A committee of theologians and biblical
scholars directs the project from Minnesota.
Not exact matches
Over the course of his 25 - year career, Mattox has: * written numerous articles for The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, USA TODAY, and other major publications; * spoken at educational conferences in Geneva, Prague, Rome, and Vatican City; * led writing workshops at Duke, Vanderbilt, the University of Virginia, and other major universities; * served as a speechwriter for several Members of Congress in Washington, D.C.; *
directed a documentary film and a number of other media
projects, including a public service ad campaign that ran in Rolling Stone; and * spearheaded a number of quantitative and qualitative research
projects, working closely with polling firms, focus group organizers, and «think tank»
scholars.
He also
directed Project Forward Leap, a nonprofit, academic enrichment program for urban, middle - school
scholars in Philadelphia, Harrisburg, and Lancaster Pennsylvania.
Italian architect Ippolito Pestellini Laparelli, partner at OMA working on preservation, scenography and curation, is both leading OMA Urban Studies, as well as the team of creative mediators, which includes the Swiss contemporary art curator Mirjam Varadinis, who works in Kunsthaus Zurich and was co-curator of TRACK, a large scale city - wide international exhibition in the tradition of «Chambres d'amis» in Ghent, Belgium; Spanish architect, artist and
scholar based in New York and Madrid, Andrés Jaque, the founder of the Office of Political Innovation, working on the intersection of research, politics and design; and Dutch filmmaker and journalist Bregtje van der Haak, who has been
directing international documentaries and transmedia
projects on long - term social change with a special focus on urbanisation and technological culture.
Dr. Judith Kleinfeld is professor of psychology at the University of Alaska and
directs the Boys
Project, an international consortium of
scholars concerned with the issues affecting boys and young men.