Covid 19-related CEU Senate Decisions, Policies and Communications
Dear All, please look to these documents related to COVID 19 communications and decisions by CEU if need be.
SPP is here to support our faculty, staff, students and alumni. OneCEU site has a collection of Rector updates for the community, along with separate communications from the Provost, Dean of Students, on issues such as working from home, guidance to supervisors re work obligations of parents. CEU document repository is where you can find COVID 19 academic decisions, such as grading and extensions, the PhD measures, and cost reimbursement for academics.
LATEST NEWS:
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With the support of the Open Society Foundations, the School of Public Policy's Global Policy Academy hosted an evaluation workshop of the United Nations General Assembly Special Session on the World Drug Problem (UNGASS) on May 17 in Brussels. |
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"Treating gender as a separate category is dangerous," said Steven Wolfson during a presentation to Professor Margaret Jenkins' class on Gender, Violence and War on May 10. Wolfson, who is head of the Protection Training Unit of the UNHCR Global Learning Centre in Budapest, has been working on gender-related issues for decades, including in Bosnia and Afghanistan. |
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Despite this, civil society has been slow to embrace technologies, such as drones, that are opening our skies, observed Austin Choi-Fitzpatrick during a public lecture at the School of Public Policy (SPP) at CEU on May 12. Choi-Fitzpatrick, who was an assistant professor at SPP from 2013 to 2015, is now an assistant professor of political sociology at the Kroc School of Peace Studies at the University of San Diego. |
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"How we treat others today becomes something by which we will justify ourselves in the future" said Stephen Chan during a public lecture at the School of Public Policy at Central European University on May 2. In his talk, he reflected on the reactions of European governments as well as the general debate about the refugee crisis. |
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Publishing qualitative work is difficult. Many international journals focus primarily on quantitative methods. Qualitative research is often regarded as "soft science," arbitrary, and lacking rigidity. The language of interpretive writing, in particular, can be difficult to comprehend for more quantitative minded researchers. |
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George Soros on SPP Mission
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