Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College | The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs

Georgia Tech Ivan Allen College The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs

The Latest News

  • Professor Margaret E. Kosal
    Kosal briefs International Arms Control and Disarmament Organization

    The Hague, The Netherlands (November 4, 2009) — Prof Kosal delivers brief on nanotechnology and chemical weapons agents at the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons in The Hague, The Netherlands on November 9th.

  • POSSE - Call for Applications
    Invitation for Program on Strategic Stability Evaluation (POSSE)

    Center for International Stategy, Technology, and Policy (CISTP) (October 19, 2009) — Professor Adam N. Stulberg of the Center for International Strategy, Technology & Policy at Georgia Tech and Professor William C. Potter of the James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies (CNS) at the Monterey Institute of International Studies invite applications to participate in the newly formed Program on Strategic Stability Evaluation (POSSE). This joint initiative, generously supported by the Carnegie Corporation of New York (CCNY), seeks to promote international scholarship on issues of strategic stability under deeply reduced or eliminated nuclear arsenals. The objectives of the program are to: a) forge a global network of young scholars on strategic stability; b) increase interaction both between members of the network and between the network and policy practitioners; c) fill knowledge and methodological gaps concerning analysis of strategic stability; and d) identify the means to advance and sustain nuclear arms reductions and disarmament under changing strategic landscapes.

  • ........
    A Global View of Science and Innovation Policy

    Atlanta (October 12, 2009) — The Obama administration’s emphasis on research-based policy-making and human resources for science and engineering gives new import in the U.S. to the type of dialog that unfolded during the Atlanta Conference on Science and Innovation Policy Oct 2-3.

  • Atlanta, Georgia
    High Tech Lessons From Atlanta

    Atlanta (October 9, 2009) — Why do Silicon Valley and Boston continue to thrive as high tech industry hubs while other promising areas stagnate? It’s a question long debated by researchers, but new findings by Dan Breznitz of the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs and School of Public Policy, identify localized business connections and funding as imperatives. In a case study focusing on Atlanta, Breznitz highlights critical changes needed for that city and provides a roadmap for other regions looking to grow high tech industry.

  • Professor Margaret E. Kosal
    Prof Kosal presents papers at Science & Innovation Policy Conference

    Atlanta Conference on Science and Innovation Policy (October 7, 2009) — Professor Margaret E. Kosal presented two papers at the Atlanta Conference on Science and Innovation Policy (Oct 2-3, 2009). Both papers presented were co-authored by INTA Students.

    (1) "Bioterrorism Deterrence: the Role of Public Health in Security" by Margaret E. Kosal, Ana Terron, and Katherine Lange.

    (2) "Bionanoechnology and Iran" by Margaret E. Kosal and Nikita Basandra.

    Ana Terron and Katherine Lange are both International Affairs Modern Language (IAML) undergrads. Nikita Basandra is Biomedical Engineering undergrad.

  • Major General Robert E. Livingston, Jr.
    Major General Robert E. Livingston addresses INTA Graduate Seminar

    Sam Nunn School of Inernational Affairs (October 7, 2009) — Major General Robert E. Livingston, Jr., Director of the J5 Coalition Coordination Center, United States Central Command, MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, addresses Professor Margaret E. Kosal's graduate seminar on Counterinsurgency and Small Wars on Wednesday, October 7.

  • Professor Margaret E. Kosal
    Kosal speaks on "Bionanotechnology and Security: Is Small Scary?"

    Singapore (September 14, 2009) — Professor Margaret E. Kosal is an invited speaker at the International Conference on Emerging and Disruptive Technologies (14-15 September 2009) in Singapore. Her presentation is "Bionanotechnology and Security: Is Small Scary?"

  • Growth of Ivan Allen College 2002-2009
    Ivan Allen College Benchmarks for a New Decade of Growth

    Atlanta (September 10, 2009) — The Ivan Allen College occupies a unique and pivotal role at Georgia Tech, the result of a decade of work under the outstanding leadership of former Dean Sue V. Rosser. We established a new national model for liberal arts research and curriculum – one that dissolves the boundaries that traditionally separate fields of study, that integrates the analytical and qualitative and the humanistic and technological/scientific, and that places us at the center of the future of this great institution.

  • The Daisy Alliance
    Daisy Alliance Student Scholarship/Essay Contest

    Atlanta (September 1, 2009) — The Daisy Alliance is once again offering several scholarships ($1000, $500 and $250) based on an Essay Contest on the topic of "The Role of NATO in the 21st Century".

  • Professor Margaret E. Kosal
    Prof Kosal participates in DC Colloquia on Biodefense Policy Workforce

    Atlanta (August 26, 2009) — Professor Margaret Kosal participated in a by-invitation-only colloquia on August 10 on the future needs of the US Government and nation on education of the biodefense policy workforce. Experts in public policy and biodefense policy from academia, government, and the private sector were brought together to review current educational and training programs, identify challenges, and provide recommendations to address those challenges.

  • Margaret E. Kosal
    Kosal Book Informs Debate on Security Implications of Nanotechnology

    Atlanta (August 12, 2009) — The pursuit of the minutely small – nanotechnology – is thriving in academia, in the private sector, and in global state science and technology programs. In her new book, Nanotechnology for Chemical and Biological Defense (Springer 2009), Margaret E. Kosal (Assistant Professor, Sam Nunn of International Affairs) focuses on the security implications of nanotechnology and emerging science.

  • Iran Expert Speaks at The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs

    The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs (August 11, 2009) — Iran Expert Yehuda Yaakov, Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs, meets with faculty and students at The Sam Nunn School of International Affairs to discuss "Iran Nuclear Ambitions & Political Unrest".

  • Sy Goodman
    Goodman Announces $1.25M NSF Grant for Scholarships

    Atlanta (July 15, 2009) — Seymour (Sy) Goodman, Professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs, Ivan Allen College, and the College of Computing was awarded a $1.25 million grant from the National Science Foundation to support scholarships for students pursuing degrees and research in cyber security.

  • Sue V. Rosser
    Rosser Recognized for Decade of Distinguished Service

    Atlanta (July 15, 2009) — Departing Ivan Allen College Dean Sue Rosser has been appointed Professor Emerita in the School of Public Policy. The appointment was made by Georgia Tech administration, in accord with the recommendation of faculty, in recognition of Rosser’s distinguished service to the Institute.

  • Professor Seymour (Sy) Goodman
    Sy Goodman delivers Warnings of Cyber Threats in Hill Testimony

    Washington, DC (July 14, 2009) — Professor Seymour (Sy) Goodman provides testimony and questions for the record before the Subcommittee on Research and Science Education, House Committee on Science and Technology, Washington, DC.

  • Dr. Sue V. Rosser
    Dean Rosser Leads Research on Retaining Women

    Atlanta (November 10, 2008) — Ivan Allen Dean Sue V. Rosser is at the mid-point of a three-year research initiative investigating ways to retain women and underrepresented minority students as engineering majors. In a recently published article in On Campus with Women, Rosser explains the problem and the curricular solutions that are being explored.

  • Ivan Allen College
    IAC Enrollment Growth Outpaces Institute

    Atlanta (October 16, 2008) — The Ivan Allen College experienced its largest ever enrollment this fall with 963 undergraduate and 283 graduate students matriculating in IAC majors. This is a continuation of the rapid growth the college has experenced during the past six years. From 2002 to 2008, undergraduate and graduate enrollment increased 33%. This surpasses the 18% increase in enrollment for the Institute as a whole.