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Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Russian Lecturer Position at the University of California, Riverside

POSITION ANNOUNCEMENT

Please Post


 


 

UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, RIVERSIDE


 

DEPARTMENT OF COMPARATIVE LITERATURE & FOREIGN LANGUAGES

RUSSIAN LECTURER POSITION

(Fall 2009)


 

The University of California, Riverside, invites applications for a lecturer position in Russian to teach for the Fall Quarter of 2009 (pending funding and final administrative approval). Candidates must have at least an M.A. degree in Russian, significant teaching experience at the college or university level, and a dynamic classroom presence. Duties include teaching two sections in advanced or beginning Russian (a 67% appointment). Salary per course is $4,766.96. The Fall Quarter begins September 21st and ends December 12th.


 

Please send cover letter, curriculum vitae, teaching evaluations, and two or three letters of recommendation.


 


 

Chair, Russian Search Committee

Department of Comparative Literature and Foreign Languages

University of California, Riverside

Riverside, California 92521


 

Review of applications will begin May 10, 2009; the position will remain open until filled.


 

The University of California, Riverside, is an AA/EOP employer.


 

SRAS Program Deadline: May 15, 2009

May 15 is the application deadline for Fall 2009 semester courses through SRAS. We offer many different programs in Russia, outlined below. If you are overwhelmed with all the options, please contact us and we will be happy to work with you to find the right program, or to help build your own customized option, at study@sras.org.


 

Program options:


 

Russian as a Second Language (RSL) - designed for flexibility to suit almost any need or lifestyle. Study for a week or a year. Choose the bustling streets of Moscow or the rugged hills of Kyrgyzstan. You can take advanced courses or start with the basics. With SRAS, it's all up to you.

Read more at http://www.sras.org/study_russian_abroad


 

Feature Study Abroad (FSA) - are full study abroad programs, with curricula and program length designed to facilitate credit transfer to your home institution. FSA programs include 1) a core curriculum of language training,

2) Optional customization features and 3) a study component specific to each university or city. Read more at http://www.sras.org/feature_study_in_russia


 

Internships - SRAS offers two types of internships. Our work study programs offer living stipends and discounted tuition. Custom placements are possible if you enroll in one of our base programs (such as RSL, FSA or Direct Enrollment). Custom placement internships are unpaid positions, but offer the student the ability to chose from much wider range of professional fields - read more at http://www.sras.org/internships_russia.


 

Direct Enrollment (Visiting Scholars, Degree, Language, Seminars) - With this form of enrollment, SRAS provides assistance with program and school selection and assists with application and enrollment procedures. In providing application and enrollment services, SRAS acts solely as an agent of the admissions office of SRAS Partner universities. Upon enrollment, you are a full member of the university community. There are several types of enrolment under this option - read more at http://www.sras.org/enrol_in_russian_universities


 

HOW TO APPLY: go to our site www.sras.org and click "login". After you register you will have access to our online application. If you encounter any troubles, let me know lhorner@sras.org and we will work them out :).


 

SRAS is an organization devoted to encouraging and facilitating study of, and travel to, Russia and the former USSR.


 

Source:

Lisa Horner

SRAS Student Relations

lhorner@sras.org

www.sras.org


 

Sunday, April 26, 2009

Studies in Russian and Soviet Cinema-New Issue

SRSC Issue 3.1 is now out.
http://www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journalissues.php?issn=17503132&v=3&i=1

Table of Contents
ARTICLES
Faktura: Depth and Surface in Early Soviet Set Design
Emma Widdis

Confronting the Holocaust: Mark Donskoi's The Unvanquished
Jeremy Hicks

Russian Animated Films of the 1960s as a Reflection of the Thaw: Ambiguities
and Violation of Boundaries in Story of a Crime
Laura Pontieri Hlavacek

SPECIAL FEATURE
Guest Editor: Denise J. Youngblood
Real Images: In Memory of Josephine Woll
(Reviews of Thaw films)

FILM SCRIPT
Bakur Bakuradze: Shultes

Monday, April 20, 2009

United States Department of Defense Reports in March 2009- Policies and Procedures for the Acquisition of Information Technology

United States Department of Defense Chemical and Biological Defense Program has released its latest report
2009 Annual Report to Congress
http://www.acq.osd.mil/cp/cbdreports/cbdpreporttocongress2009.pdf
Previous reports and related information is available at
http://www.acq.osd.mil/cp/cbd.html

The Defense Science Board (DSB) has posted several new reports and they
are available from their website  http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports.htm
or from the links below
Unconventional Operational Concepts and the Homeland http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports/2009-04-Unconventional.pdf
Operations Research Applications for Intelligence, Surveillance and
Reconnaissance (ISR)
http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports/2009-04-OR.pdf
Creating an Assured Joint DOD and Interagency Interoperable Net-Centric
Enterprise
http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports/2009-04-Interop.pdf
Department of Defense Policies and Procedures for the Acquisition of
Information Technology
http://www.acq.osd.mil/dsb/reports/2009-04-IT_Acquisition.pdf

Saturday, April 18, 2009

International MA in Russian and Eurasian Studies at European University at St. Petersburg

This is a unique opportunity to study Russian politics, history, culture and society in Russia itself in the medium of English.
This is the only fully-fledged program of this kind in the country. Eleven years of success.

Coming deadlines:

International MA in Russian and Eurasian Studies: 30 April 2009
IMARES http://www.eu.spb.ru/imares

Summer School in Russian Studies: 4 May 2009
http://www.eu.spb.ru/summer

NB: The University is also launching its new semester abroad program in
Russian Studies for advanced undergraduates in February 2010.
http://www.eu.spb.ru/semester

Source:
Dr. Sergey Erofeev (erofeev@eu.spb.ru)
Director of International Programs
European University at St. Petersburg
http://www.eu.spb.ru/international

Friday, April 17, 2009

Kinokultura- April 2009 Issue Released


Dear Colleagues,



Here is slightly belated announcement about the release of new issue of Kinokultura.



This is issue #24, and it contains extensive film reviews.

Politics of Torture? Or Information Extraction for the Common Good???


April 17, 2009



Dear Readers,


I am not in habit of passing my own personal viewpoints on Bush administration's interrogation techniques of those who were described as "enemy combatants" as this blog is dedicated to Slavic and Eastern European Studies. However, from time to time, I will take liberty to post for my readers any information that is officially released by our (i.e.) the United States administration for larger distribution for my overseas readers. As a naive information professional, I have learned to believe in social justice mandates as well as in transparency of information. But, then, my view are only limited due to limited information that is at hand. How do we then overcome information assymetry?? Any thoughts?



It is interesting to see how a state chooses to use certain techniques to justify its own existence and its own nature of reality while ignoring other state or non-state actors moments of truths? or falsehood.


Memos from the NY Times site



I have uploaded these memos for your consideration. For the humanity to make to make its own mind. It is not my place to pass the judgment on those who carried out the orders or those who refused to do it due to conscience. Let the time show the truth.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Mumiy Troll in Los Angeles



Dear Readers,



Just to let you know that the Mumiy Troll concert, originally scheduled as part of the UCLA Russian Winter Festival, will now take place on at the Roxy on Sunset, Wednesday, May 13, 2009



More details can be found here: http://theroxyonsunset.com/mumiy-troll-rescheduled-date/




Music and video can be streamed from MySpace




The band’s English language website is here

Friday, April 10, 2009

In Memoriam: Evgenii Vesnik

Новости@Mail.Ru10.04.2009

Ушел из жизни Евгений Весник

На 87-м году жизни скончался народный артист уже несуществующего Советского Союза Евгений Весник. Читать дальше

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

UNESCO, Library of Congress and partners launch World Digital Library

01-04-2009 (Paris)


 

UNESCO and 32 partner institutions will launch the World Digital Library, a web site that features unique cultural materials from libraries and archives from around the world, at UNESCO Headquarters on 21 April. The site will include manuscripts, maps, rare books, films, sound recordings, and prints and photographs. It will provide unrestricted public access, free of charge, to this material.


 

Mr Billington first proposed the creation of a World Digital Library (WDL) to UNESCO in 2005, remarking that such a project could "have the salutary effect of bringing people together by celebrating the depth and uniqueness of different cultures in a single global undertaking". In addition to promoting international understanding, the project aims to expand the volume and variety of cultural content on the Internet, provide resources for educators, scholars and general audiences, and narrow the digital divide within and between countries by building capacity in partner countries.


 

The WDL will function in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Portuguese, Russian and Spanish, and will include content in a great many other languages. Browse and search features will facilitate cross-cultural and cross-temporal exploration on the site. Descriptions of each item and videos with expert curators speaking about selected items will provide context for users, and are intended to spark curiosity and encourage both students and the general public to learn more about the cultural heritage of all countries.


 

The WDL was developed by a team at the Library of Congress. Technical assistance was provided by the Bibliotheca Alexandrina of Alexandria, Egypt. Institutions contributing content and expertise to the WDL include national libraries and cultural and educational institutions in Brazil, Egypt, China, France, Iraq, Israel, Japan, Mali, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Qatar, the Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Serbia, Slovakia, Sweden, Uganda, the United Kingdom, and the United States.


 

Examples of treasures that will be featured on the WDL include oracle bones and steles contributed by the National Library of China; Arabic scientific manuscripts from the National Library and Archives of Egypt; early photographs of Latin America from the National Library of Brazil; the Hyakumanto darani, a publication from the year 764 from the National Diet Library of Japan; the famous 13th century "Devil's Bible" from the National Library of Sweden; and works of Arabic, Persian, and Turkish calligraphy from the collections of the Library of Congress.


 

One of UNESCO's main mandates is to promote the free flow of all forms of knowledge in education, science, culture and communication. The Organization therefore supports initiatives to improve and increase content on the Internet. To this end, it collaborates with a range of partners on the creation of digital and other repositories.


 

World Digital Library Prototype http://www.worlddigitallibrary.org/project/english/


 

Source: http://portal.unesco.org/ci/en/ev.php-URL_ID=28484&URL_DO=DO_TOPIC&URL_SECTION=201.html


 

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Mass Privatization and the Postcommunist Mortality Crisis

A public lecture by LAWRENCE KING, Cambridge University, Sociology

Thursday, April 02, 2009
12:00 PM - 2:00 PM
10383 Bunche Hall

Transitions from state socialism to capitalism gave rise to an unprecedented mortality crisis. Current explanations center on unhealthy lifestyles, health system collapse and acute psychosocial stress, although little comparative research has attempted to specify a mechanism that can explain the variation over time and across countries. We develop and test a causal model of how transition policies affect population health inspired by classical sociological analyses of the transition to capitalism. Using panel data for 25 Post-Soviet countries from 1989 to 2002, we find strong empirical evidence that mass privatization, whether measured by a novel program implementation variable or European Bank for Reconstruction and Development privatization indices, significantly reduces male life expectancy by increasing heart disease, suicide, homicide and alcohol-related mortality rates with the greatest overall effects on working-age men. The most important mechanism linking privatization and death appears to be stress and stress related drinking, and one of the major pathways producing excess mortality is privatization leading to unemployment leading to premature death.

 
 

Lawrence King is Reader in Sociology at the University of Cambridge. He studies the intersection of political processes, social structure and economic institutions with comparative-historical, qualitative, quantitative, power-structure and industrial organization research methods. Most of his published work has focused on foreign direct investment, privatization, and industrial restructuring in Central Eastern Europe and Russia. His current research focuses on the relationship between globalization and public health in postcommunist and less developed countries.

Sponsor(s):
Center for European and Eurasian Studies, Center for International Business Education and Research

This talk is part of CEES' Public Lecture Series and CIBER's
Social Issues in International Business Speaker Series.

GRANT- Global Supplementary Grant Program for Doctoral Studies


 

The Open Society Institute's Network Scholarship Programs (NSP) is pleased to announce the Global Supplementary Grant Program (GSGP) for the 2009 - 2010 academic year. GSGP offers supplementary grants to students from select countries of Eastern and Central Europe, the former Soviet Union, and Mongolia. The purpose of the program is to enable qualified students to pursue doctoral studies in the Humanities and Social Sciences at accredited universities in Asia, Australia, Europe, the Middle/Near East, and North America.


 

Eligibility:

GSGP is available to citizens of the following countries: Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia, Croatia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Macedonia, Moldova, Mongolia, Montenegro, Russia, Serbia, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.

Please note that this is a supplementary program not intended for full funding. Applicants must be able to demonstrate additional support from other sources.


 

Deadline:

The application deadline for students pursuing a Ph.D. in Europe is June 8, 2009.


 

For further details about the program please visit:

http://www.soros.org/initiatives/scholarship/focus_areas/global_supplementary/guidelines


 

Source: Celine Keshishian c.keshishian@osf-eu.org

Georgian Archival Bulletin, No. 4


 

The 4th edition (Winter 2009) of the quarterly Archival Bulletin has recently been released by the Archive Department of the Georgian Ministry of Internal Affairs, and is available for download in PDF

Format: http://archive.security.gov.ge/saarqivo_moambe_4.pdf


 

Any institution interested in receiving hard copies of the Archival Bulletin or individuals interested in working in the Georgian KGB and Central Committee archives should contact:


 

Colonel Omar Tushurashvili

Head of the Archives Department

Ministry of Internal Affairs of Georgia

Vazha-Pshavela Avenue, #72

Tbilisi, Georgia

Tel./Fax: (995 32) 323898

E-mail: Tushurashvili(at)pol.ge or Moambe(at)pol.ge

ELEVENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GREY LITERATURE

ELEVENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GREY LITERATURE

http://www.textrelease.com/gl11callforpapers.html


 

Library of Congress, Washington D.C. USA, 14-15 December 2009

Over the past 15 years, Grey Literature has developed from a millennium movement to a well defined field in information studies. This process has been considerably influenced and shaped by results of research issuing from the International Conference Series on Grey Literature. The Eleventh Conference in this series will endeavor to piece together traditional features inherent to grey literature with more recent elements both technology and policy driven. In any field of science and technology, information and knowledge aggregated in research must be made available beyond the limits of any one specific information community, and as such, should be openly accessible to net citizens. This principle related to grey literature, requires that its uses and applications in diverse subject areas benefit information society as a whole. Furthermore, net citizens must acquire a sense of safeguard and security that the grey resources on which they come to rely have passed some level of corporate governance. In piecing the various components and facets of grey literature together, GL11 hopes to depict a virtual image of the Grey Mosaic.

Source:

GreyNet

Grey Literature Network Service

Javastraat 194-HS

1095 CP Amsterdam

Netherlands


 

T/F +31-(0)20 331 2420

Email: info@greynet.org

Url: http://www.greynet.org

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