CAS Faculty Directory
Ahmad, Fawzia. CB 238.
Tel: (303)735-3964. Fax:
Fawzia.Ahmad@colorado.edu
Webpage
Instructor, Departments of French & Italian and Women's Studies
Degrees
: B.A., University of Punjab in Lahore, Pakistan; M.A., French Literature, Notre Dame, 1984; Ph.D., French Literature, Boston University, 1996.
Research/teaching focus: Postcolonial issues related to women in developing countries.
Selected publications: A Study of Land and Milieu in the works of Algerian-born authors, Albert Camus, Mouloud Feraoun, Mohammed Dib, (Mellen Press, 2005).
Aissa, Abderrahaman. CB 278.
Tel: (303) 492-4111. Fax: (303) 492 3699
Aissa.Abderrahman@colorado.edu
Arabic Language Instructor, Department of Spanish and Portuguese
Degrees: B.A., Philosophy and Sociology, Beirut Arab University, 1972, 1976; M.S., Library and Information Science, M.S., Computer and Information Systems, University of Denver, 2001, 2004.
Research/teaching focus: Teaching Arabic for non-Arabic speakers.
Ajisaka, Kathleen. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 492-5487. Fax: (303) 492-5856
Kathleen.Ajisaka@colorado.edu
Executive Assistant, Alliance of Associations of Teachers of Japanese
Degrees
: 1) 1972 BA in East Asian Studies and Japanese Language & Literature (UCB), 2.) 1996 MA in Comparative Literature focusing on Modern Japanese Women Writers (UCB), 3.) 1996 completed coursework for Secondary Teaching Certificate, and 4.) 1997-99 Graduate coursework in Eastern Religion and Japanese Literature.
Research/teaching focus: Female shamanism in Eastern religion and its reflection in Japanese literature.
Anderson, Suzanne. CB 260.
Tel: (303)492-7071. Fax: (303)492-7501
Suzanne.Anderson@colorado.edu
Webpage
Assistant Professor, Department of Geography
Degrees
: Ph.D., Geography, University of California, Berkeley, 1995.
Research/teaching focus: Geomorphology, weathering, hydrology, glaciology.
Selected publications: “Glaciers show direct linkage between erosion rates and chemical weathering fluxes,” Geomorphology (in press); Anderson S, Anderson S, MacGregor, Waddington, O’Neel, Riihimaki, and Loso (2004): “Strong feedbacks between hydrology and sliding of a small alpine glacier,” Journal of Geophysical Research, 109; Loso, Anderson R, Anderson S (2004): “Post Little Ice Age record of coarse and fine clastic sedimentation in an Alaskan proglacial lake,” Geology 32(12): 1065-1068).
Arias, Ernest. CB 314.
Tel: (303) 492-6914. Fax: (303)492-6163
Arias@colorado.edu
Webpage
Professor, Environmental Design
Research/teaching focus
: Architecture, urban design, city and regional planning.
Baird, Daniel. CB 279.
Tel: . Fax:
Daniel.Baird@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Research/teaching focus
:
Barry, Roger. CB 216.
Tel: (303) 492-5488. Fax: (303) 492-7501
Roger.Barry@colorado.edu
Webpage
Distinguished Professor, CIRES/Geography
Degrees: Ph.D., University of Southampton, U.K., 1965.
Distinctions: Fulbright Teaching Scholar, Moscow State University, Russia, 2000.
Research/teaching focus: Mountain climate, Central Asia, Arctic climatology; snow and ice/atmosphere interactions.
Selected publications: Barry, R.G. "The status of research on glaciers and global glacier recession: A Review" (2006) in Progress in Physical Geography, 30 (3):285-306. Barry, R.G. (lead author), et.al, (2007) "Snow", Chapter 4, Global Outlook for Ice and Snow, Earthprint UNEP, Paris. pp 39-62. Barry, R.G. (2004), “Climate: Research programs,” in M. Nuttall (ed) Encylopedia of the Arctic Vol. 1, Routledge, New York, pp. 379-83; Barry, R.G. (2002), “The Role of Snow and Ice in the Global Climate System: A Review,” Polar Geography 24(3) pp. 235-246; Barry, R.G. (1992), Mountain Weather and Climate , 2nd ed. Routledge, London; Barry, R.G. and Carleton, A.M. (2001), Synoptic and Dynamic Climatology, Routledge, London; Barry, R.G. and Seimon, A. (2000), “Research for Mountain Area Development: Climatic fluctuations in the mountains of the Americas and their significance,” Ambio 29(7): 364-70.
Berggreen, Shu-Ling Chen. CB 478.
Tel: (303)492-8696. Fax: 303.492-0969
Shu-Ling.Berggreen@colorado.edu
Webpage
Associate Professor, Journalism
Degrees: Ph.D., University of Tennessee

Research/Teaching Focus: Asian media; media and ethnicity; media and socialization in multicultural contexts; intercultural/international communication; new technology and society; and methodological issues in communication research.
Bernier, Ronald. CB 318.
Tel: (303) 492-8525. Fax: (303) 492-4886
Ronald.Bernier@colorado.edu
Webpage
Professor Emeritus, Fine Arts
Degrees: B.A., History of Art/Studio Art, University of Minnesota, 1965, cum laude; M.A., History of Art, University of Hawaii, 1967; Ph.D., History of Art, Cornell, 1971.
Distinctions: career recognition award from Asian Cultural Council of the Rockefeller Brothers Foundation, 1993; alumni-in-residence research grant, East-West Center, University of Hawaii, 1984; special award to visit the Hakone and Atami art museums, 1982; Fulbright-Hays Faculty Research Fellowship, Japan, 1979.
Research/teaching focus: History of Asian art
Selected publications:Himalayan Architecture (New Jersey and London: Associated Universities Press, 1997); Author and narrator of a five-hour video series on China and a five-hour video series on Japan (Boulder: Alarion Press, 1989); Himalayas at the Crossroads (Pasadena: Pacific-Asia Museum of Art, 1987); Exhibitions: “Chinese Paintings of Madame Yin Lo Yen,” 1973; “Arts of the Chinese Brush,” 1973, 1974.
Biernacki, Loriliai. CB 292.
Tel: (303) 492-8041 Fax: (303) 735-2080
Loriliai.Biernacki@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Religious Studies
Degrees: B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., Religious Studies, University of Pennsylvania, 2000.
Distinctions: Lilly Foundation Grant Summer 2004 for research in Kamakhya, India; University of Pennsylvania SAS Dissertation Fellowship, 1998; Penfield Fellowship for Dissertation Research, 1996; American Institute of Indian Studies Hindi Language Fellowship in Benares, 1993-94.
Research/teaching focus: Hinduism, Tantra, and Gender Theory.
Selected publications: Renowned Goddess of Desire: Women, Sex, and Speech in Tantra (Oxford University Press, 2007);"Kali in California: Shree Maa of Kamakkhya" in The Graceful Guru: Hindu Female Gurus in India and the US, Oxford University Press, 2004; "Possession, Absorption and the Transformation of Samavesha": in Veroffentlichungen zu den Sprachen und Kulturen Sudasiens series, pub.: Austrian Academy of Sciences, 2003; "Wilhelm Halbfass: India and Philology": in Religious Studies Review, forthcoming; "Satya Narayana Vrat Katha" for South Asian Folklore: An Encyclopedia: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka. Eds. Peter Claus, Sarah Diamond, Routledge, 2003.
Bilham, Roger. CB 399.
Tel: (303) 492-6189. Fax: (303) 492-2606
Roger.Bilham@colorado.edu
Webpage
Professor, Geological Studies
Degrees: Ph.D., Geophysics, Cambridge University, 1971; B.Sc., Physics, University of Wales, 1966; B.Sc.(Hons), Geology, University of Wales, 1967.
Distinctions: Miller Professorship, University of California, Berkeley, 2004; IRIS/SSA Distinguished lecturer, 2002-03; Fellow of the American Geophysical Union, 2002; Guggenheim Fellowship, Oxford University, 2000.
Research/teaching focus: Earthquakes, tectonic plates.
Selected publications: "Investigating historic New Madrid earthquakes with instrumentally-recorded aftershocks," with Mueller and Hough, Nature 429, 284-288 (2004); "Flexure of the Indian Plate and intraplate earthquakes," with Bendick and Wallace, Proc. Indian Acad. Sci. (Earth Planet Sci.),112(3) 1-14 (2003); "Present Day Crustal Deformation in China constrained by Global Positioning Measurements," with Wang, Qi, Pei-Zhen Zhang, Freymueller, Larson, Xiâan Lai, X. You, Z. Niu, J. Wu, Y. Li, J. Liu, Z. Yang, and Q. Chen, Science, 294, 574-577, 2001; "Himalayan Seismic Hazard," with Gaur and Molnar, Science, 293, 1442-4, (2001).
Bliss, Anne. CB 317.
Tel: (303) 492-4478.
Anne.Bliss@colorado.edu
Webpage
Senior Instructor, Program for Writing and Rhetoric
Research/teaching focus: Anne Bliss is also Coordinator for English as a Second Language (ESL), Faculty Teaching Excellence Technology Liaison, and ATLAS Institute Fellow teaching in the Program for Writing and Rhetoric. She is also the Program Coordinator for the CU- Xi'an Jiaotong University Collaboration Program, and is a Full Professor Adjunct at Xiâ'an Jiaotong University. Dr. Bliss regularly teaches ESL students in PWR courses, and she served as a Fulbright Fellow to Chile in 2005.
Boord, Daniel. CB 283.
Tel: (303) 492-2165. Fax: (303) 492-1362
Daniel.Boord@colorado.edu
Professor, Film Studies; Director Elect
Research/teaching focus: Film production, documentary, memory and culture.
Brown, Janice. CB 279
Tel: (303) 735-1053. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Janice.C.Brown@colorado.edu
Professor of Japanese and Chair East Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees:
BA, Japanese (1977); MA (1979) and PhD (1985), Asian Studies (Modern Japanese Literature), University of British Columbia.
Distinctions: Chair, Department of East Asian Studies, University of Alberta,
2002-2006.
Research/teaching focus: modern Japanese literature; modern and contemporary Japanese women writers and poets; feminist literary theory and criticism
Selected publications: Hayashi Fumiko's I Saw a Pale Horse and Selected Poems from Diary of a Vagabond (Ithaca, NY: Cornell East Asia Series, 1997); Tarnished Words: The Poetry of Oba Minako (Norwalk, CT: EastBridge, 2006); J. Brown and S. Arntzen, eds., Across Time and Genre: Reading and Writing Japanese Women's Texts (Edmonton: Quality Color Press, University of Alberta, 2002).
Brueck, Laura. CB 279
Tel: (303) Fax (303)
Laura.Brueck@colorado.edu

Assistant Professor, Hindi, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees:
B.A., Smith College, 1991; M.A., University of Texas at Austin, 2002; Ph.D., University of Texas at Austin, 2006.
Distinctions:Fulbright Hays Fellowship for research in India, 2004-2005; University of Texas Continuing Fellowship 2005-2006, 2006-2007.
Research/teaching focus:South Asian Literature and Culture; Dalit Studies; Post-colonial Studies; Contemporary Hindi Literature and Film; Translation Studies.
Selected publications: "Mainstreaming Marginalized Voices: the Dalit Lekhak Sangh and the Negotiations over Hindi Dalit Literature"
in Claiming Voices from Below: Dalits and the Subaltern Question in India. Eds. Anne Feldhaus and Manu Bhagavan (Oxford University Press, forthcoming); "Marking the Boundaries of a New Literary Identity: The Assertion of 'Dalit Consciousness' in Dalit Literary Criticism" Essays in Honor of Patrick Olivelle, Ed. Steven Lindquist (Firenze University Press, forthcoming); "Dalit Chetna in Dalit Literary Criticism" in Seminar no. 558 (India's Monthly Symposium) April 2006.

Chakravarti, Dipankar. CB 419.
Tel: (303) 492-1311. Fax: (303) 492-5962
Dipankar.Chakravarti@colorado.edu
Webpage
Professor of Marketing, The Ortloff Professor of Business
Research/teaching focus: Consumer and Managerial decision making; Consumer behavior in developing economies.
Selected Publications: "Voices Unheard: The Consumer Psychology of Poverty and Development," Journal of Consumer Psychology (forthcoming, 2005); "A Process Analysis of the Effects of Humorous Ad Executions on Brand Claims Memory," with Krishnan and Shanker, Journal of Consumer Psychology, 13, 3(2003), 231-245; "Price and Margin Negotiations in Marketing Channels: An Experimental Study of Sequential Bargaining Under One-Sided Uncertainty and Opportunity Cost of Delay," with Srivastava, Joydeep, and Rapoport, Marketing Science, 19, 2(2000), Spring,163-184.
Chan, Steve. CB 333.
Tel: (303) 492-7904. Fax: (303) 492-0978
Steve.Chan@colorado.edu
Professor, Political Science
Degrees: Ph.D., Political Science, University of Minnesota, 1976.
Distinctions: Served as department chair for political science during 2003-07, and as Treasurer
for the International Studies Association for the 1999-2002 term. Recipient of the Karl W. Deutsch award in 1988, Boulder Faculty Assembly award for Excellence in Research in 1994, and CU Parents Association's Marinus Smith Award in 2004.
Research/teaching focus: International relations, political economy, foreign policy,
decision-making, and East Asia.
Selected publications: His work has appeared in journals such as the American Political Science Review, Comparative Political Studies, International Interactions, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Conflict Resolution, Journal of Peace Research, Security Studies, and World Politics. His books include China, the U.S., and the Power-Transition Theory (2008); Coping with Globalization (2001); Economic Sanction As Statecraft (2000); Beyond the Developmental State (1998); Foreign Direct Investment in a Changing Global Political Economy (1995); Defense, Welfare and Growth (1992); The Evolving Pacific Basin in the Global Political Economy (1992); Flexibility, Foresight and Fortuna in Taiwan's Development (1992); East Asian Dynamism (1993, 1990); International Relations in Perspective (1984); Foreign Policy Decision Making (1984); and Understanding Foreign Policy Decisions (1979).
Chen, Jin . CB 279.
Tel: . Fax:
jin.chen@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees:
Distinctions:
Research/teaching focus:.
Selected publications:
Chester, Lucy. CB 234
Tel: (303) 492-0310. Fax: (303) 492-1868
Lucy.Chester@colorado.edu
Webpage
Assistant Professor of History and International Affairs, History
Degrees: PhD, History, Yale, 2002; MA, History, Yale, 1998; BA, Yale, 1996.
Distinctions: Smith Richardson Foundation Junior Faculty Research Grant, 2004–05; Council on Research and Creative Work Junior Faculty Development Award, 2005; John Addison Porter Prize, Yale University, 2003.
Research/Teaching Focus: Modern South Asian History: Indian and Pakistani nationalism, women in South Asia, legacies of partition, historiography; International Security Studies: Indo-Pakistan relations, United States policy in South Asia.
Selected Publications: “Imperial Cartography in the End of Empire: Map Use During the 1947 Partition of South Asia,” in La cartografia europea tra primo Rinasciemnto e fine dell'Illuminismo, eds. D.R. Curto, A. Cattaneo, and A.F. Almeida (Firenze: L.S. Olschki, in press 2003); “The 1947 Partition: Drawing the Indo-Pakistani Boundary,” American Diplomacy 7:1 (February 2002); “The Mapping of Empire: French and British Cartographies of India in the Late Eighteenth Century,” Portuguese Studies 16 (October 2000); “Mapping Imperial Expansion: Colonial Cartography in North America and South Asia,” The Portolan 45 (Fall 1999)".
Covert, Herbert. CB 233.
Tel: (303) 492-1167. Fax: (303)
Herbert.Covert@colorado.edu
Professor, Anthropology
Degrees: B.A., Anthropology, University of Massachusetts, 1976; M.A., Anthropology, Arizona State University, 1978; Ph.D., Duke University, 1985.
Distinctions: National Geographic Society Grant, "Survey of Hatinh and Red-shanked Douc Langurs in Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park, Viet Nam", 2005; Zoological Society of San Diego "Southeast Asian leaf monkey ecology and conservation" 2004-05; Research award, Council on Research and Creative Work at CU Boulder, for "Primate Conservation in Vietnam"; Boulder Faculty Assembly Excellence in Teaching Award, 1998-99.
Research/teaching focus: Biological Anthropology, Primate Ecology, and Conservation of Primates of Vietnam.
Selected publications: Workman C., Covert H.H. 2005, "Learning the ropes: The ontogeny of locomotion in red-shanked douc (Pygathrix nemaeus), Delacour's (Trachypithecus delacouri), and Hatinh langurs (Trachypithecus hatinhensis) I. positional behavior", Am J Phys Anthropol; Covert, H.H., Workman, C.C., and Byron, C. 2004, "The EPRC as an important research center: ontogeny of locomotor differences among Vietnamese colobines", in T. Nadler, U. Streicher, and Ha Thang Long (eds.) Conservation of Primates in Vietnam, Frankfurt Zoological Society and Haki Publishing: Ha Noi, pp.121-129; Byron, C. and Covert, H.H., 2004, "Unexpected Locomotor Behavior: brachiation by an Old World Monkey from Vietnam", Journal of Zoology, London 263:101-106.
Denny, Frederick M. CB 292.
Tel: (303) 492-6358. Fax: (303) 735-2080
Frederick.Denny@colorado.edu
Professor Emeritus, Religious Studies
Degrees: A.B. College of William and Mary, 1961; B.Div. Andover Newton Theological School, 1965; M.A., Ph.D University of Chicago 1969, 1974; Certificate in Advanced Arabic Studies, American University in Cairo, 1970.
Distinctions: Former Member of the Board of Directors and the Executive Committee of the American Academy of Religion (2001-2004).
Research/teaching focus:(Comparative Study of Religion, Islamic Studies, Ritual Studies.
Selected publications:Muslims in America (2007); Islam and Ecology, co-edited with Richard C. Foltz and Azizan Baharuddin. (Harvard's Center for the Study of World Religions and Harvard University Press, 2003); Jews, Christians, Muslims: A Comparative Introduction to Monotheistic Religions, co-authored with J.Corrigan, C. Eire, M. Jaffee (Prentice-Hall, 1998); An Introduction to Islam (2nd ed., Prentice-Hall, 1994); Islam and the Muslim Community (rev. ed., Harper-SanFrancisco, 1993).
Everaert, Christine. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 492-7241
Christine.Everaert@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: MA in Oriental Languages and Cultures (Indology) from Ghent University, Belgium (1997); B.A. (Candidate) Colonial History, Ghent University, Belgium (1999); Ph.D. in Oriental Languages and Cultures (Indology), Ghent University, Belgium ("Lost (and added) in translation. Tracing the boundaries between Hindi and Urdu; An analysis of a corpus of short stories from the 20th century" October 2006). Academic experience: teaching Hindi and Urdu at the Ghent University (1999- 2006).
Research/teaching focus: Hindi and Urdu short stories; comparative linguistics
between Hindi and Urdu.
Selected publications: "Basisgrammatica van het Hindi, Met illustraties uit de moderne Hindi literatuur," ("Essential Grammar of Hindi, with examples taken from modern Hindi literary texts") Academia Press, 130 p., 2004; "Volksverhalen uit Nagaland, Spiegel van een stammenmaatschappij" ("Folktales from Nagaland, mirror of a tribal community") in "Nagaland, Overgangsrituelen binnen een tribale leefgemeenschap in het Noordoosten van India" ("Nagaland, rites de passage in a tribal community in North-East India"); "Halsbrekende toeren; ongelukkige liefde in het Urdu kortverhaal 'Mozail' van S.H. Manto", ("Daredevil feats; unhappy love in the Urdu short story 'Mozail' by S.H. Manto") in Janssen, C. (ed.), "Het gebroken hart in Oosterse literaturen" ("Broken hearts in Oriental Literatures"), Academia Press, Gent, 2001, pp. 83-91; "Wat een moeder lijden kan: armoede en dood in een Indiaas kortverhaal" ("How a mother can suffer: death and poverty in a Indian short story"), in Janssen, C. (ed.), "Wee het gebeente; De doden in Oosterse literaturen" ("Woe betide you; The dead in Oriental Literatures), Academia Press, Gent. (in the press); " "Manovrtti" / "Apna apna khayaal": two titles, almost one story", in: "Proceedings of the International Conference on South-Asian Literatures and Languages ICON-SALILA (ICOSAL 5)", by Moscow State University, Russia (accepted for publication by Moscow State University).
Farokhfal, Reza . CB 279.
Tel:
farokhfal.reza@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees:
Research/teaching focus:
Selected publications:
Fierman, Deanna. CB 279.
Tel: 303-735-5089
Deanna.Fierman@colorado.edu
Academic Advisor, Asian Studies, Chinese, Japanese
Fong, Judith Yem Siu . CB 184.
Tel: (303) 492-4414
Judith.Fong@colorado.edu
Associate Professor, Head of Collection Department, Norlin Libraries
Ganguly, Suranjan. CB 316.
Tel: (303) 492-3377. Fax: (303) 492-1362
Ganguly@colorado.edu
Associate Professor, Film Studies Program
Degrees: Ph.D., English, Purdue University, 1991.
Research/teaching focus: Research: Indian cinema. Courses Taught: Asian Cinema, Major Asian filmmakers, Japanese and Chinese cinema, Akira Kurosawa and Satyajit Ray, Contemporary Asian cinema.
Selected publications: Currently authoring a book on Adoor Gopalakrishnan, India's most distinguished contemporary filmmaker; Satyajit Ray: In Search of the Modern, Scarecrow Press, 2000. Indian edition (in English) published in 2001 by Indialog. Articles on Indian Cinema published in The Journal of South Asian Literature, The Journal of Commonwealth Literature, Film Criticism, Asian Cinema, East-West Film Journal, etc .
Gautam, Sanjay. CB 419.
Tel: . Fax:
Sanjay.Gautam@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Department of History
Degrees: B.A. (Hons) , History, Ramjas College, Delhi University, New Delhi, 1986; M.A. , M.Phil. , History, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, 1988, 1992; Ph.D., South Asian Languages and Civilizations, University of Chicago, 2005.
Research/teaching focus: History of South and Southeast Asia.
Selected publications: Review of Stephen Cohen's India: Emerging Power in University of Chicago Newsletter, Spring 2001.
Gayley, Holly. CB 292.
Tel: . Fax:
Holly.Gayley@colorado.edu
Instructor, Religious Studies
Degrees: Ph.D. Harvard University (expected June 2008).
Research/teaching focus: Buddhism, Tibetan religions, Buddhist Modernism; Hagiography, relics and ritual theory; Gender, Minorities in China.
Selected publications: "Soteriology of the Senses in Tibetan Buddhism" Numen 54/4 (2007): 459-499; "Buddhist Modernism in Mkhan po 'Jigs phun's Advice to Tibetans of the 21st Century." Forthcoming in the Proceedings from the Eleventh Seminar of the International Association of Tibetan Studies, Bonn 2007.
Gill, Sam. CB 292.
Tel: (303) 492-7319. Fax:
Sam.Gill@colorado.edu
Webpage
Professor, Department of Religious Studies
Degrees: Ph.D.: University of Chicago.
Research/teaching focus
: Dance, movement and the body, play, and theoretical issues of comparative cultural studies.
Gordon, Kenneth R. CB 419.
Tel: (303) 492-4235. Fax: (303) 492-5962
Ken.Gordon@colorado.edu
Senior Instructor, International Business & Operations Management
Degrees: B.A. University of Iowa, 1967; M.S, Northwestern University, 1971; Ph.D., Northwestern University, 1973.
Research/teaching focus
: International management, business in Japan, Malaysia, Indonesia
Distinctions: Special advisor to the Denver Mayor's Office and the World Trade Center on the creation of a China Trade Representative Office in Shanghai, China, and member of the Mayor's China Advisory Committee (CAC), 1999-present; Special advisor to Colorado Governor's Office on Chinese Premier Zhu Rongji's visit to Denver, 1999.
Selected publications: "The 3 Pâs for Investing in China: Patience, Persistence, & Planning," Denver Business Journal (July, 2002); "Cross-Cultural Business Communication with the Chinese." World Trade Center's Cross-Cultural Communication Program (February, 2002); "Doing Business in China: Often Overlooked Issues," Western International Personal Association (November, 2001).
Guruswamy, Lakshman D. CB 401.
Tel: (303) . Fax:
Guruswam@colorado.edu
Webpage
Professor, School of Law
Degrees: Clare Hall, University of Cambridge; Ph.D., Law, University of Durham, 1978; LL.B., Sri Lanka.
Distinctions: Invited Speaker at numerous international conferences, including World Congress on Renewable Energy, 2004 and AALS Conference on Globalization and Environmental Law, 2004.
Research/teaching focus: International Environmental Law.
Selected publications: "Dispute Resolution: UNCLOS v. WTO", in Bringing New Law to Ocean Waters (2004); "Integrated Water Resources Management," in Water Management (2004); "Environmental Law," in Oxford Encyclopedia of American Law (2004); "Jurisdictional Conflicts Between International Tribunals: A Framework for Adjudication and Implementation," in Bringing New Law to Ocean Waters (Caron & Scheiber, eds.) (2004); International Environmental Law in a Nutshell, 2d edition, (2003).
Hall, Kira. CB 295.
Tel: (303)492-2912. Fax:(303)492-4416
Kira.Hall@colorado.edu
Webpage
Assistant Professor, Department of Linguistics
Degrees: Ph.D., Linguistics, UC Berkeley, 1995.
Research/teaching focus: Identity within sociolinguistics, linguistic anthropology, nationalism, and Globalization, northern India.
Selected publications: (In progress), "From Tooth to Tusk: Language, Gender, and Sexuality among India's Hijras"; (In progress), "Studies in Indian Folk Traditions: Collected Writings of Ved Prakash Vatuk", ed., Meerut, India: Archana Publications; "Identity and Interaction: A Sociocultural Linguistic Approach," with Bucholtz, Discourse Studies 7(4-5), 584-614 (2005); "Intertextual Sexuality: Parodies of Class, Identity, and Desire in Liminal Delhi," Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 15(1):125-144 (2005); "Theorizing Identity in Language and Sexuality Research," with Bucholtz, Language in Society 33(4):501-547 (2004).

Harrison-Carter, Victoria. CB 232
Tel: (303) 492-3392. Fax: (303) 492-8386
Harrisov@colorado.edu

Webpage

Lecturer, Philosophy
Degrees
: Ph.D. University of London, BA University of London.
Research/teaching focus: Classical Eastern philosophies; ethics; philosophy of religion.
Selected publications: Book: The Apologetic Value of Human Holiness: Hans Urs von Balthasar's Christocentric Philosophical Anthropology, Studies in Philosophy and Religion, volume 21 (Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic, 2000). Articles: “Human Holiness and Religious Apologia”, lead article in The International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 46 (1999): 63-92. “Personal Identity and Integration”, The Heythrop Journal, XL (1999): 424-437. “Putnam's Internal Realism and von Balthasar's Religious Epistemology”, lead article in The International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 44 (1998): 67-92. “Kierkegaard's Philosophical Fragments: a clarification”, Religious Studies, 33 (1997): 445-472. Review Article: Philip J. Ivanhoe, Ethics in the Confucian Tradition: The Thought of Mengzi and Wang Yangming (Indianapolis: The Hackett Publishing Company, 2002). Forthcoming in Dao: A Journal of Comparative Philosophy.
Hoover, Stewart. CB 478.
Tel: (303) 492-4833. Fax: (303) 492-0969
Stewart.Hoover@colorado.edu
Professor, Journalism and Mass Communication
Degrees: M.A. University of Pennsylvania, Ph.D. University of Pennsylvania..
Research/teaching focus: Qualitative studies of media audiences, culture, media technologies and technological changes.
Hsiao, Frank. CB 256.
Tel: (303) 492-7908. Fax: (303) 492-8960
Frank.Hsiao@colorado.edu
Professor, Economics
Degrees
: Ph.D., M.A., University of Rochester, 1967, 1964.
Research/teaching focus: Economic development of Taiwan, Korea, and Japan; Growth theory; Quantitative methods in Economics.
Distinctions: Invited Researcher/Fellow, the International Centre for the Study of East Asian Development (ICSEAD), Kitakyushu, Summer 2002; Nagoya University, Summer 1998; Kansai University, Summer 1987. Visiting scholar, Academia Sinica, Taiwan, Summer 1997; Harvard, Spring 96.
Selected publications: "Colonialism, Learning and Convergence: A Comparison of India and Taiwan,ä (with Hsiao), Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, 2005. "Catching Up and Convergence: Long Run Growth in East Asia" (with M Hsiao), Review of Development Economics, 2004; "The Chaotic Attractor of Foreign Direct Investment-Why China? A Panel Data Analysis," (with M Hsiao), J. of Asian Economics, 2004; "'Miracle Growth' in the Twentieth Century- International Comparisons of East Asian Development" (with Mei-Chu W. Hsiao), World Development, 2003.
Hsu, Chun-ling. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 735-1491. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Chun-ling.Hsu@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages & Civilizations
Degrees
: B.A, Soochow University, Taipei; Bachelor of Law, Fu Jen Catholic University, Taipei, 1987; M.A., Education, University of Wisconsin-River Falls, 1995.
Research/teaching focus: Grammar, assessment, instructional technology.
Ishida, Catherine. CB 595.
Tel: (303) 735-5115. Fax: (303) 735-5126
Catherine.Ishida@colorado.edu
Webpage
Japan Project Coordinator, Program for Teaching East Asia
Degrees: B.A., M.A., University of Maryland at College Park, 1995, 2004.
Research/Teaching focus: K-12 educators’ professional development in Japanese history, education, and culture; Education in Japan.
Selected Publications: (Re)inventing Classroom Management: How Japanese elementary school teachers negotiate the cultural interspace between their global traditions of education and those of the local diaspora, Master's seminar paper, 2004; "The Philosophical Foundations in Cross-cultural and Intercultural Communication Education: Across Scholarly Works and the AFS-USA Curriculum", Pt. 1 Chap. 2 in Tanki Ryuugaku Seido no Takoku Hikaku Kenkyuu-Nihongo Kyouiku no Guroubaru Sutandaado no Mosaku, Atsuko Kondou, ed., pp. 33-63. Tokyo: Univ. of Tokyo, January 2004.
Iyigun, Murat. CB 256.
Tel: (303) 492-6653. Fax: (303) 492-8622
Murat.Iyigun@colorado.edu
Webpage
Assistant Professor, Economics
Degrees: B.S., Hacettepe University, Ankara, Turkey, 1985; M.B.A., Boston University, 1991; A.M., Economics, Brown University, 1992; Ph.D. Economics, Brown University, 1995.
Research/Teaching focus: Human capital; R-based models of economic growth; exploring the sources of macroeconomic volatility with panel data.
Selected Publications: "Adaptive Skills, Technological Progress, and Growth" (with Ann L. Owen), European Economic Review forthcoming 2005; "The Export Technology Content, Learning by Doing and Specialization in Foreign Trade" (with Galina An), Journal of International Economics, forthcoming 2005; "Geography, Demography, and Early Development," Journal of Population Economics, forthcoming 2005; "Income Inequality and Macroeconomic Fluctuations'' (with Ann L. Owen), The Economic Journal, 114:495, 352-376, 2004; "Finance and Macroeconomic Volatility" (with Cevdet Denizer and Ann L. Owen), Contributions to Macroeconomics 2(1), Article 7, 2002; "Timing of Childbearing and Economic Growth," Journal of Development Economics 61(1), 257-271, 2000; "Public Education and Intergenerational Economic Mobility," International Economic Review 40(3), 697-710, 1999; “Entrepreneurs, Professionals, and Growth" (with Ann L. Owen), Journal of Economic Growth 4(2), 211-230, 1999; "Risk, Entrepreneurship and Human Capital Accumulation" (with Ann L. Owen), American Economic Review 88(2), 454-457, 1998.
Jan, Najeeb. CB 260
Tel: (303) 492-2860.
Najeeb.Jan@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor , Geography
Research/Teaching focus: South Asian & Modern Middle Eastern History, Islamic Studies: Modern Islam, Contemporary Culture and Politics, Post Colonialism, Cultural Studies.
Jones, Carla. CB 233
Tel: (303) 735-0108. Fax (303)492-1871
Carla.Jones@colorado.edu
Webpage
Assistant Professor, Anthropology
Degrees: B.A., Anthropology, UC Berkeley, 1991; M.A., SE Asian Studies, UC Berkeley, 1993; Ph.D., University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, 2001.
Research/Teaching focus: Class, gender, urban anthropology, globalization, Indonesia; visual culture, fashion, and Orientalism; also special interests in globalization, subjectivity and governmentality, critical gender theory, mass media and consumption.
Distinctions: Ford Foundation, Postdoctoral Fellowship; Fulbright grant.
Selected Publications: "Fashion anf Faith in Urban Indonesia," (2007) Fashion Theory 11 (2/3): 211-232; "The Domestic CEO: Emotion Management as Feminized Work in Central Javanese Middle-class Homes," Ethnos, 69(4). "What Happens When Asian Chic Becomes Chic in Asia?" with Ann Marie Leshkowich, Fashion Theory, August 2003. Re-Orienting Fashion: The Globalization of Asian Dress, volume co-edited with Ann Marie Leshkowich and Sandra Niessen. Oxford: Berg Press, 2003.
Keister, Jay. CB 301.
Tel: (303) 492-5496. Fax: (303) 492-5619
Keister@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, College of Music
Degrees
: B.A., Cal State, Fullerton, 1983; M.A., Ethnomusicology, UCLA, 1991; Ph.D., Ethnomusicology, UCLA, 2001.
Research/teaching focus: Ethnomusicology; Asian music; Japanese traditional music; nagauta shamisen and folk music.
Selected publications: Shaped By Japanese Music: Kikuoka Hiroaki and Nagauta Shamisen Music in Tokyo, Routledge, 2004; “The Shakuhachi as Spiritual Tool: A Japanese Buddhist Instrument in the West,” Asian Music 35(2): 99-131 (2004); "Japanese Mi-kagura Ritual as Embodied Performance," Pacific Review of Ethnomusicology 7: 17-29.
Khan, M. Nizam. UCB 483.
Tel: (303) 492-8023 Fax: (303) 492-6924.
Khanm@colorado.edu
Research Associate, Institute of Behavioral Science
Degrees: M.A., Economics, Chittagong University, Bangladesh, 1985; M.A., Demography, University of Pennsylvania, 1993; Ph.D., Sociology, University of Colorado, 2002.
Research/teaching focus: Aging, migration and marriage in developing countries; Health status/care of the elderly and women; Intra-household resource allocation.
Selected publications: : "Who Receives Healthcare? Age and Sex Differentials in Adult Use of Healthcare Services in Rural Bangladesh" (with Young, Williams, Menken, and Kuhn), Journal of Health and Population in Developing Countries, (forthcoming, 2005); The 1996 Matlab Health & Socioeconomic Survey: Questionnaires for Household (with Rahman, Menken, Foster, Peterson, Kuhn, and Gertler), RAND Corporation, Santa Monica (1998); "Factors affecting the interval between first marriage & first birth, a study in Bangladesh" (with Riley and Moulton), Population 4-5 (1996) 883-896.
Kimbrough, Keller. UCB 279.
Tel: (303) Fax: (303) 492-7272.
Keller.Kimbrough@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: B.A., Colorado College, 1990; M.A., Columbia University, 1993; Ph.D., Yale, 1999.
Distinctions: Visiting Research Fellow, Nanzan Institute for Religion & Culture (Nagoya), 2005-06; Robert and Lisa Sainsbury Research Fellow (SOAS), 2002-03; Yale University Dissertation Fellowship, 1998-99; Japan Foundation Dissertation Research Fellowship, 1997-98.
Research/teaching focus: Premodern Japanese Literature (particularly late Heian, Kamakura, Muromachi, and early Edo periods); Japanese Buddhist Literature; Heian and Medieval Poetry and Poetics; Japanese Narrative Painting.
Selected publications: "Voices from the Feminine Margin: Izumi Shikibu and the Nuns of Kumano and Seiganji," in "Performing Japanese Women," vol. 12:1 #23 of Women and Performance (2001): 59-78; "Apocryphal Texts and Literary Identity: Sei Shônagon and the Matsushima Diary," in Monumenta Nipponica 57, no. 2 (summer 2002): 133-171; "Nomori no kagami and the Perils of Poetic Heresy," in Proceedings of the Association for Japanese Literary Studies 4 (2003): 99-114; "Little Atsumori and The Tale of the Heike: Fiction as Commentary, and the Significance of a Name," in Proceedings of the Association for Japanese Literary Studies 5 (2004): 325-336.
Kleeman, Faye. CB 279.
Tel: (303)735-1725. Fax: (303) 492-7272.
Faye.Kleeman@colorado.edu
Associate Professor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: M.A., Ochanomizu University, Tokyo, Japan, 1981; Ph.D., UC Berkeley, 1991.
Distinctions: GCAH 2002, 2008; Kaiden Manuscript Award, 2001; Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation Research Fellowship, 2000,2005; Japan Foundation Research Fellowship, 2001, 2005-06; NEH Research Grant, 1999; Fulbright-Hays Dissertation Fellowship, 1989-1990.
Research/teaching focus: Modern Japanese culture and literature; women writers; colonial literature; film and cultural studies.
Selected publications: "Postwar Japanese Language Literature: (Iwanami, 2006);" Russo-Japanese War and Literary Expression: Voice, Gender, and Colonialism." (London: Global Oriental, 2007); Under an Imperial Sun: Japanese Colonial Literature in Taiwan and the South, University of Hawaii Press, 2003. "A house of their own," Japan Study Review 2 (Fall 1998): 3-28.
Kleeman, Terry. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 492-4497. Fax: (303) 735-2080
Terry.Kleeman@colorado.edu
Associate Professor, Asian Languages and Civilizations and Religious Studies
Degrees
: Ph.D., Oriental Languages, U.C. Berkeley, 1988; M.A., Asian Studies, University of British Columbia, 1979; B.A., History, University of Miami, 1975.
Research/teaching focus: Chinese, popular religions, Daoism, Buddhism, East Asian new religions, Classical Chinese literature, Chinese ethnography.
Distinctions: Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation Research Fellowship, 2005-06; Center for the Humanities and Arts Fellow, 2004-05; American Council of Learned Societies Research Grant, 1995-96; Research Foundation Grant, University of Pennsylvania, 1992-93; Lilly Fellow, University of Pennsylvania, 1990-91; NDEA Title VI Fellowships, 1981-85.
Selected publications: A God's Own Tale: The Book of Transformations of Wenchang, Albany: State University of New York Press (1994); Great Perfection: Religion and Ethnicity in a Chinese Millenial Kingdom, Honolulu: University of Hawaii Press (1998); The Ancient Chinese World (with Barrett), The World in Ancient Times series, New York: Oxford University Press, 2005; "Reconstructing Chinaâs Religious Past: Textual Criticism and Intellectual History," Journal of Chinese Religions 32 (2004): 29-45; "Ethnic Identity and Taoist Identity in Traditional China," in Kohn and Roth (eds.), Daoist Identity: History, Lineage, and Ritual (Honolulu: Univeristy of Hawai'i Press, 2002): 23-38; "Daoism and the Quest for Order," in Taoism and Ecology (Cambridge, Mass.: Center for the Study of World Religion, Harvard University, 2001): 61-70.

Korevaar, David . CB .
Tel: (303) 492-6256. Fax: (303)
david.korevaar@colorado.edu

Associate Professor, Music
Degrees
: BM (1982), MM (1983), DMA (2000) all from The Julliard School.
Research/teaching focus: Applied Piano. Research on various areas of Piano Literature, mostly early 20th century European piano music (France especially).
Distinctions: US State Department Cultural Envoy Grant for Concerts and classes in Kazakhstan and Tajikistan, 2008; Provost's Faculty Achievement Award, CU, 2007; MERLOT award for technology/teaching for Bach Well-Tempered Clavier website coauthored with Tim Smith (Northern Arizona University); Richard French Prize for Dissertation, Juilliard, 2000; Top prize in William Kapell University of Maryland International Piano Competition, 1988; Winner of Peabody-Mason Foundation Sponsorship for Pianist (Boston), 1985; etc.
Selected publications: Numerous CDs for Koch International Classics, Ivory Classics, MSR Classics, and other labels. Repertoire from Bach, Beethoven, Brahms to Ravel, Dohnanyi, Lowell Liebermann, and music from the Ricardo Viñes Piano Music Collection at the University of Colorado. More information at www.davidkorevaar.com, including articles.
Kroll, Paul W. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 492-7060. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Kroll@colorado.edu
Professor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees
: Ph.D., University of Michigan, 1976; M.A., University of Michigan, 1973; B.A., University of Michigan, 1970.
Distinctions: Institute for Advance Study, member 2008-2009; Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, 2007-2008; President, American Oriental Society, 2006-2007; Chiang Ching-kuo/American Council of Learned Societies, research fellowship, 1996; American Council of Learned Societies, research fellowships, 1979-80, 1985-86; Faculty Research Fellowships, University of Colorado at Boulder, 1985-86, 1992-93, 2000-01. Lectures at more than thirty universities in U.S. and abroad, including Oxford, Cambridge, Collège de France, Heidelberg, Leiden, Princeton, etc.
Research/teaching focus: Medieval Chinese (approx. 200-900 A.D.) literature, religion, and cultural history.
Selected recent publications: "The Road to Shu, from Zhang Zai to Li Bo," Early Medieval China 10/11 (2004):127-154, "Nostalgia and History in Mid-Ninth-Century Verse: Cheng Yu's Poem on 'The Chin-yang Gate'," T'oung Pao 89 (2003): 286-366; "The Divine Songs of the Lady of Purple Tenuity," in Studies in Early Medieval Chinese Literature and Cultural History, ed. Kroll and Knechtges (T'ang Studies Society, 2003). Dharma Bell and Dharani Pillar: Li Po's Buddhist Inscriptions (Kyoto, 2002). "Reflections on Recent Anthologies of Chinese Literature in Translation," in Journal of Asian Studies 61 (2002). "Poetry of the T'ang Dynasty," in The Columbia History of Chinese Literature (Columbia U.P., 2001). "Seven Rhapsodies of Ts'ao Chih," Journal of the American Oriental Society 120 (2000). "The Light of Heaven in Medieval Taoist Verse," in Journal of Chinese Religions 27 (1999).
Kuhn, Randall. CB 483.
Tel: (303) 492-7986. Fax: (303) 492-6924
Randall,Kuhn@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor and Director, Global Health Affairs
Degrees
: M.A., Ph.D., Demography and Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, 1994, 1999.
Distinctions: Population Council Doctoral Fellowship (at UPenn, 1998); Fulbright Scholarship (IIE, to Bangladesh, 1997); University of Pennsylvania Dean's Fellowship (1997); American Institute of Bangladesh Studies Dissertation Fellowship (1997, declined); SSRC International Pre-Dissertation Fellowship (Bangladesh, 1995).
Research/teaching focus: causes and consequences of migration in Bangladesh, regional and
ethnic differentials in the impact of the December 26 tsunami on community well-being in Sri Lanka.
Selected recent publications: "A Longitudinal Analysis of Health and Mortality in a Migrant-Sending Region of Bangladesh," in Jatrana, Toyota, and Yeoh (eds.), Migration and Health in Asia, (London: Routledge, 2005); "The Role of Social Context in Shaping Intergenerational Relations in Indonesia and Bangladesh" (with Frankenberg), in Silverstein (ed.), Intergenerational Relations Across Time and Place: Annual Review of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Vol. 24 (2004), New York: Springer; "The Impact of Family Members on Self-Reported Health of Elderly Men and Women in Rural Bangladesh" (with Rahman and Menken), Ageing and Society 24(6)(2004): 903-920 .
Lama, Kunga . CB 279.
Tel: (303) 735-5224
Kunga.Lama@colorado.edu

Program Assistant, Center for Asian Studies
Degrees: M.A., Anthropology, University of Colorado-Boulder 2007; B.A. Sociology, California State University-Hayward.
Distinctions: Ashby Prize for most innovative article of the year, 2006; FLAS Fellowship 2006-2007.
Research/teaching focus: Languages: Hindi, Nepali, Tibetan, Chinese; Tibetan political economy and cultural practices.
Selected recent publications:
"Hip-Hop gangsta or most deserving victims? Transnational migran identities and the paradox of Tibetan racialization in the US" with E. Yeh in Environment and Planning A 38: 809:829;

Lasmawan, I Made. CB 301
IMade.Lasmawan@colorado.edu
Instructor, College of Music
Research/teaching focus: Director Balinese Gamelan.
Lee, Cheol. CB 279
Tel: (303) 492-8041. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Cheol.Lee@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees
: B.A., Kangwon National University; M.A., Linguistics, UCB; Ph.D. (coursework completed), UCB.
Research/teaching focus: Coding modalities in Korean predicates.
Li, Xiang. CB 184.
Tel: (303) 492-7454.
Xiang.Li@colorado.edu
Bibliographer for Asian Languages and Studies
Liang, Hui . CB 184.
Tel: (303) 492-6105
Hui.Liang@colorado.edu
Library Technician, Asian Languages and Studies
Chinese and Japanese materials cataloguer.
Ling, Jiang. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 735-1491 Fax: (303) 492-7272
Jiangl@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: M.A., Indiana University.
Research/teaching focus: Chinese language curriculum.
Loveall, Karla. CB 595.
Tel: (303) 735-5123. Fax: (303) 735-5126
Karla.Loveall@colorado.edu
China Program Coordinator, Program for Teaching East Asia
Degrees
: BA, Augustana College, Rock Island, IL.
Teaching/research focus: Chinese history and culture, K-12.
Mas, Ruth. CB 292
Tel: (303) 492-6358
Ruth.Mas@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Religious Studies
Degrees: Ph.D. University of Toronto 2006.
Distinctions: Morris Wayman Prize for Interdisciplinary Research 2002.
Research/teaching focus: Contemporary Islam in Europe/France; Liberalism, secularism and political theology; Theories of gender, subjectivity, and affect.
Selected publications: “Secular Couplings: Métissage and the Regeneration of Islam and Muslim Subjectivity in Postcolonial France.” New Dangerous Liaisons: Discourses on Europe and Love in the Twentieth Century, New York, Oxford: Berghahn Books (Forthcoming); "Compelling the Muslim Subject: (Post)Colonial Violence, Memory and the Public Performativity of 'Secular/Cultural Islam'", Muslim World, (96)4, October 2006, 585-616; "Europe of Love: Re-Centring Intercultural Affairs, Special Edited Essay Collection," with Luisa Passerini, European Review of History, (11) 2, (2004); "Love as difference:The politics of love in the thought of Malek Chabel," European Review of History, (11) 2, (2004), 273-301; “Qiyas: A Study in Islamic Logic,” Folia Orientalia, (Summer 1998), 113- 128.
Maskus, Keith. CB 256.
Tel: (303) 492-7588. Fax: (303) 492-8960.
Keith.Maskus@colorado.edu
Professor, Economics
Degrees
: Ph.D., M.A., Economics, University of Michigan, 1981, 1979; B.A., Economics and Mathematics, Knox College, 1976.
Distinctions: Lead Economist, World Bank (2001-02); Distinguished Speaker Series, Industry Canada, 2002.
Research/teaching focus: international trade, development economics, intellectual property rights, U.S. relations with Pacific Asia.
Selected publications: "The Globalization of Private Knowledge Goods and the Privatization of Global Public Goods" (with J. H. Reichman), Journal of International Economic Law 7(2), 279-320, 2004; "General Equilibrium Approaches to the Multinational Firm: A Review of Theory and Evidence" (with James R. Markusen), NBER working paper number 8334, in E. Kwan Choi and James Harrigan, eds., Handbook of International Trade. London: Basil Blackwell, 320-349, 2003; "Vertical Pricing and Parallel Imports" (with Yongmin Chen), Journal of International Trade and Economic Development, 2004; "Discriminating among Alternative Theories of the Multinational Enterprise' (with James R. Markusen), Review of International Economics 10(4), 694-707, 2002; "Regulatory Standards in the WTO: Comparing Intellectual Property Rights with Competition Policy, Environmental Protection, and Core Labor Standards," World Trade Review 1(2), 135-152, 2002; "Parallel Imports in a Model of Vertical Distribution: Theory, Evidence, and Policy" (with Yongmin Chen), Pacific Economic Review 7(2), 319-334, 2002.
McGilvray, Dennis. CB 233.
Tel: (303) 492-7198. Fax: (303) 492-1871
Dennis.McGilvray@colorado.edu
Webpage
Associate Professor and Chair of Anthropology
Degrees
: PhD, University of Chicago, 1974. BA, Reed College 1965.
Distinctions: NSF Grant, “Tsunami recovery in two cultural regions of Sri Lanka,” 2005.
Research/teaching focus: Cultural anthropology of South Asia, Tamil and Muslim communities in Sri Lanka and South India, Kinship and caste, popular religion, and ethnic politics.
Selected publications:
Dennis B. McGilvray, Crucible of Conflict: Tamil and Muslim Society on the East Coast of Sri Lanka (Duke University Press 2008), Dennis B. McGilvray and Mirak Raheem, Muslim Perspectives on the Sri Lankan Conflict (East-West Center 2007), "Jailani: A Sufi Shrine in Sri Lanka" in Imtiaz Ahmed & Helmut Reifeld, eds., Lived Islam in South Asia. Delhi: Social Science Press 2004: 273-289. Symbolic Heat: Gender, Health, and Worship among the Tamils of South India and Sri Lanka, Ahmedabad: Mapin 1998 (reprinted 2003). "Arabs, Moors, and Muslims: Sri Lankan Muslim Ethnicity in Regional Perspective" in T.N. Madan, ed,, Muslim Communities in South Asia (3rd edition). New Delhi: Manohar 2001: 499-553. "Households in Akkaraipattu: Dowry and Domestic Organization among the Matrilineal Tamils and Moors of Sri Lanka" in J.N. Gray & D.J. Mearns, eds., Society from the Inside Out: Anthropological Perspectives on the South Asian Household. Delhi: Sage 1989: 192-235. "The 1987 Stirling Award Essay: Sex, Repression, and Sanskritization in Sri Lanka?," Ethos 16(2): 99-127 (1988). "Dutch Burghers and Portuguese Mechanics: Eurasian Ethnicity in Sri Lanka," Comparative Studies in Society and History 23(2): 235-263 (1982).
McGranahan, Carole Ann. CB 233.
Tel: (303) 735-2557. Fax: (303) 492-1871
Carole@colorado.edu
Webpage
Assistant Professor, Anthropology
Degrees
: Ph.D., Anthropology and History, University of Michigan, 2001; M.A., Anthropology, University of Michigan , 1999; B.A. with Honors, Anthropology, Colgate University, 1991.
Distinctions: School of American Research Advanced Seminar Convenor (with Ann Stoler), 2003; Outstanding Dissertation nomination, Anthropology and History, U. Michigan 2001.
Research/teaching focus: Tibet and the Himalayas, especially issues of power in local, global, and historical contexts. Work bridges anthropology and history, including interests in colonialism, the nation-state, refugees and exile, memories of war, and the production of history.
Selected publications: Imperial Formations, Co-edited with Anne Stoler and Peter Purdue, Santa Fe: School of American Research Press (2007); "Empire Out-of-Bounds: Tibet in the Era of Decolonization," in Imperial Formations, p187-227; “Truth, Fear, and Lies: Exile Politics and Arrested Histories of the Tibetan
Resistance,” Cultural Anthropology 20(4), 2005; “Tibet's Cold War: The CIA and the Chushi Gangdrug Resistance, 1956-1974,” Journal of Cold War Studies, 2005; “Kashmir and Tibet: Comparing Conflicts, States, and Solutions,” India Review 2(3), 2003, pp. 145-180; “Empire and the Status of Tibet: British, Chinese, and Tibetan Negotiations, 1913-1934,” in McKay (ed.), The History of Tibet, Volume 3: The Tibetan Encounter with Modernity, Richmond, Surrey: Curzon Press, 2003; “From Simla to Rongbatsa: The British and the “Modern” Boundaries of Tibet,” The Tibet Journal, 2002. “Sa sPang mda’ gNam sPang mda’: Murder, History, and Social Politics in 1920s Lhasa,” in Epstein (ed.), Khams pa Local Histories: Visions of People, Place, and Authority, Proceedings of the Ninth Seminar of the International Association for Tibetan Studies, Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers. 2002, pp. 103-126.
Melzer, Meredith. CB 595.
Tel: (303) 735-5122
Meredith.Melzer@colorado.edu
Webpage
Project Associate, TEA and NCTA
Menken, Jane. CB 484.
Tel: (303) 492-2144. Fax: (303) 492-6924
Jane.Menken@colorado.edu
Webpage
Distinguished Professor of Sociology and Director, Institute of Behavioral Sciences
Degrees
: Ph.D., Sociology and Demography, Princeton University, 1975; M.Sc., Biostatics, Harvard School of Public Health, 1962; A.B., Mathematics, University of Pennsylvania, 1960.
Distinctions: Member, U.S. National Academy of Sciences, American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Institute of Medicine.
Research/teaching focus: Demography, fertility, aging, women and development.
Selected publications: “Who Receives Healthcare? Age and Sex Differentials in Adult Use of Healthcare Services in Rural Bangladesh” (with Young, Williams, Khan, and Kuhn), Journal of Health and Population in Developing Countries, (forthcoming, 2005); “The Impact of Family Members on Self-Reported Health of Elderly Men and Women in Rural Bangladesh” (with Rahman), Ageing and Society 24(6)(2004): 903-920; “Childbearing and Women's Survival: New Evidence from Rural Bangladesh” (with Duffy), Population and Development Review, 29(3)(2003): 405-426; The 1996 Matlab Health & Socioeconomic Survey: Questionnaires for Household (with Rahman, Khan, Foster, Peterson, Kuhn, and Gertler), RAND Corporation, Santa Monica (1998).

Menn, Lise. CB 594.
Tel: (303) 444-4274. Fax: (303) 413-0017.
Lise.Menn@colorado.edu
Webpage

Professor Emerita, Linguistics; Fellow, Institute for Cognitive Science
Degrees
: B.A. Swarthmore College, 1962; M.A., Brandeis University, 1964; M.A., University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign, 1975; Ph.D., University of Illinois Urbana/Champaign, 1976.
Distinctions: Board of Governors, Academy of Aphasia 2001-2003; Secretary, Section Z (Linguistics), American Association for the Advancement of Science.
Research/teaching focus: Linguistics, comparative neurolinguistics.
Selected publications: “Developing methods for analyzing language deficiencies in narratives” (with Tanake-Welty), Japanese Journal of Communication Disorders (Vol.22 No.2, 2005); "Language production in Japanese preschoolers with Specific Language Impairment: Testing theories," by Tanaka-Welty, Yumiko, Watabe, Jun, & L. Menn. (2002) .In E. Fava, (ed.) Current Issues in Linguistic Theory, Amsterdam: Benjamins, pp 175-193. “The role of empathy in sentence production: A functional analysis of aphasic and normal elicited narratives in Japanese and English” (with Kamio, Hayashi, Fujita, Sasanuma, Boles), in Function and Structure, Kamio and Takami (eds.), Amsterdam: John Benjamins, 1999, 317-55; “The interaction of preserved pragmatics and impaired syntax in Japanese and English aphasic speech” (with Reilly, Hayashi, Kamio, Fujita, and Sasanuma), Brain and Language 61 (1998): 183-225.
Mobarak, A. Mushfiq. CB 256.
Tel: (303) 492-8872. Fax: (303) 492-1871
Mobarak@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Economics
Degrees
: B.A., Macalester College, 1997; M.A., Ph.D., Economics, University of Maryland, 1999, 2002.
Distinctions: NSF grant “Human and Social Dynamics”, 2005-08; NBER grant “Innovation Policy and the Economy”, 2005-06; Junior Faculty Development Award, UCB, 2005; World Bank Research Committee Grant, 2001.
Research/teaching focus: Development Economics, Political Economy, Environmental Economics.
Selected publications:"Democracy, Volatility and Development," The Review of Economics and Statistics, 87 (2), May 2005; "Evaluating Financial Sector Development in the Middle East and North Africa: New Methodology and Some New Results," Journal of the Middle East Economic Association 6, 2004; "Banking on Development" (with S. Creane, R. Goyal and R. Sab), Finance and Development 40(1), 26-30, 2003; "Financial Development and Economic Growth in the Middle East and North Africa," (with S. Creane, R. Goyal and R. Sab), Newsletter of the Economic Research Rorum for the Arab Countries, Iran and Turkey 10(2), Summer 2003.
Mody, Bella Armory. CB 478
Tel: (303) 492-1912. Fax: (303) 492-0969
Bella.Mody@colorado.edu
Webpage
De Castro Chair in Global Media Studies, Journalism and Mass Communication
Degrees: PhD, Gujarat University, 1980; MA, University of Pennsylvania, 1991; BA Ranchi U, 1967
Research/teaching focus: Political economy of communication media in developing countries, design of public service applications of media in developing countries.
Selected publications:"Governing the Market for New Media” (with Trebing and Stein), in Lievrouw and Livingstone (eds.), The Handbook of New Media. Sage, 2005, 2002; International and Development Communication: A 21st Century Perspective. Thousand Oaks: Sage, 2003; Handbook of Intercultural and International Communication (co-editor), Sage, 2001; “Contexts of Power and the Power of Media,” in Wilkins (ed.), Accounting for Power in Media for Social Change, Lanham, Md: Rowman and Littlefield, 2000; “Competition in Local before Long Distance? A Contextual analysis of Telecommunications Development in India,” in Noam (ed.), Telecommunications in West Asia, New York: Oxford University Press, 1998; Telecommunications Politics: Ownership and Control of the Information Highway in Developing Countries (co-editor), Hillsdale, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1995.

Mukherjee, Mithi. CB 234.
Tel: (303) 492-8941. Fax: (303) 492-1868
Mithi.Mukherjee@colorado.edu
Webpage

Assistant Professor, History
Degrees
: B.A., Presidency College, Calcutta, 1987; M.A., M. Phil., Modern Indian History, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, 1990, 1992; Ph.D., South Asian History, University of Chicago, 2001.
Distinctions: Junior Faculty Development Award, University of Colorado, Boulder, 2004-05; Graduate Committee on Arts and Humanities Grant, UCB, 2004-2005; Committee on South Asian Studies Grant, University of Chicago, 1997-2000; American Institute of Indian Studies Junior Research Fellowship, 1995-1996.
Research/teaching focus: History of South Asia, Nationalism, Colonialism and Globalization.
Selected publications: “Justice, War and the Imperium: India and Britain in Edmund Burke's Prosecutorial Speeches in the Impeachment Trial of Warren Hastings” Law and History Review (forthcoming); Review of Piya Chatterjee, A Time for Tea: Women, Labor and Post/Colonial Politics of an Indian Plantation (Durham: Duke University Press, 2001) in Labor History, Vol. 44, No. 3, 2003; Review of P.J. Marshall, Bengal: The British Bridgehead, Eastern India 1740-1828, The New Cambridge History of India, Vol. II. 2 in Social Scientist, 19 (3-4), March-April, 1991.
Murata, Minori. CB 256.
Tel: (303) 492-6699. Fax: (303)
Minori.Murata@colorado.edu
Instructor, Asian Languages & Civilizations
Degrees:
B.A., Kanazawa University, 1986; M.A., Special Education, Kanazawa University, 1988; M.A., Linguistics, CU Boulder, 1997.
Research/teaching focus: Japanese language.
Narasimhan, Bhuvaneswari. CB 295
Bhuvana.Narasimhan@colorado.edu

Assistant Professor, Linguistics
Degrees:
PhD., Boston University 1998.
Research/teaching focus: Children's early event description; Tamil, Hindi, Dutch, English.

Nelson, James. CB 419.
Tel: (303) 492-4296. Fax: (303) 492-5962
James.Nelson@colorado.edu
Webpage
Associate Professor Emeritus, Business and Administration
Oakes, Timothy. CB 260.
Tel: (303) 492-8310. Fax: (303) 492-7501
Timothy.Oakes@colorado.edu
Webpage
Associate Professor, Geography
Degrees
: Ph.D., Geography, University of Washington, 1995. M.A., Geography, University of Washington, 1991. B.A., Colby College, 1987.
Research/teaching focus: Research: 1) Cultural geography, concentrating on place-based identities and cultural politics; 2) tourism studies; 3) Chinese cultural geography and regional development. Teaching: Geography of China; cultural geography; world regional geography; qualitative field methods.
Selected publications: "Asia," in The International Encyclopedia of Human Geography, eds. R. Kitchen and N. Thrift, Oxford: Elsevier (2008); Reinventing Tunpu: Cultural Tourism and Social Change in Guizhou (with X. Wu), Guiyang: Guizhou Remnim Chubanshe 2007); "Welcome to Paradise! A Sino-American joint venture project", in L. Jensen and T. Westen (eds.) China's Transformations: The Stories Beyond the Headlines, Rowman and Littlefield (2007), 240-264; Translocal China: Linkages, Indentities and the Reimagining of Space (Ed., with L. Schein) London and New York:Routledge (2006); "Cultural Strategies of development: Implicatons for village governance in China," Pacific Review 19 (1): 13-37 (2006); Translocal China: Linkages, Identities and the Reimagining of Space (London and New York: Routledge, 2005); "Cultural strategies of development: implications for village governance in China," Pacific Review 18:4 (2005); "Land of living fossils: excavating cultural prestige in China’s periphery," in Locating China: Space, Place, and Popular Culture, ed. J. Wang (London and New York: Routledge, 2005), 31-51; "The story of secretary Wang – hero, savior, liar, scoundrel," in Narratives of Reform, ed. D. Solinger (Lewiston, NY: Mellen, 2005); "Building a southern dynamo: Guizhou and state power," The China Quarterly 178 (June, 2004): 467-487; "Capitalizing Asian Studies: scholarship and the production of knowledge in a globalizing world," Portal: A Journal of Multidisciplinary Isnternational Studies 1:1 (2004); "Reimagining Chinese mobilities and spaces," Provincial China 8:1 (2003): 1-4.
Osnes, Beth. CB 261.
Tel: (303) 492-7355 Fax: (303) 492-7722
Osnesbeth@hotmail.com
Assistant Professo r, Theatre and Dance
Degrees: B.A., Theology, Marquette University, 1986; M.A., Ph.D., Theatre, CU Boulder, 1988, 1992.
Distinctions: Fulbright Scholar, Research Scholarship in Malaysia, 1991; AHAB, Neodata Endowment Grant, 1996; Boulder City Arts Commission Grant, 1996, 1993, 1989 and 1988; Neodata Foundation Grant for the Arts and Humanities, 1990.
Research/teaching focus: Asian Theatre.
Selected publications: “Report from Burma: Fear of Laughing,” Turning Wheel: The Journal of Socially Engaged Buddhism, Fall 2001: 8; “Understanding Religious Beliefs Through the Malaysian Traditional Shadow Puppet Theatre,” in the Quest, Theosophic Society, Wheaton, IL, Spring 1994: 70-73, 89; “The Evolving Shadow Puppet Theatre of Malaysia,” Asian Theatre Journal, Spring 1992: 112-116.
Palmer, Martha. CB 295.
Tel: (303) 492-1300. Fax: (303) 492-4416
Martha.Palmer@colorado.edu
Associate Professor, Linguistics/Computer Science
Degrees
: B.A., Philosophy, University of Texas, 1972; M.A., Computer Science, University of Texas, 1976; Ph.D., Artificial Intelligence, University of Edinburgh, 1985.
Distinctions: President, Association of Computational Linguistics (ACL), 2005, (Vice-President-Elect, 2003, Vice-President, 2004, President Pro-tem, 2006); Chair, ACL-SIGHAN (Special Interest Group on Chinese Language Processing), 2001-2003.
Research/teaching focus: Natural Language Processing, Computational Linguistics, linguistic annotation of English, Chinese, Korean and Arabic.
Selected publications: “Microplanning with Communicative Intentions: The SPUD System” (with Stone, Doran, Webber, and Bleam”, Computational Intelligence 19(4):1-75, 2003; “The Penn Chinese TreeBank: A Phrase Structure Analysis Approach” (with Xue, Xia, and Chiou), Natural Language Engineering, 10(4):1-30, 2004; “Automatically Extracting and Comparing Lexicalized Grammars for Different Languages” (with Xia, Han, and Joshi), Proceedings of the Seventh International Joint Conference on Artificial Intelligence, 2001.
Palmer, Michael. CB 419.
Tel: (303) 492-7125. Fax: (303) 492-5962
Michael.Palmer@colorado.edu
Professor, Business
Research/teaching focus
: International financial markets, corporate foreign market entry strategies, soverign debt.
Pang, Cecilia. CB 261.
Tel: (303) 492-7125. Fax: (303) 492-5962
Cecilia.Pang@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Theatre and Dance
Degrees: Ph.D., Dramatic Art, UC Berkeley, 1991; M.A., Theatre Arts, San Francisco State University, 1982; B.A., University of Guelph, Ontario, 1978.
Distinctions: Certificate of Merit for Direction of Peeru Gunto, Kennedy Center/American College Theatre Festival Region VII, 2004; Paulo Friere Award for Exceptional Multicultural Teaching, Northern Michigan University, 2002; Marquette Arts Council Performing Artist Award, 2001.
Research/teaching focus: Acting, directing, Peking opera, Asian theatre.
Selected publications: Performance Review of "Sweet and Sour Hong Kong" and "Story of Wu Zixu," Theatre Journal, vol. 56, no. 3 (October 2004): 487-89; Book Review of "On Actors and Acting," Journal of Restoration and Eighteenth Century Research, vol 18. No. 1 (Summer 2004): 50:52; Performance Review of "Peony Pavillion," Theatre Journal, vol. 52, no. 1 (Mar 2000): 131-33; Book Review of "About Face," Theatre InSight, vol. 10, no. 1 (Spring 1999): 84-85; Performance Review of "The Griot Voice," Theatre Journal, vol. 51, no. 1 (Mar 1999): 88-89.
Parisi, Lynn. CB 595.
Tel: (303) 735-5121. Fax (303) 735-5126
Lynn.Parisi@colorado.edu
Director, Program for Teaching East Asia
Degrees: B.A., Duke University, 1972. M.A., Asian Studies, University of Oregon, 1975, M.A., Education coursework, Duke University, 1978-79.
Distinctions: Fulbright grant to China, 1980; Fulbright grants to Japan, 1985, 1995; Buchanan Prize of Association for Asian Studies, William Hosokawa Award, Japan-America Society of Colorado, 2003.
Research/teaching focus: Japanese history/culture, K-12; Chinese history and culture, K-12; K-12 in-service teaching training.
Selected publications: Snapshots from Japan: The Lives of Seven Japanese High School Students, New York: Center for Global Partnership, 2004; Recreating a Modern Nation: Japan 1945-1989. Boulder: (SSEC, 2002) Tokugawa Japan: The Great Peace and the Development of Urban Culture, Japanese History through the Humanities, Part 1 (Sicoal Science Education Consortium, 1995). Meiji Japan: The Dynamics of National Change, Japanese History through the Humanities, Part 2 (SSEC, 1995); Japan in the Class-room (SSEC, 1987, 1993). The Constitution and Individual Rights in Japan; Teaching About Law and Culture (ERIC Clearinghouse for Social Studies/Social Science Education, 1995).
Park, Jong Phil . CB 318.
Tel:. Fax
JP.Park@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Department of Art and Art History
Degrees:
Distinctions:
Research/teaching focus:
Selected publications:

Richter, Antje . CB 279.
Tel: (303). Fax (303)
Antje.Richter@colorado.edu

Webpage

Assistant Professor, Chinese, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: Ph.D. Munich University 1998.
Distinctions:07-08/2004 Grant of the German Academic Exchange Service for participation in a summer school for foreign teachers of Chinese at Beijing Normal University, 11/1995-10/97 Ph.D. scholarship of the Bavarian State Ministry of Education, Culture, Science and the Arts
Research/teaching focus: Early and medieval Chinese literature, especially letters and letter writing; rhetorics; material culture.
Selected publications : “Notions of Epistolarity in Liu Xie’s Wenxin diaolong.” Journal of the American Oriental Society 127.2 (2007): 1–18; “Die Wahrnehmung von Armut im Alten China [The Perception of Poverty in Early China].” In: China und die Wahrnehmung der Welt. Antje Richter; Helmolt Vittinghoff (eds). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2007. 1–19; “Letters and Letter Writing in Early Medieval China.” Early Medieval China 12 (2006): 1–29; “Familiäre Mahnbriefe: Die Herausbildung eines epistolaren Subgenres in der Han-Zeit [Letters of Parental Admonition: The Emergence of an Epistolary Subgenre in the Han Dynasty].” In: Han-Zeit: Festschrift für Hans Stumpfeldt aus Anlaß seines 65. Geburtstages. Michael Friedrich et al. (eds.). Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2006. 379–95; “Mit Schätzen beladen heimkehren: Der Schubkarren als glückverheißendes Motiv in volkstümlichen chinesischen Drucken [Coming Home with Riches: The Wheelbarrow as an Auspicious Motif in Chinese Popular Prints].” Monumenta Serica 52 (2004): 277–324; “Sleeping Time in Early Chinese Literature.” In: Night-Time and Sleep in Asia and the West: Exploring the Dark Side of Life. Brigitte Steger; Lodewijk Brunt (eds). Richmond: RoutledgeCurzon, 2003. 24–44; Das Bild des Schlafes in der altchinesischen Literatur [The Notion of Sleep in Early Chinese Literature]. Hamburg: Hamburger Sinologische Gesellschaft, 2001.

Richter, Matthias . CB 279.
Tel: (303) 735-0426. Fax (303) 492-7272.
Matthias.Richter@colorado.edu
Assistant Professor, Chinese, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: Ph.D. Hamburg University.
Distinctions: 2002-2005 Grant of the German Research Foundation (project: "Towards a Methodology for the Study of Early Chinese Manuscripts"); 2006-2007 Creel Post-doctoral research fellowship, University of Chicago.
Research/teaching focus: Early Chinese literature, espeically politico-philosophical and didactic texts; rhetorical strategies; textual criticism; and manuscript culture.
Selected publications:Monograph: Guan ren: Texte de altchinesischen Literatur zur Charkterkunde und Beamtenrekrutierung [Early Chinese Texts on Characterology and the Recruitment Officials], Bern: Peter Lang, 2005.504; Edited volumes: Editorship and 'Introduction': "Methodological Issues in the Study of Early Chinese Manuscripts: Papers from the Second Hamburg Tomb Text Workshop" in Asiatische Studien/Etudes Asiatiques LIX.1 (2005):1-390; Editorship and 'Introduction': "Special Section: Hamburg Tomb Text Workshop" in Monumenta Serica 51 (2003): 401-628; Articles: "Cognate Texts: technical Terms as Indicators of Intertextual Relations and Redactional Strategies" in Asiatische Studien/Etudes Asiatiques LVI, 3 (2002): 549-572; "Self-Cultivation of Evaluation of Others? A Form Critical Approach to Zengzi li shi" in Asiatische Studien/Etudes Asiatiques LVI, 4 (2002):879-917; "Towards a Profile of Graphic Variation: On the Distribution of Graphic Variants within the Mawangdui Laozi Manuscripts" in Asiatische Studien/Etudes AsiatiquesLIX.1 (2005): 169-207; "Der Alte und das Wasser: Lesarten von Laozi 8 im uberliefertenText und in den Manuskripten von Mawangdui" in Han-Zeit: Feirschrift fur Hans Stumpfeldt aus AnlaB seines 65. Geburtstages. Michael Friedrich, Reinhard Emmerich, Hans van Ess (ed), (Lun Wen, Studien zur Geistsgeschichte und Literatur in China 8) Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2006: 253-273.
Rodd, Laurel Rasplica. CB 279. Woodbury 310
Tel: (303) 492-1138. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Laurel.Rodd@colorado.edu
Professor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: Ph.D., Japanese Literature, University of Michigan, 1977; M.A., Japanese Literature, University of Michigan, 1972; M.A.T, Education, East Tennessee State University, 1969.
Distinctions: Chief Reader, Japanese Language and Culture Advanced Placement Program; Ronald Walton Award for Distinguished Service on Behalf of the Less Commonly Taught Languages; University of Colorado Excellence in Service Award, 2000; Alpha of Colorado Phi Beta Kappa Chapter Campus Scholar, 2000; Colorado Congress of Foreign Language Teachers Scholarship Award, 1997.
Research/teaching focus: Classical Japanese literature and language, translation theory and practice, Buddhist literature, women's literature.
Selected publications: Kokinshu: A Collection of Poems Ancient and Modern (Princeton UP, 1984; paperback edition Cheng & Tsui, 1996); “Meiji Women Poets,” in Modern Murasaki, Copeland and Ortabasi, (eds.), Columbia UP, 2006; “Yosano Akiko’s ‘What Is Womanliness?’,” in Woman Critiqued, Copeland (ed.), University of Hawai’i Press, 2006; “Kyoiku hyojun doshi no kanrensei,” in Nihongo kyoshi no senmon noryoku kaihatsu, Tosaku Yasuhiko (ed.), 2003.
Romero, Brenda. CB 301.
Tel: (303) 492-7421. Fax: (303) 492-5619
Brenda.Romero@colorado.edu
Webpage
Chair of Musicology and Associate Professor of Ethnomusicology
Degrees
: Ph.D., ethnomusicology, University of California, Los Angeles, 1993. M.Mus., Theory & Composition, 1986. B.Mus., with Distinction, Theory & Composition, University of New Mexico, 1983.
Distinctions: Elli Köngäs Maranda Prize from the American Folklore Society's Women's Section, 2002; Fulbright García-Robles de la Comisión México/Estados Unidos, 2000-2001.
Research/teaching focus: World Musics--Asia, Ethnomusicology: Latin America, Native North America
Selected publications: "The Growing Popularity of Mariachi in the United States." Proceedings of Revista de una Tradición: De Occidente Viene Mariachi, y de México.. Interdisciplinary conference held at the Colegio de Michoacán, August 27. Zamora, México: Colegio de Michoacán, 2002. "Profile of an Ethnomusicologist" for Garland Encyclopedia of Music: General Music. Volume 10, edited by Ruth Stone. New York: Routledge, 2002. "La Indita of New Mexico: Gender and Cultural Identification," in Chicana Traditions, Continuity and Change, edited by Olga Najera-Ramirez and Norma Cantu. Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
Saegusa, Kyoko. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 492-4497. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Saegusa@colorado.edu
Senior Instructor, Asian Languages and Civilizations
Degrees: B.A., English Literature, Japan Women's University, 1970. M.A., English/TESL, Arizona State University, 1976.
Distinctions: CCFLT Ronald Walker Grant, 1998 & 2002; SWCOLT Professional Travel Award, 1996
Research/teaching focus: language pedagogy (learner autonomy, student-directed language learning, innovative and unorthodox methods, psychological aspects of language learning); theory and practice of translation.
Selected publications: "Let students decide what they want to learn," Tapped-In Summer Carnival, Instructor's manual/tapescript for Yookoso! Book 1 & 2, revised edition, with Yasu-Hiko Tohsaku (McGraw-Hill, 2001). The Patriarchal System, translation of "Kachoo Seido by Miya-zawa Kenji, Beacons (1995). Co-editor, Language 30/Japanese (Washington, D.C., Educational Services Corporation, 1992).
Salaz, Danielle Rocheleau. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 735-5312. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Danielle.Salaz@colorado.edu
Assistant Director, Center for Asian Studies
Degrees: B.A., Japan Studies, Teikyo Loretto Heights University, 1996, Valedictorian; M. A. Japanese Language and Civilization, UCB, 2000.
Distinctions: Past Chair, National Alumni Council, Youth For Understanding – USA. Representative for YFU at Advocacy Day; sponsored by the Alliance for International Education and Cultural Exchange; Washington, D.C.; 2001.
Research/teaching focus: Use of loanwords in Japanese language; overseas Japanese (kikokushijo); international academic exchange and intercultural communication.
Selected publications: Contributing author, Encyclopedia of Modern Asia, Levinson, Christensen, et al., Eds., New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 2002. “A Morphological Study and Annotated Bibliography of English Loanwords in Contemporary Japanese: Conventional Scholarly Theories and Their Real-World Applications,” presented at International Conference on Communication and Cultural (Ex)Change, International Association for Intercultural Studies, Hong Kong, 2001.
Schmidt, Susan. CB 279.
Tel: (303) 492-5487. Fax: (303) 492-7272
Susan.Schmidt@colorado.edu
Executive Director, Alliance of Associations of Teachers of Japanese
Degree
: B.A. UCB, 1968; M.A. coursework, Japanese language and history, University of Pennsylvania, 1974-75.
Selected presentations: “Building Networks of Japanese Language Teachers”, Sao Paulo, Brazil, 2005; “Changes in Japanese Universities and Their Impact on International Exchanges”, Association of International Educators annual conference, 2005; “Measuring the Impact of Study Abroad: Follow-up Focusing on Japan”, Council on International Educational Exchange.
Shneer, David . CB 333.
Tel: . Fax:
david.shneer@colorado.edu
Associate Professor, History
Degrees:
Distinctions:
Research/teaching focus:
Selected publications:
Serapio, Manuel. Associate Professor and Program Director of International Business, Graduate School of Business and Administration, University of Colorado at Denver
Degrees
: B.A., Economics, Ateneo de Manila University; MBA, University of Hawaii, Ph.D. International Business, University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign.
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