An FYI for all ECOFEM-ers!
Stefanie Rixecker
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Date sent: 22 Sep 1994 12:27:42 +1000
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From: Andrew Dragun <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Grawemeyer Award
To: Resource & Environmental Economics List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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Date: Wed, 21 Sep 1994 17:42:12 -0400 (EDT)
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From: Rodger Payne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
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UNIVERSITY OF LOUISVILLE
GRAWEMEYER AWARD
for Ideas Improving World Order 1995
______________________________________________________________________________
International The University of Louisville is pleased to announce the
Competition eighth annual competition for the best idea promoting
improved relations between nations published or presented
from July 1990 to August 1995. The University is able to
provide the award as a result of the creative generosity of
and well articulated may have an individual author or
author(s), or may be the product of an institution or
world. The award will be one hundred fifty thousand dollars
($150,000).
Purpose The purpose of the award is to stimulate the recognition,
dissemination and critical analysis of outstanding proposals
for improving relations among nations. Submissions may
address a wide range of international concerns including
foreign policy and its formation, the conduct of
international relations, global economic issues,
international trade and investment, resolving regional
conflicts, addressing ethnic and racial disputes, halting
the proliferation of destructive technologies, international
cooperation in environmental protection and other global
issues, international law and organization, any combination
least incrementally lead to a more just and peaceful
international order. Submissions will be judged according
to originality, feasibility and potential impact.
Administration 1. The University Committee overseeing the award invites
nominations from throughout the world by individual
political scientists expert in the area, by professional
associations of political scientists or related
disciplines in international relations, by university
presidents or by publishers and editors of journals and
books in political science and international affairs.
Self nominations will not be considered.
2. Each nomination letter must be submitted in English and
be accompanied by a nomination form.* The nominator must
set out briefly the significance of the nomination and
why it is presumed worthy of the award. See Number 5
below for a more complete description of what is to be
only in printed books and articles in scholarly or
distinguished journals but also in public speeches,
"white papers," or other widely and publicly disseminated
forms so long as they first appeared in the time frame
indicated above. If the nominator does not submit four
copies of the publication, the nominee or his/her
publisher will be asked to submit them. When the four
copies are received, the review process will begin.
3. Following a rigorous screening process, three finalists
will be recommended to the University of Louisville
Grawemeyer Award Committee. This committee, consisting
of the President of the University, the Dean of Arts and
Sciences, the chair of the Department of Political
Science and four persons named by the President, will
select the winning submission for the award. Upon
recommendation by the President of the University, the
Board of Trustees of the University will grant the award.
4. Acceptance of the award will require personal delivery of
a public address setting out and developing the winning
5. The nominator, or the nominee, must submit all materials
in four typed or printed copies and these submissions
shall include:
written text or transcript) including all standard
bibliographic citations and copyright citations.
(Nominations not in English must be accompanied by an
English summary or abstract and a translation of the
most essential parts.)
product of more than one or two authors.
c. A completed nomination form.
d. Acknowledgment that one copy of all materials
submitted will become a part of the permanent
University Archives.
e. In general, solicited letters of support are not very
helpful. However, other materials such as book
reviews and newspaper articles may be submitted as
supportive material.
6. All nominations must reach the University of Louisville
by October 15, 1994.
7. *Completed nominations and requests for nomination forms
or further information should be sent to:
University of Louisville
Grawemeyer Committee
Department of Political Science
University of Louisville
Louisville, KY 40292
U.S.A.
Phone: (502) 852-6831
FAX: (502) 852-7923
8. The winner of the eighth (1995) University of Louisville
Grawemeyer Award for Ideas Improving World Order will be
publicly announced in the Spring of 1995. The public
at the University in the Fall of 1995, the time and place
set by the University.
9. The prize will be paid in five annual installments of
thirty thousand dollars ($30,000.00).
A special award is expected to be announced for 1994 later
this fall.
The University of Louisville is pleased to have as its sixth
(1993) winner of the Award, God's Peoples: Covenant and Land
in South Africa, Israel, and Ulster by Donald Harman
Akenson, published by Cornell University Press. Past
winners have been For the Common Good by Herman E. Daly and
John B. Cobb, Jr., published by Beacon Press and The Third
Wave by Samuel P. Huntington, published by University of
Oklahoma Press (co-winners for 1992); Our Common Future, a
work of the United Nations Commission on Environment and
Development, chaired by Norway's Prime Minister, Gro Harlem
Brundtland, published by Oxford University Press (1991); The
Meaning of the Nuclear Revolution: Statecraft and the
Prospect of Armageddon by Robert Jervis, published by
Cornell University Press (1990); After Hegemony by Robert
Keohane, published by Princeton University Press (1989); and
Thinking in Time by Richard Neustadt and Ernest May,
published by Free Press (1988).