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This book offers a nuanced analysis of a US-led foundation
initiative of uncommon ambition, featuring seven foundations with a
shared commitment to strengthen capacity in higher education in
Sub-Saharan African universities. The book examines the conditions
under which philanthropy can be effective, the impasses that
foundations often face, and the novel context in which philanthropy
operates today. This study therefore assesses the shifting grounds
on which higher education globally is positioned and the role of
global philanthropy within these changing contexts. This is
especially important in a moment where higher education is once
again recognized as a driver of development and income growth,
where knowledge economies requiring additional levels of education
are displacing economies predicated on manufacturing, and in a
context where higher education itself appears increasingly
precarious and under dramatic pressures to adapt to new conditions.
This book offers a nuanced analysis of a US-led foundation
initiative of uncommon ambition, featuring seven foundations with a
shared commitment to strengthen capacity in higher education in
Sub-Saharan African universities. The book examines the conditions
under which philanthropy can be effective, the impasses that
foundations often face, and the novel context in which philanthropy
operates today. This study therefore assesses the shifting grounds
on which higher education globally is positioned and the role of
global philanthropy within these changing contexts. This is
especially important in a moment where higher education is once
again recognized as a driver of development and income growth,
where knowledge economies requiring additional levels of education
are displacing economies predicated on manufacturing, and in a
context where higher education itself appears increasingly
precarious and under dramatic pressures to adapt to new conditions.
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Democracy in America (Paperback)
Alexis De Tocqueville; Edited by Richard D Heffner; Afterword by Vartan Gregorian
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R233
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Purchase of this book includes free trial access to
www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books
for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: was
inhabited by many indigenous tribes, it may justly be said, at the
time of its discovery by Europeans, to have form. ed one great
desert. The Indians occupied, without possess- ing it. It is by
agricultural labor that man appropriates the soil, and the early
inhabitants of North America lived by the produce of the chase.
Their implacable prejudices, their uncontrolled passions, their
vices, and still more, perhaps, their savage virtues, consigned
them to inevitable destruction. The ruin of these nations began
from the day when Europeans landed on their shores: it has
proceeded ever since, and we are now seeing the completion of it.
They seemed to have been placed by Providence-amid the riches of
the New World to enjoy them for a season, and then surrender them.
Those coasts, so admirably adapted for commerce and industry; those
wide and deep rivers; that inexhaustible valley of the
'Mississippi; the whole continent, in short, seemed prepared to be
the abode of a great nation, yet unborn. In that land the great
experiment was to be made by civilized man, of the attempt to
construct society upon a new basis; and it was there, for the first
time, that theories hitherto unknown, or deemed impracticable, were
to exhibit a spectacle for which the world had not been prepared by
the history of the past. CHAPTER II. ORIGIN OF THE ANGLO-AMERICANS
AND ITS IMPORTANCE, lit RELATION TO THEIR FUTURE CONDITION. Utility
of knowing the Origin of Nations in order to understand their
social Condition and their Laws.?America the only Country in which
the Starting-Point of a great People has been clearly
observable.?In what respects all who emigrated to British America
were similar.?In what they differed.?Remark applicable to all the
Europeans who established themselves on the shores ...
Newton Minow's long engagement with the world of television began
nearly fifty years ago when President Kennedy appointed him
chairman of the Federal Communications Commission. As its head,
Minow would famously dub TV a vast wasteland, thus inaugurating a
career dedicated to reforming television to better serve the public
interest. Since then, he has been chairman of PBS and on the board
of CBS and elsewhere, but his most lasting contribution remains his
leadership on televised presidential debates. He was assistant
counsel to Illinois governor Adlai Stevenson when Stevenson first
proposed the idea of the debates in 1960; he served as cochair of
the presidential debates in 1976 and 1980; and he helped create and
is currently vice chairman of the Commission on Presidential
Debates, which has organized the debates for the last two decades.
Written with longtime collaborator Craig LaMay, this fascinating
history offers readers for the first time a genuinely inside look
into the origins of the presidential debates and the many battles
both legal and personal that have determined who has been allowed
to debate and under what circumstances. The authors do not dismiss
the criticism of the presidential debates in recent years but do
come down solidly in favor of them, arguing that they are one of
the great accomplishments of modern American electoral politics. As
they remind us, the debates were once unique in the democratic
world, are now emulated across the globe, and they offer the public
the only real chance to see the candidates speak in direct response
to one another in a discussion of major social, economic, and
foreign policy issues. Looking to the challenges posed by
third-party candidates and the emergence of new media such as
YouTube, Minow and LaMay ultimately make recommendations for the
future, calling for the debates to become less formal, with
candidates allowed to question each other and citizens allowed to
question candidates directly. They also explore the many ways in
which the Internet might serve to broaden the debates' appeal and
informative power. Whether it's Clinton or Obama vs. McCain, Inside
the Presidential Debates will be welcomed in 2008 by anyone
interested in where this crucial part of our democracy is headed
and how it got there.
In this humorous, learned, and moving memoir, Vartan Gregorian
recounts his journey from an impoverished childhood as a Christian
Armenian in Muslim Tabriz to cultured citizen of the world.
Gregorian's odyssey begins in an obscure poor quarter of a
provincial city (thought by some to be the location of the Garden
of Eden). Childhood centered on his brilliant, beloved, illiterate
grandmother who taught him so much, the beauty of Church, school,
American movies, and the larger world he read about in his borrowed
books. From there, he continued on to a Beirut lycee, Stanford
University, and the presidencies of the New York Public Library,
Brown University, and Carnegie Corporation.
Like Jimmy Carter in "An Hour Before Daylight," and in the
tradition of Nabokov, Jill Ker Conway, and V. S. Naipaul, he tells
us that education is an openness to everything, and describes his
public and private life as one education after another. This is a
love story about life.
After World War II, leading western powers focused their attention
on fighting the "Red Menace," Communism. Today, as terrorist
activity is increasingly linked to militant Islamism, some
politicians and scholars fear a "Green Menace," a Pan-Islamic
totalitarian movement fueled by monolithic religious ideology. Such
fears have no foundation in history, according to Vartan Gregorian.
In this succinct, powerful survey of Islam, Gregorian focuses on
Muslim diversity and division, portraying the faith and its people
as a mosaic, not a monolith. The book begins with an accessible
overview of Islam's tenets, institutions, evolution, and historical
role. Gregorian traces its origins and fundamental principles, from
Muhammad's call to faith nearly 1,400 years ago to the defeat of
the Ottoman Empire in World War I, and the subsequent abolition of
the Caliphate. He focuses particular attention on the intense
struggle between modernists and traditionalists, interaction
between religion and nationalism, and key developments that have
caused bitter divisions among Muslim nations and states: the
partitions of Palestine, the break up and Islamization of Pakistan,
the 1978 revolution in Iran, and the 1979 Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan. Today Islamist views range across the entire spectra
of religious and political thought, and Islamism is anything but a
unified movement. While religious extremists have attempted to form
a confederacy of like-minded radicals in many countries, much of
the Muslim population lives in relatively modern, secular states.
Gregorian urges Westerners to distinguish between activist Islamist
parties, which promote -sometimes violently -Islam as an ideology
in a theocratic state, and Islamic parties, whose traditional
members want their secular political systems to co-exist with the
moral principles of their religion. Gregorian emphasizes the
importance of religion in today's world and urges states,societies,
and intellectuals to intervene in order to prevent Islam--as well
as other religions--from becoming the political tool of various
parties and states. He recommends continuing dialogues between
modernist and traditionalist Muslims, as well as among the
educated, secular elite and their clerical counterparts. He also
urges U.S.-led efforts to engage and better understand the
diversity of Muslim communities in the United States and the world.
Lamenting widespread U.S. ignorance of the world's fastest-growing
religion, Gregorian calls on "enlightened citizens" to promote
international understanding, tolerance, and peace.
David Pierpont Gardner was president of one of the world's most
distinguished centers of higher learning - the nine-campus
University of California - from 1983 to 1992. In this remarkably
candid and lively memoir he provides an insider's account of what
it was like for a very private, reflective man to live an extremely
public life as leader of one of the most complex and controversial
institutions in the country. "Earning My Degree" is a portrait of
uncommon leadership and courage and a chronicle of how these traits
shaped a treasured, and sometimes mystifying, American institution.
Before his tenure as president, Gardner spent seven years at the
University of California, Santa Barbara, during a tumultuous era of
culture wars, ethnic division, and anti-Vietnam War protests,
leaving his post as vice chancellor to serve as vice president of
the University of California from 1971 to 1973. In 1973 he was
named president of the University of Utah, and while there he
chaired the National Commission on Excellence in High Education,
which authored "A Nation at Risk", regarded today as the twentieth
century's most telling report on the condition of American public
schools. As president of the University of California, he contended
with intense controversies over affirmative action, animal rights,
AIDS research, weapons labs, divestment in South Africa, and much
more. This memoir recounts his experiences with these and other
issues and describes his dealings with the diverse cast of
characters who influence the university: U.S. presidents,
governors, legislators, regents, chancellors, faculty, staff,
students, alumni, and donors. The epilogue of "Earning My Degree"
is a thoughtful and engaging account of the ten years since
Gardner's retirement that includes his personal views about what
has truly mattered in his life.
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