Division of Social Studies News by Date
December 2015
12-25-2015
Richard Aldous interviews Sean McMeekin about the worsening relations between Turkey and Russia and the broader and longer-term implications for East-West relations.
12-21-2015
"The Ottoman Endgame is a marvellous exposition of the historian’s art that will frighten everyone else off the subject for years," writes Christopher de Bellaigue.
12-20-2015
"While it's a great idea to consider how introverts are faring in the new educational environment, a reactionary response that pushes right back to outdated models is not the wise course."
12-16-2015
"Luc Sante’s fascinating guide to the squalid, disorderly, dank, thrilling, dangerous underside of the Paris of the past makes for a suitably sprawling book."
12-15-2015
Thomas Keenan, director of Bard's Human Rights Program, comments on the recently released high-quality drone footage of Islamic State targets in Iraq taken by the Italian Air Force.
12-14-2015
A native of Red Hook, New York, Bard senior Julia Jardine hadn’t planned on staying so close to home when she applied for colleges. But as early as her first tour of the campus, Julia loved Bard. She was drawn in by the College’s reputation for intensive reading and writing, as well as its unique interdisciplinary programs. Through her interdivisional major in Bard’s Human Rights Program, Julia has had the option to take classes in many fields, such as Rights and the Image with Professor Susan Merriam, a crosslisted art history/human rights class exploring how the global public interacts with human rights issues through art. This class heightened Julia’s enthusiasm for her major, a field of study that she had in mind before enrolling at Bard. “Human rights is where I get to think critically about what’s happening today and what’s happened in the past,” Julia explained. “I just fell in love with it.”
Growing up in Red Hook, Julia was aware of Bard before she entered the College, but living the experience of a Bard student is different from what she had imagined. Julia described the student community as “extremely smart and usually very modest about it, and engaged in a lot of intellectual conversation outside of class.” In her circle of Human Rights majors, Julia frequently finds herself discussing her studies at all hours. Since coming to Bard, she has been surprised by how much her classes are involved in her nonacademic life, and how applicable what she learns in the classroom can be for her jobs and life in general. After almost three years at Bard, Julia’s way of thinking has changed. She has learned a lot about how to navigate the world, as well as much about herself and her personal outlook on life. She has also learned to focus—to dedicate herself fully to the things that she is most passionate about.
Through Bard’s Center for Civic Engagement, Julia has gotten involved with the Eleanor Roosevelt Val-Kill Partnership, a nonprofit organization in the nearby town of Hyde Park, New York. Her work there began as a summer-long unpaid internship and has since turned into a paid position. Julia is collaborating with the partnership to create a summer human rights workshop for students focused on how Eleanor Roosevelt might have approached the human rights issues that women face today. “I have learned research skills for programming, capacity building, and grants. I was able to independently prepare a budget of $30,000.”
“I have seen the inside of a nonprofit at the most important stages, its development and early innovation stages. I have attended cocktails and luncheons in Manhattan with some of the most powerful people in the city; I have spoken with Jill Abramson, the former executive editor of the New York Times, about journalism today; and I have baked blueberry crumble for the Roosevelts and shared it with them over tea,” Julia added.
What Julia’s learned on and off campus will serve her well after graduation. Currently, she is thinking she might apply to physical therapy schools, get a master’s of public health, and go into the Peace Corps. Ultimately, her goal is to go into the health field.
When asked about her favorite places on Bard campus, Julia immediately proposed Kline, the dining hall, where students come together to eat and relax: “I go there sometimes just to get my life organized.” She also loves the library, where she spends a lot of time working, and the grassy area behind Keene, her first-year dorm. Being so close to home, Julia now lives off-campus in Red Hook, with her parents, with whom she shares a close relationship.
How has Bard changed Julia’s life? According to her, she is more independent, confident, and outspoken, not only about issues that matter to her, but also about issues that matter to the people around her. “I also just think differently,” she mused. “Even in everyday ways.” During her time at Bard, Julia has learned to take information from the classroom and apply it to her own life, resulting in a gradual change in her thinking process and views.
“I couldn't have experienced such an unexpected transformation without the opportunities I found at Bard College.”
Growing up in Red Hook, Julia was aware of Bard before she entered the College, but living the experience of a Bard student is different from what she had imagined. Julia described the student community as “extremely smart and usually very modest about it, and engaged in a lot of intellectual conversation outside of class.” In her circle of Human Rights majors, Julia frequently finds herself discussing her studies at all hours. Since coming to Bard, she has been surprised by how much her classes are involved in her nonacademic life, and how applicable what she learns in the classroom can be for her jobs and life in general. After almost three years at Bard, Julia’s way of thinking has changed. She has learned a lot about how to navigate the world, as well as much about herself and her personal outlook on life. She has also learned to focus—to dedicate herself fully to the things that she is most passionate about.
Through Bard’s Center for Civic Engagement, Julia has gotten involved with the Eleanor Roosevelt Val-Kill Partnership, a nonprofit organization in the nearby town of Hyde Park, New York. Her work there began as a summer-long unpaid internship and has since turned into a paid position. Julia is collaborating with the partnership to create a summer human rights workshop for students focused on how Eleanor Roosevelt might have approached the human rights issues that women face today. “I have learned research skills for programming, capacity building, and grants. I was able to independently prepare a budget of $30,000.”
“I have seen the inside of a nonprofit at the most important stages, its development and early innovation stages. I have attended cocktails and luncheons in Manhattan with some of the most powerful people in the city; I have spoken with Jill Abramson, the former executive editor of the New York Times, about journalism today; and I have baked blueberry crumble for the Roosevelts and shared it with them over tea,” Julia added.
What Julia’s learned on and off campus will serve her well after graduation. Currently, she is thinking she might apply to physical therapy schools, get a master’s of public health, and go into the Peace Corps. Ultimately, her goal is to go into the health field.
When asked about her favorite places on Bard campus, Julia immediately proposed Kline, the dining hall, where students come together to eat and relax: “I go there sometimes just to get my life organized.” She also loves the library, where she spends a lot of time working, and the grassy area behind Keene, her first-year dorm. Being so close to home, Julia now lives off-campus in Red Hook, with her parents, with whom she shares a close relationship.
How has Bard changed Julia’s life? According to her, she is more independent, confident, and outspoken, not only about issues that matter to her, but also about issues that matter to the people around her. “I also just think differently,” she mused. “Even in everyday ways.” During her time at Bard, Julia has learned to take information from the classroom and apply it to her own life, resulting in a gradual change in her thinking process and views.
“I couldn't have experienced such an unexpected transformation without the opportunities I found at Bard College.”
12-14-2015
Bard senior Julia Jardine hadn’t planned on staying so close to home when she applied for colleges, but as early as her first tour of the campus, Julia loved Bard. She was drawn in by the College’s reputation for intensive reading and writing, as well as its unique interdisciplinary programs. As a Human Rights major, Julia has been able to take classes in many fields. Through Bard’s Center for Civic Engagement, she has gotten involved with the Eleanor Roosevelt Val-Kill Partnership, a nonprofit organization in the nearby town of Hyde Park, New York.
12-11-2015
A study by two researchers at the Center for the Study of the Drone, at Bard College, provides a comprehensive overview of the risks posed to manned aircraft by unmanned aircraft.
12-11-2015
With the holiday season approaching, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) estimates that up to one million new drones will be entering U.S. airspace, creating potentially dangerous situations for unmanned and manned aircraft. A new study released today by The Center for the Study of the Drone at Bard College offers a comprehensive examination of incidents involving drones and manned aircraft in the national airspace over the past two years. Using data from the FAA and Department of Interior, the report, “Drone Sightings and Close Encounters: An Analysis,” explores 921 incidents in the national airspace from December 2013 to September 2015. Coauthors Dan Gettinger and Arthur Holland Michel identified 327 close encounters in which drones presented some level of hazard to manned aircraft, 90 of which involved commercial multiengine jets, and 594 sightings, in which drones were spotted near or within manned aircraft flight paths but did not pose immediate danger of collision.
12-10-2015
Bard sociology professor Allison McKim talks about how the post-Prohibition consolidation of the beer business worked to exclude minorities—a problem that still permeates the industry today.
12-08-2015
Bard professor and Arendt Center director Roger Berkowitz speaks on a panel today at the Blinken Open Society Archives as part of a symposium on privacy, security, and transparency.
12-02-2015
Bard High School Early College Manhattan faculty member Steven Mazie covers the Supreme Court for the Economist. This week the justices dive into a dispute over what diversity means.
November 2015
11-27-2015
Logue's Homer, "because of its radical departures, gets us closer to the original than many more defensibly 'faithful' translations have ever managed."
11-25-2015
The Human Rights Project presents a lecture by Mark Danner, "The Management of Savagery: The Islamic State, Extreme Violence and Our Endless War," on Tuesday, December 1, at 6 p.m. in the Reem-Kayden Center room 103. Nearly a decade and a half after 9/11, the attacks in Paris have given another strong dose of the fear and panic that, since 2001, have done so much to nourish our enemies and indeed to create new ones. More and more we seem trapped in a self-perpetuating Forever War, doomed to endlessly play a part our enemies have designed for us. Is there any escape?
11-24-2015
Professor Romm on the "wickedly subversive" classicist Mary Beard and her recent lecture series at Bard, “Last Words: Roman Epitaphs and Their ‘Afterlife.’”
11-19-2015
Professor Ian Buruma has been described as “one of the few remaining ‘public intellectuals’."
11-18-2015
Center for Civic Engagement Senior Fellow Jonathan Cristol discusses revisions to the UNSC within the current structure.
11-12-2015
In light of the Iraqi and Syrian refugee crisis, Tehseen Thaver Explores Mona Siddiqui’s Hospitality and Islam: Welcoming in God’s Name.
11-10-2015
"Beard, who teaches classics at Cambridge, is a perennial champion of Rome's underrepresented and oppressed," writes Professor Romm.
October 2015
10-31-2015
The Economist reviews Sean McMeekin's new book, The Ottoman Endgame: War, Revolution and the Making of the Modern Middle East, 1908-1923.
10-23-2015
Professor Christopher Lindner and students in the Bard Archeology Field School participated in an open house at the historic Parsonage in Germantown, where the Field School is excavating the site.
10-17-2015
Snowden accused Hillary Clinton of "a lack of political courage," during his appearance via satellite at the Arendt Center conference, "Why Privacy Matters."
10-15-2015
10-07-2015
History professor Richard Aldous reviews Niall Ferguson’s Kissinger: The Idealist, "a brilliant, magisterial work."
10-07-2015
The Hannah Arendt Center for Politics and Humanities at Bard College will host its eighth annual international conference from Thursday, October 15 to Friday, October 16 in Olin Hall, on Bard’s Annandale-on-Hudson campus. The two-day conference, “Why Privacy Matters,” features NSA Whistleblower Edward Snowden, Robert Litt (Second General Counsel of the Office of the Director of National Intelligence Charged with Prosecuting Snowden), David Brin, Kate Crawford, Ben Wizner, Anita Allen, and more. The conference asks: What do we lose when we lose our privacy? Reading on Kindles, searching Google, and using cell phones leave a data trail of intimate details. Governments and businesses track our comings, goings, and doings. Scott McNealy, former CEO of Sun Microsystems, speaks for many when he says, “You have zero privacy anyway. Get over it.” It is easy to note the violence of the slogan “if you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear,” but few offer an intelligent response. Why do we willfully participate in the loss of our privacy? How is it that we rarely register its loss? Do we simply value privacy less? It is time to ask why privacy matters? It is amidst this sense that privacy is being lost and we are powerless to resist its loss that the Hannah Arendt Center at Bard College asks: How can a right to privacy and a meaningful private life exist today?
September 2015
09-30-2015
The Hannah Arendt Center's eighth annual international conference will take place October 15–16 and features many expert speakers, including (via satellite) NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
09-30-2015
Richard Aldous reviews Worldmaking: The Art and Science of American Diplomacy, by David Milne.
09-30-2015
The Scone Foundation will honor Dachau archivist Albert Knoll with the 10th annual Archivist of the Year Award. This award recognizes an archivist who has made a contribution to his or her profession or who has provided support to scholars conducting research in history and biography. The special event takes place in Manhattan on Monday, October 26 at 6:30 p.m., at the Bard Graduate Center at 18 West 86th Street, New York, in conjunction with the Hannah Arendt Center for Politics and Humanities at Bard College.
09-17-2015
Eminent scholar Mary Beard, Professor of Classics, University of Cambridge, presents The Anthony Hecht Lectures in the Humanities at Bard College 2015. The series of lectures, titled Last Words: Roman Epitaphs and Their “Afterlife”, will explore Roman epitaphs and the sensibilities they reveal. The three talks take place September 28–30 in Bard's Olin Auditorium. The lectures are free and open to the public and no reservations are required.
09-13-2015
09-10-2015
"What we are witnessing today is a crisis of two civilizations: The Middle East and Europe are both facing deep cultural and political problems that they cannot solve," writes Professor Mead.
09-08-2015
09-05-2015
Jeanne van Heeswijk will give a lecture titled "Acts of Political Uncertainty: Towards a Daily Practice of Resistance," on September 8 at 6:00 pm in the László Z. Bitó '60 Conservatory Building. Van Heeswijk, 2014-15 Keith Haring Fellow, will demonstrate how active forms of citizenship can engage constituencies and communities in critical public issues. Van Heeswijk will describe how the complexities of our cities can be employed as the performative basis for the production of new forms of sociability, collective ownership, and self-organization.
August 2015
08-20-2015
Stephen Mucher reviews Ta-Nehisi Coates's book Between the World and Me, a "vivid analysis of how the enduring legacy of white supremacy forms responses to ... racial violence."
08-15-2015
Bolsa Família, the world's largest conditional cash transfer, provides welfare payments to 13 million Brazilian households – and creates dilemmas for Brazil's rural landless movement, the MST. Through ethnographic analysis in two villages, this paper explores the daily practices and political conceptions of the program's beneficiaries.
“At 30 years of age, the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (Movement of Rural Landless Workers, or, more simply, ‘MST’) stands as Brazil’s quintessential postdictatorship social movement, an agglomeration of perhaps 1.5 million people who proudly proclaim themselves to be (or, often, avidly seek to become) small peasants (Raney and Heeter 2005). The movement has led thousands of plantation occupations, through which landless farmers and poor urbanites demand that the federal government expropriate land, compensate its owners, and redistribute it. A successful occupation leads to the creation of an assentamento, a community of small farmers cooperatively governed through the MST.
During their disagreement at the training, Marcos and Otilo both expressed an unease that, for the MST, serves as a symptom of times that are once again changing. In the early 1980s, the movement captured the spirit of an anti-dictatorial moment, successfully reviving the demand for radical land reform that the military government had repressed for 20 years. Then, over the course of the 1990s, the MST responded to the Washington Consensus by adroitly pivoting its message and methods. Movement strategists decided to begin targeting agro-business as ‘the new latifúndio [plantation system]’ and to propose an alternative agriculture based on peasant farming. The movement thus became, by the start of the twenty-first century, a leading force in favor of alter-globalization and participatory democracy, a key figure in Via Campesina and the World Social Forum – and a sometimes electoral ally of Brazil’s Workers Party (Branford and Rocha 2002; Ondetti 2008; Wolford 2010).”
Morton, Gregory Duff (2015). “Managing Transience: Bolsa Família and its Subjects in an MST Landless Settlement.” Journal of Peasant Studies 42(6): 1283-1305.
(If English-language video subtitles don’t come on, click “cc” in the bottom right corner of the screen.)
“At 30 years of age, the Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (Movement of Rural Landless Workers, or, more simply, ‘MST’) stands as Brazil’s quintessential postdictatorship social movement, an agglomeration of perhaps 1.5 million people who proudly proclaim themselves to be (or, often, avidly seek to become) small peasants (Raney and Heeter 2005). The movement has led thousands of plantation occupations, through which landless farmers and poor urbanites demand that the federal government expropriate land, compensate its owners, and redistribute it. A successful occupation leads to the creation of an assentamento, a community of small farmers cooperatively governed through the MST.
During their disagreement at the training, Marcos and Otilo both expressed an unease that, for the MST, serves as a symptom of times that are once again changing. In the early 1980s, the movement captured the spirit of an anti-dictatorial moment, successfully reviving the demand for radical land reform that the military government had repressed for 20 years. Then, over the course of the 1990s, the MST responded to the Washington Consensus by adroitly pivoting its message and methods. Movement strategists decided to begin targeting agro-business as ‘the new latifúndio [plantation system]’ and to propose an alternative agriculture based on peasant farming. The movement thus became, by the start of the twenty-first century, a leading force in favor of alter-globalization and participatory democracy, a key figure in Via Campesina and the World Social Forum – and a sometimes electoral ally of Brazil’s Workers Party (Branford and Rocha 2002; Ondetti 2008; Wolford 2010).”
Morton, Gregory Duff (2015). “Managing Transience: Bolsa Família and its Subjects in an MST Landless Settlement.” Journal of Peasant Studies 42(6): 1283-1305.
(If English-language video subtitles don’t come on, click “cc” in the bottom right corner of the screen.)
08-09-2015
The details of an agreement between the Indian government and the Nationalist Socialist Council of Nagaland remain shrouded in secrecy, writes Sanjib Baruah in this op-ed.
08-07-2015
Professor Mead delivered testimony to an August 5 hearing on the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action and the military balance in the Middle East.
08-05-2015
The association of prominent literary writers and editors interviews Ian Buruma, winner of a recent PEN Award for his essay collection Theater of Cruelty: Art, Film, and the Shadows of War.
08-03-2015
Jonathan Cristol, Bard alumnus and senior fellow at the Center for Civic Engagement, discusses the Taliban's change in leadership and its likely impact on relations with the United States.
July 2015
07-27-2015
Southard’s book explores the aftermath of the atomic bomb, following the lives of survivors.
07-21-2015
On Tuesday, Senator John McCain discussed U.S. national security challenges with Bard professor Walter Russell Mead.
07-16-2015
"Iran is going to get a nuclear weapon. Sooner or later, sanctions or no sanctions, deal or no deal," states Cristol, director of the Bard Globalization and International Affairs Program.
07-15-2015
Poet and translator of German literature Peter Filkins talks about the third novel in H.G. Adler’s trilogy about surviving the Holocaust.
07-14-2015
James Ketterer explains the many complicated moving parts to the recently announced nuclear agreement between Iran and six world powers.
07-10-2015
Professor Buruma links anti-Semitism in the 1814 Norwegian Constitution with the West’s modern relationship with Islam.
07-06-2015
Bard alumnus and trustee Charles S. Johnson III has received a "Celebration of Civil Rights Milestones" award from the State Bar of Georgia and the Center for Civil and Human Rights.
07-05-2015
Professor Leonard’s photographs, on view at the Museum of Modern Art, show low-end commerce from New York to Africa, representing the human toll of corporate globalization.
07-04-2015
The Center for the Study of the Drone at Bard College has partnered with The Verge to create a database of the first 500 exemptions to the FAA's commercial drone restrictions.
07-03-2015
This podcast from Bard's Human Rights Project asks: Why are people so nasty to women on the Internet? AMIDEAST President and former diplomat Theodore Kattouf speaks about his career.
June 2015
06-30-2015
Professor Mead argues that the Obama administration has not succeeded in changing the view of governments in Russia, Iran, and China that the American-backed world order is vulnerable.