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Kreisler was the executive director of the Institute of International Studies at the University of California from 1974 to 2014. In that role, he administered interdisciplinary academic and public affairs programs that analyzed global issues. His reflections on that work is recorded in an interview broadcast in 2014. [2]
Eva Harris (born August 6, 1965) is a professor in the School of Public Health at the University of California, Berkeley, [1] and the founder and president of the Sustainable Sciences Institute. [2] She focuses her research efforts on combating diseases that primarily afflict people in developing nations.
Cowell Memorial Hospital, also known as Ernest V. Cowell Memorial Hospital, is a historical former building in downtown Berkeley, California. The Cowell Memorial Hospital was built in 1930 and demolished in 1993. The building and its site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on January 6, 1993.
Lim was made a Fulbright scholar in 2016, and moved to Pune, India to pursue public health research on gender disparities among healthcare workers. [6] She completed her masters and medical education at UC Berkeley School of Public Health and UCSF School of Medicine in 2017, as part of the UC Berkeley-UCSF Joint Medical Program.
The School of Public Health has its origins in the Department of Hygiene, which pioneered much of California's start of the 20th century public health endeavors. [4] It was Karl F. Meyer, however, whose compelling 1930s Public Health curriculum demonstrated a pressing need for a school devoted to the study and practice of public health. [2]
After selling Berkeley Systems in 1997 for $13.8 million, Blades and Boyd founded the liberal political group MoveOn.org. [3] Blades received her B.A. in History from UC Berkeley in 1977 and her J.D. from the Golden Gate University School of Law. She wrote the book Mediate Your Divorce [4] (published by Prentice Hall), and co-wrote The Divorce ...
Levine was a MacArthur Fellow in 1983, [4] elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1985 and a Fulbright Scholar in History from the University of California - Berkeley to the University of Sydney in 1988. He was president of the Organization of American Historians in 1992–93 and received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1994.
In 2003, Choy published a book entitled Empire of Care: Nursing and Migration in Filipino American History, which was reviewed in the American Historical Review by Madeline Hsu. [3] Empire of Care traces the history and migration of Filipino nurses. Choy uses the term "empire of care" to refer global inequalities in health services due to an ...