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Regional Member Programs:
African Studies
Program*
Center
for East Asian Studies*
Center
for European Studies*
European
Union Center of Excellence
Center for German and European Studies
Center for Interdisciplinary
French Studies
Latin
American, Caribbean and Iberian Studies Program*
Middle
East Studies Program
Center
for Russia, East Europe and Central Asia*
Center
for South Asia*
Center
for Southeast Asian Studies*
Global Member Programs:
* Indicates Title VI National
Resource Center
Resources for Member Programs:
Administration and Governance
Gilles Bousquet is the dean of the Division of International Studies and the director of the International Institute. The International Institute Academic Planning Council—comprised of representatives from Institute programs, faculty, staff, and research circles—governs the International Institute. The planning council meets monthly during the academic year to approve joint initiatives, oversee activities, and set policy and strategic goals.
Members of the Academic Planning Council
APC Meeting Minutes
September 17, 2008 October 8, 2007
March 5, 2007
December 15, 2006
October 20, 2006
May 3, 2006
March 29, 2006
February 15, 2006
December 14, 2005
October 19, 2005
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September 21, 2005
May 5, 2005
March 3, 2005
February 3, 2005
December 15, 2004
November 17, 2004
October 2, 2004
May 7, 2004
April 16, 2004
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The African Studies
Program brings together an interdisciplinary
group of faculty, staff, and students devoted to the study
of the African continent and the African diaspora. The program
offers an undergraduate concentration, graduate certificate
and a PhD Minor, as well as a wide range of talks, conferences,
and other outreach activities for teachers, business and
government. African Studies also offers publications and
links to related programs and activities across the campus
and the world.
The Center for East Asian Studies at
the University of Wisconsin brings together an inter-disciplinary
group of faculty, staff, and students devoted to the study of
China, Japan, and Korea. We offer an undergraduate major, an undergraduate certificate, and a Ph.D. minor; these allow students to take advantage of the wide range of courses
given in all of the schools and colleges at the University. The
Program also contributes to the intellectual vitality of the
campus and the Madison community by hosting lectures by distinguished
outside speakers.
The Center for European Studies (CES) at the University of Wisconsin-Madison
is an official National Resource Center funded by the U.S. Department
of Education and the University. CES belongs to a select group
of nationally-recognized Title VI European Studies Centers that
have been awarded grants to create national centers of excellence
for the purpose of educating undergraduates and graduates (and
the broader community) about Europe.
CES brings together scholars from across the campus to investigate
all aspects of Europe - from business to borders. The UW-Madison
is home to more than 20 departments and programs offering Europe-related courses and
offers students the opportunity to study almost all European
languages. CES links departments, courses, and people, and offers
further stimulation through symposia, conferences, and guest
speakers on a variety of topics concerning Europe.
The construction and deepening integration of the European Union
is one of the most significant political and economic phenomena
of our time. Developments such as the completion of the single
European market, the launching of a common currency, and the
emergence of the EU itself as an increasingly important player
in the governance of the international economy carry far-reaching
implications for the United States and its citizens, as for the
rest of the world.
The European Union Center of Excellence thus
seeks to:
- improve understanding of the EU as a complex, evolving governance
system and international actor
- enhance awareness of the growing importance and widening
scope of EU-US relations, and
- promote intensified "people-to-people" links among
EU and US citizens.
The Center for
German and European Studies (CGES) is a joint
effort of a consortium of faculty representing various disciplines
from the University of Wisconsin-Madison (UW-Madison) and
the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities (UMN-TC) who share
research and teaching interests in German and European studies.
Established in 1998 by the DAAD (German Academic Exchange Service)
through a generous grant from the German Marshall Fund and matching
funds from the two universities, the center draws on the expertise
of the faculty from the two institutions, as well as a network
of affiliated institutions across North America and Europe. Devoted
to the development of the next generation of scholars and the
production of new knowledge relating to Germany and Europe, the
Center supports research, teaching, and outreach in a broad range
of fields and disciplines. At the heart of the Center's activities
is a unique series of Research Collaboratives focusing on Germany
and Europe from a Transatlantic perspective, involving faculty,
graduate students, and visiting scholars.
The Center for Interdisciplinary
French Studies (CIFS) at UW-Madison
was formally established in the year 2000 to advance the study
of French in all domains. The Center's mission was defined to
take advantage of existing synergies across the university, with
industry, with the private sector, and with the general public
in Wisconsin and beyond, and to work in cooperation with the
network of Centres Pluridisciplinaires, privileged partners with
the French Cultural Service in higher education.
Creation of CIFS recognized long-standing ties between the Department
of French and Italian and other departments and programs at the
UW in the humanities, the social sciences, business, education,
law, the arts and, increasingly, medicine and the life sciences,
as well as outreach programs for teachers, business and government
professionals.
The Center is affiliated with the International Institute where
it is a member of the European Studies Alliance. Its administrative
office is housed within the Department of French and Italian.
The Latin American, Caribbean and Iberian Studies Program
(LACIS) brings together an interdisciplinary group of faculty, staff,
and students. The program offers the following degrees; BA/BS,
MA, MA/JD and a PhD Minor. LACIS sponsors a wide range of talks,
conferences, and other outreach activities for teachers, business
and government. The Latin American, Caribbean and Iberian Studies
program also offers publications and links to news and resources
across the campus and the world.
The purpose of the Middle East Studies Program is to combine
training in a discipline or profession with insight and knowledge
about the culture, languages, and problems of the area. The program
adopts the basic philosophy that it is necessary to develop a
new practical approach to the study of the Middle East by first
acquiring sound training in a discipline or profession and then
by applying the methods and concepts of that discipline and profession,
as well as skills of inquiry and research, to specific problems
in the Middle East. Economic planning, legal reform and institution
building, urbanization, demography, housing, nutrition, agriculture,
land problems, the organization and development of educational
systems, and technical and vocational training at all levels
are some of the fields covered by the program. The University
of Wisconsin-Madison has extensive and unique resources in these
fields, and it offers a broad range of courses on the languages,
history, culture, and literature of the region.
The Center for Russia, East Europe, and Central Asia
(CREECA) is a U. S. Department of Education Title VI National Resource
Center. It was established in 1993 to unite the efforts of two
longstanding University programs--Russian and East European Studies,
and Central Asian Studies.
CREECA's mission is threefold:
- To foster new knowledge and understanding of Russia, East
Europe, and Central Asia
- To train a new generation by providing
the knowledge, tools, and experience necessary for understanding
these societies and
for playing productive roles in their reconstruction
- To serve
as a community resource through outreach activities designed
for Wisconsin's citizens, businesses and other parties
interested in these regions of the
world
Today CREECA offers PhD certificates, Masters of Arts degrees,
and undergraduate certificates to dozens of students on the UW
campus. Furthermore, through Foreign Language and Area Studies
(FLAS) fellowships, CREECA supports graduate students in departments
from Anthropology to Slavic as well as professional students
in law, medicine, and engineering.
The Center for South Asia at the University of Wisconsin – Madison
is made up of a community of faculty and staff who reflect the
diversity and global relevance of South Asian Studies. We conduct
and support outstanding research that is relevant to the world
around us; teach all categories of students (undergraduate, graduate,
returning adults, and K-12) how to evaluate and apply an understanding
of South Asia to their personal, academic and professional goals;
and disseminate the results of our research and teaching locally,
nationally and globally through outreach and service.
Through our diverse academic disciplines, summer language institute,
annual conference, student organizations and outreach programs,
the Center seeks to define and promote greater understanding
of South Asian history, language, religion and culture. We also
support linkages to other relevant area studies and global studies
programs that emphasize transnational flows of culture, people,
money in ways that are important to a better understanding of
South Asia both in the past and the present.
The Center for Southeast Asian Studies was formally established
in 1973 as an interdisciplinary program of the College of Letters
and Sciences. The Center operates a vigorous and well-developed
program committed to the study of Southeast Asia that is recognized
as one of the best worldwide.
The program consists of 25 core faculty members in 15 disciplines
that include anthropology, business, communications (journalism),
education, economics, forestry, geography, history, linguistics,
literature, music and dance (performing arts), political science,
public health, sociology, and urban and regional planning.
Many other University faculty members have research and teaching
interests
in Southeast Asia and regularly work with students in a wide
variety of fields, including environmental, development, and
policy studies, natural resources, and law. The Center administers
two major degree programs: BA in Asian Studies (Southeast Asian
Concentration) and MA in Southeast Asian Studies. Faculty and
student research are supported by extensive library holdings,
with particular strengths on Indonesia, the Philippines, and
Thailand, including a separate Southeast Asian Video Archive
and other special collections.
UW-Madison offers more than 100 different study abroad programs
around the world. More than 80 of these programs are offered
by International Academic Programs (IAP) to UW-Madison students
across campus; many programs are also available to Wisconsin
residents or degree-seeking students from outside UW-Madison.
A listing of UW-Madison schools and colleges that offer international
programs is available here.
Instruction is in a wide range of languages, including many
options in English. Program participants earn UW-Madison residence
credits for the work they completed abroad.
Study abroad is a rewarding, life-transforming experience that
complements any academic program! Explore our site to find out
more...
The Center for World Affairs and the Global Economy (WAGE) is a research center that brings together scholars from economics, political science, public policy, sociology, business, law and other fields to study contemporary processes of globalization and international economic integration.
In the spirit of the Wisconsin Idea, WAGE shares international expertise with the businesses, government, and public of Wisconsin. We organize and fund university events, faculty research, graduate education, and public outreach concerning economic globalization and its governance.
Founded in 1991 as a center for the study of peace, security,
and international cooperation, Global Studies is the cross-regional,
international partner of Wisconsin's seven Title VI-funded area
studies centers, all housed administratively in the International
Institute. Our action plan is a Wisconsin design to illuminate
and help the nation address contemporary global challenges.
The Global Cultures Program is an interdisciplinary certificate
program approved for credit in the College of Letters and Science
beginning in the 1993-94 academic year. The program draws on
the rich array of area studies courses and comparative studies
courses offered at the UW-Madison, providing a framework for
linkages between cross-cultural academic work and study abroad
programs. The goals of the program are:
- Encourage greater participation in overseas study
- Better integrate campus course work with study abroad
- Stress cross-cultural learning experiences
- Help students find an "international pathway" through
the College's breadth requirements.
The International Studies Major (ISM) offers a broad background in international and transnational
political,
social, economic,
commericial and environmental affairs, together with a co-operative
study of politics, economics, security and cultures. The goal
is to provide students with necessary tools to understand global
processes in their totality and how they are situated and lived
in specific regions. It is important to stress that the major
itself is not primarily vocational or professional. It does,
however provide an integrated program of courses that lays the
foundation for professional training in a wide variety of areas.
Such a foundation can be invaluable in securing a place in competitive
graduate or professional schools, which, in turn prepare an individual
for government service, positions in commercial or industrial
multinational corporations, international banking, house, foreign
press services, and institutions of teaching and research.
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