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BC Brief

Welcome to BC Brief, a hub for Brooklyn College campus news. Please tell us your news about publications, presentations, grants, awards, student success, alumni achievement, major upcoming campus events, and more using the BC Brief Submission Form.

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  • March 1, 2023 | | large language models, Technology

    Sociology Professor Kenneth A. Gould co-authored an opinion piece, “Risks and Benefits of Large Language Models for the Environment” which appeared in the latest issue of Environmental Science and Technology, a biweekly peer-reviewed scientific journal.

    The work is an international collaboration with interdisciplinary scholars that explores the benefits and risks of large language models for the environment. It discusses large language models (LLM) which are artificial intelligence models that create human-like responses based on large amounts of data and human input. It can compile, read, and translate texts into sentences that resemble how we write. The authors explore the advantages and disadvantages of learning language models and their effects on our environment as well as how environmental research is conducted. 

    The article is available here: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.3c01106

    Currently, Gould is the director of the Urban Sustainability Program at Brooklyn College and serves as a professor of sociology, earth and environmental sciences at the CUNY Graduate Center. His most recent work examines the socio-environmental impacts of coastal climate change resilience policies in urban contexts. Gould’s main research focuses on the political economy of the environment, technology, and development. He is most notably known for his contribution to the Treadmill of Production model of socioenvironmental dynamics. 

     

  • February 27, 2023 | | Judaic Studies

     Sara Reguer, professor emerita of history in the Department of Judaic Studies, was invited by Columbia University as a guest lecturer to discuss her prestigious book, Winston S. Churchill, and the Shaping of the Middle East, 1919-1922 on February 22.

    For over 32 years, Reguer served as the former head of the Judaic Studies Department dedicating her commitment and passion to educating students on the importance of Jewish civilization and the issues they had and continue to currently encounter. She focuses on the history of Jewish women with a special emphasis on Judaic scholarship and feminism. 

    The book is available here: https://www.academicstudiespress.com/israelsocietycultureandhistory/winston-s-churchill-and-the-shaping-of-the-middle-east

  • February 15, 2023 | | Archaeology

    H. Arthur Bankoff ’65, professor emeritus of the Department of Anthropology, co-author of Buried Beneath the City: An Archaeological History of New York along with Nan Rothschild, Amanda Sutphin and Jessica Striebel MacLean, won the 2023 Society for American Archaeology Book Award.  

    The book explores the archeological history of New York City. It features images of artifacts from archaeological excavations throughout the five boroughs of New York and allows us to gain insight into the city’s past and the people that lived there. The information was curated by the NYC Archaeological Repository.

    Currently, Bankoff is the longtime advisor to the chair for archaeology at the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission where he supervises reviews and approval of sites, research designs, and archaeological work in New York City. The alumnus is the Director of Brooklyn College’s Archeology Research center where he manages fieldwork and laboratory analysis of more than 20 local sites.  

    Bankoff’s has amassed over 35 years of archeological laboratory and fieldwork experience. 

    He has directed archaeological excavations and taught in field schools in New York, Yugoslavia, Serbia, Croatia, Bulgaria, and Israel. He has held two Fulbright Research Fellowships in Yugoslavia. His projects have been funded by National Geographic, the National Science Foundation, the National Endowment for the Humanities, IREX and the PSC-CUNY Faculty Research Awards Program.


  • February 8, 2023 | | Evolution, Psychology

    Stefano Ghirlanda, professor of psychology, has co-authored a new book, The Human Evolutionary Transition: From Animal Intelligence to Culture which will be released on February 28.  

    The work explores the evolution of human and animal intelligence. Humans think, solve, react, and adapt to various situations while animals rely on genetics and are innately inclined towards 

    learning through repetition and association. The authors’ central theme is that humans are a superior species to animals because of their strong cognitive behavior and their ability to retain information through sequential learning. Animals are not given the opportunity to develop new behavioral and mental skills while humans are given these changes through childhood and through culture. 

    Ghirlanda is also a professor of biology at the CUNY Graduate Center. Additionally, he is a guest professor at Stockholm University in the Centre for the Study of Cultural Evolution in Sweden and the founder and fellow of Stockholm University’s Centre for the Study of Culture Evolution. Ghirlanda is an active researcher and a behavioral theorist who studies human and animal behavior. He examines how animals adapt to new situations, learn from their experiences which relate to their instinctive abilities.

    Ghirlanda has written and co-authored several national and international journals on topics that include behavioral theory, evolution biology, learning theory, and cultural evolution. 

    He is also the former director of the Macaulay Honors College at Brooklyn College.

    The book is available here: https://press.princeton.edu/books/ebook/9780691240763/the-human-evolutionary-transition

  • February 8, 2023 | | Koppelman School of Business, Advisory Council

    Brooklyn College’s Koppelman School of Business is thrilled to announce their newest member, Michael Bussa ’85 to the Dean of Advisory Council. Michael Bussa is a Partner in the Global Mobility Services Tax practice of KPMG,LLC., the Global head of KMPG’s Reward practice, and the U.S. Leader for the Global Reward Services (GRS). 

    During his distinguished business career, of over 37 years, Bussa has consulted with organizations in all industries helping them to thrive. The alumnus has been involved with numerous corporations and created incentive global compensation programs, provided advice on how to capitalize on corporate income tax savings as well as merger and acquisitions due diligence while ensuring that the organizations obey the regulatory laws.

    The Dean of Advisory Council created by Koppelman School Dean Qing Hu and its council chair Martin D. Sass ‘63, in 2021, launched a committee comprised of business industry leaders that possess a variety of experience in marketing, finance, insurance, and other areas of the business world. The purpose of the Advisory Council is to provide Koppelman students mentorship and guidance with their academic and career endeavors, share their expertise regarding the current state of the business industry. Additionally, they assist in the development of the new curriculum for the School of Business. 


  • February 1, 2023 | | Art Exhibition, African American Culture

    Derrick Adams, Assistant Professor of Art, has debuted his latest solo art exhibition, “I Can Show You Better Than I Can Tell You” at The FLAG Art Foundation in Chelsea which is on display now through March 11.

    The new exhibit features 16 paintings based on his new series Motion Picture Paintings. The artwork provides a glimpse into the different aspects of film production including movie trailers, billboards, and close ups. The paintings convey the emotions of fear, fantasy and joy and are influenced by family photos, and the celebration of everyday life in modern 

    African American culture. The images can be viewed individually but are connected to represent how the overall story will unfold. 

    Within the artist’s twenty-year career, he has become well renown in the contemporary art scene and has had numerous solo shows which include “Sweet Spot” (2022) at the LGDR & Wei in Hong Kong; “Looks,” at the Cleveland Art Museum; Derrick Adams and Barbara Earl Thomas: “Packaged Black” (2021) at the Henry Art Gallery in Seattle; “Style Variations (2021) at Salon 94 in New York City; Sanctuary (2021) at The Momentary in Arkansas; “Buoyant” (2020) at the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, New York amongst others.  

    The visual artist has received his own residency with the Robert Rauschen Foundation, received a Gordon Parks Foundation fellowship, a Studio Museum Joyce Alexander Wein Artists Prize, and a Louis Comfort Tiffany Award. His work remains in the permanent collections of The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Birmingham Museum of Art, and the Studio Museum in Harlem.   

    Adams earned his M.F.A from Columbia University, a B.F.A from Pratt Institute, and is an alumnus of the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation’s Studio Program.  

     

  • February 1, 2023 | | History, Slavery

    The new book co-authored by the History Professor explores historical accounts regarding slavery in West Indian Ocean during the 19th century. 

    Professor of history Gunja SenGupta has co-authored a new book, Sojourners, Sultans, and Slaves: America and the Indian Ocean in the Age of Abolition and Empire which will be released on February 21. This work unearths global historical records that highlight information regarding slavery in Western Indian Ocean societies. The authors provide first-hand narratives of the hardships slaves endured and also illustrate how poverty can be used to justify slavery in the 19th century. 

    SenGupta teachers several undergraduate and graduate classes in 19th-century United States slavery/ abolition in the Indian Ocean; the Civil War and Reconstruction; African American History; U.S Women’s History; and Comparative Slavery. She is also the former director of the Macauley Honors College at Brooklyn College. 

    The book is available here: https://www.ucpress.edu/book/9780520389137/sojourners-sultans-and-slaves

  • January 26, 2023 | | Theater, Original Play, NYSCA

    “The Machine Stops” (hyperlnk) https://www.kevinrayworks.com/the_machine_stops/  an original play based on the short story by E. M. Forster and playing at the Mark O'Donnell Theatre in Brooklyn, was devised, designed, directed, stage managed, and performed primarily by Brooklyn College Theatre alumni. The group received a grant from the NY State Council on the Arts for this production in particular because of the innovative and collaborative techniques implemented in the creation of the production. Through a combination of live acting, puppetry, and video projections, this production uses expressive theatricality to vividly bring Forster's futuristic allegory to life on stage. The play closes on Feb. 5.

    Brooklyn College Theatre Alums 

    Kevin Ray, Director – MFA Directing, 2018

    Jon Degaetano, Projection Design – MFA Theater Design, 2019

    Wyatt Moniz, Lighting Design – BFA Theater Design/Tech, 2018

    Yang Yu, Set Design – MFA Theater Design, 2019

    Henry Menestrier, Stage Manager – BFA Theater Design/Tech, 2022

    Augustus W. Cook II, Actor –CUNY BA-Theater Focus, 2018

    Uki Pavlovic, Actor – Film BA, Minor in Acting , 2018

    John Teresi, Actor – MFA Acting,  2019


  • January 25, 2023 | | Diversity, Higher Education

    As part of NGA Web Bites series, Tammie Cumming, associate provost for institutional effectiveness at Brooklyn College and program cohost, and M. David Miller (University of Florida) interviewed Paulette Granberry Russell, President of the National Association of Diversity Officers in Higher Education (NADOHE). The interview can be seen at www.nextgenerationassessment.com and on YouTube https://youtu.be/5cR2VKLSatg). 

     

  • January 9, 2023 | | History, New York City

    Benjamin Carp, the Daniel M. Lyons Chair of History, has written a new book, The Great New York Fire of 1776: A Lost Story of the American Revolution.

    This work explores the untold story of the mysterious fire that burned down New York City, the most important place in North America, during the Revolutionary War in 1776, once British forces took over. The book is available here: https://yalebooks.yale.edu/book/9780300246957/the-great-new-york-fire-of-1776/

     

  • December 29, 2022 | | Film, Film Festival, Composer, Producer

    John J.A. Jannone, an associate professor in Television, Radio & Emerging Media who was the producer and composer for the film Person Woman Man Camera TV, saw the film win awards at several 2022 film festivals, including Best Production at the Harlem Film Festival, as well as Best Made in Pennsylvania at the Centre Film Festival in State College, PA.

    You can view the film's homepage and trailer at the link below.

    https://www.brokenyolkproductions.com/features-1/personwomancameratv

     

  • December 29, 2022 | | Paleontology, Ammonites

    Katherine Marriott new book "Evolution of the Ammonoids" (CRC Press/Taylor & Francis Group) will be released on December 31st. 

    The book is an examination of the 300-million-year history of ammonoids, the famous spiral fossils, as well as the many climate disasters they survived, were killed off by, and features about 200 of Katherine’s original illustrations.

     

  • December 28, 2022 | | Business, Leadership

    Professor Friedman’s paper "Timeless Lessons About Leadership from the Midrash" examines  two ancient Midrashim and shows that many important messages about leadership are embedded in them.

    The Journal of Values-Based Leadership (JVBL) is an international journal, published by Valparaiso University's College of Business. JVBL strives to publish articles that are intellectually rigorous yet of practical use to leaders, teachers, and entrepreneurs and focuses on converging the practical, theoretical, and applicable ideas and experiences of scholars and practitioners.

     

  • December 14, 2022 | | Emerging Media, VR

    Associate Professor of Emerging Media Jason Moore’s live, interactive & immersive virtual reality project, The MetaMovie Presents: Alien Rescue has won Best VR Experience of the Year at the VR Awards. This prestigious and highly competitive awards show celebrates the best work across the global virtual reality industry.

     

  • December 14, 2022 | | Cultural anthropology, Weightlifting

    Cultural anthropology professor and children and youth studies director Katie Rose Hejtmanek recently competed in the International Weightlifting Federation's (IWF) Masters World Championships. She is the 59kg 40-44 World Champion.

    "I'm so proud to be a professor at Brooklyn College and an athlete at Brooklyn Training Hall. I am a product of the opportunities found in Brooklyn - elite higher education and athletics."

    This is part of Hejtmanek's research and scholarship program. As a cultural anthropologist she studies fitness and strength sports and uses the field method of participant observation to understand better the role of these activities in people's lives.

     

  • December 14, 2022 | | Digital Art, NFTS

    For Jennifer and Kevin McCoy, digital art has been a huge catalyst in the popular imagination surrounding “crypto” art. Together, they have stewarded this new art form and been the subjects of numerous articles and interviews, including Brooklyn College Magazine, NFTs, Storytelling, and the Future of Art and Professor Redefines What It Means to Be an Art Patron, each that have sought to understand this new art frontier.

    In November, the McCoys were featured in the PBS Nova program Crypto Decorded but are quick to note that while they were the only artists highlighted, many artists have pioneered interesting innovations in how digital art can circulate in the marketplace.

    "I am encouraged that digital artists are still doing incredible projects in this space," Jennifer said. "I am less interested in NFT's as collectibles and more interested in experimental propositions within the technology."

    Currently, Jennifer teaches a video art class for undergraduate and a graduate thesis seminar for performance and interactive media art students. She will be co-directing the PIMA program from the fall 2023 semester forward.

    Jennifer and her husband, Kevin, an associate professor of art and art education at NYU, are currently producing two projects in their studio in collaboration with NFT platforms. In the coming year, they are working with Artwrld, a production company founded by a former curator at New York's Creative Time and an international group called Snarkart.

     

  • December 8, 2022 | | Film, Awards

    John Jannone, an Associate Professor Television, Radio & Emerging Media who was the producer and composer of the film Person Woman Man Camera TV, has seen the film win awards at multiple 2022 film festivals, including the award for Best Production at the Harlem Film Festival as well as Best Made in Pennsylvania at the Centre Film Festival in State College, PA.

    You can view the film's homepage and trailer at the link below: https://www.brokenyolkproductions.com/features-1/personwomancameratv 

  • December 7, 2022 | | Conference presentation, Teachers, Technology

    Associate Professor of Education Michael Meagher, along with with colleagues from Wayne State University and Miami University, presented a paper entitled Preservice Teachers’ Task Choice in Technology-Rich Environments on Nov. 19 at the 44th Annual Meeting Of The North American Chapter of The International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education in Nashville, TN. The paper can be read on page 2,034 here: http://www.pmena.org/pmenaproceedings/PMENA 44 2022 Proceedings.pdf 

  • November 29, 2022 | | Student Debt, Supreme Court Case

    Professor and Department Chairperson for Puerto Rican and Latino Studies Alan A. Aja was  invited as an expert to contribute to an amicus brief to the U.S. Supreme Court calling to vacate current injunctions (Biden v. Nebraska https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/biden-v-nebraska/) blocking student loan cancellation. Aja joined a group of economists, sociologists, and higher education scholars in providing academic expertise on pandemic-situated rationale for the Biden administration's plan for student loan debt relief for low income borrowers. The amicus brief, filed on November 23rd, is available here: https://www.scotusblog.com/case-files/cases/biden-v-nebraska/ Prof. Aja had previously joined a co-author of the brief, scholar Louise Seamster (University of Iowa), in a Brookings Institute piece on the regressive structure of the student loan system: https://www.brookings.edu/blog/how-we-rise/2022/01/24/a-regressive-student-loan-system-results-in-costly-racial-disparities

  • November 29, 2022 | | Colonial India, Women's History

    History Professor Swapna Banerjee recently published her monograph, Fathers in a Motherland: Imagining Fatherhood in Colonial India (Oxford University Press, 2022), that breaks new ground by weaving stories of fathers and children into the history of gender, family and nation in colonial India. Focusing on the reformist Bengali Hindu and Brahmo communities, the author contends that fatherhood assumed new meaning and significance in late nineteenth and early twentieth-century India.

    In addition to her book, Banerjee also co-edited a volume Mapping Women's History : Recovery, Agency, Resistance in Colonial and Postcolonial India (Kolkata: Stree-Samya, 2022), an insightful four part collection on: I Recovery and Reminiscences; II Feminism: Agency and Resistance; III Activism; and IV Reflections. 

  • November 29, 2022 | | Greed, Business Ethics

    Koppelman School of Business faculty Hershey Friedman and Clifton Clarke have published a paper -- "Deadly Consequences of Emphasizing Profits Over Human Life: How Corporate Greed Has Caused the Death of Millions"-- demonstrating that millions of people have perished because of corporate malfeasance. Executives were aware that they were risking the life of consumers but prioritized profits over safety. Issues discussed include the opioid epidemic; climate change; the marketing of guns, sugary beverages, and menthol cigarettes; and more.

    Read it here: https://jime.csesm.org/index.php/JIME/article/view/229/191

  • November 22, 2022 | | Music, Artificial Intelligence, Deep Learning

    This project is motivated by the idea that humans are able to learn with greater efficiency than machine learning models, in large part because they learn not just from exposure, but also from domain knowledge, which includes guided practice and codified knowledge. For example, in music, people learn by both playing their instruments and classroom study of music theory. This work will develop new approaches for integrating domain knowledge into deep learning models. It will create models that can be trained with less data as well as mitigate data biases.

    https://www.nsf.gov/awardsearch/showAward?AWD_ID=2228910

  • November 22, 2022 | | Education

    As part of the Next Generation Series, Brooklyn College's Dr. Tammie Cumming,

    Associate Provost and Assistant Vice President Institutional Effectiveness, interviewed  Dr. R. Todd Benson, Executive Director and Principal Investigator for the COACHE Survey at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.

    Web Bites video series, which provides a platform for discussion of timely topics, best practices, and new approaches to emerging challenges in higher education assessment, accreditation, and policy. Each moderated video discussion features assessment specialists, educators, and higher education leaders.

    For over ten years, the Collaborative on Academic Careers in Higher Education (COACHE) has surveyed full-time faculty at over 250 colleges and universities, providing unique insights into the faculty experience and job satisfaction. Dr. Benson leads this national effort. In this lively discussion of the COACHE survey, Dr. Benson sheds light on gaining faculty buy-in for survey participation, the importance of transparency and follow-through in establishing this buy-in, and the changes in the working environment in higher education due to the pandemic.

     “It was an honor to have Dr. Benson as our guest for this Web Bites episode. COACHE has made significant contributions in assessing faculty experience and faculty campus climate,” said M. David Miller, professor of research and evaluation methodology at the University of Florida and cohost of the NGA Web Bites. “This work has allowed for many institutions to identify focus areas and make marked improvements in their faculty’s professional lives.”

    “Dr. Benson has seen firsthand that it is well worth the effort to administer a survey in such a manner that results in a respondent pool that is representative of the faculty population. This helps faculty realize the value of taking the COACHE survey with results that are actionable,” said Tammie Cumming, associate provost for institutional effectiveness at Brooklyn College and NGA Web Bite cohost. “His recommendation for communicating the results, action plans, and progress is helpful in ensuring that the data were used to prioritize efforts to improve faculty satisfaction and support for professional advancement.”

    The NGA Web Bites video series explores accreditation, assessment, research, policy, and other important topics of interest in higher education. For more, visit www.nextgenerationassessment.com.

    For more information regarding COACHE, visit https://coache.gse.harvard.edu/. 

  • Nov. 18, 2022 | | US Midterms, US Elections, Immigrant Perspective

    Assistant Professor of Marketing Ngoc Cindy Pham wrote a first-person perspective on the U.S. midterm elections where she offers her thoughts on how the election played out for the Brooklyn College campus. “There are two distinct camps: The group of professors and staff who support the Democrats and their candidates for their pro-Union policies…[and] other school officials…[who] announced they would vote for Mr. Zeldin of the Republican Party.” The original article is written in Vietnamese. 

  • All BC Brief Items

  • November 16, 2022 | | American Literature, Poverty

    In this special issue of American Literature Joseph Entin, Clare Callahan and other scholars from the University of Illinois and Princeton aim to illustrate that literature uniquely exceeds the terms of poverty’s representation. 

    https://read.dukeupress.edu/american-literature/article/94/3/383/317150/Introduction-How-American-Literature-Understands 


  • November 9, 2022 | | Education, Policy, CUNY Graduate Center

    Professor David Bloomfield, a professor of education leadership, law, and policy at Brooklyn College and a member of the Urban Education faculty at the CUNY Graduate Center, joins The Thought Project podcast to discuss what’s ahead for K-12 education in a time of deep political division.

    Schools have long been places for students to learn and to learn how to become citizens. What happens, though, when parents and lawmakers on the right and left disagree about fundamental rights and freedoms and what it means to be a citizen?    

    Recently, the Burbank Unified School District banned the novels To Kill a Mockingbird, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, Of Mice and Men, and Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry, from school reading lists. Approximately 33 states have introduced anti-transgender legislation that disproportionately targets transgender youth and restricts their access to sports, health care, even bathrooms. Bloomfield asserts that the attacks on LGBTQ youth could be curbed by the application of Title IX, which the Biden administration is currently rewriting.    

    Education has made headlines in New York, too. A New York Times investigative story sparked a recent ruling from the state department of education ordering the city to work with a large yeshiva in Brooklyn to ensure that it introduced secular instruction and complied with state standards, which it was failing to meet. Bloomfield has commented on the issue over the past several years, calling it a classic case of “education rights.”      

    Bloomfield also weighs in on the contentious reductions of the New York City Department of Education budget. He calls the cuts a “green eyeshade decision” that essentially ignored schools as community hubs that served multiple purposes during the height of the pandemic.    

    Listen in on this timely and informative conversation.

    https://www.gc.cuny.edu/news/professor-david-bloomfield-education-political-football


  • November 3, 2022 | | Middle States, Diversity, Equity, Inclusion

    Anthony Brown, Chief Diversity Officer and Special Assistant to the President, and Tammie Cumming, Associate Provost and Assistant Vice President for Institutional Effectiveness, will present at  a pre-conference workshop, “A Multilayered Approach to Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” at the Middle States Commission on Higher Education 2022 Annual Conference: Empowering Higher Education from December 7-9, in Philadelphia, PA.

    https://web.cvent.com/event/31e1fcf4-d510-4f3a-b868-0c68151d8632/websitePage:645d57e4-75eb-4769-b2c0-f201a0bfc6ce 

  • November 2, 2022 | | Higher Education, Assessment

    Linda Suskie, higher education assessment consultant and a pillar of the assessment community, was interviewed for November's Next Generation Assessment Series by Tammie Cumming, associate provost and assistant vice president for institutional effectiveness at Brooklyn College and M. David Miller (University of Florida). You can watch the interview here; https://youtu.be/dP22JfuzZEk).

  • October 26, 2022 | | LGBTQ+, Resource Center, Trans Awareness

    The CUNY LGBTQIA+ Consortium has awarded the Brooklyn College’s LGBTQ+ Resource Center $40,000 for the 2022-23 academic year for events and other support programing initiatives.

    The funding has already helped support several events this year and will fund many others, including Trans Day of Remembrance Vigil for Trans Awareness Week to be held on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2022, from 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m. at the Lily Pond at the East Campus Quad. This vigil brings awareness to the hate and violence perpetrated against trans individuals, both historically and currently. A vigil will be held on campus and a guest speaker will remember those lost and provide context during the post-Roe v. Wade era with new threats to gender-affirming health care.

    To learn more about the Center, go here: http://www.brooklyn.cuny.edu/web/academics/centers/lgbtqcenter.php?utm_source=Website&utm_medium=LGBTQ&utm_campaign=LGBTQResourceCenter 

  • October 26, 2022 | | Film, Screenwriting, Cinema

    Kirschner wrote and directed the film, which follows an art student in her first year out of college as she comes of age and questions the values of her traditional Jewish parents and stars Marla Sokoloff, Rob McElhenney, Idina Menzel and Tovah Feldshuh. 

  • October 19, 2022 | | Education, American History

    School of Education’s Sonia Murrow’s latest book Rethinking America's Past:  Howard Zinn's A People's History of the United States in the Classroom and Beyond won a Critics Choice Book Award from the American Educational Studies Association.  https://ugapress.org/book/9780820360348/rethinking-americas-past/

  • October 18, 2022 | | Sociology, New York City, Social Movements

    A new book co-authored by Carolina Bank Muñoz disrupts the guidebook industry by focusing on people power and social movements.

    A People's Guide to New York City by Carolina Bank Muñoz, Penny Lewis, Emily Tumpson Molina - Paperback - University of California Press (ucpress.edu) 

  • October 18, 2022 | | Soviet Union, Ethnicity, Empire, History

    In her new work, 'The Multiethnic Soviet Union and its Demise' (Bloomsbury, 2022), Professor O’Keeffe is the first to offer a concise, accessible overview of the evolution of the Soviet Union as a multiethnic empire. With a focus on individual life stories, it explores how the diverse peoples of the Soviet Union experienced the potential advantages and disadvantages of Soviet ethnic politics. It also explains how and why the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 along markedly national lines, leading to the birth of a variety of new nation-states – including Ukraine and the Russian Federation. 

  • October 13, 2022 | | Gender Studies, awards

    Political Science Professor Janet Elise Johnson, a co-editor of The Routledge Handbook of Gender in Central-Eastern Europe and Eurasia along with Katalin Fábiá and Mara Lazda, won an AWSS 2022 Heldt Prize for best book in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian women’s and gender studies.

    AWSS said about the work: “Unparalleled in its usefulness for the fields of study indicated in the title of this prize, the Routledge Handbook of Gender in Central-Eastern Europe and Eurasia assembles a dazzling collection of high-level articles into a coherent and well-formulated whole. Excellent editing permits the enormous breadth of topics introduced here to work both individually and in concert. Readers are treated to sensitive and eye-opening discussions of differences and similarities across a region which features not only different landscapes and languages, but also widely diverse imperial histories and religious traditions. A powerhouse of research on important topics, this volume will be a tremendous resource for years to come.” 

    You can learn more about Routledge Handbook of Gender in Central-Eastern Europe and Eurasia here:

    https://www.routledge.com/The-Routledge-Handbook-of-Gender-in-Central-Eastern-Europe-and-Eurasia/Fabian-Johnson-Lazda/p/book/9781138347755 

    You can learn more about the awards here: https://awsshome.org/awards/heldt-prizes/ 

  • Sept. 28, 2022 | | AIDS, History

    We Are Having This Conversation Now offers a history, present, and future of AIDS through thirteen short conversations between Alexandra Juhasz and Theodore Kerr, scholars deeply embedded in HIV responses. They establish multiple timelines of the epidemic, offering six foundational periodizations of AIDS culture, tracing how attention to the crisis has waxed and waned from the 1980s to the present.

  • Sept. 22, 2022 | | Energy, Climate, Business Management

    Robert Bell published an article about President Biden's energy transformation law, the Inflation Reduction Act titled “Why Biden’s Renewable Energy Law Just Might Save All Of Us From Global Warming” in Le Monde, the French newspaper of record on September 17, 2022. Bell gave a presentation on the same subject at the E5T Summer Conference at La Rochelle, France, on August 31. Here is a link to his presentation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7rUQE3qXsk4&t=15s 

  • Sept. 21, 2022 | | Is This A Room, Theater, Post-Truth

    In the recently published book "Theater in a Post-Truth World: Text, Politics, and Performance" (Bloomsbury, 2022) that examines how the concept and disagreements around post-truth have been explored in the world of theater and performance. Associate professor Helen Georgas has contributed a chapter that closely examines of reality and "truth" in Brooklyn College alum Tina Satter's verbatim staging of an FBI transcript in "Is This A Room."

  • Sept. 21, 2022 | | Sustainability, Graduate Center

    Tammy Lewis and Brooklyn College professors Brett Branco, Jennifer Cherrier, Peter Groffman, and Mike Menser presented at CUNY's Media Conference, "Are We Ready? NYC Resilience and Sustainability a Decade After Superstorm Sandy" on September 16th at the Advanced Science Research Center. The day-long press briefing explored what the greater NYC area has learned, where we are, and where we need to be 10 years after Superstorm Sandy.

    https://asrc.gc.cuny.edu/event/are-we-ready-nyc-resilience-and-sustainability-a-decade-after-superstorm-sandy/

     

  • Sept. 20, 2022 | | Anthropology, CrossFit, Anxiety, Ethnography

    Katie Rose Hejtmanek is associate professor of anthropology at Brooklyn College, CUNY. Her forthcoming work includes an ethnography on CrossFit, Training for Life: The Promise of CrossFit, a collection on the Anthropology of Anxiety, and an edited volume on strength sports, Strong A(s) F(eminist): Power in Strength Sports. KHejtmanek@brooklyn.cuny.edu 

  • Sept. 14, 2022 | | Education, Accreditation

    Next Generation Assessment (NGA) Web Bites co-hosts Dr. Tammie Cumming and Dr. M. David Miller interview Dr. Sonny Ramaswamy, President of the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU) as part of a special Web Bites series on accreditors and Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI). 

    In a timely conversation about NWCCU’s role in emphasizing DEI for its accredited institutions, Dr. Ramaswamy reflects on the discussions that NWCCU has had with its accredited institutions to address DEI and highlights the resources and partnerships NWCCU has developed to support these DEI efforts. Dr. Ramaswamy has given his "sincere thanks to Tammie and David for hosting this important conversation". 

    To watch please visit: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=op0SeTcaeXI

     

  • Sept. 14, 2022 | | New Publication, Physics, Schrodinger

    In her new book, Professor Sahni presents a complementary perspective to Schrödinger theory of electrons in an electromagnetic field, one that does not appear in any text on quantum mechanics. 

  • Sept. 7, 2022 | | Biology, Grant, Research

    Brooklyn College Biology Professor Luis Quadri co-athured a research article on “Mycobacterium abscessus,” an environmental mycobacterial Pathogen Causing Chronic Pulmonary Disease.  Several Ph.D. students are also co-authors of the article. You can read it here https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0817/11/9/953. Quadri was also awarded a $20,000 CUNY-ASRC Seed Program 2022 Grant to continue the research reported in the article. To learn about the Quadri research, visit:

    https://www.gc.cuny.edu/people/luis-quadri.

  • Sept. 7, 2022 | | Marketing, Russia, Ukraine, Crypto

    Ngoc Cindy Pham and her student won a $2000 grant from BC Mentoring and Research program for their project “The negative Impacts of Russian – Ukraine war on their citizens,” which was presented at the Brooklyn College Undergrad Research Summer 2022 Exhibition on August 4, 2022. Professor Pham and her co-author also presented separate research titled “Crypto Marketing: What are NFTs? Classification of non-fungible tokens (NFTs) in marketing applications” at the American Marketing Association (AMA) Summer Conference from August 12-14 in Chicago.

  • Sept. 7, 2022 | | Business, Shareholder, Ethics

    Clifton Clarke had his research article titled “Protecting Shareholder Value: Unethical Corporate Leadership Threatens the American Dream” published in the Journal of Intercultural Management and Ethics by the Center for Socio-Economic Studies and Multiculturalism. Hershey Friedman and Clifton Clarke had their research article titled "Deadly consequences of emphasizing profits over human life: How corporate greed has caused the death of millions" accepted for publication in the Journal of Intercultural Management and Ethics by the Center for Socio-Economic Studies and Multiculturalism. 

  • Sept. 7, 2022 | | Economics, Finance, Ecology

    Nadia Doytch and her co-authors have their research article titled "The impact of financial development on ecological footprints of nations" published in the Journal of Environmental Management by Elsevier. Doytch and her co-author also had another research article titled "Outward Foreign Direct Investment and Domestic Innovation Efforts: Evidence from India" accepted for publication at the Journal of Economics and Business by Elsevier.  

  • Sept. 6, 2022 | | Religion, Biblical Text, Women

    On the heels of her well-received book Winston S. Churchill and the Shaping of the Middle East, 1919-1922 (Academic Studies Press, 2020). Professor Emerita for the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Sara Reguer turns her focus to biblical women, bringing them imaginatively from the background to the forefront with Onto Center Stage: The Biblical Woman (Cherry Orchard Books, 2022).
  • Sep. 1, 2022 | | Jamaica Bay Project, Science, New Faculty

    Jonathan Hallemeier is a visiting scholar who joined the Jamaica Bay Project last spring. ​He earned a Ph.D. in integrative conservation and anthropology in 2021 from the University of Georgia. He then relocated to New York City where he works as an Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education (ORISE) postdoctoral researcher with the Engineer Research and Development Center of the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers.

    https://www.heclab.org/jonathan-hallemeier.html  

  • Aug. 24, 2022 | | Physics, Quantum Theory, Electronic Structure

    Professor Sahni presents a complementary perspective to Schrödinger theory of electrons in an electromagnetic field, one that does not appear in any text on quantum mechanics. Schrödinger Theory of Electrons: Complementary Perspectives  (Springer Tracts on Modern Physics 285) presents ideas that reach beyond the traditional understanding of quantum theory.  The book is written in a pedagogical style accessible to senior undergraduates, graduate students, and researchers in the area of electronic structure.

  • Aug. 18, 2022 | | Books, Mathematics, Data Science, Graph Theory, Social Network Analysis, Mathematical Biology

    Graphs and Networks contains modern applications for graph theorists and a host of useful theorems for network scientists. The volume begins with applications to biology and the social and political sciences and gradually takes a more theoretical direction toward graph structure theory and combinatorial optimization. A background in linear algebra, probability, and statistics provides the proper frame of reference. Topics include minors, connectomes, trees, distance, spectral graph theory, similarity, centrality, small-world networks, scale-free networks, graph algorithms, Eulerian circuits, Hamiltonian cycles, coloring, higher connectivity, planar graphs, flows, matchings, and coverings.

  • April 29, 2022 | | AERA, Bilingual Education, Teacher Prep, Educator Activism, Pedagogy

    Several professors from the School of Education presented at the annual American Education Research Association conference, the largest gathering of education researchers, in late April. Associate Professor and Chair Laura Ascenzi-Moreno discussed bilingual education and teacher preparation. Associate Professor Beth Ferholt discussed her research on historical and cultural perspectives on care and compassionate in educational settings. Associate Professor of Sonia Murrow presented her work on the historical contexts of educator activism and educational development. And Professor Deborah Shanley and adjuncts Malgorzata Powietrzynska and Linda Noble presented research on well-being and equity and the importance of valuing humanity as education. 

  • April 22, 2022 | | Esperanto, Russia, Ab Imperio, Revolutionary Russia

    History Professor Brigid O’Keeffe’s book, Esperanto and Languages of Internationalism in Revolutionary Russia (Bloomsbury Academic, 2021), has been selected for Ab Imperio’s best book of 2021. The prize honors "the best study in new imperial history and history of diversity in Northern Eurasia, up to the late twentieth century." 

  • April 8, 2022 | | Tania León, Pulitzer Prize, Hitchcock Institute for Studies in American Music

    The Hitchcock Institute for Studies in American Music will host a two-day symposium celebrating her 2021 Pulitzer Prize win for "Stride" and her recent retirement from Brooklyn College and the CUNY Graduate Center. The events, sponsored by the Baisley Powell Elebash Fund, will include a screening of archival footage of Leon at work, panels featuring her colleagues and former students, as well as performances of her pieces. The symposium on April 14 and 15, will be live-streamed. Register on Eventbrite.

  • March 18, 2022 | | NYC Men Teach, Talent Development, Philanthropy, Diversity, Education

    The NYC Men Teach Director, Shemeka Brathwaite, has received two scholarships for her work with students and in the community. A doctoral student in the Community-Based Leadership program at CUNY’s College of Staten Island, Brathwaite received the 2022 ATD Student Scholarship: John Coné Membership Scholarship. She will receive one full year of Associate Professional in Talent Development Professional-Plus membership and is welcomed as a member of the association’s higher-education community. The scholarship is awarded to students with dedication to talent development. Brathwaite also received the 2021 National Speakers Association Foundation Nido Qubein Scholarship, for students committed to philanthropy, education, entrepreneurial spirit and diversity, for which she was awarded $5,000. 

  • March 18, 2022 | | Feirstein Graduate School of Cinema, Stuart Dryburgh, Cinematography

    The Feirstein Graduate School of Cinema will welcome its second Filmmaker-in-Residence, Stuart Dryburgh. In April and May, the Academy Award-nominated cinematographer will lead a master class seminar, workshops on lighting and on the director/cinematographer collaboration, and office hours for one-one-one mentorship open to all students. 

  • March 7, 2022 | | Trading, Commodity, Disasters

    Sunil Mohanty and his co-author’s article, "Fourteen large commodity trading disasters: What happened and what can we learn?” published in Journal of Commodity Markets, was named the most downloaded article in the last 90 days. 

  • March 7, 2022 | | Trade, Import Reporting, Philippines, Statistics

    Professor of Economics Nadia Doytch moderated a roundtable discussion at the Ateneo de Manila University School of Government with the Philippine Bureau of Customs, Statistics Authority, Department of Trade and Industry, and the Central Bank of The Philippines, on the harmonization of imports definition and reporting in February.

  • March 7, 2022 | | Gender, Leadership, Southeast Decision Sciences Institute (SEDSI) Conference

    Associate Professor of Business Management Toby Birnbaum and Professor Hershey Friedman’s research on diversity and leadership, “Gender Diversity and Leadership Lessons from the Biblical Era,” was featured in the Southeast Decision Sciences Institute’s February conference.

  • March 4, 2022 | | Business, Humanity-Centered Leadership, Conscious Leadership

    Business Management Professor Hershey Friedman and Adjunct Lecturer Murray Mizrachi co-authored a paper, “Humanity-Centered Leadership: Servant Leadership with a Worldview,” in Analysis and Metaphysics.

  • March 4, 2022 | | Global Courts, Corruption, Foreign Corrupt Practices Act

    Associate Professor of Accounting John Paul has his research article titled “Global Courts and Corruption: Ending the FCPA Free-Riding” published in the North East Journal of Legal Studies. 

  • Feb. 18, 2022 | | Climate Change, Western Grown, Environmental Crisis, Expansion

    History Professor Michael Rawson has published a book, The Nature of Tomorrow: A History of the Environmental Future (Yale University Press, 2021), about how the West’s expansion has contributed to the global environmental crisis. 

  • February 10, 2022 | | Diabetes, Public Health, Caribbean Community, Black Community, New York City, Health Disparities

    Assistant Professor Margrethe Horlyck-Romanovsky of the Department of Health and Nutrition Sciences is the recipient of a 2022 CUNY Interdisciplinary Research Grant for her proposal of a community-based participatory diabetes prevention program for Black Caribbean communities in New York City. Horlyck-Romanovsky is a public health nutrition professional who is committed to addressing intra-ethnic health disparities among populations of African descent. The one-year grant provides nearly $40,000 for the project. 

  • Jan. 21, 2022 | | NFTs, Jennifer McCoy, Kevin McCoy, Sundance Film Festival, The Inside World

    Art Professor Jennifer McCoy and her husband artist Kevin McCoy had their science fiction mystery thriller NFT game The Inside World premier at the 2022 Sundance Film Festival in January. 

  • Jan. 21, 2022 | | Haiti, Blackness, Politics, Freedom, Human Dignity, Anti-Imperialism, Saint Paul

    Sociology Professor Jean Eddy Saint Paul was interviewed by the Library of Congress and served as an expert who contributed to the Libguide, “Ayiti Reimagined: The First Black Sovereign Nation,” an initiative of the Latin American, Caribbean, and European Division of the Library of Congress. 

  • Jan. 21, 2022 | | Churchill, Middle East

    Professor Emerita Sara Reguer's newest book, Winston S. Churchill and the Shaping of the Middle East, 1919-1922 (Academic Studies Press) was discussed via Zoom by the Jewish Historical Society of England in January. 

  • December 17, 2021 | | Renewable Energy, Consumption, Foreign Direct Investments

    Assistant Professor of Economics Nadia Doytch co-authored a research article titled “Economic Growth and Renewable and Non-Renewable Consumption: Evidence from the U.S. States” published in Renewable Energy in November. She also co-authored a research article titled “Does Transitioning towards Renewable Energy Accelerate Economic Growth? An Analysis of Sectoral Growth for a Dynamic Panel of Countries” published in Energy in November. Additionally, she co-authored a research article titled “Tracking Greenfield FDI During the COVID-19 Pandemic: Analysis by Sectors” published in Foreign Trade Review in November. 

  • December 10 2021 | | Climate Change, Climate Crisis, Western Growth

    History Professor Michael Rawson published a new book The Nature of Tomorrow: A History of the Environmental Future (New Have: Yale University Press, 2021), an examination of how Western visions of endless future growth have contributed to the global environmental crisis. 

  • December 2, 2021 | | Ngoc (Cindy) Pham, Joseph R. Fraia, Time Art, Vietnam

    Assistant Professor of Marketing Ngoc (Cindy) Pham is being honored in an art exhibition on display at the prestigious West Village gallery Time Art. The exhibit, “Strength and Grace - A Tale of Two Worlds,” is a tale about the meaning of the American dream. The artist, Joseph R. Fraia, calls the project a visual representation of a contemporary heroine’s journey from the cradle of tradition and family in the Far East, through the challenges of becoming aware of herself in the West and the final manifestation of her true nature. Pham is a native of Vietnam. The exhibit is on display December 9 - 12. 

  • December 2, 2021 | | Social Connectedness, Psychological Distance, Contagion Threat, Psychological Connectedness

    Assistant Professor of Business Management Laura Rifkin co-authored a research article titled “When physical closeness induces psychological distance: The effects of psychological ownership and contagion threat on social connectedness” published in the Journal of Consumer Behavior.

  • Nov. 24, 2021 | | Metaverse, MetaMovie, Virtual Reality, Cinema, Video Games, Immersive Theatre

    Assistant Professor Jason Moore won the Best Multiplayer Experience for The MetaMovie Presents: Alien Rescue at the 2021 Raindance Immersive Festival. The MetaMovie combines virtual reality with elements of cinema, video games, role playing, and immersive theater to create a new way of storytelling. Alien Rescue also won an honorable mention for Best Immersive Game. 

  • Nov. 24, 2021 | | Finance, Corporate Investment, Market Frictions

    Assistant Professor of Finance Monsoo Kang presented his research titled "The Effect of Corporate Investment on Market Frictions: Implication for the Stock Price Delay Premium” at the 2021 FMA Annual Meeting in late October 2021. 

  • November 12, 2021 | | Women’s Basketball, CUNYAC

    Alex Lang, assistant athletics director and head coach of the women’s basketball team, earned his 300th career win in a game at the West Quad Center. 

  • November 12, 2021 | | Higher Education Leadership, HBCUs, Black Male Students

    Hamilton Raymond, director of student activities, recently earned his Ph.D. in Higher Education Leadership and Management from Walden University. His doctoral thesis was titled, Academic Agenda and Goal Setting and African American Male Student Persistence at a Predominantly Black Institution. Raymond has been at the college for three years. 

  • October 29, 2021 | | Haiti, Immigration, Immigration Policy

    Sociology Professor Jean Eddy Saint Paul, the founding director of the CUNY Haitian Studies Institute, spoke at Harvard University’s Afro-Latin American Research Center on October 22 about U.S. immigration Policy Toward Haitians. 

  • October 22, 2021 | | Risk, Equity Investment, Audits, Engagement Partner

    Min Liu has her research article titled " What Information in Financial Statements Could be Used to Predict the Risk of Equity Investment?” accepted for publication in Journal of Risk and Financial Management. She co-authored a research article titled " Does Disclosure of Audit Engagement Partner’s Name Improve Audit Quality? A Difference-in-Difference Analysis,” also accepted for publication in Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 

  • October 22, 2021 | | Research and Development, Firm Efficiency

    Assistant Professor of Accounting Yoshie Lord has had her research article titled "R&D Reporting Rule and Firm Efficiency" accepted for publication in the Journal of Accounting, Auditing and Finance. 

  • October 15, 2021 | | CEO Nominal Salary, Firm Operating Performance, Corporate Governance

    Assistant Professor of Finance Mina Glambosky has her research article titled " The Relationship between CEO Nominal Salary and Firm Operating Performance" accepted for publication the International Journal of Corporate Governance. 

  • October 15, 2021 | | Global Corruption, Courts

    Associate Professor of Accounting John Paul has his research article titled "Global Corruption and the Courts: Ending the FCPA Free-Riding" accepted for publication in the North East Journal of Legal Studies. 

  • October 5, 2021 | | Picat, Programming Contest, Computer Sciences

    Professor Neng-Fa Zhou, of the Computer and Information Sciences department, led a team of computer scientists that won the 2021 LP/CP Programming Contest. The team won for coming up with smart solutions in Picat, a programming language that Zhou created.

  • September 30, 2021 | | Healthcare Resource Allocation, Health Status

    Associate Professor of Business Management Viju Raghupathi has her research article titled “The Association between Healthcare Resource Allocation and Health Status: An Empirical Insight with Visual Analytics” accepted for publication in Journal of Public Health. 

  • September 30, 2021 | | Accounting, Accounting Firms

    Yoshie Lord has her research article titled " Valuation of short-lived firms following waves of new listings" accepted for publication in International Journal of Managerial Finance. 

  • September 30, 2021 | | Matroids, Monarchs, Three-Connected Graphs, Graph Theory

    Mathematics Associate Professor Sandra Kingan has published three research papers: Finding monarchs in excluded minor classes of matroids in the Australasian Journal of Mathematics; H-Critical Matroids in the Journal Graphs and Combinatorics; and Constructing minimally 3-connected graphs in the Journal Algorithms. She also co-edited a book, Research Trends in Graph Theory (SpringerNature, 2021). 

  • September 30, 2021 | | Mathematics Education, Early Childhood Education

    Associate Professor Xia Li, of the Early Childhood/Art Education (ECAE) department, with full support from Professor Jacqueline Shannon, hosted a conference on “Math through Storytelling: Engage the Whole Child in Math Learning through Wonders.” Four ECAE graduate students presented their use of oral stories teaching math concepts to young children. More than 80 Brooklyn College students, alumni, and other educators from New York City and other countries attended the conference.  

  • September 24, 2021 | | COVID-19, Public Health

    Associate Professor of Business Management Barbara Lewis has her research article titled “The COVID-19 Wars: Physician vs. Clinician” published in Academia Letters. 

  • September 24, 2021 | |

    Adjunct Assistant Professor of Economics Ka Wai Terence Fung and his co-authors have their research article titled “Stock and bond joint pricing, consumption surplus, and inflation news” published in Research in International Business and Finance. 

  • September 24, 2021 | | ETF Pairs, Portfolio Performance, Finance Leveraged ETF Pairs, Portfoliio Performance, Finance

    Associate Professor of Finance Stanley Peterburgsky has his research article titled " Leveraged ETF Pairs: An Empirical Evaluation of Portfolio Performance” accepted for publication in The Journal of Investing. 

  • September 24, 2021 | | Political Science, US Foreign Policy

    Adjunct Political Science Professor Anthony Gronowicz authored the book, Last Western Empire: A History of U.S. Foreign Policy (Koba Books, 2021). 

  • September 17, 2021 | | Climate change, Gentrification, Urban Sustainability, Coastal Resilience, Climate Justice, Environmental Privilege

    Sociology Professors Kenneth Gould and Tammy Lewis have published an article, "Resilience Gentrification: Environmental Privilege in an Age of Coastal Climate Disasters" in the August issue of Frontiers in Sustainable Cities. 

  • | | Climate Change, COVID-19, Pandemics, Globalization, Anthropocene

    Dean Kennth Gould, of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, also a Sociology professor, published an article, “Scientists need to better communicate the links between pandemics and Global Environmental Change,” in September’s Nature, Ecology & Evolution. 

  • September 17, 2021 | | Haiti, Haitian Politics, World Politics, Haitian History, Caribbean, United States History, French History

    Sociology Professor Jean Eddy Saint Paul, the founding and former director of the Haitian Studies Institute, published an article, “Assassinations and invasions – how the US and France shaped Haiti’s long history of political turmoil,” in the August 27 issue of The Conversation. The article is republished in Encyclopedia Britannica. 

  • September 17, 2021 | | Cold War, Huldah Clark, Soviet History

    History Professor Brigid O’Keeffe has published an article “A Cold War Case: What Huldah Clark Can Teach Us About Teaching Soviet History” in the summer 2021 issue of the journal Slavic Review. 

  • September 10, 2021 | | LASA, Southern Cone, International Conference, Latin America

    Spanish Professor Bernardita Llanos, also Endowed Chair of Women and Gender Studies, was elected co-chair of the Southern Cone Section of the Latin American Studies Association. In the role, she will lead 250 active members in organizing featured panels, workshops, round tables, and special events to be part of the association’s international conference for the next two years. 

  • September 10, 2021 | | Mathematics, Simons Foundation, Walk Green’s Function, Harmonic Measure Convergence Rates

    Associate Professor of Mathematics Christian Benes was awarded a Collaboration Grant for Mathematicians by the Simons Foundation. The five-year grant, in the amount of $42,000, will support his research on "Random Walk Green’s Function and Harmonic Measure Convergence Rates.” 

  • Sept. 7, 2021 | | Richard Gladstein; Feirstein Graduate School of Cinema Astoria Film Festival; Cinematic Storytelling;

    Richard Gladstein, film producer and executive director at the Feirstein Graduate School of Cinema at Brooklyn College, will be teaching a Master Class in the Art of Cinematic Storytelling at the Astoria Film Festival, October 2 from 2 to 3 p.m. at the Zukor Theater at Kaufman Astoria Studios.

  • Aug. 27, 2021 | | Afro-Latinos, U.S. Economy

    Professor Alan Aja, chair of the Department of Puerto Rican and Latinos Studies, coauthored Afro-Latinos in the U.S. Economy (Lexington Books, 2021) with Michelle Holder, associate professor of economics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.

  • Aug. 27, 2021 | | Sonic Arts, National Endowment for the Humanities, NEH Grants, Music Performance Analysis, Communication Disorders

    Assistant Professor of Sonic Arts Johanna Devaney was awarded a $100,000 NEH Digital Humanities Grant for AMPACT: Automatic Music Performance Analysis and Comparison Toolkit, a suite of tools to enable the computational analysis of musical performances. She is also participating in a project funded by a partnership grant from the Canadian Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. This project focuses on how group singing can help people with communication disorders. Devaney will be using her music performance analysis tools to help in the computational analysis component of the project.

  • Aug. 23, 2021 | | Mathematics, Simons Foundation, Green’s Function, Random Walks, Harmonic Measure

    Christian Benes, associate professor of mathematics, was awarded a Collaboration Grant for Mathematicians by the Simons Foundation. The grant, in the amount of $42,000, will support research on “Random Walk Green’s Function and Harmonic Measure Convergence Rates” over a five-year period beginning September 2021. 

  • August 5, 2021 | | Published Research, Applied Mathematics, Systemic Racism

    Assistant Professor Heidi Goodson and her coauthor had their paper titled "Examining the Modeling Framework of Crime Hotspot Models in Predictive Policing" published in the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics in July. The scholars give an example of what goes into mathematical crime hotspot modeling and show that the modeling assumptions perpetuate systemic racism in policing. The goal of the paper is to raise objections to this field of research, not on its mathematical merit, but on the scope of the problem formation. 

  • July 27, 2021 | | History, Revolutionary Russia, Soviet Union, Language, Politics

    Associate Professor of History Brigid O'Keeffe published a book, Esperanto and Languages of Internationalism in Revolutionary Russia (Bloomsbury, 2021). 

  • July 27, 2021 | | Mary Magdalene, Magdalene Laundries, International Museum Exhibition

    Art Professor Patricia Cronin's acclaimed "Shrine For Girls" sculptural installation that debuted at the 56th Venice Biennale (the Olympics of the Art World) traveled to it's 4th stop on an international tour in "Mary Magdalene, The Exhibition," at the Museum Catharijne Convent, Utrecht, The Netherlands. The exhibit began June 25 and will be on display through January 9, 2022. The exhibition focuses on the most intriguing female figures in the bible and explores the many, sometimes contradictory stories from the Middle Ages to today. 

  • July 15, 2021 | | Film, Feirstein, Graduate Film School, Cinema

    Starting Fall 2021, Annette Danto will be joining The Barry R. Feirstein Graduate School of Cinema as its new chair. Danto is currently professor and chair of the undergraduate Film Department and will continue on in that role. Danto is an accomplished filmmaker, experienced educator, and author. She has been a professor at the college for more than 20 years. 

  • June 14, 2021 | | Working From Home, Technology, Faculty

    William Hampton-Sosa and Holly Chiu presented their research titled "Impact of technology quality on the working from home experience: The faculty's perspective" at the 58th Annual Meeting of the Eastern Academy of Management in May. The virtual conference theme was "Responsible Management: Challenges and Opportunities." 

  • June 14, 2021 | | Augmented Reality, Online Footwear

    Ngoc Cindy Pham and her co-authors have their research article titled “Are consumers ready for Augmented Reality? Factors influencing online footwear purchasing intentions using AR technology” accepted for publication in Journal of Marketing Development and Competitiveness. 

  • May 24, 2021 | | Digital Economy, Retail, Investments

    Hyuna Park, an associate professor in the Finance Department and the Herb Kurz Chair in Finance and Risk Management, presented her research titled "Investments in the Digital Economy: A Textual Analysis of Retailers" at a KSB research seminar series held earlier this month. 

  • May 24, 2021 | | Professional Staff Congress, Teachers Unions, Union Leadership

    James Davis, a professor of English and American Studies who has been at the college for nearly 20 years, has become the new president of the Professional Staff Congress, the union that represents 30,000 faculty and staff members at CUNY. He will succeed outgoing President Barbara Bowen, who has led the PSC for more than two decades. Davis has been Brooklyn College’s union chapter chair since 2015, a position he used to broaden the base of member involvement and developed effective campaigns to enforce the contract and amplify the voices of faculty, staff, and students. 

  • May 8, 2021 | | Automation, PSC-CUNY Grant

    Associate Professor of Economics Nadia Doytch was awarded a PSC CUNY Traditional A Research Award in the amount of $3,500 for a research project titled “Automation and Industry Performance." 

  • May 8, 2021 | | Taxes, Cloning

    Associate Professor of Accounting John Paul’s research paper titled "How Do You Tax the Hard Forks that were Cloned in the Clouds?" won the Best Paper Award from the Western Academy of Legal Studies in Business in March. 

  • May 8, 2021 | | Natural and Behavioral Sciences, Scientific Research, Science Day, Student Research

    The School of Natural and Behavioral Sciences recently held their 30th annual Brooklyn College Science Research Day, the first that was held virtually, after having to cancel last year’s program due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Organized by the college’s Center for Achievement in Science Education, this year’s event featured 57 student posters from 41 undergraduate and 16 graduate students. Each poster was considered by two judges who first viewed a virtual poster described by the students in a video and then met with the students online or by telephone to ask questions and give feedback. The results were announced at a virtual award ceremony on May 7 with nearly 100 attendees. The winning research covered a diverse range of fields and inquiries, from a mouse with fatty liver disease to the role of religious experiences in interpersonal relationships.

    For the undergraduate division, the winners were: In first place, Roberto DeGregorio, a chemistry student whose paper was titled Towards Gold-Based Targeted Theranostic Agents: Synthesis and Characterization of Cationic Au(Iii)-Nhc Iodo Complexes; In second place, Claudia Melo, a biology student whose paper was titled Antioxidant, Antibacterial, and Anti-Sars-Cov Activity of Commercial Products Of Xylopia (Xylopia Aethiopica) tied with Dobrushe Denburg, a chemistry student whose paper was titled Photochemical and Photophysical Study of Bis-Alkylated Lumazine and Pterin Photosynthesizers; In third place, Ominakhon Nazarzoda, a biology student whose paper was titled Trafficking Monocytes Into the Ischemic Brain And Mapping Cell Subtypes.

    For the graduate division, the winners were: In first place, Eliza Altvater, a Health and Nutrition Science student whose paper was titled The Role Of Hepatic Stellate Cell Activation Via Tlr4 In Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis-Induced Fibrosis; In second place, Kristy St. Rose and Jasmine Williams, Health and Nutrition Science students whose paper was titled Mouse Fed A Western Diet Develop Obesity And Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease; In third place, Jaclyn K. Doherty, a Psychology student whose paper was titled Disclosure Of Meaningful Religious Experiences In Interpersonal Relationships.

     

  • April 26, 2021 | | Crowdfunding, Social Justice

    Viju Raghupathi and her co-authors have their research article titled, "Exploring the Factors that Determine the Success of Litigation Crowdfunding: Implications for Social Justice" accepted for publication in Technological Forecasting and Social Change. 

  • April 12, 2021 | | Work From Home, Pandemic, New Normal, COVID-19

    Associate Professors Holly Chiu and William Hampton-Sosa, and Professor Tomas Lopez-Pumarejo have their research article, “Working from home: College professors’ perspective” accepted for publication in Work from Home: Multi-level Perspectives on the New Normal (Emerald Publishing), a forthcoming academic book. 

  • March 22, 2021 | | Herb Alpert Awards, The Arts, Film

    Distinguished Professor Alexandra Juhasz, of the Film Department, served as a panelist to help chose the recipients of 2021 Herp Alpert Award in the Arts. She was part of a three-member panel that selected the winners in their film/video category. The winners will be announced in May. 

  • March 10, 2021 | | Foreign Direct Investment, Economy, World Economy

    Nadia Doytch has had her research article titled "Who Gains from Services FDI- Host or Home Economies? An Analysis of Disaggregated Services FDI Inflows and Outflows of twenty-four European Economies" accepted for publication in the journal Foreign Trade Review. 

  • March 10, 2021 | | History, Revolutionary Russia, Comintern, Language Politics

    Associate Professor of History Brigid O'Keeffe published a chapter in Internationalists in European History: Rethinking the Twentieth Century (Bloomsbury, 2021). Her chapter is titled "Building a Communist Tower of Babel: Esperanto and the Language Politics of Internationalism in Revolutionary Russia." 

  • March 10, 2021 | | Leveraged Stock, Profitability

    Assistant Professor of Finance Seungho Baek has a research article titled "Does leveraged stock buyback improve firms' profitability?" accepted for publication in Applied Economics Letters. 

  • February 23, 2021 | | Psychology, Young Scholar Award

    Assistant Professor Ana Gantman was recently awarded the SAGE Young Scholar Award by the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, which recognizes outstanding achievements by young scholars who are early in their research careers. 

  • February 23, 2021 | | Interdisciplinary Research, Research Grant, Geovisualization, Community Planning

    Professor Yehuda Klein and CUNY Graduate Center Associate Professor James Biles won a $40,000 CUNY Interdisciplinary Research Grant entitled "Using Systems Modeling, Optimization and Geovisualization Tools to Inform Community Planning and Policymaking in Response to Climate Change."

  • February 16, 2020 | | Robin Hood, Emergency Grants, COVID-19, Immigrant Students

    Poverty-fighting organization Robin Hood has awarded Brooklyn College a second grant of $150,000 to provide emergency relief support to immigrant students affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. This is in addition to an initial $150,000 grant given last year. The grant will be administered by the Immigrant Student Success Office and will provide emergency assistance to students who have lost wages or had other COVID 19-related emergency expenses, such as food, housing, and technology for remote learning. Eligible students can apply online.  

  • February 8, 2021 | | National Parks, Place-Based Education, School-University Partnerships

    Secondary Education Professor Deborah Shanley co-wrote a chapter in America's Largest Classroom: What We Learn from Our National Parks (University of California Press, 2020). The chapter is titled "What Really ‘Matters’ at Stephen T. Mather Building Arts and Craftsmanship High School." 

  • February 4, 2021 | | Visa, Personal Finance, Consumer Tools, Credit Score

    Professor of Economics Merih Uctum was recently featured in an interview with WalletHub—a personal finance website that provides users free consumer tools, credit reports, and scores—on the pros and cons of using a Visa card. 

  • February 4, 2021 | | Ethical Wealth, The Talmud, Prosperity

    Business Management Professor Hershey Friedman has his research article titled “Ethical Wealth is not a Paradox: The Talmudic Guide to Prosperity" published in the Journal of Intercultural Management and Ethics. 

  • February 4, 2021 | | Capital-Raising, CDFIs, Minority-Owned

    Associate Professor of Business Management Darline Augustine and her co-authors published their article titled titled “Capital-Raising Among Depository Minority-Owned CDFIs Before the Covid-19 Pandemic” in Community Development Innovation Review, by the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. 

  • February 4, 2021 | | Audits, Audit Quality, Market Competition

    Assistant Professor of Accounting Fujiao Xie published her research article titled “Audit Market Competition, Audit Independence, and Audit Quality: A Theoretical Model and Policy Implications,” in the journal Accountancy Business and the Public Interest. 

  • February 4, 2021 | | Crowd Wisdom, Asset Sharing, Hospitality Management

    Associate Professor Viju Raghupathi and her co-authors published their research on “Effect of Crowd Wisdom and Pricing in the Asset-Based Sharing Platform: An Attribute Substitution Perspective” in the International Journal of Hospitality Management.


  • January 28, 2021 | | Business Management, SSRN, Scholarship

    Darline Augustine, an associate professor of business management, is recognized by SSRN, a public database for sharing research manuscripts, for being in the top 10 percent of authors by total new downloads within the last 12 months.

  • January 28, 2021 | | Finance, Economics

    Professor Robert Bell is cited by the French publication devoted to offshore wind energy, Energies de la mer about his interview at the e5t international renewable energy conference in La Rochelle last fall.  

  • January 28, 2021 | | Finance, Economics

    Associate Professor Hong-Jen Lin presented a paper, co-authored with Sunil K. Mohanty, titled "International Trades, Capital Requirement and Banking Efficiency: A Case of China of the Pre- Trade War Era" at the 28th SFM Conference on Theories and Practices of Security and Financial Markets, co-authored with Professor Sunil K. Mohanty. 

  • January 28, 2021 | | Accounting, Finance, Economics

    Jacqueline Gilman, an economics student supervised by Manny Thorne, has her term paper titled “Negative Interest Rates: How do they work? Case Studies in Japan, Europe, Switzerland, Sweden, and Denmark” accepted for publication in the Journal of Corporate Accounting and Finance. 

  • January 28, 2021 | | tobacco, journal, economics

    Associate Professor of Economics Nadia Doytch Publishes Research in Three Publications and presents her work to the Society for the Study of Emerging Markets
    • Professor Doytch and her co-authors have their article titled “Analyzing the Trend of Illicit Tobacco in the Philippines from 1998 – 2018" accepted for publication in the Journal of Tobacco Control, by the BMJ Publishing Group. 
    • Professor Doytch and her co-authors have their article titled “Do Institutions and Technologies Matter for Trade Openness? Evidence of African Countries" accepted for publication in the International Trade Journal, by Taylor & Francis. 
    • Professor Doytch has her so-authored article titled “Do FDI inflows to Eastern Europe and Central Asia Respond to the Business Cycle? A Sector Level Analysis" accepted for publication by the Journal of Economic Asymmetries, by Elsevier. 
    • Professor Doytch presented her research titled “The Environmental Impact of Industry-level Greenfield FDI: Evidence from 30 Chinese Provinces and 32 Economic Sectors” at the virtual conference hosted by the Society for the Study of Emerging Markets, Allied Social Sciences Association (ASSA) on Jan. 3-5, 2021.

  • January 6, 2021 | | American Studies Conference

    Christopher Ebert, an associate professor of history, presented at the Second American Studies Conference.

  • December 28, 2020 | | Curatorship, Museum, Exhibit, Graffiti, Jewish History

    History Professor Karen Stern-Gabbay has been awarded the Sid Lapidus Curatorial Fellowship at the Center for Jewish History in New York City, three-month fellowship for curators to support their original research and conceptualization of an exhibition. Stern-Gabbay will use the fellowship to develop an exhibition that takes a diachronic and cross-cultural approach to Jewish graffiti and street art.

  • December 16, 2020 | | Holocaust, Survivor, Poland, Soviets, Borderlands, Refugees, Displaced Persons, Immigrants, Memoir.

    Judaic Studies Professor Robert Shapiro translated A Rejected Stone: My Life (MDX Publishing, 2020), a Yiddish-language memoir by a Holocaust survivor from eastern Poland who rebuilt his life in America, first in Brooklyn and then in Baltimore.

  • December 2, 2020 | | Jewish Studies, Antiquity, Ancient Jews, Graffiti

    The Association for Jewish Studies has announced that Prof. Stern has won the 2020 Jordan Schnitzer Book Award for Writing on the Wall: Graffiti and the Forgotten Jews of Antiquity (Princeton University Press, 2018). 

  • December 2, 2020 | | Thanatology, Death and Dying, Bereavement, Grief, Oral History

    Professor Emeritus and former chair of the Department of Health and Nutrition Sciences, David Balk published his two-volume book, Living, Dying, Death, and Bereavement: Conversations with Thanatologists (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2020). 

  • December 2, 2020 | | Winston Churchill, Middle East, World History

    Professor Sara Regeur of the History Department recently published her book, Winston S. Churchill and the Shaping of the Middle East, 1919-1922 (Academic Studies Press, 2020). 

  • December 2, 2020 | | Information Marketing, Political Action Committee

    Joshua Fogel co-authored an article, “An Information Marketing Campaign Promotes Physician Donation to a Radiology Political Action Committee” accepted for publication in the journal Health Policy and Technology. 

  • November 17, 2020 | | COVID-19, Stock Market, Economy

    Seungho Baek had his research article titled "The Risk Transmission of COVID-19 In the US Stock Market" accepted for publication in Applied Economics. 

  • November 17, 2020 | | COVID-19, Recession

    Management Professor Carol Connell co-authored a paper on her research titled "The Persistent Link between Growing Talent and Growing the Top Line: Lessons from Fast-Growing Firms in the COVID-19 Recession." The paper has been accepted for publication in Organizational Dynamics. 

  • November 4, 2020 | | Renewable Energy, COVID-19, Investments

    Robert Bell, a professor in the Business Management Department, gave a talk titled “Renewable Energy: Covid 19 Triggers Investment Race” as a panelist at the Summer University Conference at La Rochelle, in France, on New Winds, New Horizons to Construct the Post-Carbon World. 

  • November 4, 2020 | | Sustainable Development, Business Education

    Yehuda Klein, a professor and chair of the Economics Department, and John Paul, graduate deputy chair in the Accounting Department, made a presentation titled “An Accountant and an Ecologist Walk Into a Bar” at the Fifth PRME Northeast Virtual Conference on “Sustainable Development Goals: Transforming Business Education and Practice.” This conference was hosted by the Rutgers Institute for Corporate Social Innovation at Rutgers Business School. 

  • November 4, 2020 | | Virtual Currency, Taxes, Clones

    John Paul, the graduate deputy chair in the Accounting Department, had his article, "Exploring Virtual Currencies: How Do You Tax the Clones in the Clouds?," accepted for publication in the North East Journal of Legal Studies. 

  • November 4, 2020 | | Sustainability, Foreign Investment, Ecological Footprint

    Nadia Doytch, an assistant professor of economics, had her article, "The Impact of Foreign Direct Investment on the Ecological Footprints of Nations," accepted for publication in Environmental and Sustainability Indicators. 

  • November 4, 2020 | | Belle Zeller, PSC/CUNY, Scholarship

    Two students, junior Mic Braun and senior Marwa Elraey, have been awarded The Belle Zeller Scholarship, an award given by the Professional Staff Congress/CUNY, the university’s faculty and staff union. Braun is a student in the CUNY Baccalaureate for Unique and Interdisciplinary Studies program and Elraey is a senior with a double major in Linguistics and Communications Sciences and Disorders. The scholarship gives awardees a stipend of $2,500 each semester they remain full-time and in good academic standing. The scholarship honors Brooklyn College Professor Emeritus of Political Science Belle Zeller, who also was the founding president of the PSC. Full-time CUNY students with at least a 3.75 GPA are eligible to apply. The award is intended to honor the unique qualities of Zeller, with winners chosen based on a commitment to scholarship and to social issues. 

  • October 21, 2020 | | Cancer, Brooklyn, Cancer Center, Cancer Research, Research Center

    Professors Maria Contel, Jennifer Basil, and Brian R. Gibney will head the Brooklyn College Cancer Center (CommUnity Outreach, Research and Education) BCCC-CURE, which was established this year with a mission to enhance the lives of patients affected by cancer with a special focus on Brooklyn residents. Through this center, Brooklyn College seeks to expand its research on cancer and to combine research forces with local cancer treatment centers, hospitals, and Brooklyn communities, while delivering first-class educational opportunities to our students. 

    Contel, the director of BCCC-CURE, is an organometallic chemist and former chair of the Chemistry Department who holds two patents and has been testing compound metals to combat breast cancer for the better part of her career. Basil, a professor and former chair of the Biology Department, is serving as associate director of community outreach. She is a breast cancer survivor who has been involved in outreach and advocacy since 2004. Her scholarship focuses on the evolution of behavioral and brain complexity. Gibney, an associate professor in the Chemistry Department, is the associate director of education. His laboratory focuses on the role of zinc in controlling gene expression in cancer as well as other research on heart disease.

  • October 19, 2020 | | Fulbright Program, Norway

    Professor Sunil Mohanty of the Finance department has been selected as a Fulbright U.S. Scholar Alternate for 2020-2021 for Norway. 

  • October 19, 2020 | | Practitioner Research, Library Research, Information Professionals

    Professors Lee Ann Fullington and Frans Albarillo of the library have co-edited the book Reflections on Practitioner Research: A Practical Guide for Information Professionals (ACRL Publications, 2020). 

  • October 9, 2020 | | Republican, Political Bias, American Economic Association

    Associate Professor Mitchell Langbert had his article, “Republicans Need Not Apply: An Investigation of the American Economic Association Using Voter Registration and Political Contributions” published in the Econ Journal Watch. 

  • October 9, 2020 | | Business, Data Analytics, Fraud

    Assistant Professor of Business Management John Paul had his article, "When Justice is Served, Using Data Analytics to Examine How Fraud-Based Legal Actions Affect Earnings Management," accepted for publication in the Arizona State Corporate and Business Law Journal. 

  • October 8, 2020 | | Venice Film Festival, Virtual Reality

    Assistant Professor Jason Moore, of the Television, Radio and Emerging Media department, was invited to the Venice Bieannle, part of the 77th Venice International Film Festival last month. Moore won a Special Mention at the festival’s FanHeart Awards, for his virtual reality piece, Alien Rescue.  

  • October 8, 2020 | | Social Media, Advertising, Gyms, Fitness Clubs

    Business Management Professor Joshua Fogel co-authored an article titled “Social Media Advertisements with Deposit Contracts and Fitness Club/Gym Membership: Are Consumers Persuaded?” which was accepted in the Journal of Consumer Marketing. 

  • September 23, 2020 | | Murray Koppelman School of Business, Google Scholar

    Qing Hu, dean of the Murray Koppelman School of Business, reached a major milestone in his academic career when his Google Scholar Citations surpassed 10,000. 

  • September 23, 2020 | | Business Management, Statistics 

    Professor Joshua Fogel of the Business Management department has co-authored a paper titled “Correlates of exam performance in an undergraduate statistics course: Basic math skills along with self-reported psychological/behavioral and demographic variables” accepted for publication in Statistics Education Research Journal. 

  • September 23, 2020 | | Accounting, Accounting Applications

    Professor Dan Tinkelman of the Accounting department has co-authored a paper on calibrating graphics for financial accounting applications that has been accepted for publication in Journal of Emerging Technologies in Accounting. 

  • September 4, 2020 | | Environment, Soil science, Russia

    Earth and Environmental Sciences Professor Zhongqi (Joshua) Cheng and doctoral student Anna A. Paltseva co-author paper on anthropogenic soils and landscapes of European Russia in the Journal of Environmental Quality. 

  • September 4, 2020 | | Talmud, Accounting Ethics

    Professor Hershey Friedman, of the Business Management department and Dov Fischer, of Accounting, have their article titled "Use of Stories in the Jewish Talmud to Emphasize Substance over Form" accepted for publication as a chapter in The Routledge Handbook of Accounting Ethics.

  • September 4, 2020 | | Lending, Recession, Foreign Banks

    Professor Sunil Mohanty, of the Finance department, co-authored an article titled “Foreign bank lending in the U.S. during three U.S. recessions” accepted for publication in the Global Finance Journal.

  • September 4, 2020 | | Diet, Latinx community, Cardiovascular Disease, Hispanic Caribbean Restaurants

    Assistant Professor Melissa Fuster, of the Health and Nutrition Sciences department, received Loan Repayment Program award from the National Institutes of Health, in which she will work with a mentor on her research project on improving diet quality and cardiovascular health in New York City’s Latinx community, while the institute makes repayments to student loans. 

  • September 4, 2020 | | ResearchGate, Scholarly Articles

    Hershey Friedman received a recognition from ResearchGate, a public database for posting scholarly articles, for having the most read contributions from Brooklyn College with 2,836 “new reads.”

  • September 4, 2020 | | Vietnamese Business, Bribery, International Business

    Assistant Professor Ngoc Cindy Pham and Professor Joshua Fogel have their paper titled "Bribery in Vietnamese Business: Historical and Current Approaches" accepted for publication in Asia Pacific Business Review. 

  • September 4, 2020 | | Covid-19, Stock Market

    Assistant Professor Seungho Baek, Professor Sunil Mohanty, and Assistant Professor Mina Glambosky, all of the Finance department, have their paper titled "COVID-19 and Stock Market Volatility: An Industry Level Analysis" accepted for publication in Finance Research Letters. 

  • September 4, 2020 | | Financial Development

    Nadia Doytch, an assistant professor in the Economics department, and co-authors have their paper titled “The drivers of financial development: Global evidence from internet and mobile usage" accepted for publication in Information Economics and Policy. 

  • August 26, 2020 | | Student Success, NACUBO

    Marcus Richardson, the executive director of strategic initiatives, has been asked to join a panel assembled by the National Association of College Business Officers to think tank ideas on ways college business officers can implement strategies that improve student success while also creating revenue for their institutions. Richardson is one of roughly a dozen college officials from across the country selected as a HUB Leader for the project. 

  • August 26, 2020 | | Gentrification

    Emeritus Professor Jerry Krase and Judith N. DeSena ’78, who received her bachelor of arts in Sociology, recently published two edited volumes: Gentrification around the World, Volume I: Gentrifiers and the Displaced (Palgrave-MacMillan, 2020)
    and Gentrification around the World, Volume II: Innovative Approaches (Palgrave-MacMillan, 2020). The books cover more than a dozen cities on six continents and offers intimate perspectives on how gentrification is affecting ordinary people. 

  • August 26, 2020 | | Portuguese Literature, Nuno Júdice

    Nava Renek, the program coordinator in the Women's Center, received a translation grant from Direção-Geral do Livro, dos Arquivos e das Bibliotecas. She will translate and publish an English edition of Portuguese writer Nuno Júdice's short novel, A Manta Religiosa. 

  • August 12, 2020 | | Koppelman School of Business, Effie Collegiate Competition, Marketing, Advertising, IBM, The Weather Channel

    Brooklyn College Koppelman School of Business seniors Andrew Okun and Rahel Shamailova joined a York College student to becoming one of only seven teams to advance to the semi-finals in the Effie Collegiate Challenge, the pre-eminent awards in marketing and advertising worldwide. They competed against hundreds of teams to develop a non-traditional integrated marketing campaign focused on IBM and The Weather Channel app. 

  • August 12, 2020 | | Koppelman School of Business, Machine Learning, ETF-Investments, Sustainability

    Assistant Professor Seungho Baek of the Finance department and Professor Merih Uctum from Economics had their article, "Robo-Advisors: Machine Learning in Trend-Following ETF Investments" accepted for publication in Sustainability. 

  • July 22, 2020 | | #MeToo, Family Business, The Murray Koppelman School of Business, Scholarly Journal

    Professor Dov Fischer of the Accounting Department and Professor Hershey Friedman of the Business Department in The Koppelman School of Business co-authored an article about #MeToo and family businesses, which was accepted to the Humanistic Management Journal, a new publication that has attracted some of the top authors in business ethics and economics. The article, Family Business in the #MeToo Era: Lessons from Ruth on Tone at the Top, was published in March.

     

  • July 22, 2020 | | The Koppelman School of Bustiness, International Tax Law, Accounting, Student Research

    Jacquelyne Gilman and Leslie Anandane, both students in the MS in Accounting program in The Koppelman School of Business, have written an academic research article that has been accepted in Journal of Corporate Accounting and Finance. Professor Dov Fischer supervised their work on “What are the Ramifications and/or Impacts of the U.S. Switching to a Territorial Tax System?,” a topic that has implications for large technology companies that are accused of tax avoidance. The article originated as a joint project for their class, Internatoinal Tax. 

  • July 22, 2020 | | Theater, Theater Department, Stage Managers Association

    Robert I. Sutherland-Cohen, an associate professor emeritus in the Department of Theater, is being honored by the Stage Manager's Association with their Founders Award, in recognition of his teaching, writing, and service to the organization. He will receive the award at a virtual ceremony in September. 

  • April 6, 2020 | | Computer Information Science

    The Brooklyn College community mourns the passing of Moshe Augenstein, a professor and undergraduate deputy chair in the Computer and Information Science department, who has passed away due to complications from COVIID-19. He had been at the college for 45 years. He joined the Department of Computer and Information Science while completing his Ph.D. Afterward, he became an assistant professor. He wrote several texts on data structures in various languages. He also consulted with various companies involved in sales, manufacturing and importing. 

  • March 2, 2020 | | RESPOND BC, Art, Culture, Politics, Tow Center, Brooklyn College Library, Art Department, Exhibit

    The Brooklyn College Library and Art Department are asking students, faculty, and staff to submit art—in any media, including performance—that conveys personal, social, cultural, or political positions for the RESPOND BC exhibit, which will run at the Brooklyn College Library and the Leonard & Claire Tow Center for the Performing Arts from April 17 through 30. The submission deadline is March 20. To be considered, please e-mail respondbc@brooklyn.cuny.edu and cc professordadams@gmail.com with your name, title, a brief statement about the work, the media, and dimensions/duration, and include either a jpg, pdf, doc, mp3 file, or video link of your submission. 

  • February 13, 2020 | | Faculty, Staff, Reading Group, Winona LaDuke, Wolfe Institute

    All faculty and staff are invited to selected readings of Winona LaDuke's Recovering the Sacred: The Power of Naming and Claiming (South End Press, 2005), performed by Brooklyn College Professor Conor Tomás Reed. LaDuke is the Hess Scholar in Residence.

    The reading group will meet from 12:30 to 2 p.m. in 283 Library on the following Thursdays: February 27, March 19, and April 23.

    Members can pick up a free copy of Recovering the Sacred from the Wolfe offices in 2231 Boylan Hall. Participants are encouraged to attend the Hess events during March 16–20 for the opportunity to discuss LaDuke's work with the author herself.

    RSVP at wolfeinstitute@brooklyn.cuny.edu.

  • January 21, 2020 | | Black History Month

    The Office of Diversity and Equity Programs invites you to help kick off Black History Month! Join President Michelle J. Anderson and Chief Diversity Officer Anthony Brown in the Tow Center for a program highlighted by remarks from Prudence Cumberbatch, associate professor and chair of Africana Studies; a poetry reading by Rosamond King, associate professor of English and director of the Wolfe Institute; and a performance of "Lift Every Voice and Sing" by Assistant Professor and Director of Choruses Malcolm Merriweather and students from the Brooklyn College Conservatory of Music.

    Thursday, February 6, 2020
    Noon
    Grand Lobby, Leonard & Claire Tow Center for the Performing Arts

  • January 21, 2020 | | English Department, Wolfe Institute

    Robert Viscusi, a professor emeritus who also served as the executive officer of the Wolfe Institute for the Humanities from 1980 to 2016, died on Sunday, January 19, after a battle with cancer.

    Viscusi, who taught in the English Department, co-founded the Italian American Writers Association in 1991 and was known as a great advocate of the John D. Calandra Italian American Institute at Queens College (CUNY). He published widely, including a collection of sonnets, Ellis Island (Bordighera Press, 2012), Astoria: A Novel (Guernica Editions, 1995) which won a 1996 American Book Award, and a critical magnum opus, Buried Caesars and Other Secrets of Italian American Writing (SUNY Press, 2006).

    He earned a bachelor's degree from Fordham College, a master's degree from Cornell University, and a doctorate from New York University.

     

  • November 24, 2019 | | Professional Development

    Brooklyn College cares about the success and growth of its team. That is why the senior vice president for finance and administration has launched a new professional development program.

    The first event is "Goals and Growth," an interactive lecture by Doris Bien-Aime '13 in which you are the focus for a change. As a brand and educational strategist, Bien-Aime will share her well-received approach to all things: "Our goals are attached to our understanding of ourselves in relation to the world around us. Lead a more purpose-driven career and life."

    Wednesday, December 11, 2019
    11:15 a.m.–1:15 p.m.
    Location: TBD

    Register for the Event

     

  • November 13, 2019 | | Sushi Tasting, Metropolitan Café

    Brooklyn’s Best Sushi Sampling

    Brooklyn’s Best Sushi Sampling

    Join us on Wednesday, November 13, 2019, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. to sample some of Brooklyn's best sushi, presented by Sushi Zan.

    Sushi Zan prepares sushi fresh daily at the Boylan Hall Cafe. Try on eof our specialty rolls or ask Sushi Zan for a custom roll made fresh to order.

  • October 14, 2019 | | Biochemistry, Graduate Student, Scholarships

    Graduate student Glennon Bythrow received the provost's Alfred W. Alberts Award in Biochemistry. Alberts '53 discovered lovastatin, the first of the class of cholesterol-lowering drugs called statins. Each year the award goes to an outstanding graduate student in biology, chemistry, or biochemistry.

  • October 13, 2019 | | Biology, Biomass, Algae

    Biology professor Juergen Polle moderated and spoke in the session "Genetic Modification: A Key to Improving Algae Feasibility?" at the 13th annual Algae Biomass Summit in Orlando, Florida, in September. The summit has become the go-to conference for commercial algae producers, the scientific community, and algae product developers that are unlocking the potential of algae.

  • October 12, 2019 | | Biology, RNA, Graduate Student, Scholarships

    Graduate student Avdar San received the Early Research Initiative Provost's Pre-Dissertation Research Fellowship for the Sciences. The $5,000 award recognizes academic interests and achievement and is intended to help support research activities. Avdar, a Ph.D. student in biology, is studying the interaction of RNA with the RNA binding protein, Nucleolin.

  • October 10, 2019 | | Biology, Graduate Student, Scholarships

    Biology graduate student Manal Farhat received the provost's Estelle and James T. Ramey Scholarship.

  • October 9, 2019 | | Health, Nutrition, NIH, Cardiovascular, Latinx

    Melissa Fuster Rivera, assistant professor in the Health and Nutrition Sciences Department, was awarded an NIH mentored research grant to help fund her research on interventions to improve cardiovascular health in Latinx communities through restaurants.

  • October 6, 2019 | | Biology, Microbiology, Pipeline

    Peter Lipke, chair of the Biology Department, will moderate a session at the American Society of Microbiology's annual microbe conference in Chicago next June. The session is titled "The Leaks in the Pipeline: Where Are the 'Qualified Candidates'?"

  • October 3, 2019 | | Literature, Creative Writing, Fiction, Author, Poetry

    Greg Grandin '92, along with M.F.A. in creative writing alumni Helen Phillips '07, and Ocean Vuong '12, and are all shortlisted for the 2019 National Book Awards—Phillips for her novel The Need; Vuong for On Earth We are Briefly Gorgeous; and Grandin for The End of the Myth: From the Frontier to the Border Wall in the Mind of America.

  • September 30, 2019 | | Vietnam, Cambodia, Indochina, Soviet Union, Cold War, World History, Political Science, Foreign Policy

    Assistant Professor Kosal Path, of the Political Science Department, has a new book out in February: Vietnam's Strategic Thinking During the Third Indochina War (University of Wisconsin Press, 2020). The book explores why the nation's leadership first decided to invade Cambodia in 1978, then shifted its approach from military confrontation to economic reform in the 1980s.

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