Global Studies

Illinois International episode with Tom Bassett and Alex Winter-Nelson.

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Format: http://ilint.illinois.edu/community/tv/ilint_tv.html

Proposal for the Creation of a National Network of Global Studies High Schools

October 30, 2008
Author(s): Edward A. Kolodziej, Karen Hewitt, Allison Witt
Affiliation: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Publication Type: Occasional Paper
Abstract:

This is a proposal to seek private and public funding to create a national network of global studies high schools (GSHS). The aim of a network of GSHSs is to enlarge the leadership corps of the next generation and to equip its members to address mounting global challenges to the security, material welfare, and freedoms of the American people, the citizens of open societies everywhere, and those who are striving to join their ranks.

 

Global History: Research and Teaching in the 21st Century

June 20, 2005
Author(s): J.R. McNeill
Affiliation: School of Foreign Service, Georgetown University
Publication Type: Occasional Paper
Abstract:

Dr. J.R. McNeill teaches world history, environmental history and international history at Georgetown University. In this occasional paper, McNeill discusses why it is important to study history and global studies and three different models used when teaching world history. Then Dr. McNeil delves into one of those models, “the human web”, covering the growth of civilization throughout the past 6,000 years and what that means for historical perspectives on global studies.

 

Plotting an Intellectual Jailbreak: Rationale For Globalizing the Campus and University

June 20, 2005
Affiliation: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Publication Type: Occasional Paper
Abstract:

Absent a compelling rationale, there is little reason to create a new program of global studies in an already crowded academic landscape, nor much justification for re-allocating scarce (and often shrinking) human and material resources to this enterprise. Four propositions provide a necessary if insufficiently complete and comprehensive rationale for global studies programs. First, and increasingly, fundamental problems of deep and universal concern to humans everywhere can be resolved or managed only if they are addressed — simultaneously and synchronously — at local, national, regional, and global levels by relevant actors. Second, the scope of these global and globalizing problems evidences the emergence of a global society for the first time in the evolution of the species. Third, the description, explanation, and understanding of globalization, marked by globalizing problems of a world society, require dedicated interdisciplinary and interprofessional programs of study. The obverse to this proposition, fourth, is that, notwithstanding its many merits, the current diffuse and decentralized organization of educational programs and disciplinary units across the academy at all levels is ill-suited — in some instances a serious impediment — to the study of globalization and to the discovery of ways to employ and deploy the forces unleashed by globalization for human good or, conversely, to limit and frustrate the damage they do.

 

Global Energy Trends: The Supply/Demand, the Technology and the Policy Dimensions

Date: October 10, 2007
Speaker(s): George Gross
Organization:
Format: Real Media
Running Time: 1 hour, 25 minutes
Series: Prisms of Globalization

Researching and Teaching Global History

Date: June 20, 2005
Speaker(s): John McNeill, Professor of History, Georgetown University
Organization: Center for Global Studies
Research Clusters: Global Studies Education
Format: Real Media
Running Time: 1 Hour 35 Minutes
Series: Global Studies in Higher Education Conference