccs.carleton.ca Tue Apr 19 06:07:24 1994 Received: from alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (alfred.ccs.carleton.ca [134.117.1.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id GAA06380; Tue, 19 Apr 1994 06:07:22 -0600 Received: from superior.YP.nobel (superior.ccs.carleton.ca) by alfred.ccs.carleton.ca (4.1/SMI-4.0) id AA29172; Tue, 19 Apr 94 08:07:05 EDT From: leden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) Received: by superior.YP.nobel (4.1/Sun-Client) id AA05582; Tue, 19 Apr 94 08:04:49 EDT Message-Id: <9404191204.AA05582@superior.YP.nobel> Subject: Useful Email Addresses: the IPE Executive Committee To: Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden), vicki_golich@csusm.edu (Vicki Golich), goddardr@mhs.t-bird.edu (Roe Goddard), denemark@strauss.udel.edu (Bob Denemark), ipe@csf.colorado.edu (IPEnet), wsn@csf.colorado.edu (World Historical Systems Network), isaconf@ukanvm.cc.ukans.edu (1995 ISA Conference Program Chairs), isa@byu.edu (ISA Executive Headquarters), tgurr@bss2.umd.edu (Ted Gurr) Date: Tue, 19 Apr 94 8:04:49 EDT Cc: Lorraine_Eden@ccs.carleton.ca (Lorraine Eden) X-Mailer: ELM [version 2.3 PL11] From: Lorraine Eden, President and Section Chair, IPE/ISA School of International Affairs, Carleton University To: Members of the International Political Economy Section of the International Studies Association (IPE/ISA) RE: USEFUL EMAIL ADDRESSES Date: April 19, 1994 ------------------------------ In order to run the IPE section of the International Studies Association more effectively over the next two years, we have put together a small electronic email network, called IPEexec. I thought you might a list of the members of this net and their email addresses useful in terms of contacting individuals re IPE section activities. If you want a general message to go out to this group, you should email it to one of the individuals on IPEexec who will forward it to the whole net. Best wishes, Lorraine Eden ------------------------------- EMAIL ADDRESSES FOR INTERNATIONAL POLITICAL ECONOMY EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Lorraine Eden (President) leden@ccs.carleton.ca Vicki Golich (Vice President, Chair of Senior/Junior Scholar Committee) vicki_golich@csusm.edu Ken Stiles (Past President) Roe Goddard (Secretary, IPE NEWSLETTER Editor) goddardr@mhs.t-bird.edu Kurt Burch (IPE Governing Council) kurt@bach.udel.edu Dimitris Stevis (IPE Governing Council) dstevis@vines.colostate.edu Lev Gonick (IPE Governing Council, IPEnet SYSOP) lgonick@mach1.wlu.ca Marianne Marchand (IPE Governing Council) mmarchand@sara.nl Kenny Thomas (IPE Governing Council) skpthom@umslvma.umsl.edu Philip Cerny (Senior/Junior Scholar Committee) pgc3@tower.york.ac.uk Renee Marlin-Bennett (Senior/Junior Scholar Committee) rmarlin@american.edu Roger Tooze (Senior/Junior Scholar Committee) ins3toozeri@nottingham-trent.ac.uk Bob Denemark (Chair, World Historical Systems Sub-section) denemark@ravel.udel.edu Christopher Chase-Dunn (WSnet SYSOP) chriscd@jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu Christine Ingebritsen (SWIPE Co-chair, President of ISA West) ingie@u.washington.edu Audie Klotz (SWIPE Co-chair) u27903@uicvm.cc.uic.edu Ronen Palan (RIPE Co-editor) r.p.palan@newcastle.ac.uk Lynne Rienner (Publisher, IPE YEARBOOK) lcr@rienner.com Mark Denham (IPE Executive, Member at Large) fac3148@uoft01.utoledo.edu --------------------------------------------- OTHER USEFUL ISA EMAIL ADDRESSES FOR REFERENCE (These individuals are not on IPEexec) Deborah Gerner and Phil Schrodt (ISA 1995 Program Co-chairs) isaconf@ukanvm.cc.ukans.edu Ted Gurr (ISA 1995 President) tgurr@bss2.umd.edu Lou Pollister and Ladd Hollist (ISA Headquarters) isa@byu.edu -- ------------- Lorraine Eden Professor of International Affairs The Norman Paterson School of International Affairs Carleton University 1125 Colonel By Drive Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6 CANADA Phone 613-788-2600x6661 Fax 613-788-2889 Email leden@ccs.carleton.ca From HALLER@vms.cis.pitt.edu Tue Apr 19 09:26:34 1994 Received: from VM2.CIS.PITT.EDU (vm2.cis.pitt.edu [136.142.186.12]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with ESMTP id JAA08585 for ; Tue, 19 Apr 1994 09:26:33 -0600 From: HALLER@vms.cis.pitt.edu Received: from vms.cis.pitt.edu by vms.cis.pitt.edu (PMDF V4.2-14 #4065) id <01HBCU3I55LUD7PPKS@vms.cis.pitt.edu>; Tue, 19 Apr 1994 11:26:21 EST Date: Tue, 19 Apr 1994 11:26:21 -0500 (EST) Subject: Sachs, Braudel, and Brazil To: wsn@csf.colorado.edu Message-id: <01HBCU3I56JOD7PPKS@vms.cis.pitt.edu> X-Envelope-to: wsn@csf.colorado.edu X-VMS-To: IN%"wsn@csf.colorado.edu" MIME-version: 1.0 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT Hi Folks, Regarding Sachs and Braudel, I think it is not so very weird that Jeffrey Sachs should know something about Braudel and participate in meetings at a Braudel Institute in Sao Paulo. If I remember right, Sachs was doing his thing in (or should I say to?) Latin American countries before skipping off to Poland to enlighten the Poles as to the true nature of their fundamental difficulties. Also, I remember seeing a piece by Sachs where he made some reference to Alejandro Portes's work and also to dependency theory. If I'm not mistaken, that was in a PEWS newsletter a couple of years ago. The two things that concern me most about that forwarded message are the following: 1) it should be obvious what this globetrotting Smokie the Bear of hyper- inflation is up to in Brazil and if the Brazilian political elites want his meat-axe solutions applied in their country, then be on the lookout for a big wave of a heightened rate of infant mortality (those of you who know the ins and outs of Charles Woods work will know exactly what I mean) in Brazil if the Brazilians take him up on it successfully; 2) Sach's familiarity with the dependency and world systems' schools underline to me that even though what you know is important, knowledge and additional knowledge in and of itself does not necessarily compel people to examine or reexamine critically their convictions -- even when the action they encourage others to take on the basis of those convictions may carry serious consequences for those whose voices are never heard in the policy-making arenas because they're faced with the daily challenges of just trying to survive; so, why should Sachs educate himself on the ins and outs of the dependency and world-systems schools? I guess what I think about that should be obvious and since I'm due up at the office soon, I'll cut this commentary on Sachs and his "tough-love" solutions for people he'll never see, much less know, off now. Thanks for your indulgence and understanding, Bill Haller From MJL1@NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.EDU Tue Apr 26 12:32:10 1994 Received: from NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.EDU (nauvax.ucc.nau.edu [134.114.96.4]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with ESMTP id MAA07777; Tue, 26 Apr 1994 12:32:08 -0600 From: MJL1@NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.EDU Received: from NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.EDU by NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.EDU (PMDF V4.2-12 #2384) id <01HBMO236TUO005Z4A@NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.EDU>; Tue, 26 Apr 1994 11:31:54 MST Date: Tue, 26 Apr 1994 11:31:54 -0700 (MST) Subject: Symposium: Call for Papers To: isafp@csf.colorado.edu, ipe@csf.colorado.edu, trade@csf.colorado.edu, pkt@csf.colorado.edu, wsn@csf.colorado.edu Message-id: <01HBMO2373HU005Z4A@NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.EDU> X-VMS-To: @MLCSF.;2 MIME-version: 1.0 Content-transfer-encoding: 7BIT > > CALL FOR PAPERS > >"EXPLORING THE CHALLENGES OF CONFLICT: ISSUES AND ALTERNATIVES IN THE 20TH >CENTURY WORLD" > >AN INTERDISCIPLINARY GRADUATE STUDENT/FACULTY SYMPOSIUM >Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ >November 4-5, 1994 > >The theme of the fourth annual NAU Graduate Student Interdisciplinary >Symposium (GSIS) is CONFLICT IN THE 20TH CENTURY. GSIS organizers invite >graduate students and faculty to attend and to submit abstracts of papers you >would like to present at this year's symposium. > >possible topic areas include, but are not limited to: > >Conflict and Community in Urban Areas >Violence and Non-violence as Means of Social Change >Power Relations: Social, Economic, and/or Political >Environmental Conflict >"Legitimate" Violence: Language, Institutions, and/or War >Gender Conflict >Technologies for Violent and Non-violent Uses >Crime and Societies Response to Crime >Racial and Ethnic Identities and Conflict >International Conflict >Conflict as Witnessed in Art, Music, or Literature > >THE DEADLINE FOR ABSTRACTS IS AUGUST 1, 1994 > >Please send abstracts and requests for additional information on the symposium >to: Matt Lindstrom, Co-Chair, GSIS > Department of Political Science, NAU Box 15036 > Flagstaff, AZ 86011 > (602) 779-5695 > Email: MJL1@NAUVAX.UCC.NAU.ECU > >THANKS, MATT From @JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU:CHRISCD@JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU Wed Apr 27 05:00:28 1994 Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (jhuvm.hcf.jhu.edu [128.220.2.2]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id FAA12678 for ; Wed, 27 Apr 1994 05:00:26 -0600 Resent-Message-Id: <199404271100.FAA12678@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with BSMTP id 5028; Wed, 27 Apr 94 07:00:22 EDT Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin CHRISCD@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 5027; Wed, 27 Apr 1994 07:00:22 -0400 Resent-Date: Wed, 27 Apr 94 07:00:06 EDT Resent-From: CHRIS CHASE-DUNN Resent-To: wsn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Received: from JHUVM (NJE origin JHUSMTP2@JHUVM) by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (LMail V1.1d/1.7f) with BSMTP id 1295; Sat, 23 Apr 1994 16:42:17 -0400 Received: from csf.Colorado.EDU by JHUVM.HCF.JHU.EDU (IBM VM SMTP V2R2) with TCP; Sat, 23 Apr 94 16:42:15 EDT Received: from (localhost [127.0.0.1]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id OAA01056; Sat, 23 Apr 1994 14:40:00 -0600 Date: Sat, 23 Apr 1994 14:40:00 -0600 Message-Id: <199404232038.NAA21135@igc.apc.org> Errors-To: gimenez_m@gold.colorado.edu Reply-To: pravolidu@igc.apc.org Originator: psn@csf.colorado.edu Sender: psn@CSF.COLORADO.EDU Precedence: bulk From: Fund for New Priorities in America To: Multiple recipients of list Subject: Job Opening in D.C. X-Listprocessor-Version: 6.0 -- ListProcessor by Anastasios Kotsikonas X-Comment: PROGRESSIVE SOCIOLOGISTS NETWORK ----------------------------Original message---------------------------- JOB ANNOUNCEMENT SCHOOL COORDINATOR The Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) and the Fund for New Priorities in America, two institutions dedicated to promoting progressive principles, policies and practice, are searching for a person to organize, direct and raise funds for the Social Action & Leadership School for Activists (SALSA). Classes of 15-25 activists from around the country will come to SALSA to learn organizing skills, to become familiar with leading issues in domestic and foreign policy, and to develop stronger working relationships with one another. Responsibilities include refining the program design, assembling an esteemed advisory board, hiring and evaluating teachers, putting together a pragmatic development schedule, and administering the program. Several months of seed money for SALSA has already been raised, but the coordinator will be responsible for raising an additional $100-200,000 per year. Applicants must have a proven track record for organizing and managing complex programs, preparing proposals and raising funds. They should also have the following: -- An academic background in education or practical experience in designing and teaching classes; -- an awareness of the special challenges facing adult and continuing education; -- a strong vision about how education can catalyze activism; -- a working knowledge of foreign affairs, economics, public policy and related fields; -- an ability to work well with others and to inspire the highest quality of work from others; -- the maturity to relate well to students and scholars of all ages and temperments; -- a long-standing commitment to progressive caucuses. SALARY: $40,000 per year DATE OF OPENING: June TO APPLY: Send cover letter, resume, writing sample (only short pieces, such as op-eds, please) and references to: SALSA Attention: Jessica Fishman c/o IPS 1601 Connecticut Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20009 (202) 234-9382 IPS is an equal opportunity, affirmative action employer. We especially welcome applications from women and people of color. ____________________________________________________________ I've posted this announcement to PSN on the assumption that some readers might be interested, or know likely candidates among their friends or former students, etc. Any PSNers with questions about the job, or about SALSA generally are welcome to send e-mail inquiries to me at: PRAVOLIDU@IGC.ORG Peace, Eric Fink Director, Fund for New Priorities in America From DKELLY@ucs.indiana.edu Wed Apr 27 15:57:10 1994 Received: from PO3.indiana.edu (PO3.Indiana.Edu [129.79.10.63]) by csf.Colorado.EDU (8.6.4/8.6.4/CNS-2.0) with SMTP id PAA23048 for ; Wed, 27 Apr 1994 15:55:58 -0600 Message-Id: <199404272155.PAA23048@csf.Colorado.EDU> Received: from LOCAL:.prism.DECnet by PO3.Indiana.EDU; id AA22482 (5.65c+jsm/2.5.1jsm); Wed, 27 Apr 1994 16:52:02 -0500 Date: Wed, 27 Apr 94 16:54:10 EST From: David Kelly X-To: WSN Subject: Address for Terry Boswell. To: wsn@csf.colorado.edu If anyone on the list knows Terry Boswell's e-mail address, presuming he has one, could they please send it to me at DKELLY@UCS.INDIANA.EDU ? Thanks in advance, David Kelly Department of Political Science Indiana University