Jon Christensen at 00:34
Panel discussion at 12:18
Dana Cuff at 50:30
Jennifer Wolch at 52:00
In this video we see the concluding panel for Mapping and Its Discontents, led by Jon Christensen of UCLA's Institute of the Environment and Sustainability. The day's speakers reconvene for a panel discussion and questions from the audience. Finally Dana Cuff, principal investigator of the UCLA Urban Humanities Initiative, and Jennifer Wolch, Dean of the UC Berkeley College of Environmental Design, close the symposium.
Never Built LA:
http://aplusd.org/exhibitions-future/neverbuilt
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Herbert M'cleod (Special Advisor, Office of the President, Sierra Leone) spoke about how post-conflict countries should seek to allow for changes to policy based on evidence rather than to recreate the government and economy that led to the conflict. In practice, however, the post-conflict environment is complex, mired in the need for short-term solutions and the rush to return to a sense of "normalcy".
Berkeley is more than a set of statistics, more than a collection of prizes, more than a #1 ranking. What does it really mean to Be Berkeley? It means something different to everyone... with one common goal: Being the best!
How Berkeley can YOU be?
Find us on the web:
http://admissions.berkeley.edu
http://facebook.com/UCBerkeleyAdmissions
http://twitter.com/CalAdmissions
http://blog.Admissions.Berkeley.edu
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Jessica Fisher's Frail-Craft was the winner of the prestigious 2006 Yale Series of Younger Poets competition. She is a doctoral candidate in English at U.C. Berkeley and is coeditor, with Robert Hass, of The Addison Street Anthology, which chronicles Berkeley's rich poetic history.
Support for this series is provided by Mrs. William Main, the Library, The Morrison Library Fund, the dean's office of the College of Letters and Sciences, and the Townsend Center for the Humanities. These events are also partially supported by Poets & Writers, Inc. through a grant it has received from The James Irvine Foundation.
http://lunchpoems.berkeley.edu
Integrative Biology 131: General Human Anatomy. Fall 2005. Professor Marian Diamond. The functional anatomy of the human body as revealed by gross and microscopic examination.
The Department of Integrative Biology offers a program of instruction that focuses on the integration of structure and function in the evolution of diverse biological systems. It investigates integration at all levels of organization from molecules to the biosphere, and in all taxa of organisms from viruses to higher plants and animals.
The department uses many traditional fields and levels of complexity in forging new research directions, asking new questions, and answering traditional questions in new ways. The various...