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Programs & Activities
 
2008 Programs and Activities
 
On March 28, 2008 Charles E. Hugel '51, Retired Chairman, RJR Nabisco and Chief Executive, Combustion Engineering was a guest in Professor Mark Crain's "Industry, Strategy and Policy" class. Mr. Hugel discussed the legendary battle for control of RJR Nabisco, which stood for nearly a decade as the biggest business deal of all time. This episode is documented in the New York Times best seller Barbarians at the Gate: The Fall of RJR Nabisco, by Bryan Burrough and John Helyar. 
Click here for the audio cast of Charles Hugel's lecture
Click Here To Listen
Audio File Size:
 
Brad Weiss `10 and Erik Peterson discuss "The Seven Revolutions" lecture.
On February 7, Erik Peterson, Senior Vice President of the Center for Strategic & International Studies (CSIS), Washington, D.C., spoke on "The Seven Revolutions." CSIS serves as a strategic planning partner for the government by conducting research and analysis and developing policy initiatives that look into the future and anticipate change.

For more information, visit www.csis.org/gsi/seven_revolutions.

"I thought Erik Peterson's talk was fantastic. It was so interesting to see what the world is projected to be like in 2025. I have two little cousins who were born in 2004 and 2005 and I cannot even imagine what it would be like for them to see the 22nd century! I found the Seven Initiatives to be issues that me, and my peers, can relate to and I think his program was excellent."

-Marie Garofalo `10

"Erik Peterson's speech on the 7 Revolutions was incredibly thought-provoking. I think it is very important for our generation to be aware of the problems and challenges we will face in the future and be as proactive as possible to find solutions to them ASAP. The combination of Peterson's speech and his very well-done power point presentation got the point across better than any presentation I've ever seen before."

-Jacqueline Bonder `08

"I really enjoyed Erik Peterson as a speaker. He presented one of the best presentations that I have ever seen in substance and style. I'm glad we were able to host his lecture at Lafayette."

-Brad Weiss '10
 
2007 Programs and Activities
 

Professor Nicole Crain organized a field trip for Policy Studies and A.B. Engineering students to Washington, D.C. on Nov. 12-13.

Click here for the podcast of the field trip to Washington, D.C.
Click Here To Listen
Video File Size: 9.86 MB
 
New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Nicholas Kristof lectures on the "Genocide in Darfur".
The Board of Trustees resolved that Lafayette College would develop an educational program and other potential responses to heighten awareness among the College’s constituencies regarding the abhorrent violations of human rights committed by the Sudanese government within the Darfur region.  The Policy Studies Program took a leadership role in implementing the Trustee’s resolution through two events.  The first was a lecture by Nicholas Kristof, the renowned author and columnist for The New York Times.  Mr. Kristof’s lecture was held in Colton Chapel on Thursday, November 8 which over 500 students, faculty and community attended.

Nicholas Kristof talks with students during the booksigning reception that followed his lecture on Genocide in Darfur.

 
Click here for the audiocast of Nicholas Kristof discussing the "Genocide in Darfur."
Click Here To Listen
Audio File Size: 58.34 MB
Click here for the "Speak Out Against Darfur " video.
Click Here To Listen
Video File Size: 18.05 MB
Click here for the slideshow from the Nicholas Kristof lecture.
Click Here To Listen
The"Speak Out Against Darfur" video can also be viewed from the front of Amnesty International's Student Activism page.
 
"Visions of the Energy Future"
Click here for a video, podcast and photographs from the conference.
 

Former President of El Salvador, Francisco Flores Lectures
"Making Small Nations Great through the Principles of Freedom"

On September 17, the former president of El Salvador, spoke before an audience of over 400 people in William Center for the Arts. His lecture, "Making Small Nations Great through the Principles of Freedom," focused on the economic and social policies he instituted to change El Salvador from a country identified with poverty and violence to an example of steady growth and human development. The event was sponsored by the Policy Studies Program and the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of the Lehigh Valley.
Click for audiocast featuring
President Francisco Flores.
Click Here To Listen
Video File Size: 26.89 MB
Click here to view the slideshow from the lecture.
Click Here To Listen
Click here for general background information on El Salvador.
Former President of El Salvador Speaks at Lafayette.
 
Desk of a President

During the summer of 2007, Matthew Weiss ’07 traced the history of the JFK desk’s ownership and authenticated its historical significance at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston and through oral histories in the Washington, D.C., area. Now in his first year at Brooklyn Law School, he graduated from Lafayette summa cum laude with majors in economics & business and government & law.

Tom Feehan ’79 and his wife, Cecilia, of Hyattsville, Md., own the JFK desk. They are restoring it with plans to donate it to the policy studies program in memory of Cecilia’s mother, Jeannie Brickerd.

Matthew Weiss '07 at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston, Massachusetts.
Campaign 1960: The JFK desk at Kennedy for President Headquarters in the Democratic National Committee offices. Pictured with Robert F. Kennedy, JFK's campaign manager, are Angela Novello, Robert Kennedy's secretary, and Novello's uncle.
 
Click here for the "Desk of a President " podcast created by Carolyn Romney '08.
Click Here To Listen
File Size: 27.0 MB
 

Author and Washington Post Reporter Juliet Eilperin Lectures
“The Battle over Planet Earth: Environmental Policy in an Era of Political Polarization"

 

On the evening of April 4th approximately 100 students and faculty gathered in Kirby Hall of Civil Rights to attend a lecture by Juliet Eilperin, Washington Post reporter and author of "Fight Club Politics: How Partisanship is Poisoning the U.S. House of Representatives.”

Juliet Top

Co-sponsored by the Policy Studies Program and the Department of Economics and Business, the lecture addressed the politics of the environment in the U.S. Congress and the present barriers to enacting bi-partisan proposals.

Mark Crain, Simon Professor of Political Economy and chair of Policy Studies, believes Eilperin’s visit emphasized some of the most challenging issues facing today’s policy makers, and some of the obstacles to reaching any sort of political agreement.

Mark for Juliet 2

“Climate change and environmental quality are two hotly-debated and important issues, and Ms. Eilperin is a close observer of the latest proposals and the status of the political debate in Washington," says Crain. "For nearly a decade as a reporter for the Washington Post,she has covered theUnited StatesHouse of Representatives and the environment for the national desk, reporting on science, policy, and politics.

“The purpose of bringing prominent speakers like Ms. Eilperin to Lafayette is threefold. Specifically, I want to heighten awareness of the most important issues of our time: in this case, the environment and climate change. Second, I think students need to ask whether the U.S. legislative process is capable of solving monumentally important problems, and if it cannot, they should think about what structural reforms are needed. Third, Ms. Eilperin’s career in journalism provides a fascinating example for students who are looking for professions in which they can apply their interest in politics.”

Crain sees Eilperin’s work as a positive example of how students can successfully combine knowledge from different disciplines.

“Policy Studies is an interdisciplinary major, and Ms. Eilperin’s work provides an excellent illustration of how to combine scientific knowledge with knowledge of the political process, and why integration of separate fields is important to understanding and solving crucial issues,” he says.
Juliet 1

Eilperin graduated magna cum laude from Princeton University in 1992, where she received a bachelor’s degree in politics with a certificate in Latin American studies. In the fall of 1992, she went to Seoul, South Korea on a Luce Scholarship, which allowed her to cover politics and economics for an English-language magazine. Upon returning to Washington, Eilperin wrote for Louisiana and Florida newspapers at States News Service and then joined Roll Call newspaper in 1994. In March 1998, she joined the Washington Post as its House of Representatives reporter, where she covered the impeachment of Bill Clinton, lobbying, legislation, and four national congressional campaigns.

Since April 2004, Eilperin has covered the environment for the national desk, reporting on science, policy, and politics in areas including climate changes, oceans, and air quality. In pursuit of these stories, she has gone scuba diving with sharks in the Bahamas, trekking on the Arctic tundra, and searching for rare insects in the caves of Tennessee.

Juliet 2
During her first year at the Washington Post, Eilperin wrote over 200 stories, making her the most prolific writer on the news staff. In spring 2005, she served as the McGraw Professor of Journalism at Princeton University, teaching political reporting to undergraduate and graduate students.
Click for the podcast featuring Juliet Eilperin
Click Here To Listen
Video File Size: 94.1 MB
 
Facing the Chinese Century: Prospects and Challenges

Scholars, journalists, and policy makers from around the globe lectured on campus March 1-2 as part of Lafayette’s “Facing the Chinese Century: Prospects and Challenges” conference.

Chinese Image 3

Hosted by the College’s new Policy Studies program, the conference focused on the transformation of China's cities, technological infrastructure, and culture industry, which has helped bring the country to the level of a significant modern power. It also explored the reasons why, regardless of its rising status in the world, China remains a mystery to many people. The goal of the conference was an attempt to demystify this dynamic country.

“China-related issues have not received the attention they deserve,” says Mark Crain, Chair of Policy Studies and Simon Professor of Political Economy. “We have this emerging giant that has become an economic, cultural, and military leader. It is hard to think of a more important on-going development, and we hope to elevate awareness among Lafayette students. Otherwise, they will miss out on critical challenges and opportunities.”

Two Policy Studies faculty affiliates, Paul Barclay, associate professor of history, and Nicole Crain, visiting professor of economics and business, contributed to planning the program and served as panel moderators.

The conference format consisted of five panels of world renowned experts on Chinese affairs speaking on topics ranging from East Asian security to China's demographic shifts.

“This conference reflected the broad depth of the Policy Studies program", says Crain. "It is becoming increasingly important to analyze policy from an interdisciplinary approach. Analyzing and understanding China, for example, rely on tools from history, economics, political science and law, and the sciences. This is exactly the approach embodied in the policy studies major. Lafayette is reaching across disciplines, pursuing the highest levels of academic excellence.”

From a global perspective, Crain hoped the conference showed potential faculty and students that the College is not only interested, but actively engaged, in what is happening in China and East Asia.

The conference’s opening lecture, “China’s Past: A Harbinger of Its Future?” was presented by Jonathan Spence, Sterling Professor of History at Yale University in Colton Chapel. Spence is a preeminent scholar of Chinese history, having published more than a dozen books on the subject.

Spence
Jonathan Spence, Sterling Professor of History at Yale University, signs his books.

Other speakers lectured and lead discussions throughout the second day of the conference. These included: Hu Zhaoming, counselor at the Chinese Embassy in the United States; Yoshihide Soeya, professor of political science and international relations at Keio University in Japan; John Pomfret, Los Angeles Bureau Chief for The Washington Post; and Susan Greenhalgh, professor of anthropology at the University of California, Irvine.

Susan Greenhalgh 2
Susan Greenhalgh, Professor of Anthropology at the University of California, Irvine, speaks on China's one child policy.

Edward Chen, President of Lingnan University in Hong Kong, and Cheng Li, William R. Kenan Professor of Government at Hamilton College and Nonresident Senior Fellow in the Foreign Policy Studies program at the Brookings Institution, served as panel moderators.

Edward Chen
The conference was made possible by a gift from J. Peter Simon ’75, Lafayette trustee. Marilyn Kann, reference librarian and conference coordinator, and Julie O’Brien, Policy Studies Administrative Assistant, were co-planners of the conference.
Click Here To Listen
Video File Size: 21.90 MB
 
2006 Programs and Activities
Click here for the official China Conference website
 
ENvision: Election Night Broadcast
From the announcement of open auditions for anchors, reporters, and commentators in early September (2006), the policy studies program, MBC Teleproductions of Allentown, and over 150 Lafayette students and faculty members began researching, writing, and producing the first live, student-run election night broadcast in Lafayette College history.
Election 181
 

On Tuesday, November 7 the ENvision broadcast came to life in the Pfenning Alumni Center with up-to-the-minute tracking of results and predictions as well as a series of pre-recorded segments focusing on such topics as voter turnout, immigration, and expected policy changes through interviews, original research and discussions with various experts.

Election 224
 

For over two hours, co-anchors Megan Zaroda ’07 of Easton, Pa., Jayne Miller ’10 of Bethel, Pa., and alumnus Jeffrey D. Robinson ’80 provided expert commentary while Meghan Baker ’07 of Medford, N.J., reported up-to-the-minute results.

ENvision was viewed over the College’s internal network, on the web site as a webcast, on RCN Channel 4, and on the new jumbo scoreboard at Fisher Field. To attract the attention of the students, the policy studies program and Holla Back hosted an election party on the patio outside the Wilson Room in Pfenning where students could watch the live broadcast. The event was intended to get students involved in the election process.

A review of the broadcast came unexpectedly from WPVI-TV Action News anchor
Jim Gardner. “I was blown away by the quality of the effort, its seriousness of purpose, the high level of political insight, the fine production values of the program, and the scope of the presentation.”

Click here for slideshow of Election Night Broadcast

 

“Can Foreign Aid End World Poverty?”
November 2006: William Easterly from New York University

Easterly
William Easterly, professor of economics at New York University, co-director of NYU’s Development Research Institute, and a faculty affiliate of Africa House at NYU,
presented a lecture in November, “Can Foreign Aid End World Poverty?” The event was co-sponsored with the Gladstone T. Whitman ’49 Fund and the policy studies program.

Easterly addressed how aid agencies have advocated a program of large aid increases, and how the recent wave of attention to “make poverty history” could be problematic. He also debated how effective past foreign aid has been toward creating economic development and eliminating poverty. He believes that, despite sharply contrasting
views on the effectiveness of foreign aid, there is a surprising degree of unanimity
that the aid system is deeply flawed and could be much improved.

Easterly is the author of numerous works including The Elusive Quest for Economic Growth. His most recent book, The White Man’s Burden: Why the West’s Efforts to Aid the
Rest Have Done So Much Ill and So Little Good,
wonthe 2006 People’s Choice Commitment
to Development Award sponsored by Foreign Policy magazine and the Center for
Global Development.
 

“America at the Crossroads”
October 2006: Francis Fukuyama from Johns Hopkins University

Francis F
Professor Crain and the policy studies program worked with the department of religious studies and other departments to arrange a lecture on October 25 by Francis Fukuyama, the Bernard L. Schwartz Professor of International Political Economy at Johns Hopkins University. Professor Fukuyama’s lecture in October 2006 shared its title with his most recent book, America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy. Throughout the book, he asserts that the war in Iraq failed and that the Bush administration misinterpreted the neoconservative political thought on which it relied. Fukuyama believes that the U.S. is now facing unintended consequences of the war and an opportunity to redefine American foreign policy.
Fukuyama is the author of several other important books, including The End of History and the Last Man.
 

“Time Discounting and the Brain”
September 2006: Samuel M. McClure from Princeton University

McClure

Samuel McClure from the Center for the Study of Brain, Mind, and Behavior at
Princeton University presented his lecture, “Time Discounting and the Brain,” as part
of a seminar co-sponsored by the policy studies program, the neuroscience program,
and the department of economics and business. Professor McClure is a major contributor to the emerging interdisciplinary field of neuroeconomics.

Neuroeconomics is an interdisciplinary research program with the goal of building
a biological model of decision making in economic environments. Neuroeconomists
study how the embodied brain enables the mind to make economic decisions.