Development Concentration Faculty

  development concentration faculty:

 

 

 

Ilir Agalliu

Dr. Ilir Agalliu is a physician and epidemiologist, whose main research interests are directed toward understanding the contribution of genetic and lifestyle/environmental risk factors in the etiology of cancer.  He is currently an assistant professor in the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx.  In the arena of international health, Dr. Agalliu is the principal investigator of a study that is examining risk factors for prostate cancer as well as knowledge, attitudes and beliefs about participating in clinical and public health research among African men in Nigeria.  Dr. Agalliu teaches Introduction to Epidemiology: Case Studies in Public Health, which is a basic introductory course in principles of study design and research methods for field epidemiological studies. 



Fabiola Berdiel

Fabiola Berdiel is the Assistant Director GPIA for International Field Programs and faculty at The Milano School of International Affairs, Management and Urban Policy. She is an educator, project manager, and sustainable development practitioner.  Her research focuses on how design thinking can be used as a tool for socioeconomic development, exploring the opportunities that this new appoach can offer.  Fabiola has a B.A. in Sociology and Pedagogy from Sarah Lawrence and a Masters in International Affairs from The New School. Fabiola has worked and conducted field research in Guatemala, Nicaragua, Cuba, Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, Puerto Rico, South Africa, Namibia, Ethiopia, Uganda, Senegal, Israel, Nepal, India, Ireland, and Spain. She is co-founder of DEED: Development through Empowerment, Entrepreneurship, and Design at The New School. Currently, her practice has focused on collaborative interdisciplinary projects with Parsons School for Design, ranging from working with Fashion Studies to design a backpack for humanitarian relief workers, to partnering with Transdiciplinary Design and Design Strategies to develop a design thinking curriculum for partner organizations.



Tom Buckley

Tom Buckley is currently the Director of Research and Technical Services at Casey Trees. Tom’s current research interests are in applications of GIS and web-based collaboration to urban ecology, to international urban development, and to humanitarian crises.

He consulted for the World Bank in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake, focusing on OpenStreetMap and surveying for building damage assessments. Tom also worked as a GIS programmer at the company building GeoCommons, a startup funded by In-Q-Tel, a venture capital firm financed by the CIA, and the original investors in Google Earth.  While there, he worked on web-based mapping projects for USAID and the World Bank.  

Tom has over 10 years of experience working with GIS software.  Tom has a B.A. in Economics and Analytic Philosophy from Cornell University and an M.A. in Geography from George Washington University.


Goncalo Fonseca

Goncalo Fonseca is a doctoral candidate in Economics at The New School for Social Research and an economic historian.



Max Fraad-Wolff

Max Fraad-Wolff is an economist and is a freelance researcher, strategist, and writer in the areas of international finance and macroeconomics. His work regularly appears in the Asia Times, The Prudent Bear, The Huffington Post, and many other international outlets. His research interests include international financial risks and opportunities

Sakiko Fukuda-Parr

Sakiko Fukuda-Parr is Professor of International Affairs at the New School. She is a development economist working in the multidisciplinary framework of capabilities and human development, and currently works on relating human rights and development policy, conflict prevention, and global technology. She codirects the Economic and Social Rights Empowerment Initiative. She was previously a research fellow at the Kennedy School of Government. From 1995 to 2004, she was lead author and director of the UNDP Human Development Reports. In addition to these reports,  include: The Gene Revolution: GM Crops and Unequal Development; Readings in Human Development; Rethinking Technical Cooperation - Reforms for capacity building in Africa; Capacity for Development - Old Problems, New Solutions, and numerous papers and book chapters on issues of poverty, gender, human rights, technology. She founded and is editor of the Journal of Human Development, and is on the Editorial Board of Feminist Economics. She is also on the board of several NGOs that advocate human rights and technology for development.She was appointed by the UN Secretary General to the Committee on Development Policy.  



Barry Herman

Barry Herman (Ph.D., University of Michigan) is Visiting Senior Fellow at the Graduate Program in International Affairs of The New School in New York. He is also a member of the Board of Directors of Global Integrity, a research NGO based in Washington that works with independent scholars and investigative reporters on assessing laws, institutions and practices to improve governance and limit corruption in developed and developing countries. In addition, from 2004 to 2009 he co-chaired the Task Force on Debt Restructuring and Sovereign Bankruptcy at the Initiative for Policy Dialogue at Columbia University. He completed almost 30 years in the United Nations Secretariat in 2005, the last two years of which were as Senior Advisor in the Financing for Development Office in the Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA). 



David Lamoureux

David Lamoureux is a Doctoral Canidate at the New School for Social Research. He recieved his B.S. in Agricultural Economics from the University of Vermont. His research interests include alternatives to the neoclassical economics as the dominant paradigm and the historical foundations of contemporary economic thought.

Cynthia Lawson

Cynthia Lawson is a digital artist, technologist and educator. Her research is in the areas of integrative and interdisciplinary education, educational technology, and media experimentation. Cynthia is fascinated with how streams of information (rss feeds, words, voicemails, photographs) can be filtered into a new medium in the creation of media art. She has taught in United States, Guatemala, Colombia, Dominican Republic, and Japan. Her artwork has been internationally exhibited and performed, including at UCLA Hammer Museum, Museum of Modern Art (Bogota and Medellin), Point Ephemere (Paris) and Exit Art (NYC). Cynthias writings have been published and presented at a variety of conferences, online journals, and books, including New Media Poetics published by MIT Press. She has a B.S. in Electrical Engineering from Universidad de los Andes (Bogot) and a Masters in Interactive Telecommunications from New York University. Cynthia is currently Assistant Professor of Integrated Design in the School of Design Strategies at Parsons The New School for Design, and an active member of Madarts, an arts collective in Brooklyn, NY.

Terra Lawson-Remer

Terra Lawson-Remer (J.D., Ph.D.) is Assistant Professor of International Affairs at the New School University in New York City. Previously, she was a Senior Adviser for International Affairs at the U.S. Department of the Treasury, and also held positions at the United Nations University World Institute for Development Economics Research, the law firm of Latham & Watkins, and the Ethical Globalization Initiative. Dr. Lawson-Remer is currently a fellow for Civil Society, Markets, and Democracy at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), where she is directing the CFR-sponsored study on the political economy of transitions. She currently chairs the New School's Advisory Committee on Investor Responsibility, and is also a Founder and Co-Director of the Economic & Social Rights Empowerment Initiative, a joint project with SSRC.

Dr. Lawson-Remer's research addresses opportunity and exclusion in the global economy, including economic development and poverty, natural resources, global economic governance, property rights, emerging economies, fragile states, inclusive growth, and rule of law. She has written numerous academic research articles on these issues, and worked and conducted field studies in Latin America, North and East Africa, Asia, and the South Pacific. She is co-creator of the social & economic rights fulfillment (SERF) index and author of the forthcoming book Fulfilling Economic & Social Rights (with Sakiko Fukuda-Parr and Susan Randolph, Oxford University Press).

Long a committed civic leader, Dr. Lawson-Remer previously worked as an organizer, action coordinator, and consultant for a variety of grassroots environmental and social justice organizations, including Amnesty International USA, the New York Civil Liberties Union, Ruckus, the United Farm Workers, and the Rainforest Action Network. She was a lead plaintiff in an ACLU lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of San Diego's youth curfew ordinance, which the Ninth Circuit agreed was unconstitutional and overturned in 1997. At Yale she co-founded STARC: Students Transforming and Resisting Corporations, a national student organization that advocated for corporate social responsibility and played a pivotal role in winning greater transparency and strengthening environmental and social safeguards at the WTO and World Bank.

Dr. Lawson-Remer is a regular contributor to the Huffington Post and author of the forthcoming book Fulfilling Social & Economics Rights (with Fukuda-Parr and Randolph, Oxford University Press, 2012). Some of her recent academic publications and working papers include: Security of Property Rights for Whom?; Do Stronger Collective Property Rights Improve Household Welfare? Evidence from a Field Study in Fiji; A Role for the International Finance Corporation in Integrating Environmental & Human Rights Standards into Core Project Covenants: A Case Study of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan Oil Pipeline Project; Property Insecurity, Growth, & Conflict; Integrating Environmental, Social and Governance Issues into Institutional Investment: A Handbook for Colleges and Universities; An Index of Social & Economic Rights Fulfillment: Concept & Methodology; and NAFTA, GATS, and the Propertization of Resources.

She earned her B.A. from Yale University; her J.D. from New York University School of Law, where she was awarded a full tuition Dean's Merit Scholarship; and her Ph.D. with a concentration in Political Economy from New York University's Law & Society Institute.



Manjari Mahajan

Manjari Mahajan is an Assistant Professor at GPIA. She received her PhD in Science and Technology Studies from Cornell University in 2008. She holds a MSc in Science Policy from SPRU at Sussex University, and a BA from Harvard University. Before joining the New School, she had a two-year postdoctoral fellowship from the Social Science Research Council (SSRC).  Mahajan's interests are in international health, science and technology studies, and development policy.  She has conducted research on the AIDS epidemics in South Africa and India, and the impact of global intellectual property regimes on public health and biomedical research.  She is currently working on a book manuscript that is provisionally titled The Anatomy of Humanitarian Emergencies: Science, Citizenship, and Global Governance of the AIDS Epidemics of India and South Africa.

 



Scott Martin

Scott B. Martin (Ph.D., Columbia University) has taught in the International Affairs program since 2005 as well as in the School of International  and Public Affairs at Columbia Univesity since 1998. Prof. Martin has also been a Lecturer of Political Science and Latin American Studies at Princeton University and a full-time Visiting Lecturer at Yale University and Sarah Lawrence College. He holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from Columbia University (2001), where he also served for two years as Assistant Director of the Institute of Latin American Studies.  He is the author of numerous articles and book chapters, such as most recently "New Directions in Public Policy and State-Society Relations," in Mauricio Font and Laura Randall, eds., The Brazilian State: Debate and Agenda (Lanham and New York: Lexington Books, 2011), with Glauco Arbix, and "'Models' of Mining Corporate Social Repsonsibility and the Local Political Cycle:  The Case of Alcoa in Juruti (Pará)," forthcoming in Portuguese with João Paulo Veiga.   He is also co-editor and contributor to The New Politics of Inequality in Latin America (Oxford, 1997), Competividade e Desenvolvimento: Atores e Instituições Locais (São Paulo, SENAC, 2001), and Business and Industry (Marshall Cavendish, 2003). His areas of research and teaching specialization are comparative and transnational labor politics, comparative social policy, corporate social responsibility in transnational corporations, politics/policy of socio-economic development, and Latin American political economy. He regularly consults on international development, labor, and business issues, in particularly for the Economist Intelligence Unit, where he is lead Latin America researcher for annual EIU scorecards of the business environment for microfinance and for venture capital and private equity, respectively.

Alberto Minujin

Alberto Minujin is a professor at the Graduate Program in International Affairs (GPIA) at the New School, with a special focus on topics related to social policy and children's rights.  He serves as the Director of the New School website equityforchildren.org, as well as the International Summer Field Program (IFP) in Buenos Aires, Argentina and an is active member of the Latin American Observatory (OLA).  Since 2003, Prof. Minujin has coordinated several international conferences co-sponsored by GPIA and UNICEF.  He is also a professor at the School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, New York, researching topics of children, human rights, poverty, and monitoring, evaluation and social research methods.

In 2010 Minujin was awarded the Bicentennial Medal from the Provincia de Buenos Aires of Argentina on the occasion of Argentina's 200th anniversary, and in recognition of his contributions to the fields of child rights and social policy.

Prof. Minujin provides consulting services on issues related to social policy, design and development of projects for child well-being, and statistical analysis and monitoring and evaluation. Until October, 2005, he was Senior Program Officer, Policy Analysis at the Global Policy Section in the Division of Policy and Planning of UNICEF Head Quarters (New York), working on social policy, policies for child poverty reduction and equity, budget analysis and human rights issues. Since 2006, he has provided consulting services to UNICEF Iran, Tanzania, Egypt, Ecuador, Mexico, Argentina and New York and to the Government of Provincia de Buenos Aires, Argentina.  

Prof. Minujin is the editor and author of two books published by The New School: "Social Protection Initiatives for Children, Women, and Families: An Analysis of Recent Experiences" that focus in the experiences around the world on cash and in-kind transfers to poor families; and "Poverty and Children: Policies to Break the Vicious Cycle (2006)", that discusses concepts, measurement and policies related to children living in poverty. His previous two books, examining the historical social changes and the impoverishment of the middle class in Argentina and exploring future alternatives for Argentine society, have become nonfiction best sellers. Prof. Minujin has published several other books, numerous articles and papers.

Tom O'Donnell

O'Donnell’s present work examines the political economy of a globalized energy sector, especially of petroleum, as a
basis for understanding both U.S. geo-strategy and the trajectories of major oil-producing states. His research and teaching have focused on the Middle East and North African (MENA) states and Latin America.  Dr. O’Donnell was a 2008 U.S. Fulbright Scholar to Venezuela, and in 2009 he continues his affiliation with the Centro de Estudios del Desarrollo at the Universidad Central de Venezuela (CENDES-UCV) in Caracas, studying the political economy of oil in the internal and external policies of the Bolivarian state. Dr.  O’Donnell has often taught at The New School for Social Research in New York City, where he was also Visiting Fellow at the Department of Graduate Economics in 2008-09.

Angelica Ponguta

Dr. Ponguta obtained her Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Pathology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Masters in Public Health (with a concentration in Health Policy) from Yale University. Through her work she has contributed to the fields of basic science, epidemiology and population health, and international early childhood development (ECD) policy. Her past work has included the study of growth factors in the progression of disease at the molecular level. She also led the collection of epidemiological data from subjects in the Bronx for the Hispanic Community Health Study to assess risk factors associated with metabolic diseases in the Latino population.

 

Currently, she is a fellow at the Yale Child Study Center where she uses her research background to drive policy analysis and development. She is currently developing and implementing a national study of the ECD sector in Ethiopia. In collaboration with UNICEF she is also conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis of ECD parenting programs in low and middle-income countries. Her international experience in ECD policy includes supporting the development of the Laos National ECD Plan of Action and the Angola National ECD Policy. She has also conducted a national analysis of the ECD sector in Kosovo to generate a set of programmatic and policy recommendations. She participated in the development and implementation of a study protocol to elucidate the governance and finance mechanisms of ECD in Kenya, Laos, and Cambodia.

 

Dr. Ponguta uses a multidisciplinary approach in the Global Perspectives on Reproductive Health course to explore the biological, epidemiological, programmatic and policy dimensions of reproduction in the global context.



L. Angelica Ponguta

Dr. Ponguta obtained her Ph.D. in Molecular and Cellular Pathology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and a Masters in Public Health (with a concentration in Health Policy) from Yale University. Through her work she has contributed to the fields of basic science, epidemiology and population health, and international early childhood development (ECD) policy. Her past work has included the study of growth factors in the progression of disease at the molecular level. She also led the collection of epidemiological data from subjects in the Bronx for the Hispanic Community Health Study to assess risk factors associated with metabolic diseases in the Latino population.

 

Currently, she is a fellow at the Yale Child Study Center where she uses her research background to drive policy analysis and development. She consults with the World Bank on a national analysis of the ECD sector in Ethiopia. In collaboration with UNICEF she is also conducting a systematic review and meta-analysis of ECD parenting programs in low and middle-income countries. Her international experience in ECD policy includes supporting the development of the Laos National ECD Plan of Action and the Angola National ECD Policy. She has also conducted a national analysis of the ECD sector in Kosovo to generate a set of programmatic and policy recommendations. She participated in the development and implementation of a study protocol to elucidate the governance and finance mechanisms of ECD in Kenya, Laos, and Cambodia.

 

Dr. Ponguta uses a multidisciplinary approach in the Global Perspectives on Reproductive Health course to explore the biological, epidemiological, programmatic and policy dimensions of reproduction in the global context.



Mila Rosenthal

Mila Rosenthal is a human rights advocate with a long international career spanning many countries and issues. Currently, she is working on a project with economists, including the New School's Sakiko Fukuda-Parr, on methodologies for measuring economic and social rights fulfillment. Recently she served as the Executive Director of HealthRight International, a global organization working to build lasting access to health for excluded communities. Before that, at Amnesty International USA, she developed global campaigns on a wide range of issues including international justice, freedom of speech and religion, the right to health, and stopping violence against women, and pioneered AIUSA's advocacy on the human rights responsibilities of companies.

Previously, Mila lived and worked throughout East Asia. She served in the UN peacekeeping mission in Cambodia and worked to build civil society there. She researched the lives of women workers in textile factories in Vietnam for her PhD in social anthropology from the London School of Economics and advocated on labor rights in several countries. She has written extensively about the social impact of globalization on women, taught at Columbia University's School of International and Public Affairs, and currently serves on the Board of the Business and Human Rights Resource Centre.



Richard Wolff

Richard D. Wolff is Professor Emeritus of Economics at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and
Visiting Professor at the New School University. He has a PhD in Economics from Yale University as
well as degrees from Harvard (History BA) and Stanford (Economics MA). Wolff taught Economics at
Yale, the City University of New York and the University of Massachusetts. He has also been a visiting
professor at the University of Paris I (Sorbonne). He now lives in Manhattan with his wife, a practicing
psychotherapist. He has authored or co-authored 10 books and over 50 scholarly articles and 75 popular
articles. His recent work has concentrated on analyzing the causes and alternative solutions to the current
global economic crisis. He also hosts a weekly radio program, “Economic Update,” broadcast on WBAI,
99.5 FM in New York.



 

 

Sakiko Fukuda-Parr is the chair of the development concentration. Please direct questions and comments to Kelly Gannon.