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#291 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Tue Sep 18, 2007 12:49 pm
Subject: Theories and methods in applied biocultural anthropology -October 19-20, 2007
anthroman40
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Theories and methods in applied

biocultural anthropology.

University of South Florida.

October 19-20, 2007


#292 From: "Thais Forbes" <trforbes@...>
Date: Tue Sep 18, 2007 1:29 pm
Subject: RE: Theories and methods in applied biocultural anthropology -October 19-20, 2007
trftampa
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Sounds great, Glenn, thanks for sharing this.
 
Thais

T.R. Forbes, M.A., RN

CPR, Health & Safety Education

9802 Cypress Shadow Avenue

Tampa, Florida 33647

(813) 245-2641 mobile

(813) 973-8687 tel./fax 

-----Original Message-----
From: SCOPA@yahoogroups.com [mailto:SCOPA@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of Glenn Brown
Sent: Tuesday, September 18, 2007 8:49 AM
To: scopa@yahoogroups.com; AntConn@yahoogroups.com
Cc: cscfig@yahoogroups.com
Subject: [SCOPA] Theories and methods in applied biocultural anthropology -October 19-20, 2007

Theories and methods in applied

biocultural anthropology.

University of South Florida.

October 19-20, 2007


#293 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Fri Oct 5, 2007 12:10 pm
Subject: Emailing: Army Enlists Anthropology in War Zones - New York Times.htm
anthroman40
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The New York Times
Printer Friendly Format Sponsored By


October 5, 2007

Army Enlists Anthropology in War Zones

SHABAK VALLEY, Afghanistan — In this isolated Taliban stronghold in eastern Afghanistan, American paratroopers are fielding what they consider a crucial new weapon in counterinsurgency operations here: a soft-spoken civilian anthropologist named Tracy.

Tracy, who asked that her surname not be used for security reasons, is a member of the first Human Terrain Team, an experimental Pentagon program that assigns anthropologists and other social scientists to American combat units in Afghanistan and Iraq. Her team’s ability to understand subtle points of tribal relations — in one case spotting a land dispute that allowed the Taliban to bully parts of a major tribe — has won the praise of officers who say they are seeing concrete results.

Col. Martin Schweitzer, commander of the 82nd Airborne Division unit working with the anthropologists here, said that the unit’s combat operations had been reduced by 60 percent since the scientists arrived in February, and that the soldiers were now able to focus more on improving security, health care and education for the population.

“We’re looking at this from a human perspective, from a social scientist’s perspective,” he said. “We’re not focused on the enemy. We’re focused on bringing governance down to the people.”

In September, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates authorized a $40 million expansion of the program, which will assign teams of anthropologists and social scientists to each of the 26 American combat brigades in Iraq and Afghanistan. Since early September, five new teams have been deployed in the Baghdad area, bringing the total to six.

Yet criticism is emerging in academia. Citing the past misuse of social sciences in counterinsurgency campaigns, including in Vietnam and Latin America, some denounce the program as “mercenary anthropology” that exploits social science for political gain. Opponents fear that, whatever their intention, the scholars who work with the military could inadvertently cause all anthropologists to be viewed as intelligence gatherers for the American military.

Hugh Gusterson, an anthropology professor at George Mason University, and 10 other anthropologists are circulating an online pledge calling for anthropologists to boycott the teams, particularly in Iraq.

“While often presented by its proponents as work that builds a more secure world,” the pledge says, “at base, it contributes instead to a brutal war of occupation which has entailed massive casualties.”

In Afghanistan, the anthropologists arrived along with 6,000 troops, which doubled the American military’s strength in the area it patrols, the country’s east.

A smaller version of the Bush administration’s troop increase in Iraq, the buildup in Afghanistan has allowed American units to carry out the counterinsurgency strategy here, where American forces generally face less resistance and are better able to take risks.

A New Mantra

Since Gen. David H. Petraeus, now the overall American commander in Iraq, oversaw the drafting of the Army’s new counterinsurgency manual last year, the strategy has become the new mantra of the military. A recent American military operation here offered a window into how efforts to apply the new approach are playing out on the ground in counterintuitive ways.

In interviews, American officers lavishly praised the anthropology program, saying that the scientists’ advice has proved to be “brilliant,” helping them see the situation from an Afghan perspective and allowing them to cut back on combat operations.

The aim, they say, is to improve the performance of local government officials, persuade tribesmen to join the police, ease poverty and protect villagers from the Taliban and criminals.

Afghans and Western civilian officials, too, praised the anthropologists and the new American military approach but were cautious about predicting long-term success. Many of the economic and political problems fueling instability can be solved only by large numbers of Afghan and American civilian experts.

“My feeling is that the military are going through an enormous change right now where they recognize they won’t succeed militarily,” said Tom Gregg, the chief United Nations official in southeastern Afghanistan. “But they don’t yet have the skill sets to implement” a coherent nonmilitary strategy, he added.

Deploying small groups of soldiers into remote areas, Colonel Schweitzer’s paratroopers organized jirgas, or local councils, to resolve tribal disputes that have simmered for decades. Officers shrugged off questions about whether the military was comfortable with what David Kilcullen, an Australian anthropologist and an architect of the new strategy, calls “armed social work.”

“Who else is going to do it?“ asked Lt. Col. David Woods, commander of the Fourth Squadron, 73rd Cavalry. “You have to evolve. Otherwise you’re useless.”

The anthropology team here also played a major role in what the military called Operation Khyber. That was a 15-day drive late this summer in which 500 Afghan and 500 American soldiers tried to clear an estimated 200 to 250 Taliban insurgents out of much of Paktia Province, secure southeastern Afghanistan’s most important road and halt a string of suicide attacks on American troops and local governors.

In one of the first districts the team entered, Tracy identified an unusually high concentration of widows in one village, Colonel Woods said. Their lack of income created financial pressure on their sons to provide for their families, she determined, a burden that could drive the young men to join well-paid insurgents. Citing Tracy’s advice, American officers developed a job training program for the widows.

In another district, the anthropologist interpreted the beheading of a local tribal elder as more than a random act of intimidation: the Taliban’s goal, she said, was to divide and weaken the Zadran, one of southeastern Afghanistan’s most powerful tribes. If Afghan and American officials could unite the Zadran, she said, the tribe could block the Taliban from operating in the area.

“Call it what you want, it works,” said Colonel Woods, a native of Denbo, Pa. “It works in helping you define the problems, not just the symptoms.”

Embedding Scholars

The process that led to the creation of the teams began in late 2003, when American officers in Iraq complained that they had little to no information about the local population. Pentagon officials contacted Montgomery McFate, a Yale-educated cultural anthropologist working for the Navy who advocated using social science to improve military operations and strategy.

Ms. McFate helped develop a database in 2005 that provided officers with detailed information on the local population. The next year, Steve Fondacaro, a retired Special Operations colonel, joined the program and advocated embedding social scientists with American combat units.

Ms. McFate, the program’s senior social science adviser and an author of the new counterinsurgency manual, dismissed criticism of scholars working with the military. “I’m frequently accused of militarizing anthropology,” she said. “But we’re really anthropologizing the military.”

Roberto J. González, an anthropology professor at San Jose State University, called participants in the program naïve and unethical. He said that the military and the Central Intelligence Agency had consistently misused anthropology in counterinsurgency and propaganda campaigns and that military contractors were now hiring anthropologists for their local expertise as well.

“Those serving the short-term interests of military and intelligence agencies and contractors,” he wrote in the June issue of Anthropology Today, an academic journal, “will end up harming the entire discipline in the long run.”

Arguing that her critics misunderstand the program and the military, Ms. McFate said other anthropologists were joining the teams. She said their goal was to help the military decrease conflict instead of provoking it, and she vehemently denied that the anthropologists collected intelligence for the military.

In eastern Afghanistan, Tracy said wanted to reduce the use of heavy-handed military operations focused solely on killing insurgents, which she said alienated the population and created more insurgents. “I can go back and enhance the military’s understanding,” she said, “so that we don’t make the same mistakes we did in Iraq.”

Along with offering advice to commanders, she said, the five-member team creates a database of local leaders and tribes, as well as social problems, economic issues and political disputes.

Clinics and Mediation

During the recent operation, as soldiers watched for suicide bombers, Tracy and Army medics held a free medical clinic. They said they hoped that providing medical care would show villagers that the Afghan government was improving their lives.

Civil affairs soldiers then tried to mediate between factions of the Zadran tribe about where to build a school. The Americans said they hoped that the school, which would serve children from both groups, might end a 70-year dispute between the groups over control of a mountain covered with lucrative timber.

Though they praised the new program, Afghan and Western officials said it remained to be seen whether the weak Afghan government could maintain the gains. “That’s going to be the challenge, to fill the vacuum,” said Mr. Gregg, the United Nations official. “There’s a question mark over whether the government has the ability to take advantage of the gains.”

Others also question whether the overstretched American military and its NATO allies can keep up the pace of operations.

American officers expressed optimism. Many of those who had served in both Afghanistan and Iraq said they had more hope for Afghanistan. One officer said that the Iraqis had the tools to stabilize their country, like a potentially strong economy, but that they lacked the will. He said Afghans had the will, but lacked the tools.

After six years of American promises, Afghans, too, appear to be waiting to see whether the Americans or the Taliban will win a protracted test of wills here. They said this summer was just one chapter in a potentially lengthy struggle.

At a “super jirga” set up by Afghan and American commanders here, a member of the Afghan Parliament, Nader Khan Katawazai, laid out the challenge ahead to dozens of tribal elders.

“Operation Khyber was just for a few days,” he said. “The Taliban will emerge again.”


 
 


#294 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Fri Oct 5, 2007 5:24 pm
Subject: FW: "Tribute to Trevor Purcell"
anthroman40
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---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Callejas, Linda <callejas@...>
Date: Oct 5, 2007 12:47 PM
Subject: "Tribute to Trevor Purcell"
To: "Callejas, Linda" <callejas@...>
Cc: danielleroconnor@... , shari feldman <mmariposa@...>

 


#295 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Tue Nov 13, 2007 7:48 pm
Subject: FW: Applied Research Center November 2007 Newsletter
anthroman40
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From: Jacobs, Eric [mailto:e.jacobs@...] On Behalf Of arc
Sent: Tuesday, November 13, 2007 10:12 AM
To: Glenn Brown
Subject: Applied Research Center November 2007 Newsletter

 

arc

ARC CED e-news

School of Community Economic Development

 October 2007

Volume 5, Number 2

APPLIED RESEARCH CENTER in CED

School of Community Economic Development

Southern NH University

2500 North River Rd

Manchester, NH 03106

 

Phone: (603) 644-3151

Fax: (603) 644-3130

Email: arc@...

 

Yoel Camayd-Freixas, PhD

Director

Eric L. Jacobs, MA

Manager

 

RESEARCH STAFF

Yoel Camayd-Freixas, PhD

Sr. Research Fellow

Chris Clamp, PhD

Sr. Research Fellow

Charles Hotchkiss, PhD

Sr. Research Fellow

Gerald Karush, PhD

Sr. Research Fellow

Ravi Pandit, PhD

Sr. Research Fellow

Catherine Rielly, PhD

Sr. Research Fellow

Michael Swack, PhD

Sr. Research Fellow

Paul Barresi, PhD, JD

Research Fellow

T. David Reese, PhD

Research Fellow

Jolan Rivera, PhD

Research Fellow

Gaamaa Hishigsuren, PhD

Sr. Research Associate

Nelly Lejter, PhD

Sr. Research Associate

Puneetha Palakurthi, PhD

Sr. Research Associate

Antoinette Bolaños, MBA

Research Associate

Balu Iyer, MS, MS

Research Associate

Deborah Jackson, MA, JD

Research Associate

Eric L. Jacobs, MA

Research Associate

Richard Koenig, MCP

Research Associate

Woullard Lett, MS

Research Associate

Patricia Machado, MBA

Research Associate

Melissa Nemon, MA

Research Associate

David Santiago, MA

Research Associate

Charles Rand, MBA

Research Associate

Pedro Santiago, MBA

Research Associate

Sanjeev Sharma, MS, MBA

Research Associate

Miyako Schanely, MBA

Research Associate

Rebecca Seib, MS

Research Associate

Davaa Sodnomdarjaa, MA MS

Research Associate

Sharon Anderson, MBA

Research Assistant

Alisa Basco, MA

Research Assistant

Lynson Beaulieu

Research Assistant

David Carney, MA

Research Assistant

Patricia Christensen, MBA

Research Assistant

Michelle Foster, MS

Research Assistant

Benjamin Frost, MA, JD

Research Assistant

Victoria Hu Poirier, MS

Research Assistant

Ana Klincic, MS

Research Assistant

John Knorr, MEd

Research Assistant

Lukumu Matabasi, MBA

Research Assistant

Shawn Olson, MBA

Research Assistant

Megan O'Neil

Research Assistant

Hector Rivera

Research Assistant

Karen Song, MA

Research Assistant

Victor Vasquez, MPA

Research Assistant

 

Weed & Seed Research

The Weed & Seed Capacity-Building Project, funded by a research grant from the US Department of Justice, involves the eight case studies on best practices. The November colloquium includes presentations by ARC Research Assistants Ana Klincic and Karen Song (supervised by Professors Gerald Karush and Charles Hotchkiss), on their research in Okala, FL, and Aurora CO, respectively.

 

Aurora received Weed and Seed funding in 1998.  Due to the success of its Weed and Seed strategies, it was granted funding in 2004 for a second site.  Aurora was selected for their programming in all four Weed and Seed target areas: law enforcement, community-orientated policing, prevention & intervention, and neighborhood restoration. Aurora coordinates impressive levels of collaboration and programming that “engages and empowers residents to improve the quality of life in Aurora and to make it a safe and enjoyable place to live, work and play.”

 

OcalaÂ’s strategy consists of law enforcement and crime prevention programs with community revitalization components. Its success responds to its community and organizational infrastructure, leadership, and philosophy. The Weed and Seed grants were used to further local initiatives. OcalaÂ’s  approach involved building trust among community members, government representatives and law enforcement departments to successfully target and prosecute criminals, and develop effective service networks and government partnerships to tackle social and economic issues.

 

DATE: Friday, November 16, 2007   

TIME: 12:30-1:30 PM (lunch served at noon)

PLACE: Webster Hall, Southern NH University

 

This is the first of a series of presentations on the Weed & Seed Project.

 

 

HUD Dissertation Grant Awarded to SCED PhD Student

 

Richard Koenig Receives Prestigious HUD Doctoral Dissertation Grant

 

koenig_richardRichard Koenig, PhD candidate at the School of CED, was awarded a competitive $15,000 Doctoral Dissertation grant from the US Department of Housing and Urban Development towards his research: “Improving Tenants’ Lives through Affordable Rental Housing: Stepping Stone or Destination.” The USHUD grant is intended to stimulate policy research by encouraging doctoral candidates to pursue research topics in community, housing, and urban development, assist doctoral candidates in the timely completion of their dissertation research, and provide an arena for new scholars to share their research findings.

 

Richard will also receive a $5,000 award from the Applied Research Center funded by the Nellie Mae Education Foundation. Dr. Yoel Camayd-Freixas, Chair of the PhD Program, heads RichardÂ’s Dissertation Committee.

 

Richard received his MCP in Urban Planning from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and a BS in Economics from Wesleyan University. He earned certificates in construction, land use, and real estate finance, is a member American Planning Association and certified by the American Institute of Certified Planners. Richard recently moved to Detroit where he started a community development consulting firm. He is former CEO of Housing Opportunity Development Corporation, the only community-based affordable housing development nonprofit serving ChicagoÂ’s northern suburbs. He ran the agency for nine years and developed over 200 units of affordable housing in twelve projects worth over $30 million.

 

RichardÂ’s research apprenticeship at the Applied Research Center included studies for Heritage United Way (community indicators and strategic philanthropy), the US Department of Justice (Weed & Seed best practices), and the Latino Diaspora.

Recent ARC Projects:

Camayd et al Nashua Consolidated Plan CoverThis Plan prepared for the City of Nashua, provides an assessment of and strategies for housing and community development needs and conditions in the City, with special emphasis on the needs of low-and moderate-income households and those with special housing needs. It includes: Institutional Structure, Monitoring Standards, Priority Needs Analysis and Strategy, Lead Based Paint Strategy, Housing and Homeless Needs Assessment. The research was conducted by Yoel Camayd-Freixas (Principal Investigator), Gerald Karush, Emily Burgo & Nelly Lejter.

 

Camayd et al MANCHESTER 10 YEAR PLAN coverThis 10-Year Plan for the City of Manchester examines the existing problem of homelessness.  It looks at the service network and makes recommendations for future policy initiatives. The research was conducted by Yoel Camayd-Freixas (Principal Investigator), Gerald Karush, Eric Jacobs and Klaas Nijhuis of ARC.

 

 

 

 

Copies of these reports are available from the Applied Research Center.

 

 

WeÂ’re on the Web!

www.arcced.com

ARCCED

camayd-freixas_yoel

jacobs_ericThe Applied Research Center supports professionals, policy makers and managers through research & publications. ARC offers doctoral students an opportunity to practice and build mastery over research traditions. ARC is headed by Dr. Yoel Camayd-Freixas (l); Eric Jacobs (r) manages the center.

ARC is grounded in professional practice. It operates a Sponsored Research Program (grants) and a Professional Practice Program (contracts: planning, evaluation, organizational analysis), and offers the following services:

§  surveys & polls

§  planning, strategic planning

§  program review & evaluation

§  organizational analysis

§  policy research

§  financial innovation, analyses

·         Geographic Information Systems, maps

§  demographic analysis

·         case studies: innovation, best practices

§  analytical focus groups

 

 

www.arcced.com

 

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Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.


#296 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Mon Nov 19, 2007 3:16 pm
Subject: The Florida Institute for Community Studies Celebrates Five Years of Operations
anthroman40
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Florida Institute for Community Studies
El Instituto de Estudios Comunitarios de la Florida/
PO Box 16745, Tampa, FL 33687 Phone: 813.249.8100 Fax: 813.249.8110
Email: alayne@... <mailto:alayne@...>
Press Release
For Immediate Release: November 19, 2007
Contact: Alayne Unterberger, Executive Director, 813.249.8100 or
813.477.2882

*The Florida Institute for Community Studies Celebrates Five Years of

Operations*

Tampa, FL: The Florida Institute for Community Studies (FICS) was founded as a non-profit organization in 2002 by a diverse group of academics and activists in order to work in partnership with communities to help them achieve their goals through research, service, education and training. Now, five years later, FICS is celebrating our first five years with two major events in December 2007.

Tickets are currently on sale for our Fifth Anniversary Party and Fundraiser at the Lowry Park Zoo Paradise Café on Thursday, December 6,

2007 at 6:00 PM. The evening includes dinner, music, silent auction and a special performance of Capoeira from Brazil.

Next, FICS will host an all-day Open House at our Multicultural Family Center at 6704 Hanley Road, Tampa, FL 33634. The press and public are invited to stop by the Center anytime between 11 AM and 6 PM to meet/greet and learn about our services. HIV testing is also conducted on Fridays.

For more information or to buy tickets to the event, please contact FICS at 813.249.8100 or email Alayne@....

 


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.


#297 From: "Wolfe, Alvin" <wolfe@...>
Date: Tue Nov 20, 2007 8:41 pm
Subject: RE: Workshop: Creating Practitioners' Network
alvinwolfe
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I don't think of SCOPA as dormant.  Rather it is struggling to emerge from a quiet period of some months.  The workshop “Creating Practitioner’s Network” workshop that you’re hosting through NAPA at AAA next week sound like just what our SCOPA people need.
--Alvin

Alvin W. Wolfe
Distinguished University Professor Emeritus
Department of Anthropology
4202 E. Fowler Avenue, SOC107
University of South Florida
Tampa, FL  33620-8100   813-974-0794



From: R.Severson@... [mailto:R.Severson@...]
Sent: Tuesday, November 20, 2007 3:31 PM
To: GBrown@...
Cc: Wolfe, Alvin; epuccia@...; terrymredding@...
Subject: SCOPA

Dear Glenn Brown, Ellen Puccia, and Al Wolfe,

            I’m touching base with people who had at one time been involved in LPOs…. and I realize SCOPA has been dormant, right?

Are you or anybody you know interested in revival? If so, see below about next week at AAA. If not, just wanted you to know…….

Terry Redding and I have 20+ people signed up for a “Creating Practitioner’s Network” workshop that we’re hosting through NAPA at AAA next week, and who knows, some of them may be from your area……….

Let us know if you have a chance….Thanks, Rebecca Severson (NAPA LPO coordinator)

 

 

 

Hey CAPA: Leader-Leader, who’s the Leader?  Can any of you do any of these things we need done for AAA next week? (CAPA flier, rep at workshop and/or lunch) ……… let me know. We need to make reservations! Thanks, Rebecca

           

1 Supply your CAPA flier for the booth.  Drop off  fliers or something that describes CAPA for us to hand out at the LPO-NAPA booth at AAA so people will know who to contact etc. You can leave the fliers at 9am on Thurs Nov 29 at the booth.

2. Represent CAPA at NAPA-sponsored workshop:  Thurs, Nov 29, 11am-Noon at AAA conference. NAPA is sponsoring a workshop that Terry and I are leading (Creating Practitioner Networks) for those interested in created LPOs in their own areas. It will be Thursday, Nov. 29, from 10 am to noon. We would like to invite a member of each LPO to send a veteran member to the second hour of the workshop (11-noon), in order to talk about practicalities and strategies to attendees about the realities of managing an LPO.
3. Represent your LPO at LPO luncheon: Thurs, Nov, 29 12noon-2pm, Immediately following the workshop, we will have our annual free LPO luncheon, scheduled for approximately noon to 2 pm. at a nearby restaurant. This will be primarily a social function, where we can informally discuss news and issues. Hopefully some potential new LPO organizers will attend as well. There are several possible venues: anyone for Afghani?

Please let Terry and me know if you can send a member to the second hour of the workshop, and, if different, who will be representing your LPO at the luncheon. The workshop is free, so you or any members are welcome to attend the entire session.

Thanks so much and look forward to hearing from you!

 

Rebecca Severson
Account Executive
Qualitative, USA
Research International
312.981.5816
r.severson@...
www.research-int.com

PRICE SOLVE: Our clients blend a pretty special range of talents to get their brands to market but with the wrong price, there is an empty bottom line. RI’s Price Solve ensures the price you decide on is the right one to maximize your products potential. To find out how you can improve your pricing accuracy, please contact me today!

 


#298 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Thu Nov 29, 2007 1:30 pm
Subject: FW: Fifth Anniversary Party - RSVP Now
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
I know I posted this before, so this is a reminder.  If you feel a
sudden whim to support local professional (outside academia)
anthropology, this is a way to do it (and have fun too).
Regards,
Glenn

> -----Original Message-----
> From: Alayne Unterberger [mailto:alayne@...]
> Sent: Wednesday, November 28, 2007 8:00 PM
> To: Lisa Montelione; Lisa Montelione
> Subject: Fifth Anniversary Party - RSVP Now
>
> The Florida Institute for Community Studies has completed
> five years of operations and we are still here!
>
> To celebrate, we invite you to join us at the Paradise Cafe,
> Key West Pavilion, Lowry Park Zoo on Thursday, December 6,
> 2007 at 6 PM (mixer), with dinner and entertainment beginning
> at 7 pm.  We will be there until 10 PM.
>
> Silent auction begins at 6 PM and ends at 8 PM.
> Entertainment includes performances by Capoeira A Volta Do
> Mundo (Brazilian dance), Freddy Montes (Cuban music) and some
> surprise performers!
>
> Your tax-deductible fundraiser tickets are: $25 per person,
> $15 for students, $45 for couples and $160 for a table of 8.
>
> Call 813.249.8100 to RSVP or email me back at alayne@....
> *
> We need a head count for the food - deadline is Monday 12-3
> so please take a moment and reply now!*
>
> In honor of the zoo, some of us are dressing in
> leopard/animal prints.
> You can too!
>
> Hope to see you soon!
> FICS Board, staff and volunteers
>
>
> Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the
> Children's Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the
> public records laws of Florida.
>


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of
Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.
Attachment: vcard [not shown]

#299 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Mon Dec 10, 2007 2:05 pm
Subject: FW: QI2008 submission deadline Extended to 15 January 2008
anthroman40
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> -----Original Message-----
> From: ATLAS.ti The Knowledge Workbench - User Forum
> [mailto:ATLAS-TI@...] On Behalf Of Norm Denzin
> Sent: Friday, December 07, 2007 3:57 PM
> To: ATLAS-TI@...
> Subject: QI2008 submission deadline Extended to 15 January 2008
>
> We have extended the deadline for submitting abstracts online
> for the Fourth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry
> (QI2008). This extension is until 15 January 2008.
>
> To submit individual abstracts or whole panels, please visit:
>
> www.icqi.org
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> --------------
>
> The Fourth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry will
> take place at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
> from May 14-17, 2008. The theme of the Congress, building on
> previous Congresses, is ³Ethics, Evidence, and Social
> Justice.² Participants will explore the relationship between
> these three terms and what these relationships mean for
> qualitative inquiry in this new century. The Fourth Congress
> will offer the international community of qualitative
> research scholars the opportunity to engage in debate on
> ethical, epistemological, methodological and social justice issues.
>
> [apologies for cross-postings]
>
> www.icqi.org
>
> ***            this signature added by listserv             ***
> *** visit http://www.listserv.dfn.de/archives/atlas-ti.html ***
> *** for archive browsing and ATLAS-ti membership management ***
>
>
> Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the
> Children's Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the
> public records laws of Florida.
>


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of
Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.

#300 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Tue Dec 11, 2007 1:40 pm
Subject: Rapid acceleration in human evolution described
anthroman40
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Reuters
Rapid acceleration in human evolution described

By Will Dunham Mon Dec 10, 5:35 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Human evolution has been moving at breakneck speed in the past several thousand years, far from plodding along as some scientists had thought, researchers said on Monday.

In fact, people today are genetically more different from people living 5,000 years ago than those humans were different from the Neanderthals who vanished 30,000 years ago, according to anthropologist John Hawks of the University of Wisconsin.

The genetic changes have related to numerous different human characteristics, the researchers said.

Many of the recent genetic changes reflect differences in the human diet brought on by agriculture, as well as resistance to epidemic diseases that became mass killers following the growth of human civilizations, the researchers said.

For example, Africans have new genes providing resistance to malaria. In Europeans, there is a gene that makes them better able to digest milk as adults. In Asians, there is a gene that makes ear wax more dry.

The changes have been driven by the colossal growth in the human population -- from a few million to 6.5 billion in the past 10,000 years -- with people moving into new environments to which they needed to adapt, added Henry Harpending, a University of Utah anthropologist.

"The central finding is that human evolution is happening very fast -- faster than any of us thought," Harpending said in a telephone interview.

"Most of the acceleration is in the last 10,000 years, basically corresponding to population growth after agriculture is invented," Hawks said in a telephone interview.

The research appears in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

FAVORABLE GENE MUTATIONS

The researchers looked for the appearance of favorable gene mutations over the past 80,000 years of human history by analyzing voluminous DNA information on 270 people from different populations worldwide.

Data from this International HapMap Project, short for haplotype mapping, offered essentially a catalogue of genetic differences and similarities in people alive today.

Looking at such data, scientists can ascertain how recently a given genetic change appeared in the genome and then can plot the pace of such change into the distant past.

Beneficial genetic changes have appeared at a rate roughly 100 times higher in the past 5,000 years than at any previous period of human evolution, the researchers determined. They added that about 7 percent of human genes are undergoing rapid, relatively recent evolution.

Even with these changes, however, human DNA remains more than 99 percent identical, the researchers noted.

Harpending said the genetic evidence shows that people worldwide have been getting less similar rather than more similar due to the relatively recent genetic changes.

Genes have evolved relatively quickly in Africa, Asia and Europe but almost all of the changes have been unique to their corner of the world. This is the case, he said, because since humans dispersed from Africa to other parts of the world about 40,000 years ago, there has not been much flow of genes between the regions.

(Editing by Sandra Maler)

RECOMMEND THIS STORY

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#301 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Thu Dec 13, 2007 1:06 pm
Subject: FW: Cultural Arts Instructor Employment Ad
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Alayne Unterberger [mailto:alayne@...]
> Sent:
> Subject: Cultural Arts Instructor Employment Ad
>
> Can you please send this out to your lists? FICS' Prodigy at
> TNC is expanding and I need 2 or 3
> teachers....Bilingual/bicultural/multicultural applicants a
> plus! Be a role model and have fun too!
> Thanks very much!
> Happy holidays to all of you
> A
>
> *Cultural Arts Instructor: ASAP
> *
>
> Prodigy cultural arts program seeks Artists for part time
> work with ability to teach in youth cultural arts program in
> the Town N Country area. Prodigy is a Prevention/
> Intervention/ Diversion program that teaches life skills
> through the Arts for youth ages 7-17. This position requires
> the ability to instruct children in a culturally relevant,
> child-centered format. Must have experience working with
> youth ages 7-17. Background check required. * Forward resume
> to alayne@... Attn: Alayne or Fax to 813-249-8110.*
>
> *_Preferred Qualifications:_** *
>
> * *? Six years professional experience (or equivalent in
> education, and
> experience) in at least one artistic specialty
>
> [visual arts, performing arts, (music, dance, theater)].
>
> ? Two years art instruction experience (or equivalent in
> education and professional experience).
>
> *_Minimum Qualifications: _** *
>
> ? High school diploma or equivalent General Education Degree.
>
> ? Two years experience (or equivalent in education, and
> experience) in at least one artistic specialty (plastic arts,
> music, theater).
>
> ? One year art instruction experience (or equivalent in
> education and professional experience).
>
> * Location:* Town N Country - FICS Multicultural Family
> Center (zip 33634), Timberlane Park and TNC Park.
>
> * Programming hours: *Part Time; M-F, instruction 2 to 3
> times per week between 3pm -7:30pm (some weekends)
>
> * Background check required.*
>
> *Compensation:* depending upon experience $25.00 - $35.00 per
> hour instruction / administrative $12 ph
>
> *
> *
>
>
>
> Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the
> Children's Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the
> public records laws of Florida.
>


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of
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#302 From: "Glenn Brown" <anthroman40@...>
Date: Fri Dec 14, 2007 8:46 pm
Subject: FW: Announcement - New book on Practicing Anthropology from Left Coast Press
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
 
 ------
Left Coast Press announces the release of a major new book in practicing anthropology:

Doing Anthropology in Consumer Research
Patricia L. Sunderland and Rita M. Denny (Practica Group)
http://www.lcoastpress.com/book.php?id=116
**special 20% discount! Use code L207 at checkout.

"Whatever type of anthropology you might pursue, you'll find an entree to the field in the following pages."
-From the Foreword by JOHN F SHERRY, JR.

"This work succeeds brilliantly in blurring the increasingly unhelpful perception of a divide between 'applied' and 'academic' anthropology. Along several dimensions, it demonstrates how 'cutting edge' and indeed 'theoretical' post-1980s ethnographic research on consumers and marketing has been. Among the current literature in this field, this book has the comprehensiveness to serve as an ideal teaching tool. "
-GEORGE MARCUS, University of California Irvine

"This book is a gem, and one long awaited by academic applied anthropologists like me. I have taught courses in applied anthropology and ethnographic research methods for many years, and several of my former students have gone on to careers in market research. Had I had access to such a text earlier, my students would have been far more aware of, and far better prepared for, the careers that awaited them.... [It is] eloquently written with wit and candor, and filled with intriguing vignettes illustrating just how important the work of practitioners can be in advancing anthropological theory and method. Their use of multiple methods within the overall ethnographic framework, including rapid appraisal and semiotic analysis, is a model for contemporary fieldworkers, regardless of the location or domain of their work. "
-From the Foreword by DONALD STULL
-- 


#303 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Tue Dec 18, 2007 2:27 pm
Subject: FW: New Journal Announcement and Call for Submissions
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
fyi

> -----Original Message-----
> From: ATLAS.ti The Knowledge Workbench - User Forum
> [mailto:ATLAS-TI@...] On Behalf Of Norm Denzin
> Sent: Monday, December 17, 2007 3:27 PM
> To: ATLAS-TI@...
> Subject: New Journal Announcement and Call for Submissions
>
> International Review of Qualitative Research Sponsored by
> International Center for Qualitative Inquiry Norman K.
> Denzin, University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign Quarterly in
> May, August, November and February
> 512 pp.
>
>
> About the Journal
> INTERNATIONAL REVIEW OF QUALITATIVE RESEARCH encourages the
> use of critical, experimental and traditional forms of
> qualitative inquiry in the interests of social justice. We
> seek works that are both academically sound and partisan,
> works that offer knowledge-based radical critiques of social
> settings and institutions while promoting human dignity,
> human rights, and just societies around the globe.
> Submissions to the journal are judged by the effective use of
> critical qualitative research methodologies and practices for
> understanding and advocacy in policy arenas, as well as
> clarity of writing and willingness to experiment with new and
> traditional forms of presentation.
>
>
> For more information, including submission guidelines, please
> visit the link
> below:
>
> http://www.lcoastpress.com/journal.php?id=8
>
> ***            this signature added by listserv             ***
> *** visit http://www.listserv.dfn.de/archives/atlas-ti.html ***
> *** for archive browsing and ATLAS-ti membership management ***
>
>
> Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the
> Children's Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the
> public records laws of Florida.
>


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of
Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.

#304 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Wed Jan 2, 2008 7:41 pm
Subject: FW: Two Weeks Until QI2008 submission deadline
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: ATLAS.ti The Knowledge Workbench - User Forum
> [mailto:ATLAS-TI@...] On Behalf Of Norm Denzin
> Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2008 1:18 PM
> To: ATLAS-TI@...
> Subject: Two Weeks Until QI2008 submission deadline
>
> This is a reminder that we have extended the deadline for
> submitting abstracts online for the Fourth International
> Congress of Qualitative Inquiry (QI2008). This extension is
> until 15 January 2008.
>
> To submit individual abstracts or whole panels, please visit:
>
> www.icqi.org
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> --------------
>
> The Fourth International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry will
> take place at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
> from May 14-17, 2008. The theme of the Congress, building on
> previous Congresses, is ³Ethics, Evidence, and Social
> Justice.² Participants will explore the relationship between
> these three terms and what these relationships mean for
> qualitative inquiry in this new century. The Fourth Congress
> will offer the international community of qualitative
> research scholars the opportunity to engage in debate on
> ethical, epistemological, methodological and social justice issues.
>
> [apologies for cross-postings]
>
> www.icqi.org
>
> ***            this signature added by listserv             ***
> *** visit http://www.listserv.dfn.de/archives/atlas-ti.html ***
> *** for archive browsing and ATLAS-ti membership management ***
>
>
> Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the
> Children's Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the
> public records laws of Florida.
>


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of
Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.

#305 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Tue Jan 8, 2008 1:56 pm
Subject: FW: [AntConn] Poverty and Social Justice Conference (Anthropology) @ AU- You are invited
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
Just in case you didn't see this on AntConn:


From: AntConn@yahoogroups.com [mailto:AntConn@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of kalfani ture
Sent: Monday, January 07, 2008 2:29 PM
To: AntConn@yahoogroups.com
Cc: Maria Amelia Viteri; Jennifer Delfino
Subject: [AntConn] Poverty and Social Justice Conference (Anthropology) @ AU- You are invited

Dear Glenn:
 
Can you share the attached CFP and conference announcement (Anthropology and Social Justice) with any relevant constituent and on your AntConn listserv.  I thank you tremendously.
 
kalfani n. ture'
 

Conference Dates and Location: Friday and Saturday, March 21-22, 2008,
American University, Washington, DC
Abstracts Due: January 21, 2007

The College of Arts and Sciences Graduate Student Council and the Department of Anthropology at American University, Washington, DC, is pleased to announce the Call for Paper proposals for the Second Annual International Multidisciplinary Conference “Interrogating Diversity”. This year’s theme is “Representation, Power, and Social Justice”.
The conference will provide presenters the opportunity to present their research in a forum with an active and engaging audience devoted to discussion as it “Interrogates Diversity” by looking at the effects and affects of power dynamics behind gentrification, environmental policies, language and the media and health inequalities which are closely connected to the way in which places, communities and cultures get represented. We invite these interrogations through the gamut of theory-based papers to discussions of research-in-progress. Indeed, this space will provide a wide range of discussions - either in English or Spanish - to encourage and facilitate open and honest discussions that are often taken for granted.


Scholars from all fields of study are welcome to engage in fruitful, analytical discussion. This year’s themes examine the following four areas of concern that are meant to be suggestive rather than restrictive:


1. Gentrification, Development, and Displacement


Main Session Chair: Naomi Jagers
Co-chairs: Kalfani Ture, Michel Tinguiri
Social science is increasingly giving attention to the effects of environmental and development policies as they have been implemented in a rapidly urbanizing and globalizing world including displacement of people and communities that often result. Equal attention has been given to processes by which people resist, create community identity and shape social space in the face of such policies. It is recognized that these processes not only disrupt physical space and people's sense of belonging, but also that such trends and policies often adversely affect vulnerable communities along the lines of class, race, gender, & religion. We welcome interdisciplinary papers addressing and/or re-examining themes including and related to gentrification, urban planning and housing policy, development, refugee, tourism, and displacement as they highlight power inequality, global political and economic inequality, inter- and intra-racial conflict, homelessness, and localized resistance
to community dissolution. Please join us in exploring new insights that can inform academic and activist related discourse(s).

2. Language and social action, media representation, and the body
Main Session Chair: Jennifer Delfino
Co-Chair: Audrey Cooper


This panel explores the ways in which language emerges as a form of social action, both through media representation and as embodied practice. We welcome papers from any social science discipline that explore the connections between language, social action, the media, and the body, as well as any that seek to challenge the ways in which these topics are linked together to interrogate power and dominant forms of representation, as well as to identify openings for theorizing social change and acting towards social justice.

3. Interdisciplinary Contributions to Environmental Policy and Practice
Main Session Chair: Rodolfo Tello

How can we promote greater inclusion of social justice concerns while improving the effectiveness of environmental interventions? We are looking for papers addressing potential and actual contributions to contend with current socioenvironmental problems. From a results-based perspective, we expect to gain a better understanding of the different ways of approaching these issues, both at the policy and on the ground levels, and their degree of effectiveness within the context of their application. Proposals from different disciplinary and non-disciplinary concentrations are encouraged, including environmental anthropology, political ecology, environmental justice, human geography, ecological economics, environmental activism, sustainable development, environmental sociology, political science, environmental education, conservation social science, and other related interdisciplinary programs. Join us in an effort to build a more socially inclusive conservation practice!

4. Inequalities in Health and Healing
Main Session Chair: Nell Haynes

Health and healing are conceptualized and practiced diversely among different groups. Even such concepts are often problematic in certain places. We welcome papers exploring relationships between health, inequalities, healing practices, and larger social processes. Papers addressing wellness, illness, health, healing, disease, injury, and cultural competency as they relate to individuals, families, or communities will be productive to this discussion. Particularly of interest are disparities in health and healing due to age, gender, race, citizenship, ethnicity, and socioeconomic conditions. Proposals are encouraged from disciplines such as medical anthropology, sociology, international studies, public health, gender studies, or other interdisciplinary programs, as well as health policy organizations and practitioners. Through this discussion we hope to advance social justice by exploring how health needs are or are not being met.


ABSTRACT SUBMISSION: Please send an abstract of your paper, workshop proposal or visual work (DVD) to our conference’s email interdivconferenceii@... not later than January 21, 2008. Abstracts should not exceed 300 words. If your paper speaks specifically to one of our four themes, please indicate so in the subject line and/or include the session’s main chair name.


Please visit our website at american.edu/anthro/indiv for more information and/or contact session chairs at interdivconferenceii@...


Kalfani N. Ture'
Doctoral Student, Anthropology
American University, Washington, DC
Program in Race, Gender and Social Justice
ture_k@yahoo.com
www.american-anthropology.wetpaint.com
(301) 256 5280

 
 

 


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Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the ChildrenÂ’s Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.


#306 From: "Greenbaum, Susan" <greenbau@...>
Date: Tue Jan 8, 2008 2:06 pm
Subject: interesting talk on Thursday
greenbau@...
Send Email Send Email
 

 

Sue Hyatt, who is now at Indiana/Purdue at Indianapolis, will be giving a talk this Thursday at 3 PM at the Children's Board (Palm and Nebraska in Ybor City; across the street from Centro Asturiano). 

 

Her topic is community based research involving students in Indianapolis and Philadelphia.  Her work in Indianapolis has involved a collaborative project with resident activists on the topic of predatory lending and foreclosures.

 

Please come if you can.

 


#307 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Wed Jan 9, 2008 3:32 pm
Subject: FW: ERIC Today 4 pm - Dean Petersen on public health in environmental research
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
fyi


From: Stuart, Amy [mailto:astuart@...]
Sent: Wednesday, January 09, 2008 9:57 AM
To: Eric announce; Yeh, Daniel; Amy Stuart; Mizak, Connie; Kimball, Nolan; Alderman, Jackie; klschrad@...; Arnold, Bambi; Tippin, Edward
Subject: ERIC Today 4 pm - Dean Petersen on public health in environmental research

Dear colleagues and students:
 
Welcome back to Spring 2008 Environmental Research Interdisciplinary Colloquium!  
Come join us for our opening session speaker:
             
Jan 9   Donna J. Petersen, ScD, MHS
           Dean, College of Public Health

           A Public Health Perspective on Interdisciplinary Environmental Research
   
           Wednesday 4:00 – 5:15 pm, COPH 1023C


Spring Speaker Schedule (tentative)
-----------------------------------------
  
Jan 9     Donna Petersen, Dean, College of Public Health   
               
A public health perspective on interdisciplinary environmental research   

  
Jan 16   Shawn College, Hillsborough County City-County Planning Commission   
               
Local trends in environmental planning   

  
Jan 23   Henry Schwarcz, Professor Emeritus, McMaster University
               
Derek Ford, Professor Emeritus, McMaster University   
   
  
Jan 30   Richard Pollenz, USF Dept of Biology   
               
How do changes in the level of key signaling proteins impact cellular responses to environmental stress at the molecular level   

  
Feb 6    Shannon Bassett, USF Architecture and Community Design   
               
Landscape as urbanism- dynamic systems in the city  
 
  
Feb 13   Christopher Emrich, USF Dept. of Geography   
               
GIS and Natural Hazards   

  
Feb 20   James Symons, Professor Emeritus, University of Houston   
               
History of the disinfection by-products issue   

  
Feb 27   TBA

  
Mar 5   David Allen, Director, Center for Energy and Environmental Resources University of Texas at Austin
              and
Student Poster Session   
              
The Energy Institute at the University of Texas, AEESP Distinguished Traveling Lecture
              
Co-hosted by the University of Central Florida   

  
Mar 12   Spring Break   No lecture planned  
 
  
Mar 19   Pratyusha Basu, USF Dept. of Geography   
                
Engineering and Ethics: An International History of Large Dams in India   

  
Mar 26   Al Hines, USF Marine Science   
                
Pulley Ridge--Deepest Coral Reef on the US Continental Shelf and Its Environmental Significance   

  
Apr 2     Robert Brinkmann, USF Dept. of Geography   
               
Environmental Sustainability Planning in Clearwater   

  
Apr 9     Rene Wiesner Brown, Pasco County Lands Program Manager   
               
Three years of Pasco County environmental lands management   

  
Apr 16   Mya Breitbart, USF Marine Science   
                
Viruses in sewage and reclaimed water - implications for human and environmental health  
 
  
Apr 23   TBA

ERIC sessions this semester are held in the College of Public Health (CPH 1023C), Wednesday’s 4:00 – 5:15 pm.

Please visit the ERIC website for more information and an archive of prior presentations.  http://netcast.usf.edu/ERIC



Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.


Please note: E-mail communications sent to and from the Children’s Board of Hillsborough County are subject to the public records laws of Florida.


#308 From: "Jack Garrett" <jackgarrett@...>
Date: Thu Jan 10, 2008 6:50 pm
Subject: Institute of Homeless Studies
urbananth
Send Email Send Email
 

This may be of interest to the group Kim Hopper will be one of the Key Note Speakers.....

The 2nd Annual Camillus House Institute of Homeless Studies Symposium:

Applying Research to End Homelessness

The best experts from around the country will be coming to Miami to present the latest research, findings, and trends on homelessness. Individuals working in the fields of homelessness, health care, and social services, community leaders and policy makers, and media are invited to join us as we learn about new ways to improve efforts to ending homelessness.
 
 
Much has been learned about homelessness in the past three decades. Research has helped us learn more and more about who is homeless, what causes homelessness, and, most importantly, what it takes to end homelessness. This symposium will focus on presenting the latest research to those persons working in the fields of homelessness, healthcare, social services, or other fields.
Our goal is to help translate all that research into practice, so that we can get on with this business of ending homelessness.
Some of the topics covered will include:
For more information about the symposium and registration information please visit http://instituteofhomelessstudies.org/symposium.php 

 

Tampa Internet - Your Connection To Tampa Bay, Florida!
http://www.TampaInternet.com

#309 From: G B <anthroman40@...>
Date: Sat Feb 23, 2008 5:29 am
Subject: Re: RE: Workshop: Creating Practitioners' Network
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
We seem to emerge when there is something to come together about, but we are certainly an amorphous lot.  We're juggling careers and families and tend to limit our scholarship to internal reports and power points.  I've begun to despise power points. 
 
Some of us run across each other at in meetings and might steal a moment to mention an article we've noticed or a brief lecture we've caught at conference as there are a fair number of us in or around the area working in related fields.  These tend to end with vague commitments to get together and glean some lessons learned with an anthropological lens.  And sometimes it does happen.
 
Lately, and I can't speak for the group other than to say that I pull these thoughts from a couple of conversations I've had with colleagues from around the country - so it is by no means a representative sample - some of us feel alien to our academic brethren.  A sort of academic hegemony seems to be running through the professional organizations, even SfAA - it has always seemed to be that way with AAA (and as I said, this is not necessarily the opinion or observation of all the SCOPA members - but it is of a few) and frankly, the experience is a sense of hypocrisy.  This is a difficult issue when you have friends and colleagues in academia for whom you also feel a sense of love and respect and look forward to what they may be doing next.   I guess it is like a dysfunctional family sort of dynamic. 
 
I think these are difficult times for our academic brethren.  It is certainly always a difficult time for an applied (or practicing if you prefer) anthropologist.  Some of us have joked about breaking away entirely and forming a guild of anthropraxis - but then the joke is finding the time to get together to do it.
 
Each of us began life listening to the beat of our mother's hearts.  We follow the rhythms of the rising and setting sun, the seasons (even when they are simply the seasons of hot and hotter), and we pace ourselves to the cadence of our cultural roles and obligations.  We know timing is as critical to ideas as much as it is to anything else in our lives.  This seems to be a time when we don't have the luxury of being dysfunctional.  This seems to be a time when anthropology can actualize some of the positive things it has gathered on human organization over the past hundred fifty years or so and put them to work.  We seem to be at a moment in time where some people may actually try things.
 
I guess I am saying, I think we may need more than a workshop - but it's certainly a place to start.  We can easily pass the information along.  Thank you.
 
More than two cents and probably should have waited till morning to push the send button.
 
Regards,
Glenn

----- Original Message ----
From: "Wolfe, Alvin" <wolfe@...>
To: R.Severson@...; GBrown@...
Cc: epuccia@...; terrymredding@...; scopa@yahoogroups.com; scopa@...
Sent: Tuesday, November 20, 2007 3:41:07 PM
Subject: [SCOPA] RE: Workshop: Creating Practitioners' Network

I don't think of SCOPA as dormant.  Rather it is struggling to emerge from a quiet period of some months.  The workshop “Creating Practitioner’s Network” workshop that you’re hosting through NAPA at AAA next week sound like just what our SCOPA people need.
--Alvin

Alvin W. Wolfe
Distinguished University Professor Emeritus
Department of Anthropology
4202 E. Fowler Avenue, SOC107
University of South Florida
Tampa, FL  33620-8100   813-974-0794



From: R.Severson@research -int.com [mailto:R.Severson@ research- int.com]
Sent: Tuesday, November 20, 2007 3:31 PM
To: GBrown@childrensboa rd.org
Cc: Wolfe, Alvin; epuccia@aol. com; terrymredding@ yahoo.com
Subject: SCOPA

Dear Glenn Brown, Ellen Puccia, and Al Wolfe,

            I’m touching base with people who had at one time been involved in LPOs…. and I realize SCOPA has been dormant, right?

Are you or anybody you know interested in revival? If so, see below about next week at AAA. If not, just wanted you to know…….

Terry Redding and I have 20+ people signed up for a “Creating Practitioner’s Network” workshop that we’re hosting through NAPA at AAA next week, and who knows, some of them may be from your area……….

Let us know if you have a chance….Thanks, Rebecca Severson (NAPA LPO coordinator)

 

 

 

Hey CAPA: Leader-Leader, who’s the Leader?  Can any of you do any of these things we need done for AAA next week? (CAPA flier, rep at workshop and/or lunch) ……… let me know. We need to make reservations! Thanks, Rebecca

           

1 Supply your CAPA flier for the booth.  Drop off  fliers or something that describes CAPA for us to hand out at the LPO-NAPA booth at AAA so people will know who to contact etc. You can leave the fliers at 9am on Thurs Nov 29 at the booth.

2. Represent CAPA at NAPA-sponsored workshop:  Thurs, Nov 29, 11am-Noon at AAA conference. NAPA is sponsoring a workshop that Terry and I are leading (Creating Practitioner Networks) for those interested in created LPOs in their own areas. It will be Thursday, Nov. 29, from 10 am to noon. We would like to invite a member of each LPO to send a veteran member to the second hour of the workshop (11-noon), in order to talk about practicalities and strategies to attendees about the realities of managing an LPO.
3. Represent your LPO at LPO luncheon: Thurs, Nov, 29 12noon-2pm, Immediately following the workshop, we will have our annual free LPO luncheon, scheduled for approximately noon to 2 pm. at a nearby restaurant. This will be primarily a social function, where we can informally discuss news and issues. Hopefully some potential new LPO organizers will attend as well. There are several possible venues: anyone for Afghani?

Please let Terry and me know if you can send a member to the second hour of the workshop, and, if different, who will be representing your LPO at the luncheon. The workshop is free, so you or any members are welcome to attend the entire session.

Thanks so much and look forward to hearing from you!

 

Rebecca Severson
Account Executive
Qualitative, USA
Research International
312.981.5816
r.severson@research -int.com
www.research- int.com

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#310 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Mon Mar 17, 2008 12:11 pm
Subject: Save America's Treasures Grants
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 

Cultural Heritage Projects Funded

National Park Service: Save America's Treasures Grants
Save America's Treasures Grants, administered by the National Park Service in partnership with the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Institute of Museum and Library Services, and the President's Committee on the Arts and the Humanities, are provided to preserve our country’s cultural heritage. Grants are available for preservation and/or conservation work on nationally significant intellectual and cultural artifacts and collections, including documents, sculpture, and other works of art, and on nationally significant historic properties, including historic districts, sites, buildings, structures, and objects. The grants require a dollar-for-dollar, non-federal match. Applications must be submitted online through Grants.gov by May 20, 2008. Visit the website listed above for program details.

 

 


#311 From: "Glenn Brown" <anthroman40@...>
Date: Tue Apr 15, 2008 1:18 am
Subject: Opportunity for Ph.D.: RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
Position: Program Officer
Organization:
Russell Sage Foundation
Location: New York
Date posted: 4/6/2008

RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION
112 East 64th Street
New York, New York 10065

Position Opening

PROGRAM OFFICER

The Russell Sage Foundation is the principal American foundation devoted exclusively to research in the social sciences. An operating foundation with assets of over $250 million, the Foundation supports external research projects on a variety of social issues, provides residential fellowships to selected scholars, and publishes books and monographs deriving from the research it supports. Current programs include research on the labor market problems of low-skilled workers, the social, economic and political implications of the current large wave of immigration to the U.S., the social consequences of the recent rise in economic inequality, and the ways in which U.S. institutions are adapting to the increasing racial and ethnic diversity of the American population. The Foundation's interests range across topics in economics, sociology, political science, and social psychology, and its programs are often designed to foster new or interdisciplinary approaches to social problems in the U.S.

The Foundation seeks a program officer to take responsibility for overseeing one or more current research programs, to orchestrate the annual review of visiting scholar applications, and to participate in the development of the Foundation's new initiatives in social research. The program officer will work with program staff and academic advisory committees to provide overall intellectual and scientific direction for each program under development. Duties include writing requests for proposals, reviewing submitted proposals, organizing peer review, working with principal investigators to shape projects that require revision, writing briefs to propose research projects to the Foundation's Board of Trustees, monitoring funded research, and consulting with other funding agencies to secure support for co-funded projects.

Qualifications include:

· a Ph.D. and a substantial research background in social science
· strong analytic and quantitative training
· excellent interpersonal and organizational skills
· evidence of superior writing ability
· excellent presentational skills
· demonstrated administrative strengths


The Foundation offers a competitive salary commensurate with experience, and excellent benefits.

Send a resume and a brief letter describing qualifications and interest in the position to:

Ms. Alexsa Rosa
Russell Sage Foundation
112 East 64th Street
New York, New York 10065
Email: arosa@...

All applications received will remain under consideration until a hiring decision is made.


Contact Information:

E-mail : arosa@...
Ms. Alexsa Rosa
Russell Sage Foundation
112 E. 64th Street
New York, NY 10065
USA


POSITION CATEGORIES:
Grant making, Other programs

#312 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Mon May 5, 2008 12:11 pm
Subject: Emailing: Google for Non-Profits
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 

A helpful new resource brought to you by Google:

 

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#313 From: "E.J. Ford" <Edseljoe@...>
Date: Fri Jun 6, 2008 3:05 pm
Subject: EJ FORD FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 60!
edseljoe1968
Send Email Send Email
 
EJ_Ford_ad(blue)verysmall.jpgeditEJ5small.jpg

Hello!  My name is E.J. Ford - you may remember me!  I'm running as a
Democrat for State Representative here in District 60, my home, the area
that includes Lake Magdalene, Lutz, New Tampa, USF, Temple Terrace,
Thonotosassa, and Mango.  Let me tell you why I deserve your support.



First, I'm qualified for the job.  I'm a trained social scientist, an
anthropologist with a background in politics.  I'm a husband and a father
who sends his kids to Florida schools.  I'm a Floridian who has lived in or
near District 60, my home district, for almost all of my life.



Second, it's time for a change in the state of Florida.  The current
incumbents went to Tallahassee with a clear mandate to solve the insurance
crisis, the budget shortfall, the property tax explosion, and a number of
other problems.  And the only lasting memorial to their work was a
Presidential Primary catastrophe that embarrassed the state and
disenfranchised Floridians.



Third, I want to do some things.  I want to bring real homeowner's insurance
reform and real property tax relief to hardworking Floridians.  I want to
protect Floridians: helping law enforcement focus on violent crime and
building the resources we need to protect our environment.  I want to
protect the rights of Floridians, keeping the state out of our bedrooms,
churches, and gun cabinets, and keeping the state's hands off of our bodies.
And, I want to make sure that, unlike my opponent, I'm on the RIGHT side of
education issues.  We need more resources for education, more flexibility in
how we pay for it, and more local control of curriculum and resource
management.



I hope you'll join me in this fight.  It's going to be a lot of fun.



In the short run, here's what you can do to help me bring the fight to the
field.  Please tell your friends I'm running!  Then, please volunteer and
help us win this race!



Then, please make a donation - even ten bucks would help.



Please help!  Just send your check to this address:



E.J. Ford Campaign

401 Berwick Avenue

Temple Terrace, FL 33687



REMEMBER: Campaign finance law mandates that you include your occupation, as
well as your home address, with every check.  There's also an upper limit of
$500.00 for contributions to candidates in this race.



Right now, we need to raise money to qualify for the ballot, so the need
could not be more urgent.  Please help!  Even $10 will make it possible for
us to make a positive change for Florida.



If you are interested in volunteering, please contact me at
<mailto:ejford@...> ejford@... or call me at 813-629-9803.  We
need you!



Thanks for your support.  I'll do my best to make you proud.



EJ Ford

Candidate

State Representative, District 60

#314 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Fri Jun 6, 2008 3:11 pm
Subject: FW: [AntConn] EJ FORD FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 60!
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 

 

 

From: AntConn@yahoogroups.com [mailto:AntConn@yahoogroups.com] On Behalf Of E.J. Ford
Sent: Friday, June 06, 2008 11:05 AM
To: ejford@...
Cc: edseljoe@...
Subject: [AntConn] EJ FORD FOR STATE REPRESENTATIVE DISTRICT 60!

 

EJ_Ford_ad(blue)verysmall.jpgeditEJ5small.jpg

Hello!  My name is E.J. Ford – you may remember me!  I’m running as a Democrat for State Representative here in District 60, my home, the area that includes Lake Magdalene, Lutz, New Tampa, USF, Temple Terrace, Thonotosassa, and Mango.  Let me tell you why I deserve your support.

 

First, I’m qualified for the job.  I’m a trained social scientist, an anthropologist with a background in politics.  I’m a husband and a father who sends his kids to Florida schools.  I’m a Floridian who has lived in or near District 60, my home district, for almost all of my life. 

 

Second, it’s time for a change in the state of Florida.  The current incumbents went to Tallahassee with a clear mandate to solve the insurance crisis, the budget shortfall, the property tax explosion, and a number of other problems.  And the only lasting memorial to their work was a Presidential Primary catastrophe that embarrassed the state and disenfranchised Floridians.

 

Third, I want to do some things.  I want to bring real homeowner’s insurance reform and real property tax relief to hardworking Floridians.  I want to protect Floridians: helping law enforcement focus on violent crime and building the resources we need to protect our environment.  I want to protect the rights of Floridians, keeping the state out of our bedrooms, churches, and gun cabinets, and keeping the state’s hands off of our bodies.  And, I want to make sure that, unlike my opponent, I’m on the RIGHT side of education issues.  We need more resources for education, more flexibility in how we pay for it, and more local control of curriculum and resource management.

 

I hope you’ll join me in this fight.  It’s going to be a lot of fun.

 

In the short run, here’s what you can do to help me bring the fight to the field.  Please tell your friends I’m running!  Then, please volunteer and help us win this race!

 

Then, please make a donation – even ten bucks would help. 

 

Please help!  Just send your check to this address:

 

E.J. Ford Campaign

401 Berwick Avenue

Temple Terrace, FL 33687

 

REMEMBER: Campaign finance law mandates that you include your occupation, as well as your home address, with every check.  There’s also an upper limit of $500.00 for contributions to candidates in this race.

 

Right now, we need to raise money to qualify for the ballot, so the need could not be more urgent.  Please help!  Even $10 will make it possible for us to make a positive change for Florida.

 

If you are interested in volunteering, please contact me at ejford@... or call me at 813-629-9803.  We need you!

 

Thanks for your support.  I’ll do my best to make you proud.

 

EJ Ford

Candidate

State Representative, District 60

 

 


#315 From: "E.J. Ford" <Edseljoe@...>
Date: Mon Jun 9, 2008 6:07 pm
Subject: $10.00 for Democracy?
edseljoe1968
Send Email Send Email
 
editEJ5small.jpg

Hello!



This is E.J. Ford again.  As I mentioned last week, I'm running to be the
Democratic representative for District 60 here in Florida.



To qualify for the ballot, I need your help.  Because of our late start, the
only way we can qualify is if we raise the approximately $2000.00 to put my
name on the ballot.  We can't do petitions; that time has passed.  That
means that I need to raise money, and fast.  We've already raised a few
hundred dollars of that total in just 48 hours of fundraising.



We need to have out $2000.00 before the qualifying deadline, which is just
about ten days from now.  I don't care if we raise it in $10.00 increments
or four big checks of $500.00 apiece.  What's important is that I raise the
qualifying fee so that I can make my case to the voters of Florida!



If you can help, even if it's just ten dollars, I strongly urge you to do
so.  I know I sent this email out to hundreds of my friends and I am asking
you now to support me in my quest for office.  $10.00, $20.00, more if you
can afford it.  All of it will make it possible for us to get on the ballot
and bring the fight to the field.  Please do your part to support me and
support Democracy here in Florida.



Please help!  Just send your check to this address:



E.J. Ford Campaign

401 Berwick Avenue

Temple Terrace, FL 33687

----------OR-----------

Point your web browser to www.ejford.org and select the link to



REMEMBER: Campaign finance law mandates that you include your occupation, as
well as your home address, with every check.  There's also an upper limit of
$500.00 for contributions to candidates in this race.



If you can't afford to make a donation, PLEASE tell your friends about my
campaign!  Tell EVERYONE you know.  I need help and I need it now.



You can do it!



If you are interested in volunteering, please contact me at
ejford@... or call me at 813-629-9803.  We need you!



Thanks for your support.  I'll do my best to make you proud.



EJ Ford

Candidate

State Representative, District 60

This email is a political advertisement paid for and approved by E.J. Ford,
Democrat, Candidate for State Representative District 60

#316 From: "E.J. Ford" <Edseljoe@...>
Date: Mon Jun 16, 2008 8:03 pm
Subject: QUALIFYING JUNE 18!
edseljoe1968
Send Email Send Email
 
EJ_Ford_ad(blue)verysmall.jpgeditEJ5small.jpg

This time of year, with the Presidential Campaign taking precedence in the
press, people sometimes forget about the down-ticket races that are so
important.



Some political activists know how important those races are: someone passing
a zoning law on your city council is going to make a greater immediate
impact on your life than someone going to Washington.



That's part of the reason why I'm seeking office as a state representative,
here in District 60.



What they do in Tallahassee will have a direct effect on each and every
Floridian.  And, folks, since Florida is one of the four or five largest
states in the USA, what happens here will change our country in a real way.



Does Florida's appalling record on public education bother you?  Well, look
out, because if we get another legislative session like the last one, it's
going to get worse.



Do you worry about what will happen if we allow drilling off the coast of
Florida?



Are you concerned by the continually renewed crops of aggressive drivers
complicating increasingly overtaxed rush hours?



Does it bother you that new jobs don't seem to be a priority of the current
administration in Tallahassee?



Do the restrictions on citizen petitions make you nervous about the state of
democracy in Florida?



These, and other topics, are all causes for concern.  I'm ready to fight to
solve these problems.



But first, I need to get on that ballot!  Wednesday, June 18, is our
effective deadline for getting our cash up to Tallahassee.  We need it,
folks, and badly if we're going to qualify to vote.



Join your friends and neighbors!  Special thanks go out to Iraida, Kathy,
Adrienne and Ralph, Daniel, Wendy, Danielle and Scott, Steve and Melissa,
Carol and Ed, Dan, Chris (a.k.a., Jimmy!), Jeff, Karl, Glenn, Janelle, Juan,
Allison, Al and Nancy, Alvin, and my other pals that have taken the plunge
early in this process to put us over the top.



Even a $10 donation will make a big difference.  The key is not to wait.
Please send your check, RIGHT NOW, to the address below.  We can take online
donations, too, through the magic of the internet!  Just point your browser
to www.ejford.org and follow the link to the Donate page.



Believe me when I tell you that not a dime, not a second will be wasted!



E.J. Ford Campaign

401 Berwick Avenue

Temple Terrace, FL 33617

www.ejford.org

This message is a political advertisement paid for and approved by E.J.
Ford, Democrat, for State Representative, District 60

#317 From: <anthroman40@...>
Date: Thu Jun 19, 2008 7:32 am
Subject: Fwd: FIELD METHODS -- call for papers and special issues
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 

*****  To join INSNA, visit http://www.insna.org  *****

FIELD METHODS – CALL FOR PAPERS AND SPECIAL ISSUES

This is to let you know that FIELD METHODS has
been accepted into the Social Science Citation Index database.

Now in its 20th year, FM is a quarterly,
international journal, published by Sage
Publications and supported by an international
board of editors from across the social sciences.

For more information about FM:
<http://www.qualquant.net/FM/>http://www.qualquant.net/FM/

FIELD METHODS solicits articles about new methods
in social sciences and on new uses for existing methods.

FIELD METHODS also publishes special issues.
Please contact me if you have an idea for an
article or a special issue that you'd like to discuss.

H. Russell Bernard <ufruss@...>

FM publishes articles on methods for collecting,
analyzing and presenting data about human thought
and human behavior under field conditions. By
“field conditions,” we mean all conditions except the lab.

FM publishes articles on topics ranging from
getting past gatekeepers in ethnographic
fieldwork to the construction of web-based
surveys; from response effects in surveys to
sampling under field conditions; from techniques
for direct observation of behavior to techniques
for coding and analyzing text. FM also publishes
occasional essays on epistemological issues.

FM’s motto is “methods belong to all of us.”
Regardless of our epistemological or theoretical
assumptions, no method belongs to a field.
Ethnographers today regularly do surveys; survey
researcher today regularly do ethnographic or
cognitive interviewing to develop questions; and
scholars in every social science discipline
regularly analyze text and other qualitative data
(still and moving images, for example).


_____________________________________________________________________
SOCNET is a service of INSNA, the professional association for social
network researchers (http://www.insna.org). To unsubscribe, send
an email message to listserv@... containing the line
UNSUBSCRIBE SOCNET in the body of the message.

#318 From: "E.J. Ford" <Edseljoe@...>
Date: Thu Jun 19, 2008 7:53 pm
Subject: You did it!
edseljoe1968
Send Email Send Email
 
EJ_Ford_final_blue_2resize.jpg



Folks, we've done it.



Despite our late start, we raised the money needed to qualify to be on the
ballot with a little seed money left over.  Some said it couldn't be done.



The first donation the campaign received came from my good friend Dino, whom
I've known for almost 30 years.  Dino didn't give much, but what he gave
came just at the time when I was beginning to worry that I was on a fool's
errand.  His confidence carried me forward.  Your confidence in my chances
has put me in a position I never thought I would be:



This fall, when you go to the polling booth, toward the bottom of the
ticket, you'll see my name: E.J. Ford, Democrat, for State Representative
District 60.



Ain't it cool?



It is cool because it means that I am that much closer to getting up to
Tallahassee and being the kind of voice in politics that you want to have.



Take some time to congratulate yourself for helping get me this far.



OK, now it's time to get back to work.



This is going to be a long and difficult campaign season.  We are up against
a well-funded, three-term incumbent.  We need three things to help us beat
him and we need them now!



1)      We need volunteers.  This fall, we're going to be working closely
with the Democratic Party as part of the integrated campaign that they have
promised to bring to our state.  But, like a lot of things, you get as much
as you give.  If we have respectable crew of volunteers, we will get more
help from the party.  Plus, we'll be able to help change things on the
national level.  Check out the campaign website www.ejford.org or email me
at ejford@...

2)      We need advice.  If you have an opinion about a hot campaign issue,
please email me at ejford@....  Whether it's offshore drilling,
property taxes, the neglect of our education system, or campaign finance
reform, I want to hear your opinion.  Don't hold back!

3)      We need money.  The sad truth of the election season is that you
need to raise money to play.  We need cash to buy the campaign signs and
fliers.  Later, we may be able to get campaign t-shirts.  But for right now,
we need some money to get our campaign rolling.  You can send your
contribution to the address below or, again, check out our campaign website
www.ejford.org



Please take a moment and donate or volunteer.  This race matters.  We need
you and you can make a difference!



Thanks,



E.J. Ford Campaign

401 Berwick Avenue

Temple Terrace, FL 33617

www.ejford.org

This message is a political advertisement paid for and approved by E.J.
Ford, Democrat, for State Representative, District 60

#319 From: "E.J. Ford" <Edseljoe@...>
Date: Thu Jun 19, 2008 7:58 pm
Subject: You did it!
edseljoe1968
Send Email Send Email
 
EJ_Ford_final_blue_2resize.jpg



Folks, we've done it.



Despite our late start, we raised the money needed to qualify to be on the
ballot with a little seed money left over.  Some said it couldn't be done.



The first donation the campaign received came from my good friend Dino, whom
I've known for almost 30 years.  Dino didn't give much, but what he gave
came just at the time when I was beginning to worry that I was on a fool's
errand.  His confidence carried me forward.  Your confidence in my chances
has put me in a position I never thought I would be:



This fall, when you go to the polling booth, toward the bottom of the
ticket, you'll see my name: E.J. Ford, Democrat, for State Representative
District 60.



Ain't it cool?



It is cool because it means that I am that much closer to getting up to
Tallahassee and being the kind of voice in politics that you want to have.



Take some time to congratulate yourself for helping get me this far.



OK, now it's time to get back to work.



This is going to be a long and difficult campaign season.  We are up against
a well-funded, three-term incumbent.  We need three things to help us beat
him and we need them now!



1)      We need volunteers.  This fall, we're going to be working closely
with the Democratic Party as part of the integrated campaign that they have
promised to bring to our state.  But, like a lot of things, you get as much
as you give.  If we have respectable crew of volunteers, we will get more
help from the party.  Plus, we'll be able to help change things on the
national level.  Check out the campaign website www.ejford.org or email me
at ejford@...

2)      We need advice.  If you have an opinion about a hot campaign issue,
please email me at ejford@....  Whether it's offshore drilling,
property taxes, the neglect of our education system, or campaign finance
reform, I want to hear your opinion.  Don't hold back!

3)      We need money.  The sad truth of the election season is that you
need to raise money to play.  We need cash to buy the campaign signs and
fliers.  Later, we may be able to get campaign t-shirts.  But for right now,
we need some money to get our campaign rolling.  You can send your
contribution to the address below or, again, check out our campaign website
www.ejford.org



Please take a moment and donate or volunteer.  This race matters.  We need
you and you can make a difference!



Thanks,



E.J. Ford Campaign

401 Berwick Avenue

Temple Terrace, FL 33617

www.ejford.org

This message is a political advertisement paid for and approved by E.J.
Ford, Democrat, for State Representative, District 60

#320 From: Glenn Brown <anthroman40@...>
Date: Tue Jul 1, 2008 12:57 pm
Subject: FW: [Fwd: FICS Uploads Eight Galleries to WWW.FICSINC.ORG !]
anthroman40
Send Email Send Email
 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Alayne Unterberger [mailto:alayne@...]
> Sent: Monday, June 30, 2008 2:31 PM
> To: Christina Mathis
> Subject: [Fwd: FICS Uploads Eight Galleries to WWW.FICSINC.ORG !]
>
> Florida Institute for Community Studies, Inc.
>
> El Instituto de Estudios Comunitarios de la Florida, Inc.
>
> 6704 Hanley Road Tampa, FL 33634 *Ph: 813.249.8100
>
> Fax: 813-249-8110* http://www.ficsinc.org* email:
> alayne@...
>
>
> PRESS RELEASE
>
> For Immediate Release: June 30, 2008
>
> Contact Person: Alayne Unterberger, FICS 813.249.8100 or 813.477.2882
>
>
> *FICS Uploads Eight Galleries to WWW.FICSINC.ORG !*
>
> * *
> Tampa, Wimauma, Ruskin, Plant City, Dover, Wesley Chapel: Today the
> Florida Institute for Community Studies (FICS) posted eight new
> galleries online at www.ficsinc.org, representing our recent events
and
> programs:
>
>
> 1. Puerto Rican Parade (April 2008)
>
> 2. Project Prevention (April 2008)
>
> 3. Spring Showcase: Your Journey to Happiness (April 2008)
>
> 4. Health Careers Expedition (June 2008): youth from Pasco County,
Town
> N Country, Tampa
>
> 5. Health Careers Expedition (June 2008): youth from Dover, Riverview,
> Ruskin, Wimauma
>
>
> The almost 900 photos depict the diversity of events and programming
> that responds to our mission of partnering with communities across
> Florida to help them achieve their goals through research, education,
> training and services. Our program statistics include the following
> highlights: 600 graduates of Project Prevention, 480 participants in
> Prodigy (2007-8) and 82 graduates of Health Careers Expeditions! Check
> them out today!
>
>
> On Friday, June 27, 2008, FICS conducted 20 HIV tests in conjunction
> with National HIV Testing Day. Latinos who had never been tested
> comprised a major portion of those who participated.
>
>
> The press and public are invited to our next major event, Summer
Brilla
> Showcase, to be held on Saturday July 26, 2008 from 12 - 3 PM at the
> Town N Country Recreation Center, 6039 Hanley Road, Tampa, FL 33634.
Attachment: vcard [not shown]

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