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Beshara Doumani
(Islamic law in the Arab Middle East)
is an associate professor with the Department of History at UC Berkeley,
where he teaches courses on the modern Middle East. His research focuses
on the social and cultural history of the Arab East during the late Ottoman
period (18th and 19th centuries). He is currently working on history of
family life in Palestine and Lebanon, especially issues of women, property,
and praxis of Islamic law.
Email: bdoumani@socrates.berkeley.edu
Hallie Fader
(ORIAS)
is a summer research assistant at ORIAS and a first year law student at
Harvard Law School. She studied European Intellectual History at Brown
University and has worked as a research assistant on European-American
relations at the Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS),
a Washington foreign policy think tank.
Email: hafader@yahoo.com
Louis Freedberg
(Truth and reconciliation in South Africa)
is a senior writer and columnist with the San Francisco Chronicle.
Email: lfreedberg@sfchronicle.com
Mary Melissa Grafflin
(Confucian law and women's rights in Korea)
recently retired from teaching history at Phillip and Sala Burton High
School in San Francisco.
Judy Gruzynski
(Classroom workshop on Justinian law)
is a seventh-grade teacher at Mill Valley Middle School, teaching two
and a half social studies/language arts core classes, journalism, and
World Affairs Challenge. She has taught in Mill Valley for thirteen years
with a total of twenty-five teaching years in California. Judy is a regular
ORIAS participant.
Email: jgruszyn@marin.k12.ca.us
Jeffrey Hadler
(Customary law and the power of women in Indonesia)
is an assistant professor in the Department of South and Southeast Asian
Studies at UC Berkeley, where he teaches about the history and culture
of Southeast Asia. His doctoral dissertation is an ethnographic history
of a Sumatran community in the 19th and early 20th centuries that is the
world's largest matrilineal Muslim society. His current research includes
a history of Jews in the Malay world and an analysis of anti-Semitism
and violence in modern Indonesia.
Email: hadler@socrates.berkeley.edu
John Hayes
(Code of Hammurapi)
is a lecturer in Arabic and Semitic linguistics at UC Berkeley, where
he teaches courses on the contemporary Middle East and on Islam. He is
a specialist in the linguistic history of the Ancient Near East and the
author of A Manual of Sumerian Grammar and Texts (Lancaster, CA: Undena
Publications, 2000).
Email: jlhayes@uclink.berkeley.edu
Mujtaba Hussain
(Negotiating peace in Kashmir)
is an international human rights attorney and student at Boalt Hall School
of Law.
Email: mujtaba@justice.com
Hildi Kang
(Confucian law and women's rights in Korea)
is a research associate at the Center for Korean Studies, UC Berkeley.
Email: angswh@trivalley.com
Joan Kelley-Williams
(ICRC curriculum resources)
directs international programs for the local chapter of the American Red
Cross. She is coordinating the "Exploring Humanitarian Law"
curriculum program in this region. Email: joan.kelley-williams@travis.af.mil
Paul M. Lubeck
(Muslim debates about human and gender rights)
is a professor of sociology and the director of the Center for Global,
International and Regional Studies at UC Santa Cruz. He has conducted
research in Nigeria, Niger, Malaysia and Egypt. He was introduced to Muslim
societies as a Peace Corps volunteer in Niger, where he organizing rural
cooperatives among Muslim peasants.
Email: lubec@cats.ucsc.edu
Shahla Maghzi
Ali (Traditional and contemporary family law in China)
is a Ph.D./J.D. student in Jurisprudence and Social Policy at UC Berkeley's
Boalt Hall School of Law. She received her B.A. in international relations
and Chinese language in 1998 from Stanford University and her M.A. in
consultation and conflict resolution from Landegg University. She has
lived and worked in China, Israel, Siberia, and the United States.
Email: smaghzi@berkeley.edu
Rita Maran
(Human rights)
is a lecturer in international human rights with Peace and Conflict Studies
at UC Berkeley. She is also president of the East Bay Chapter and vice
president of the Northern California Division of the United Nations Association-USA.
She is the author of Torture: The Role of Ideology in the French Algerian
War (New York: Praeger Publishers, 1989) and has served as a human rights
analyst for the OSCE in Bosnia and Kosovo.
Email: ritam@uclink4.berkeley.edu
Laurent Mayali
(Comparative law and the Western tradition)
is the Lloyd M. Robbins Professor of Law, director of the Comparative
Legal Studies Program, and director of the Robbins Religious and Civil
Law Collection at the Boalt Hall School of Law at UC Berkeley. In 1997,
he was elected to a chair in "Roman Christianity and sources of modern
Law" at the Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes, at the Sorbonne in
Paris.
Email: mayalil@law.berkeley.edu
Trevor Nakagawa
(General Yamashita and the theory of command responsibility)
is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Political Science at UC Berkeley.
Email: trevpup@berkeley.edu
Cam Nguyen (Literature
and censorship in Vietnam)
is a Ph.D. candidate in the Group of Asian Studies and teaches Vietnamese
language and literature at UC Berkeley. Her recent publications include
"Dumb Luck: A Novel by Vu Trong Phung," translator (University
of Michigan Press, 2003); "Crossing the River: Short Fiction by Nguyen
Huy Thiep," co-editor and translator (Consortium, 2002); and "Two
Cakes Fit for a King: Folktales from Vietnam," compiler, editor and
translator (University of Hawaii Press, 2003).
Email: nguyennguyetcam1@yahoo.com
Raka Ray
(Gender issues in South Asia)
is an associate professor of sociology and South and Southeast Asia studies
and is chair of the Center for South Asia Studies at UC Berkeley. Her
areas of specialization are gender and feminist theory, social movements,
and relations between dominant and subaltern groups in India. She is also
an editor of Feminist Studies and a member of the Bay Area-based India
Relief and Education Fund.
Email: rakaray@berkeley.edu
Jeffrey Riegel
(Legalism in Ancient China)
is a professor in the Department of East Asian Languages and Cultures
at UC Berkeley, where he specializes in ancient Chinese literature and
thought. He is also chair of Berkeley's Center for Chinese Studies. Among
his many publications is The Annals of Lu Buwei (Stanford University Press,
2001), which he co-authored.
Email: riegel@berkeley.edu
Alex M. Saragoza (Aztec rule)
is a professor in the Department of Ethnic Studies at UC Berkeley. He
has published widely on Mexican economic and social history and is currently
at work on a book on the history of tourism in Mexico from the 1930s to
1970s, including the uses of the indigenous cultural past as a source
of the Mexican imaginary.
Email: alexsara@uclink.berkeley.edu
Emily Shaw (International Criminal Tribunal for the Former
Yugoslavia)
is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Political Science at UC Berkeley.
Her work focuses on political psychology and international relations.
Email: e_shaw@berkeley.edu
Rachel Shigekane
(International human rights)
is the senior program officer of the Human Rights Center and a lecturer
in Peace and Conflict Studies at UC Berkeley.
Email: rshig@uclink.berkeley.edu
Rabbi Yair Silverman
(Jewish law)
is the spiritual leader of Congregation Beth Israel in Berkeley as well
as a member of the international Jewish discourse project at the American
Association for the Advancement of Science. Ordained by the Rabbi Isaac
Elchanan Theological Seminary of Yeshiva University, he also holds a Bachelors
in Philosophy and Masters in Jewish Philosophy from Yeshiva University.
Email: rabbi@beth-israel.berkeley.ca.us
Alexander von Rospatt
(Hindu caste system)
is a professor of Buddhist studies with the Department of South and Southeast
Asian Studies at UC Berkeley. He specializes in the doctrinal history
of Indian Buddhism and in Newar Buddhism, the only Indic Mahayana tradition
that continues to persist in its original South Asian setting (in the
Kathmandu Valley) right to the present.
Email: rospatt@socrates.berkeley.edu
David Wolff
(GULAG)
is a senior research scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center
for Scholars in Washington, DC. He is also a visiting research associate
of ISEEES and author of To the Harbin Station (Stanford, 1999) and Le
KGB et les nationalismes baltes (Editions Belin, 2004 forthcoming).
Email: urufu@usa.net
Darren Zook
(Justice and violence in South Asia)
is a lecturer with the Department of Political Science at UC Berkeley.
His research interests include human rights, comparative Asian politics,
international law, and the proliferation of weapons of mass destruction.
He is currently at work on a book-length manuscript on the legal and political
dimensions of decolonization and its legacy for global politics.
Email: dczook@socrates.berkeley.edu
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