The Office for the Advancement of Research at John Jay College saw continued growth in external funding and scholarly productivity in the 2015-2016 fiscal year. Total grant funding increased 9% to $25.4 million, while scholarly works increased 27% to nearly 1,900 publications. Notable individual achievements included Psychology Professor Maria Hartwig receiving $580,000 from the FBI for deception detection research and the Research and Evaluation Center obtaining $1.3 million for policy evaluation projects.
The research report summarizes formative research conducted to understand student perceptions and attitudes toward the Green Fund at Washington State University. Three focus groups were conducted with students to explore opinions on the Green Fund. An online survey was also administered. The key finding from the qualitative research was that students have very little awareness of what the Green Fund is. The report provides details on focus group discussions and identifies lack of awareness as a major problem. Quantitative data from the survey is also presented. The overall goal of the research was to inform the development of strategies to better communicate with students about the Green Fund.
Quantitative and qualitative public policy analyst, evaluator and researcher in economic development and human development fields with over 15 years of pro-poor policy, evaluation and research experience. Adjunct lecturer and Teaching Assistant (2009-2011) in sustainable international development and poverty measurement. Collaborating researcher for United Nations Research Institute for Social Development. Non-resident adviser on monitoring and evaluation Center for Global Development and Sustainability, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University. Developer of financial resources through donor research, grant proposal writing, and direct requests to foundations.
The document summarizes evaluations of college access, readiness, and career pathway initiatives. It discusses evaluating implementation of a Texas GEAR UP state grant program through longitudinal student tracking, surveys, site visits, and analysis of costs and lessons learned. Initial analysis found variation in services across schools and opportunities to increase student and parent knowledge. Forthcoming analysis will examine relationships between implementation factors and outcomes. The document also describes assessing implementation fidelity in the Diplomas Now school turnaround program evaluation through documentation of variation across sites and challenges.
This document contains a campaign plan for St. Bede Academy to increase engagement with alumni from 2016-2017. It includes research conducted, objectives to increase communication with international alumni by 30% and social media engagement by 100%. The plan highlights include a career day with alumni, a coffee shop reconnect event, virtual homecoming, and an international alumni pen-pal program. The budget of $10,000 will be spent on social media, media relations, and events over three years to effectively reach alumni and measure the campaign's success in increasing engagement.
This document outlines a public relations campaign plan for St. Bede Academy developed by WorldEdge. The plan includes situational analysis and research on alumni engagement. The objectives are to increase communication with international alumni, social media engagement, and networking opportunities. Tactics include a pen pal program, virtual homecoming, career day event, and coffee shop meetups. The plan will be evaluated through surveys and social media analytics to measure engagement increases by May 2017. The overall goal is to strengthen connections between St. Bede Academy and its alumni community.
This document outlines a group research project on how social media impacts the travel industry. It includes an introduction, literature review, methodology, findings, conclusion, limitations, and recommendations. The literature review covers themes like the use of social media in the travel industry, its impact on consumer decision making, and gaps in previous research. The methodology section describes a mixed methods approach including surveys, interviews and focus groups. Key findings indicate that while respondents think social media has little influence, it does increase travel desire. Friends and family remain most influential. Limitations include a short time frame and young demographic. Recommendations focus on self-promotion through social media.
This document describes a program run by Geitonas School in Athens, Greece aimed at increasing awareness of Greece's cultural and natural heritage among Greek students and students from other European countries. The program involves Greek students creating posters with pictures and descriptions of heritage sites in Greece. These posters will be sent to schools in England, France and Germany to share with their students. European students will then provide responses about the Greek sites which will be shared online. The program also aims to fundraise for SOS Children's Villages in Greece through an online crowdfunding project where visitors can donate.
This document proposes a student exchange project called "Transromanica - World Heritage in Young Hands" that would educate students about cultural heritage sites in Southeast Europe designated as UNESCO World Heritage sites. The project would involve forming student teams from schools in the region that would visit notable Romanesque-era sites connected by the Transromanica cultural route, which extends from Germany to Serbia. Students would learn about the sites and cultures through workshops, presentations, and sharing experiences. They would also promote the importance of preserving natural and cultural heritage. The proposal suggests organizing subsequent "UNESCO Caravans" where student teams from multiple countries could visit each other's World Heritage sites to learn about different cultures and foster tolerance.
The research report summarizes formative research conducted to understand student perceptions and attitudes toward the Green Fund at Washington State University. Three focus groups were conducted with students to explore opinions on the Green Fund. An online survey was also administered. The key finding from the qualitative research was that students have very little awareness of what the Green Fund is. The report provides details on focus group discussions and identifies lack of awareness as a major problem. Quantitative data from the survey is also presented. The overall goal of the research was to inform the development of strategies to better communicate with students about the Green Fund.
Quantitative and qualitative public policy analyst, evaluator and researcher in economic development and human development fields with over 15 years of pro-poor policy, evaluation and research experience. Adjunct lecturer and Teaching Assistant (2009-2011) in sustainable international development and poverty measurement. Collaborating researcher for United Nations Research Institute for Social Development. Non-resident adviser on monitoring and evaluation Center for Global Development and Sustainability, Heller School for Social Policy and Management, Brandeis University. Developer of financial resources through donor research, grant proposal writing, and direct requests to foundations.
The document summarizes evaluations of college access, readiness, and career pathway initiatives. It discusses evaluating implementation of a Texas GEAR UP state grant program through longitudinal student tracking, surveys, site visits, and analysis of costs and lessons learned. Initial analysis found variation in services across schools and opportunities to increase student and parent knowledge. Forthcoming analysis will examine relationships between implementation factors and outcomes. The document also describes assessing implementation fidelity in the Diplomas Now school turnaround program evaluation through documentation of variation across sites and challenges.
This document contains a campaign plan for St. Bede Academy to increase engagement with alumni from 2016-2017. It includes research conducted, objectives to increase communication with international alumni by 30% and social media engagement by 100%. The plan highlights include a career day with alumni, a coffee shop reconnect event, virtual homecoming, and an international alumni pen-pal program. The budget of $10,000 will be spent on social media, media relations, and events over three years to effectively reach alumni and measure the campaign's success in increasing engagement.
This document outlines a public relations campaign plan for St. Bede Academy developed by WorldEdge. The plan includes situational analysis and research on alumni engagement. The objectives are to increase communication with international alumni, social media engagement, and networking opportunities. Tactics include a pen pal program, virtual homecoming, career day event, and coffee shop meetups. The plan will be evaluated through surveys and social media analytics to measure engagement increases by May 2017. The overall goal is to strengthen connections between St. Bede Academy and its alumni community.
This document outlines a group research project on how social media impacts the travel industry. It includes an introduction, literature review, methodology, findings, conclusion, limitations, and recommendations. The literature review covers themes like the use of social media in the travel industry, its impact on consumer decision making, and gaps in previous research. The methodology section describes a mixed methods approach including surveys, interviews and focus groups. Key findings indicate that while respondents think social media has little influence, it does increase travel desire. Friends and family remain most influential. Limitations include a short time frame and young demographic. Recommendations focus on self-promotion through social media.
This document describes a program run by Geitonas School in Athens, Greece aimed at increasing awareness of Greece's cultural and natural heritage among Greek students and students from other European countries. The program involves Greek students creating posters with pictures and descriptions of heritage sites in Greece. These posters will be sent to schools in England, France and Germany to share with their students. European students will then provide responses about the Greek sites which will be shared online. The program also aims to fundraise for SOS Children's Villages in Greece through an online crowdfunding project where visitors can donate.
This document proposes a student exchange project called "Transromanica - World Heritage in Young Hands" that would educate students about cultural heritage sites in Southeast Europe designated as UNESCO World Heritage sites. The project would involve forming student teams from schools in the region that would visit notable Romanesque-era sites connected by the Transromanica cultural route, which extends from Germany to Serbia. Students would learn about the sites and cultures through workshops, presentations, and sharing experiences. They would also promote the importance of preserving natural and cultural heritage. The proposal suggests organizing subsequent "UNESCO Caravans" where student teams from multiple countries could visit each other's World Heritage sites to learn about different cultures and foster tolerance.
Mr. Alen Celebic completed the Office Guides: SharePoint Online Overview for IT Pros course on July 23, 2015. The document confirms that Mr. Celebic achieved success in a SharePoint Online training course focused on IT professionals.
El documento describe las diferencias entre la Web 1.0 y la Web 2.0. La Web 1.0 proporcionaba páginas de lectura informativa y permitía publicar contenido de manera pasiva. La Web 2.0 fomenta la colaboración y el intercambio de información entre usuarios a través de herramientas como blogs, wikis y aplicaciones sociales. Se basa en cuatro pilares: redes sociales, contenidos, aplicaciones y servicios organizados de manera social e inteligente.
This document outlines chapter 9 on new product development and product lifecycle strategies. It discusses new product development strategies like acquisition and internal development. It then details the major stages in the new product development process including idea generation, concept development and testing, marketing strategy development, and commercialization. Finally, it covers product lifecycle strategies and how products should be managed through the introduction, growth, maturity, and decline stages.
Ronaldo Mendes nasceu em Minas Gerais e sempre gostou de arte. Ele se tornou um pintor naif, criando obras com estilo próprio inspirado em sua infância. Mendes nunca fez cursos de pintura, mas hoje tem obras exibidas em grandes galerias no Brasil e exterior.
La robótica es la rama de la ingeniería que se ocupa del diseño, construcción y aplicación de robots. Combina disciplinas como la mecánica, electrónica, informática e inteligencia artificial. El término "robot" se popularizó en la obra de Karel Čapek en 1920 y se refiere a trabajos forzados o servidumbre. La historia de la robótica está ligada a la creación de artefactos para relevar al hombre del trabajo.
PDF Handout: D Maino: Visual Diagnosis and Care of the Patient with Special N...Dominick Maino
This is a copy of my handout of the lecture given in class today. (Copyright 2016). You may download and use this for any non-commercial educational purpose.
Private sector engagement in REDD+ of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)IIED
A presentation by Raymond Achu Samndong, from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, at a workshop held in Paris from Thursday, 3 December to Friday, 4 December during the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP21).
The event organised by the International Institute for Environment and Development aimed to share the findings of its research to inform a wider debate on how REDD+ is contributing to addressing the drivers of land use and land use change.
The presentation focused on private sector engagement in REDD+ using the case study of Mai Ndombe, DRC.
More details: http://www.iied.org/redd-paris-what-could-be-it-for-people-forests
The SUU chemistry division is committed to instilling an understanding of chemistry and its relevance through quality teaching, scholarly activities and service.
This document discusses vertical alignment in road design. It defines vertical alignment as the vertical aspect of the road profile, including crest and sag curves. It describes the basic components of vertical alignment as grade and vertical curves. Grade is the slope of the road expressed as a percentage, while vertical curves are parabolic curves that provide gradual transitions between different grades to allow comfortable driving. The document discusses types of vertical curves such as sag curves at the bottom of hills and crest curves at the tops of hills, as well as symmetrical and unsymmetrical curves. It provides the equations used to design different types of vertical curves.
Die Rolle von JournalistInnen im Zeitalter von Web 2.0
Vortrag von Sonja Bettel (www.bettel.at)
beim Digitalks Spezial für JournalistInnen
2.Dezember 2009 in Wien
Research, Policy & Evaluation: Complex Intersections: Navigating the Waters o...guestd83a57
This workshop examined the role of education policy and scholarly research in informing college access programs and how programs in turn influence the direction of the research community.
This session examined the role of education policy and scholarly research in informing college access programs and how programs in turn influence the direction of the research community.
Overview of the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development, Rutgers Un...Kathy Krepcio
An overview of the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. Founded in 1997, the Center is a university-based research and policy center dedicated to raising the effectiveness of the American workplace by strengthening workforce education and training programs.
Catching The Rising Tide, Chinese Donor Strategies and ImplicationsYanan (Diana) DAI
Chinese donors can be segmented into five groups based on their motivation for giving and level of sophistication in managing philanthropic investments. These groups - Affluent Individuals, Chinese Companies, Early Foundations, Multinational Companies, and Mature Foundations - vary in their reasons for donating, desired level of impact, and reporting needs. Donors' expectations tend to evolve over time as their experience and budgets grow. Effective communication and engagement requires understanding each group's unique perspectives on philanthropy.
This document provides an overview of the 2013 Global Go To Think Tank Index report produced by the Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program at the University of Pennsylvania. It summarizes the methodology used to rank over 6,000 think tanks based on nominations from experts. The report ranks think tanks in categories such as top think tanks in the world, by region, by area of research, and special achievement. It acknowledges contributions from researchers, peer institutions, and expert panels in compiling both qualitative and quantitative data to determine the rankings in a transparent process aimed at better understanding the role of think tanks globally.
The document discusses the benefits of international youth exchange programs according to US government officials and organizations that support such programs. It outlines CSIET's mission to identify reputable youth exchange programs and provide resources and support to schools involved in international student exchanges.
Running head DRAFT OF DATA PRESENTATION1DATA PRESENTATION3.docxtodd271
Running head: DRAFT OF DATA PRESENTATION 1
DATA PRESENTATION 3
HEA 530 Milestone 2: Draft of Data Presentation
Sharon Riley-Ordu
Southern New Hampshire University
June 30, 2019
Data Presentation, Analysis and Discussion
Interviews with Office of Alumni Affairs Staff
In order to prepare for the presentation of data and decide on data sources to be used for evaluation, interviews were conducted with The Director, Associate Director, and Supervisor of Student Interns. Key information was gleaned from each interview which will be briefly discussion. The first interview was with Tom Fitzgerald, Director. According to Tom, the overall goal is to improve the pledge rate at Binchley College by 6%. He shared there is an overall decline in contributions. Because these contributions are used to fund special programs, especially related to the college marine ecology and Native American studies degrees, it is critical that they increase. In this interview we discussed the biggest decline in contributions was from the alumni donors aged 55 and over. I asked the Director what he thought this decline could be attributed to. He provided several different possible explanations such as death, fixed income retirement, illness and that people in this age group may be helping children and grandchildren.
My next interview was with the Associate Director. We discussed a slight increase in last two years in the donations from middle-aged and younger alumni, especially graduates of the Native American program. The percentages of graduates from the program have increased, but that can’t be the only explanation for the improvement. She shared information about a small pilot program designed especially for graduates of the Native American program, and promising results. They were invited back for a long weekend to participate in current excavation projects and research associated with it. It has been a great social event and resulted in generating income from the tuition along with the participants donating to the college while at the event and again when the Office of Alumni Affairs solicits donations for specific needs of the research projects throughout the year.
The third and final interview was with the Student Intern Supervisor. Each of the individuals interviewed are graduates of Binchley College, so they clearly have a stake in making sure the college remains successful. The Student Intern Supervisor, Shelley, is a graduate with a major in Native American Studies. She worked on the pilot program with the Associate Director, Jesse which was mentioned earlier. In this interview, we talked further about the increases in donations from Native American Alumni. A key question was asked: Do you know if a survey of the alumni of the Native American program has been conducted to measure the effect of the blog and other forms of communication you’ve used has had on their willingness to donate? Shelley replied that they have not conducted a survey.
Data .
Mr. Alen Celebic completed the Office Guides: SharePoint Online Overview for IT Pros course on July 23, 2015. The document confirms that Mr. Celebic achieved success in a SharePoint Online training course focused on IT professionals.
El documento describe las diferencias entre la Web 1.0 y la Web 2.0. La Web 1.0 proporcionaba páginas de lectura informativa y permitía publicar contenido de manera pasiva. La Web 2.0 fomenta la colaboración y el intercambio de información entre usuarios a través de herramientas como blogs, wikis y aplicaciones sociales. Se basa en cuatro pilares: redes sociales, contenidos, aplicaciones y servicios organizados de manera social e inteligente.
This document outlines chapter 9 on new product development and product lifecycle strategies. It discusses new product development strategies like acquisition and internal development. It then details the major stages in the new product development process including idea generation, concept development and testing, marketing strategy development, and commercialization. Finally, it covers product lifecycle strategies and how products should be managed through the introduction, growth, maturity, and decline stages.
Ronaldo Mendes nasceu em Minas Gerais e sempre gostou de arte. Ele se tornou um pintor naif, criando obras com estilo próprio inspirado em sua infância. Mendes nunca fez cursos de pintura, mas hoje tem obras exibidas em grandes galerias no Brasil e exterior.
La robótica es la rama de la ingeniería que se ocupa del diseño, construcción y aplicación de robots. Combina disciplinas como la mecánica, electrónica, informática e inteligencia artificial. El término "robot" se popularizó en la obra de Karel Čapek en 1920 y se refiere a trabajos forzados o servidumbre. La historia de la robótica está ligada a la creación de artefactos para relevar al hombre del trabajo.
PDF Handout: D Maino: Visual Diagnosis and Care of the Patient with Special N...Dominick Maino
This is a copy of my handout of the lecture given in class today. (Copyright 2016). You may download and use this for any non-commercial educational purpose.
Private sector engagement in REDD+ of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)IIED
A presentation by Raymond Achu Samndong, from the Norwegian University of Life Sciences, at a workshop held in Paris from Thursday, 3 December to Friday, 4 December during the 21st Conference of the Parties (COP21).
The event organised by the International Institute for Environment and Development aimed to share the findings of its research to inform a wider debate on how REDD+ is contributing to addressing the drivers of land use and land use change.
The presentation focused on private sector engagement in REDD+ using the case study of Mai Ndombe, DRC.
More details: http://www.iied.org/redd-paris-what-could-be-it-for-people-forests
The SUU chemistry division is committed to instilling an understanding of chemistry and its relevance through quality teaching, scholarly activities and service.
This document discusses vertical alignment in road design. It defines vertical alignment as the vertical aspect of the road profile, including crest and sag curves. It describes the basic components of vertical alignment as grade and vertical curves. Grade is the slope of the road expressed as a percentage, while vertical curves are parabolic curves that provide gradual transitions between different grades to allow comfortable driving. The document discusses types of vertical curves such as sag curves at the bottom of hills and crest curves at the tops of hills, as well as symmetrical and unsymmetrical curves. It provides the equations used to design different types of vertical curves.
Die Rolle von JournalistInnen im Zeitalter von Web 2.0
Vortrag von Sonja Bettel (www.bettel.at)
beim Digitalks Spezial für JournalistInnen
2.Dezember 2009 in Wien
Research, Policy & Evaluation: Complex Intersections: Navigating the Waters o...guestd83a57
This workshop examined the role of education policy and scholarly research in informing college access programs and how programs in turn influence the direction of the research community.
This session examined the role of education policy and scholarly research in informing college access programs and how programs in turn influence the direction of the research community.
Overview of the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development, Rutgers Un...Kathy Krepcio
An overview of the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. Founded in 1997, the Center is a university-based research and policy center dedicated to raising the effectiveness of the American workplace by strengthening workforce education and training programs.
Catching The Rising Tide, Chinese Donor Strategies and ImplicationsYanan (Diana) DAI
Chinese donors can be segmented into five groups based on their motivation for giving and level of sophistication in managing philanthropic investments. These groups - Affluent Individuals, Chinese Companies, Early Foundations, Multinational Companies, and Mature Foundations - vary in their reasons for donating, desired level of impact, and reporting needs. Donors' expectations tend to evolve over time as their experience and budgets grow. Effective communication and engagement requires understanding each group's unique perspectives on philanthropy.
This document provides an overview of the 2013 Global Go To Think Tank Index report produced by the Think Tanks and Civil Societies Program at the University of Pennsylvania. It summarizes the methodology used to rank over 6,000 think tanks based on nominations from experts. The report ranks think tanks in categories such as top think tanks in the world, by region, by area of research, and special achievement. It acknowledges contributions from researchers, peer institutions, and expert panels in compiling both qualitative and quantitative data to determine the rankings in a transparent process aimed at better understanding the role of think tanks globally.
The document discusses the benefits of international youth exchange programs according to US government officials and organizations that support such programs. It outlines CSIET's mission to identify reputable youth exchange programs and provide resources and support to schools involved in international student exchanges.
Running head DRAFT OF DATA PRESENTATION1DATA PRESENTATION3.docxtodd271
Running head: DRAFT OF DATA PRESENTATION 1
DATA PRESENTATION 3
HEA 530 Milestone 2: Draft of Data Presentation
Sharon Riley-Ordu
Southern New Hampshire University
June 30, 2019
Data Presentation, Analysis and Discussion
Interviews with Office of Alumni Affairs Staff
In order to prepare for the presentation of data and decide on data sources to be used for evaluation, interviews were conducted with The Director, Associate Director, and Supervisor of Student Interns. Key information was gleaned from each interview which will be briefly discussion. The first interview was with Tom Fitzgerald, Director. According to Tom, the overall goal is to improve the pledge rate at Binchley College by 6%. He shared there is an overall decline in contributions. Because these contributions are used to fund special programs, especially related to the college marine ecology and Native American studies degrees, it is critical that they increase. In this interview we discussed the biggest decline in contributions was from the alumni donors aged 55 and over. I asked the Director what he thought this decline could be attributed to. He provided several different possible explanations such as death, fixed income retirement, illness and that people in this age group may be helping children and grandchildren.
My next interview was with the Associate Director. We discussed a slight increase in last two years in the donations from middle-aged and younger alumni, especially graduates of the Native American program. The percentages of graduates from the program have increased, but that can’t be the only explanation for the improvement. She shared information about a small pilot program designed especially for graduates of the Native American program, and promising results. They were invited back for a long weekend to participate in current excavation projects and research associated with it. It has been a great social event and resulted in generating income from the tuition along with the participants donating to the college while at the event and again when the Office of Alumni Affairs solicits donations for specific needs of the research projects throughout the year.
The third and final interview was with the Student Intern Supervisor. Each of the individuals interviewed are graduates of Binchley College, so they clearly have a stake in making sure the college remains successful. The Student Intern Supervisor, Shelley, is a graduate with a major in Native American Studies. She worked on the pilot program with the Associate Director, Jesse which was mentioned earlier. In this interview, we talked further about the increases in donations from Native American Alumni. A key question was asked: Do you know if a survey of the alumni of the Native American program has been conducted to measure the effect of the blog and other forms of communication you’ve used has had on their willingness to donate? Shelley replied that they have not conducted a survey.
Data .
York University has developed a plan to intensify research over the next decade through extensive consultation. The plan contains 21 recommendations clustered into five areas: growing a scholarly culture, investing in people, supporting research growth, leadership in advocacy, and building future research. York has seen strong growth in research publications over the past decade through long-term planning and community engagement. Examples of successful research intensification include a $33.3 million grant for vision research that will enhance 25 research teams and recruit 13 new faculty members. York supports partnerships through its innovation office, which engages with startups, approves funding agreements, and launched five companies in 2016. While the return on research investments is difficult to quantify, York researchers have made contributions in fields
This document announces the launch of the 2011 Global Go To Think Tanks Rankings report. It provides an overview of the ranking methodology, which involved nominations and evaluations from over 7,000 think tanks and experts in 182 countries. Key statistics on the scope and participation in the ranking process are highlighted. The rankings are organized into categories evaluating think tanks worldwide, by region, by research area, and for special achievements. The report aims to recognize influential think tanks and improve their capacity through an open and transparent ranking process.
EduWeb2018 - Terry Coniglio and Rob Fougner, Building a Brand Ambassador Prog...Terry Coniglio
This document discusses building a university brand ambassador program through social media influencers. It provides examples of social media programs at other universities and outlines the benefits of using social executives and influencer marketing. The document then details Georgia State University's brand ambassador program called "The State Way", which identifies influencers on campus, provides them exclusive app access to university content, and has resulted in over 500 social media posts reaching over 4 million people.
This document summarizes the 2011 Global Go To Think Tank Rankings report. It announces the launch of the 2011 rankings and report, which ranks think tanks around the world. It provides statistics on the scope of the ranking process, which involved over 1,500 individuals from 120 countries participating in nominations and rankings across 30 categories. The rankings are based on nominations and evaluations from experts on specific regions and fields. The document outlines the methodology used in the 2011 rankings process and categories included. It acknowledges efforts to improve representations of think tanks from non-G7 countries in the rankings.
Marketing Research Paper Final Draft- Jessica Carroll & Kara ReynoldsJessica Carroll
This document provides a summary of a research proposal to evaluate event concepts for a non-profit organization in Kingston, Ontario. The research will involve interviews with 10 event professionals and an online survey of 100 event managers. The goal is to determine successful event themes, budgets, marketing tactics, obstacles and other factors. Preliminary results from 38 respondents found that fundraising events averaging 4-6 hours were most common. The highest costs and funds raised were for non-traditional industry events. Key obstacles included attendance and budget issues. Event costs had a significant impact on funds raised.
Global Philanthropy Report. Perspectives on the global foundation sectorDominique Gross
Report: Perspectives on the global foundation sector
seeks to develop a knowledge base to address the size,
scope, and practice of institutional philanthropy across
the globe. This inaugural report represents a first step
in an attempt to understand worldwide philanthropic
practices and trends; provide comparative analysis across
countries and regions; begin to develop a picture of the
magnitude of global philanthropic investment; and help
create an evidence-based discussion on global philanthropy.
We hope to publish the report biennially, adding additional
countries and reporting increasingly comprehensive
data within countries in future editions. Importantly, national
collaborators are publishing more in-depth reports
on philanthropy in their individual countries.
Proving Value and Measuring Impact - Big Society & LocalismSWF
1. The Proving Our Value project aims to demonstrate the economic impact of social organizations in the region through developing effective measures and partnerships between higher education and social organizations.
2. The research process over 4 years will establish an impact measurement framework, conduct research projects in priority sectors like health and employment, and disseminate findings to influence policy and practice.
3. The project will help social organizations communicate their impact to funders and commissioners by building expertise in impact measurement methodologies developed by groups like NEF and NCVO.
Comparative research is one of the most common and commonly known forms of assessment. It can take the form of meta-studies, where JA looks at existing research and pulls similar data points to compare to the data JA collects on its students, volunteers, etc. This approach has been used to determine how effective the JA volunteer model is and how JA alumni compare to the general population in terms of educational attainment, median income, and business ownership.
The document provides background information on a community engaged assessment of art and healing programs in HOPE SF communities conducted from January to July 2015. It describes the purpose of examining how art can promote community building and healing. Methods included interviews with 17 resident artists, 21 program staff, and 27 key stakeholders, as well as workshops and discussions. The assessment aimed to understand current art programs, barriers to participation, and opportunities to incorporate art into community development.
The document provides background information on a community engaged assessment of art and healing programs in HOPE SF communities conducted from January to July 2015. It describes the purpose of examining how art can promote community building and healing. Methods included interviews with 17 resident artists, 21 program staff, and 27 key stakeholders, as well as workshops and discussions. The assessment aimed to understand current art programs, barriers to participation, and opportunities to incorporate art into community development.
The document provides background information on a community engaged assessment of art and healing programs in HOPE SF communities conducted from January to July 2015. It describes the purpose of examining how art can promote community building and healing. Methods included interviews with 17 resident artists, 21 program staff, and 27 key stakeholders, as well as workshops and discussions. The assessment aimed to understand current art programs, barriers to participation, and opportunities to incorporate art into community development.
This report summarizes issues Livestrong is facing in achieving outreach to college students and recommends solutions. Key findings include: communication campaigns must be tailored to the audience and use gain frames; partnering with local organizations like Susan G. Komen improves awareness and fundraising; and connecting with university programs in nonprofit management provides opportunities for education, research, and recruiting. Recommendations are creating a campus version of Ride for the Roses event, establishing local and campus connections, and spreading awareness through social media.
Building More Robust NGO-University Partnerships in DevelopmentDavid Leege
This document discusses building more robust partnerships between NGOs and universities for international development efforts. It uses the partnership between Catholic Relief Services (CRS) and several US universities as a case study. The key lessons learned from the CRS case are: 1) identify shared priorities and monitor progress, 2) build mutual understanding between different institutional cultures, 3) create a value proposition for both partners, 4) involve senior management, 5) empower a focal point for coordination, and 6) maintain an up-to-date knowledge management system. While important, the significance of these lessons may change as partnerships mature over time.
2. DEAN’S LETTER
RESEARCH MISSION
The mission of the Office for the Advancement of Research is to promote scholarly activity, publication/
performance of works, and grantsmanship at John Jay College. The Office works with key stakeholders,
including faculty, Center directors, staff and administrators to disseminate this mission via workshops,
one-on-one mentoring, collaboration, and internal programs aimed at professional development.
Working with the Office of Sponsored Programs, which operates within OAR, the Office serves as a liaison
and resource to faculty and staff submitting grants to federal, state, and private sources. The Office works
with our Office of Marketing and Development to promote the scholarly mission of the College to the
external research communities and the general public.
John Jay’sresearchers and scholars continued to set records in
2015-16, showing unparalleled strength, dedication and resilience by thriving in
an environment of ongoing federal austerity. Total grant and contract awards to
our Principal Investigators increased by 9% from last year’s record-breaking total,
clocking in at $25.4 million. Per capita scholarship broke yet another record, adding
27% to our 2014 total, leading to a final tally of nearly 1900 works of scholarship,
and placing John Jay in a tie for third among CUNY’s senior colleges for scholarly
productivity. Impressive as these numbers are, they are even more so in context:
scholarly productivity has nearly quadrupled since 2010; the total value of grant and
contract awards is up 73% since FY2011-12; and OAR’s internal research awards to
John Jay scholars have more than doubled since the same year, rising from about
$100 thousand in FY2011-12, to nearly $250 thousand in FY2015-16. In fact, the 2016
Chronicle of Higher Education Almanac recently ranked John Jay 7th
among more
than 600 institutions in terms of the greatest increase in external research funding
over the past decade. Simultaneous to these long-term gains in research funding and
scholarship, the College’s research enterprise has built a far-reaching digital media
presence, achieving over 15 thousand public engagements in FY2015-16, a nearly
7-fold growth over three years. This expanding reach provides a tremendous platform
to interact with and amplify the digital footprint of our faculty, and represents
a testament to the broad interest in the work of our scholars, artists, and other
professionals. Congratulations to all who have helped us achieve these milestones.
3. OAR Annual Report • 2015 | 1
President
Jeremy Travis
Provost and Senior Vice President for
Academic Affairs
Jane Bowers
Associate Provost and Dean of Research
Anthony Carpi
Vice President for Marketing and
Development
Jayne Rosengarten
Chief Communications Officer
Rama Sudhakar
Director of Research Operations
Daniel Stageman
Director of Sponsored Programs
Susy Cullen
Assistant to the Dean of Research
Sandra Rutherford
Assistant Director of Sponsored Programs
Amrish Sugrim-Singh
Research Compliance Senior Analyst
Lynda Mules
Research Operations Assistant
Laura Lutgen
Grants Administrative Associate
Cherryanne Ward
Grants Administrator
Manelle Pyronneau
Travel and Event Coordinator
Mashika Patterson
Research Compliance Assistant
Anastasia Teper
Art Direction
Laura Gardner
Design
Julie Kanapaux
Writer
Wren Longno
External Funding Profile 2
■ TABLE 1 Grant and Funding Awards to John Jay Faculty
■ FIGURE 1 External Awards by CUNY College
■ Maria Hartwig
■ Research and Evaluation Center (Jeff Butts)
■ Anru Lee
■ FIGURE 2 Grant and Contract Funding by Principal Investigator
Scholarly Productivity 5
■ TABLE 2 Scholarly Productivity for John Jay Faculty
■ FIGURE 3 CUNY-Wide Per Capita Scholarship
■ Jessica Gordon Nembhard
■ Katie Gentile
■ FIGURE 4 Scholarly Productivity by Department
■ Gohar Petrossian
John Jay Research Over Time: Five Years of Growth
and Development 8
■ FIGURE 5 Per Capita Scholarship
■ FIGURE 6 Social Media Engagement
■ FIGURE 7 Grant and Contract Awards to John Jay College PIs
■ FIGURE 8 Internal Awards to John Jay College Researchers and Scholars
OAR Funding 10
■ TABLE 3 OAR Funding of John Jay Faculty
■ Aida Martinez-Gomez
■ Jacoby Carter
■ FIGURE 9 OAR Funding by Department
■ Marie-Helen Maras and Laura Shapiro
Public Scholarship 13
■ John Jay Research Events
■ Fall 2015 Book Talks
■ Spring 2016 Book Talks
■ FIGURE 10 Faculty Media Appearances
■ Second Annual NACOLE Academic Symposium
■ Peter Moskos
■ J. W. Mason
■ FIGURE 11 Faculty and Research Organization Twitter Followers
■ Nathan Lents
Social Media Snapshot 17
■ FIGURE 12 Social Media Following
■ FIGURE 13 Social Media Engagement
Table of Contents
This publication was produced by the Office for the Advancement of Research in collaboration with the Office of Marketing and Development at
John Jay College of Criminal Justice of the City University of New York. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited.
For more information about the scholarly mission of the institution, the projects touched upon in this publication, or the extensive and significant
research produced by College scholars that we could not recognize in this publication, please contact us at oar@jjay.cuny.edu.
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http://www.jjay.cuny.edu/research/
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4. 2
EXTERNAL FUNDING PROFILE
J
ohn Jay’s 2016 external funding portfolio benefited from a significant influx of private
funding, including the Arnold Foundation’s $1.25m in awards for the foundation of
the Research Network on Misdemeanor Justice, led by Psychology Professor Preeti
Chauhan. John Jay’s faculty and staff continued to expand their outreach and foster
productive relationships with city and state agencies, expanding funding from these
sources by over 20%—and becoming one of New York City’s most vital partners for criminal
justice policy research and program evaluation in the process. John Jay continues to hold 4th
place among our sister CUNY schools in terms of external award dollars in FY2016.
TABLE 1 Grant and Funding Awards to John Jay Faculty1
[1] Please note that because (1) submission and award count columns do not account for multi-year awards, (2) grants submitted in Fiscal Year
2015-16 may not be awarded until the following fiscal year, and (3) grants awarded in FY 2015-16 may result from submissions made the previous
year, each of the columns in this table effectively represents a different data stream. See individual column footnotes for further clarity.
[2] Submitted during FY 2015-16
[3] Awarded during FY 2015-16
[4] Total external funds received during FY 2015-16, regardless of submission or award date
5. OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 3
FIGURE 1 FY2016 External Awards (Grants and Contracts) by CUNY College
Maria Hartwig
In the course of a single fervent academic year, Psychology Professor Maria Hartwig has
completed three projects funded by the FBI/High-Value Detainee Interrogation Group (HIG), for
a total of $580K. The HIG, which exists to expedite and improve the interrogation of terrorism
suspects, has funded Dr. Hartwig’s work on detecting deception since its formation by President
Obama in 2009. Each of her recent projects—(1) “Moving forward: Bringing about change in
interrogation practice,” (2) “Validation of the Strategic Use of Evidence technique: The impact
of culture and criminal experience,” and (3) “Implicit influences in investigative interviews:
Expansion and cross-cultural validation”—builds upon Hartwig’s decade of work finding
effective non-coercive approaches to detecting deception. The Strategic Use of Evidence (SUE)
is a proven non-coercive investigative interviewing method rooted in psychological principles.
Its effectiveness, in contrast to more coercive interrogation techniques, is strongly supported by
empirical research. Dr. Hartwig’s hat-trick of 2015-16 HIG-funded research projects dissect the
resistance toward evidence-based interrogation methods like SUE; look at effective interrogation
within the context of the suspect’s cultural and criminal experience; and examine why the widely
accepted cues of deception used by interrogators are not those proven to work.
Research and Evaluation Center (Jeff Butts)
Research and evaluation puts the science behind policy—and an array of New York City and
State agencies regularly seek the expertise of John Jay’s Research and Evaluation Center
(REC), ably directed by Dr. Jeff Butts. Butts’ team of talented analysts usually take on several
evaluations at one time, resulting in an office continually abuzz with the work of assessing and
validating the effectiveness of government policy. Dr. Butts’ roots in juvenile justice help the REC
serve the unique evaluation needs of both the New York City and State Offices of Child Services,
as they work to assess the effectiveness of programs focused on justice-involved fathers and
youth, respectively. The Center’s work extends beyond juvenile justice: with funding from the
New York City Council and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, REC is evaluating the work
of the Cure Violence consortium. The public health project’s goal is to reduce violence in twenty
NYC neighborhoods. The REC team collects and analyzes data from all twenty, plus several
more to serve as comparison groups, in order to evaluate the project’s effectiveness. Butts’
intellectually omnivorous approach to evaluation projects helped lead to $1.3m in funding for the
REC in FY2015-16.
FIGURE 1 FY2016 External Awards (Grants & Contracts) by CUNY College
$0
$15M
$30M
$45M
$60M
CITY
HUNTER
QUEENS
JOHNJAY
LAGUARDIAC.C.
GRADUATECENTER
LEHMAN
BROOKLYN
MEDGAREVERS
HOSTOSC.C.
BARUCH
B.M.C.C.
NYCTECH
YORK
BRONXC.C.
KINGSBOROUGHC.C.
STATENISLAND
QUEENSBOROUGHC.C.
JOURNALISM
GUTTMANC.C.
LAW
$52M
$46M
$26M $22M
$15M $13M $13M $12M
$8M $8M $8M $7M $6M
$
$4M $2M $1M
$6M
$25M
$5M $5M
6. 4
Anru Lee
Anthropology Professor Anru Lee spent 2015 in Taiwan on a Fullbright scholarship, examining
the politics of memory and the feminist movement in post-industrial Taiwan. The Twenty-five
Maiden Ladies Tomb in Kaohsiung contains the remains of women workers who died when a
grossly over-occupied ferry capsized and married men and women were prioritized for rescue.
The 25 drowning victims were unmarried young women on their way to work in a Taiwan
factory. For thirty years the tomb was vandalized and defaced, while Kaohsiung’s feminist
community sought to protect it. Through many years of political pressure, they eventually
succeeded in seeing the tomb refurbished and made a designated memorial site—in the context
of a broader post-industrial makeover of the city as a whole. Professor Lee studied the tragedy
and its aftermath, with a particular focus on its socio-economic meaning relating to marriage,
women’s rights, workers’ rights and spiritual beliefs. Professor Lee’s work explores how history
has shaped the memories of the women workers of Kaohsiung, and how their lives and deaths can
inform the ways that communities approach similar memorials in post-industrial areas of Japan,
Korea and North America.
FIGURE 2 FY2015 Grant and Contract Funding by Principal Investigator, Top 20 (Department)
FIGURE 2 FY2015 Grant and Contract Funding by Principal Investigator, Top 20 (Department)
$0
$2.5M
$5M
$7.5M
KENNEDY,D.(NNSC)
JACOBS,A.(PRI)
CARPI,A.(SCI)
BUTTS,J.(REC)
CHAUHAN,P.(PSY)
HAIRSTON,D.(GPS)
NIEVES,M.(INTL)
YANOS,P.(PSY)
HARTWIGM.(PSY)
TEXEIRA,K.(UBP)
HANDELMAN,S.(CMCJ)
COUTURE,J.(ETS)
LYNN,T.(GPS)
GORDONNEMBHARD,J.(AFR)
MAZZULA,S.(PSY)
NEMEROFF,B(SCI)
GUASTAFERRO,W.(PMGT)
COOK-FRANCIS,L.(SAFF)
CHAMPEIL,E.(SCI)
$5M
$1.8M
$1.3M
$933K $810K $531K $415K $388K $380K $261K $238K $217K $155K $131K $120K $113K
RAUCEO,J.(SCI)
$118K
$10M
$1.3M
$1.1M
$9M
7. OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 5
SCHOLARLY PRODUCTIVITY
J
ohn John Jay Faculty continued to expand their commitment to scholarship in calendar
year 2015, exceeding their record-breaking 2014 productivity by 236 total works. Faculty
achieved major noteworthy increases in the production of journal articles (520, up
93/20%) and the ‘public scholarship’ category of news articles/reviews/commentaries
(259, up 53/30%). John Jay scholars also clocked a significant increase in conference
presentations and invited lectures (838, up 77/9%). Faculty members produced an average of
4.5 works of scholarship over the course of the year, representing a rich and varied intellectual
output. Almost a fifth of faculty received funding from the OAR during AY 2015-16, and this
cohort nearly doubled the college average in every category.
TABLE 2 Scholarly Productivity for John Jay Faculty5
[5] Table Notes: Data reported is for Calendar Years 2014 & 2015, per CUNY reporting requirements. While CUNY divides faculty into ‘Mandatory Reporting’
(full-time faculty) and ‘Optional Reporting’ (lecturers, substitutes, faculty on leave or sabbatical for any part of the calendar year in question, etc.) categories,
we choose here to present only the total of both of these categories. In each cell, first number represents the total number of works by category and faculty type,
while number in parentheses represents either percentage of faculty reporting, or per capita productivity rate, as indicated.
[6] ‘OAR Funded Faculty’ include all faculty receiving funding through formal OAR support programs during the calendar year in question.
[7] Includes conference presentations published as proceedings.
[8] Previously labeled ‘Other.’ Includes art shows curated, perfomances directed/choreographed/produced/dramaturgied, exhibitions at curated shows, music
compositions published, plays produced/performed, short stories and poetry published, and performances (music, dance, theater, etc.).
[9] As calculated using CUNY formulae. Categories counted by CUNY vary from year to year. In 2015, CUNY counted: Books authored, book chapters,
conference presentations published as proceedings, peer reviewed journal articles, exhibits at curated art shows, direction/choreography/dramaturgy/design,
music composition published/performed, plays produced/performed, peer-reviewed technical reports, poetry, and short stories. Bold number in parentheses is
official CUNY per capita rate based on mandatory reporters (see footnote 5 above).
8. 6
FIGURE 3 CUNY-Wide Per Capita Scholarship, 2011-15
2011
0.5 1.51.0 2.0
1st (tie)
1st (tie)
1st
4th(tie)
3rd
2.5
2012
2013
2014
2015
7th
6th
6th
5th7th
8th
3rd
2nd
5th
6th
4th
4th
3rd
QUEENS
CITY
HUNTER
JOHN JAY
BROOKLYN
YORK
LEHMAN
BARUCH
7th
1st
2nd
3rd
4th (tie)
4th (tie)
6th
7th
8th
8th
1st
3rd (tie)
2nd
5th
3rd (tie)
6th
7th8th
FIGURE 3 CUNY-Wide Per Capita Scholarship, 2011-15
8th
Jessica Gordon Nembhard
The successes of collectively-owned black businesses are an understudied phenomenon: until
2014, the last book on the subject was written by W.E.B. Du Bois in 1907. Professor Jessica Gordon
Nembhard’s Collective Courage: A History of African American Cooperative Economic Thought and
Practice has proved a worthy successor, reviving the academic discourse on “cooperative racial
economic development”.
Africana Studies Professor Gordon Nembhard has spent the last year building on this
momentous accomplishment, in part through sabbatical study of worker-owned cooperative
businesses in a Puerto Rican prison. These cooperative organizations transform an otherwise
dehumanizing experience into one of growth and empowerment. Says Gordon, “The evidence
shows that owning cooperative businesses provides [incarcerated individuals] with dignified,
well-paying work, mutual support, and increased social capital. Prisoners find cooperative
ownership transformative.” Gordon Nembhard hopes to bring the model to the United States.
Supported by the Ford Foundation via Howard University’s Center on Race and Wealth, Gordon
Nembhard’s paper “Benefits and Impacts of Cooperatives” highlights their success in creating
measurable community wealth, reducing social isolation and creating employment opportunities.
Gordon Nembhard’s influential scholarship and tireless advocacy led to her being inducted into
the Cooperative Hall of Fame in May 2016.
9. OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 7
Katie Gentile
Interdisciplinary Studies Professor Katie Gentile is a prolific feminist scholar and psychologist,
clocking in with a score of high quality peer-reviewed articles, books, book chapters, and
presentations in 2015. Her book, The Business of Being Made: The Temporalities of Reproductive
Technologies in Psychoanalysis and Culture, is the first to critically analyze assisted reproductive
technologies (ARTs). Gentile conveys the complicated potentials for ARTs, from the ways they
are transforming kinship networks to the ways they create the conditions for re-traumatization
around sexual abuse. Gentile’s research explores the race- and class-based violence implicit in
how American society approaches “fetal personhood,” often urging white and upper/middle
class women to reproduce at all costs through ARTs, while criminalizing and incarcerating
economically disadvantaged women and women of color. Poor pregnant women experience
disproportionate surveillance and prosecution for drug use that would likely go unnoticed if they
were able to afford private care. In addition to Gentile’s publications and research, she is the editor
of a new book series from Routledge called Genders & Sexualities in Minds & Cultures, a co-editor of
the journal Studies in Gender and Sexuality, and on the editorial board of Women’s Studies Quarterly.
FIGURE 4 Calendar Year 2015 Scholarly Productivity by Department (CUNY Metrics)
0
.5
1
1.5
2
2.5
3
3.5
4
4.5
5
AAS
AMU
ANT
CRJ
CTA
ECO
ENG
HIS
ISP
LAS
LIB
LPS
MLL
MTH
PHIL
POL
PSY
PUB
SCI
SFEM
3.7
4.3
1.7
3.0
1.0
0.7 0.8
1.6
1.5
0.6 0.5
1.7 1.8
0.6
1.1 1.1
4
1.1
2.9
SOC
1.3
0.9
FIGURE 4 Calendar Year 2015 Scholarly Productivity by Department (CUNY Metrics)
Gohar Petrossian
With a specialty in the prevention of wildlife crimes, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice Gohar
Petrossian published five separate peer-reviewed articles in 2015 and is first author on three.
Her research interests include conservation criminology, crime prevention, spatial and temporal
patterns of crime, problem-oriented policing and quantitative research methods. Petrossian
studies how illegal, unreported and unregulated (IUU) fishing crimes might be preventable if
opportunities to commit these crimes are reduced. Petrossian analyzes the characteristics of the
ports where illegal fish land and even the characteristics of the fish themselves for clues to the
reasons why these crimes occur—and how to prevent them. A conceptual understanding of these
factors can help authorities craft laws, enact port surveillance and create a monitoring structure
that is both informed and effective. Petrossian’s methodology quantifies data over many factors,
including hundreds of ports and IUU crimes in several dozen countries.
10. 8
FIGURE 5 Per Capita Scholarship, 2010-15
Based on CUNY-wide metrics for measuring scholarly output at its constituent colleges, John Jay
has nearly quadrupled its recorded per capita output since 2010, through both improvements in
reporting and real increases in counted areas of scholarship. See footnote 5 on page 5 for details.
FIGURE 5 Per Capita Scholarship 2010-15
2010
0.5
2011 2012 2013 2014
1
1.5
2
2015
0.5 0.5
1.3
1.2
1.5
1.9
0
FIGURE 6 Social Media Engagement, 2012-16
Engagement—the number of unique interactions with online content—has increased nearly
sevenfold across all platforms since the OAR began our social media project in 2012.
FIGURE 6 Social Media Engagement 2012-16
2012-13
4K
2013-14 2014-15 2015-16
8K
12K
16K
2,274
4,095
10,061
15,350
0
JOHN JAY RESEARCH OVER TIME:
11. OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 9
FIGURE 7 Grant and Contract Awards to John Jay College PIs, 2011-2016
The total annual external funding to Principal Investigators associated with John Jay College rose
from $14.6m in FY2011-12, to $25.4m in FY2015-16—an increase of 73%.
FIGURE 7 Grant and Contract Awards to John Jay PIs, 2011-2016
2011-12
$6.5M
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
$13M
$19.5M
$26M
2015-16
$14.6M
$18.2M
$17M
$23.3M
$25.9M
$0
FIGURE 8 Internal Awards to John Jay College Researchers and Scholars, 2011-2016
The Office for the Advancement of Research instituted its formal competitive funding programs
in AY2012-13, to supplement pre-existing merit-based prizes like the Scholarly Excellence Awards
and discretionary funding. Since doing so, we have increased support for John Jay researchers
and scholars by 157%.
FIGURE 8 Internal Awards to John Jay Researchers and Scholars, 2011-2016
2011-12
$65K
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15
$130K
$195K
$260K
2015-16
$96.9K
$118.7K
$161.2K
$189.1K
$248.9K
$0
FIVE YEARS OF GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT
12. 10
OAR REARCH AND SCHOLARSHIP FUNDING
OAR
maintained its range of 13 targeted funding program
offerings for the 2016 fiscal year, while adding nearly
$50 thousand in total funding for John Jay researchers
and scholars. Programs introduced in 2015 expanded
significantly in terms of both the number of awards given, and the total amount awarded:
the Faculty Scholarship program distributed 16 awards (as opposed to six in 2015) for a total of
over $20 thousand, for projects ranging from Communications and Theater Arts Chair Seth
Baumrin’s Subpoetics initiative devising performances in recent European conflict zones, to
Sociology Professor Lila Kazemian’s long-term study of desistance from crime over the life
course. The record $235 thousand in funding for research and scholarship represents a direct
reinvestment of monies brought in through external grants and contracts into further research
and scholarship from John Jay’s world class faculty.
TABLE 3 OAR Funding of John Jay Faculty
13. OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 11
Aida Martinez-Gomez
By day, Assistant Professor Aida Martinez-Gomez teaches Professional Translation in John Jay’s
Modern Language and Literature Department. Her research—awarded internal OAR funding—
focuses on non-professional interpreters who were drawn organically into interpreting as young
children, often for parents or other family members in a community setting. Martinez-Gomez
also researches the emerging use of community translation in prison settings where inmates
translate for one another. She compares the results of 19 interviews with non-professional
interpreters in correctional facilities to the best practices, social behaviors, patterns and expected
standards of professional translation. Community translation in prisons is largely unexamined
and unregulated, and Martinez-Gomez’s work is the first to examine the effectiveness of these
community interpreters. Internally-funded travel brought Professor Martinez-Gomez and her
book Interpreting in prison settings: An international overview to Switzerland last Spring for the
Third International Conference on Non-Professional Interpreting and Translation (NPIT3).
While interpreting in prison settings is still a field in the making, in need of both professional
practice and scholarly research, Martinez-Gomez sees a slow shift toward professionalization to
which she hopes her work will contribute.
Jacoby Carter
Assistant Professor of Philosophy Jacoby Carter returns to John Jay College in the Fall of 2016
from a year at Indiana’s Purdue University, as the Alain LeRoy Locke Visiting Professor. Carter,
who won Enhanced Travel Funding to support his participation in lectures related to the Locke
Professorship, is a specialist in Africana philosophy and the philosophy of race—both fields of
which the prolific Locke is considered a founding father. As a ‘pragmatist philosopher’, Locke
was interested in the practical consequences of ideas, ideologies, and actions—the premise that
ideas that work should be accepted, and those that don’t rejected—an interest that Professor
Carter shares. Carter’s scholarly work in 2015 revolved around the critical interpretation of a
series of little-known lectures given by Locke in 1916-17 entitled “Race Context and International
Relations.” He contends that the ideas Locke expressed in the series were far ahead of their time,
particularly in their presentation of “an integrated view of American cultures that incorporates
various racial and ethnic elements into a pluralistic and cosmopolitan democratic culture.”
14. 12
Marie-Helen Maras and Lauren Shapiro
The collaborative research of Associate Professors Lauren R. Shapiro and Marie-Helen Maras
received two OAR Seed Funding grants in 2015-16, for pilot investigations in support of larger
project proposals to external funders. Their first, “Women’s radicalization to terrorism: An
examination of US cases”, focuses on how American girls and women are seduced by ISIS/
ISIL into sympathizing and providing material support to the terrorists’ cause. Interviews with
security policy professionals explored the narratives used by ISIS/ISIL terrorists to recruit
women to terrorism, what measures are being taken, and what interventions are needed to deal
with the radicalization of women in the U.S. The Program on Extremism at George Washington
University’s Center for Cyber and Homeland Security is already using Professors Shapiro and
Maras’ pilot analysis to modify and enhance their current assessment of how American women
become radicalized. Using a similar approach to problem-solving security policy, the two are
also conducting OAR-funded pilot research on shoplifting. The work aims to engage retail
owners, managers, and security guards on the role that stereotypes play in their targeting of
potential shoplifters and on their decisions for involving the criminal justice system in cases
of suspected shoplifting.
Marie-Helen Maras
Lauren Shapiro
FIGURE 9 Fiscal Year 2016 OAR Funding by Department
FIGURE 9 Fiscal Year 2016 OAR Funding by Department
0
AAS
AMU
ANT
CRJ
CTA
ECO
ENG
HIS
ISP
LAS
LIB
LPS
MLL
MTH
PHIL
POL
PRI
PSY
PUB
SCI
SFEM
SOC
$6,500
$0
$10K
$2,842
$20K
$30K
$40K
$50K
$26,897
$1,500
CMCJ
$7,700
$16,815
$3,000
$43,450
$9,500
$1,500 $2,110
$22,937
$3,920
$1,000 $1,800
$6,300
$5,287
$26,540
$11,429
$11,293
$3,457
$30,512
15. OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 13
PUBLIC SCHOLARSHIP PROFILE
D
uring the 2015-16 Academic Year, the Office for the Advancement of Research sought
out new ways to track, promote, and assess the impact of faculty scholarship, while
maintaining a vibrant calendar of events and social media presence. Digital platforms
multiply daily, along with the means to measure their impact, and academics are
gradually beginning to incorporate the tools these platforms present them with into their scholarly
profiles—while at the same time, academic research and scholarship is being suddenly and
comprehensively incorporated into digital platforms. Our task as a research development office
is to support scholars in adopting the digital tools that can help them, and educating them about
the implications of their work being swept up in systems and discourses beyond their control.
Both new and traditional measures of scholarly impact are presented below, along with details
of our continued efforts to engage directly with the many communities interested in the work of
John Jay College researchers and scholars. In addition, we have added new content to our online
footprint, found new ways to enhance the College’s institutional research profile, and set up our
own platforms for engaging John Jay scholars in ongoing public discourse.
John Jay Research Events
The OAR’s Book Talk series entered its 5th year in the 2015-16 Academic Year, and is firmly
established as the College’s premiere venue for public discussion of cutting edge scholarship and
contemporary issues. In addition to the six talks in the series, the OAR also hosted the Second
Annual NACOLE (National Association for Civilian Oversight of Law Enforcement) Academic
Symposium in April 2016, bringing to the college 250 of the nation’s top oversight professionals
for a day-long presentation and discussion of the latest research in the field. OAR engaged some
900 members of the John Jay community over seven public events.
LUCIA TRIMBUR
John Jay Sociology
Come Out Swinging: The Changing
World of Boxing in Gleason’s Gym
—Oct. 13, 2015
FALL 2015 BOOK TALKS
JESSICA GORDON NEMBHARD
John Jay Africana Studies
Collective Courage: A History of African
American Cooperative Economic
Thought and Practice—Oct 27 2015
RADLEY BALKO
Washington Post
Rise of the Warrior Cop:
The Militarization of America’s
Police Forces—Nov. 5, 2015
16. 14
Second Annual NACOLE Academic Symposium
April 22nd, 2016
John Jay College collaborated with the National Association for Civilian Oversight
of Law Enforcement (NACOLE) to present a daylong symposium featuring the
best academic research on police accountability and legitimacy to an audience
of 250 oversight professionals, scholars, law enforcement leaders and advocates.
Researchers from John Jay, SUNY Albany, NYU, The University of Chicago,
Michigan State, and other renowned institutions presented empirical findings
from their latest studies. These findings have since been compiled as peer-
reviewed papers into a special issue of the Sage journal Criminal Justice Policy
Review, due for publication in Spring of 2017.
JOE DOMANICK
John Jay Center on Media,
Crime and Justice
Blue: The LAPD and the Battle to
Redeem American Policing
—Feb. 24, 2016
DIANA R. GORDON
CUNY Grad Center, Emeritus
Village of Immigrants: Latinos in
an Emerging America
—Mar. 8, 2016
ARTHUR BROWNE
NY Daily News
One Righteous Man: Samuel
Battle and the Shattering of
the Color Line in New York
—Mar. 29, 2016
SPRING 2016 BOOK TALKS
17. OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 15
FIGURE 10 AY2015-16 Faculty Media Appearances, Top 10 (Department)
0
5
10
15
O'DONNELL,E.(LPS)
HABERFELD,M.(LPS)
TRAVIS,J.(PRES)
KENNEDY,D.(NNSC)
MOSKOS,P.(LPS)
MASON,JW.(ECON)
BROWN,H.(PMGT)
HORN,M.(LPS)
BROWNE-MARSHALL,G.(LPS)
KOBILINSKY,L.(SCI)
19 18 17
12 12 11 11
20
14 13
2125
FIGURE 10 AY2015-16 Faculty Media Appearances, Top 10 (Department)
Peter Moskos
Renaissance scholar and Associate Professor of Law, Police Science and Criminal Justice
Administration Peter Moskos provides much-needed public dialogue between the perspectives
of law enforcement professionals and criminal justice academics on his blog Cop in the Hood.
He keeps his public scholarship fresh with almost daily commentary on the news and concerns
that surround contemporary policing, engaging constantly with the public on platforms
that include his blog, Twitter, and a steady stream of appearances, quotes, interviews, and
commentaries in popular media. Moskos’s first book, Cop in the Hood, won the 2008 PROSE
Award for Best Book in Sociology, calls upon his prior experience as a Baltimore beat cop
and along with his follow-ups In Defense of Flogging and Greek Americans are written for a
general audience. Among the most creditworthy of his achievements, Moskos has a knack for
delivering information in a principled, clear and concise manner. As stated in the introduction
to his blog—and as his comment section clearly demonstrates—“Moskos studies people the old-
fashioned way: He talks to them.”
J.W. Mason
As a Fellow at the Roosevelt Institute, Assistant Professor of Economics J. W. Mason celebrated
when Hillary Clinton’s opening campaign speech echoed the Institute’s plan to overhaul the
rules of the U.S. economy. Mason was part of Roosevelt’s Financialization Project, researching
the history and political economy of credit and debt, macroeconomics in the 20th century,
and the changing roles of financial markets in business investment. As part of the Roosevelt
Institute’s Rewriting the Rules agenda, Mason writes a series of question and answers to address
the critics of short-terminism, which he describes as “the single-minded focus on shareholder
returns that discourages long-term investment.” Mason worked with Wisconsin Senator
Tammy Baldwin to develop the proposed “Brokaw Act” to tighten regulation of activist hedge
funds, and continues to speak with the Joint Economic Committee of Congress on the proposed
legislation. His publications on corporate governance have caught the attention of policymakers,
and his work on trade policy was recently referenced in both the New York Times and Washington
Post. Mason blogs regularly at The Slack Wire (jwmason.org/the-slack-wire), where his entries
on monetary policy, labor force participation, and other macroeconomic subjects generates lively
discussion among fellow economists and pundits alike.
18. 16
Nathan Lents
Professor of Molecular Biology and Director of the Honors College, Nathan Lents’ Human
Evolution Blog unravels a string of mysteries solved by science that are bound to capture many
interests: What happens to the brain on a molecular level when the body is fighting a virus?
Why do we wince when we are in pain? Other entries call upon Lents’ expertise as a forensic
scientist, such as “How does the community of bacteria and other microbes that live in and
on us change when we die?” Lents’ work as a scientist and as an educator extends beyond the
confines of the lab and the classroom. Summer of 2016 found Lents traveling the West Coast on a
promotional tour for his newest book, Not So Different: Finding Human Nature in Animals. Written
with a diverse general audience in mind, the book explores the science behind Lents’ contention
“that both humans and chimpanzees feel love, the only difference is that humans write sonnets
about it. I think that both humans and dolphins practice fair play, but only humans enact laws
to govern it. I think that both humans and elephants experience grief but only humans seek
professional counseling to cope with it.”
FIGURE 11 AY2015-16 Faculty and Research Organization Twitter Followers, Top 10 (Departmen
0
5K
10K
15K
BILICI,M.(SOC)
CRIMEREPORT(CMCJ)
PRISONERREENTRY(PRI)
TRAVIS,J.(PRES)
RESEARCH&EVALUATION(REC)
SAFECOMMUNITIES(NNSC)
KENNEDY,D.(NNSC)
NADAL,K.(PSY)
JOHNJAYRESEARCH(OAR)
BROWN,H.(PMGT)
12,100
4,830
3,312
2,034 1,933 1,776 1,600
20K
2,206 2,092
47,700
FIGURE 11 AY2015-16 Faculty and Research Organization Twitter Followers, Top 10 (Department)
19. SOCIAL MEDIA SNAPSHOT
S
ince 2012, the Office for the Advancement of Research has been carefully curating John
Jay College’s institutional profile for research and scholarship on a growing range of
social media platforms. These platforms provide both an outlet to present the work
of John Jay scholars to the broadest possible external audience, and a means to draw
scholars and other members of the John Jay community into a vibrant dialogue on the issues that
are important to us, and our mutual accomplishments. The data below provide a sense of how
this online community has expanded in the four years since its inception, and our engagement
with its members during that time.
FIGURE 12 Social Media Following
0
250
2013 2014 2015
500
750
1,000
TWITTER FOLLOWERS
FACEBOOK FOLLOWERS
1,250
1,500
1,750
2,000
2016
+141%
+60%
+96%+218%
+6%
+99%
FIGURE 12 Social Media Following
FIGURE 13 Social Media Engagement
FIGURE 13 Social Media Engagement
0
750
2013 2014 2015
1,500
2,250
3,000
TWITTER ENGAGEMENT
FACEBOOK ENGAGEMENT
3,750
4,500
5,250
6,000
2016
YOUTUBE VIEWS
+85%
+17%
+12%
+85%
+425%
+168%
-27%
+74%
6,750
OAR Annual Report • 2016 | 17