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5/3/07
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Yale University Strengthens Contemporary Middle East Studies
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New Haven, Conn. — The
Council on Middle East Studies of the Whitney and Betty MacMillan Center for
International and Area Studies at Yale has
announced an initiative to promote richer understanding of contemporary issues
in the Middle East.
The initiative will complement Yale’s already
substantial offerings and resources in ancient, pre-modern and modern Middle
East Studies, and expand research and teaching on the Middle East and its
relations with the rest of the world. In the first three years of the
initiative, the Yale-Middle East Visiting Faculty Program, the keystone
component, will bring distinguished visiting scholars to teach courses and do
research on the region at Yale.

“In today’s changing world, it is more important
than ever to study the contemporary Middle East,” said Yale University President
Richard C. Levin. “This initiative will sharpen our understanding of the Middle
East and its diverse peoples, religions and cultures.”
The initiative will enhance interdisciplinary
teaching and research on the contemporary Middle East through the following
components:
- The Yale-Middle East Visiting Faculty component,
led by the current chair of the Council on Middle East Studies, Ellen
Lust-Okar, will bring together three visiting scholars each year, from
different disciplines and countries, whose research will focus on regional
issues with global implications. In addition to conducting research, the
visiting scholars will teach one course, participate in a year-long
multidisciplinary workshop on religion and politics and hold a final
conference in the Middle East. Two of three visiting scholars for 2007–2008
have been named. They are Shaul Mishal, professor of political science at Tel
Aviv University and an expert on Palestinian politics and Islamic
fundamentalism, and Farhad Khosrokhavar, professor of sociology at the Ecole
des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris. Khosrokhavar’s area of
expertise is Iran, Islam and the West. The third scholar is expected to be a
specialist on North African law and politics. In the next two years, this
component will focus on issues of global health and concerns of state
construction and consolidation.
- The Iranian Studies component will expand Yale’s
resources for the study of Iran and its neighbors, including a lecture series,
workshops, and support for an exchange of scholars, the expansion of the Yale
library’s Persian holdings and bibliographic resources and faculty and student
research projects. This component, which was launched in the fall of 2006 with
a monthly seminar series led by Yale Professor of History and Carnegie Scholar
Abbas Amanat, will gain momentum with a conference next fall on “Iranian
Identity Boundaries and Modern Political Culture.” Daryoush Ashouri, a
prominent Iranian author, translator, researcher and public intellectual, will
be visiting Yale in 2007, and Arang Keshavarzian, a researcher focusing on
Iranian politics, economic development, clergy-state relations and social
movements, will continue as a MacMillan Center Research Affiliate.
- The Turkish Studies component, supported by a
Federal Title VI grant as well as funding from Yale and external sources, is
expanding the University’s resources and programs focused on the language and
culture of Turkey. As part of this Initiative, the University will offer three
levels of Turkish language instruction, continue to run the successful Turkish
film series, revitalize the Friends of Turkey Association and develop other
programs like the outreach workshop on Turkey for K-12 teachers. The program
is bolstered by the recent inclusion of Bogazici University into the Fox
International Fellowship, which permits a robust exchange of scholars between
Yale and Turkey.
- The Public Health component, which brings together
Yale faculty and students from a range of departments and professional
schools, will expand work already underway on public health-related issues in
the Middle East, and other developing areas. Kaveh Khoshnood, Assistant
Professor of Epidemiology and Public Health, who has been spearheading this
effort, will lead a forum next year for Iraqi public health officials and
practitioners, Yale faculty, and international institutions to discuss
development of the Iraqi public health system. Also planned is a
multidisciplinary seminar on Health and Foreign Policy that will attract
graduate students in law, medicine, international relations, public health and
the social sciences.
- ERICE (Empowerment and Resilience in Children
Everywhere) is an international collaborative project aimed at improving the
lives of Israeli and Palestinian children. It includes Israelis, Palestinians,
Europeans and Americans, and is headed at Yale by James Leckman, the Neison
Harris Professor of Child Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, and Phyllis
Cohen, Associate Clinical Professor, Yale Child Study Center. Founded in 2004,
ERICE has among its goals the support of research on the prevalence and nature
of childhood disorders in this conflict region, the implementation of
treatment programs and the establishment of training and degree programs.
“The MacMillan Center is pleased to support the
initiative,” said Ian Shapiro, the Sterling Professor of Political Science and
Henry R. Luce Director of the MacMillan Center. “It dovetails with our ongoing
searches for faculty who focus on the contemporary Middle East, and we
anticipate that its activities will grow in both scope and depth in the near
future. The visiting faculty component has been funded for three years, and
other components have either received initial gifts or have good prospects, and
we will be exploring sustaining and permanent funding for these and new
components as they develop.”
“I am very pleased that the University and the
MacMillan Center have supported this multi-faceted initiative,” said Lust-Okar.
“The Council on Middle East Studies sees this as an excellent opportunity to
build upon existing accomplishments such as the teaching of all four of the
region’s major languages, the Title VI National Resource Center recognition, and
continuing resources such as the Libby Rouse fellowships for independent student
research, and to enhance the University’s ability to recruit scholars of the
Middle East.”
A new web site for the Council on Middle East
Studies, highlighting the launch of the initiative on the contemporary Middle
East, can be found at www.yale.edu/macmillan/cmes.
... Payvand News - 5/3/07 ...
... Payvand News - 5/3/07 ... --
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