recipients of Faculty Support Grants for the February cycle
March 13th, 2013
The following list includes faculty grants only. Graduate student grants are now handled exclusively by Dr. Amr Shaarawi, Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies. Please contact Dr. Shaarawi’s office for news about the status of applications for Graduate Student Grants.
In some cases, adjustments have been made to the requested budgets; please do not assume that you have received the full amount requested.
My office will process the checks for the following grants as quickly as we can, but please allow some time for this to happen, since there is a very heavy workload for my assistant (Nancy Wadie) once the grant decisions are made. If you have not yet provided a letter of acceptance from the conference for which you have received a grant, please note that no check will be issued until we receive such a letter.
If you see any typographical or other errors, or if you believe yourself to be wrongly missing from this list, please contact me immediately at gharman@aucegypt.edu.
CONFERENCE GRANTS
BUS (School of Business)
*Ahmed Abdel-Meguid (ACCT). Paris, France. May 2013.
*Neveen Ahmed (MGMT). New York, USA. May 2013.
*Mohamad Al-Ississ (ECON). Stanford, CA, USA. April 2013.
*Nizar Becheikh (MGMT). Porto Alegre, Brazil. April 2013.
*Mohammed Bouaddi (ECON). Montreal, Canada. April 2013.
*Mohammed Bouaddi (ECON). Montreal, Canada. May-June 2013.
*Hala El-Ramly (ECON). Granada, Spain. June 2013.
*Abeer El-Shennawy (ECON). Prague, Czech Republic. July 2013.
*Steven Formaneck (MGMT). Las Vegas, USA. March 2013.
*Steven Formaneck (MGMT). Paris, France. June 2013.
*Mohamed Hegazy (ACCT). Istanbul, Turkey. May 2013.
*Pierre Rostan (MGMT). Istanbul, Turkey. May 2013.
*Samir Youssef (MGMT). London, UK. June 2013.
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Hamid Ali (PPAD). Stockholm, Sweden. June 2013.
*Hussein Amin (JRMC). Las Vegas, USA. April 2013.
*Nesrine Badawi (Law). Cambridge, UK. May 2013.
*Shahjahan Bhuiyan (PPAD). Manama, Bahrain. June 2013.
*Shahjahan Bhuiyan (PPAD). Grenoble, France. June 2013.
*Kim Fox (JRMC). Las Vegas, USA. April 2013.
*Kim Fox (JRMC). Mechelen, Belgium. July 2013.
*Naila Hamdy (JRMC). Las Vegas, USA. April 2013.
*Kevin Keenan (JRMC). Charlotte, NC, USA. April 2013.
*Scott MacLeod (JRMC). Santa Barbara, CA, USA. February 2013.
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*Hala Abd El-Wahab (ALI). New Orleans, USA. October 2013.
*Dalal Abou El Seoud (ALI). New Orleans, USA. October 2013.
*Hossam El-Din Attiah (ELI). Dubai, UAE. March 2013.
*Catarina Belo (PHIL). Paris, France. June 2013.
*Catarina Belo (PHIL). Lund, Sweden. August 2013.
*Victoria Clark (RHET). Osaka, Japan. April 2013.
*Matthew Crippen (PHIL). Exeter, UK. July 2013.
*Amani Demian (ELI). Liverpool, UK. April 2013.
*Christian Donath (POLS). Paris, France. March 2013.
*Ira Dworkin (ECLT). Accra, Ghana. May 2013.
*Atta Gebril (ELI). Istanbul, Turkey. May 2013.
*Mona Kamal Hassan (ALI). New Orleans, USA. October 2013.
*Hanan Kamal Hassanein (ALI). New Orleans, USA. October 2013.
*Salima Ikram (SAPE). Cincinnati, OH, USA. April 2013.
*Doris Jones (RHET). Washington, USA. March 2013.
*Hanan Kholoussy (HIST). New Orleans, USA. October 2013.
*Heba Kotb (SAPE). New Orleans, USA. March 2013.
*William Melaney (ECLT). Cambridge, MA, USA. June 2013.
*Afaf Mishriki (ELI). Liverpool, UK. April 2013.
*Ian Morrison (SAPE). London, UK. April 2013.
*Yasmine Motawy (RHET). Maastricht, The Netherlands. August 2013.
*Rose Parfitt (POLS). Cambridge, MA, USA. June 2013.
*Marilyn Plumlee (ELI). Jyvaskyla, Finland. June 2013.
*Gavin Rae (PHIL). Lisbon, Portugal. July 2013.
*Yasmine Aly Salah El-Din (ELI). Liverpool, UK. April 2013.
*Mate Tokić (HIST). London, UK. April 2013.
*Shahira Mahmoud Yacout (ALI). New Orleans, USA. October 2013.
*Andrea Young (RHET). Boston, USA. March 2013.
LLT (School of Libraries and Learning Technologies)
*Meggan Houlihan (LIB). Indianapolis, IN, USA. April 2013.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Hany Fayek Abdalla (MENG). Paris, France. July 2013.
*Nageh Allam (PHYS). San Francisco, USA. April 2013.
*Sherif Aly (CSCE). Shanghai, China. April 2013.
*Salah Arafa (PHYS). Valencia, Spain. March 2013.
*Rachid Belhachemi (MACT). Montreal, Canada. August 2013.
*Ayman Elezabi (EENG). Budapest, Hungary. June 2013.
*Tarek Elkewidy (PENG). Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. March 2013.
*Khalil Elkhodary (MENG). Raleigh, NC, USA. July 2013.
*Wael Hassan (CANG). Kos Island, Greece. June 2013.
*Safwan Khedr (CANG). Honolulu, HI, USA. June 2013.
*Magda Mostafa (CANG). Oxford, UK. October 2013.
*Khaled Nassar (CANG). Berlin, Germany. December 2012.
*Ahmed Rafea (CSCE). San Diego, CA, USA. May 2013.
*Sherif Safar (CANG). Honolulu, HI, USA. June 2013.
*Ezzeldin Soliman (PHYS). Karlsruhe, Germany. March 2013.
*El Sayed Zanoun (MENG). Jeju, South Korea. May 2013.
RESEARCH GRANTS
BUS (School of Business)
*Steven Formaneck (MGMT). “Canada vs. UK: Work Practice.” Victoria, BC, Canada. April-May 2013.
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Allison Hodgkins (PPAD). “Separate from Peace: The 1994 Wadi Araba Treaty and Politics of Survival.” Amman, Jordan. March-June 2013.
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*Atta Gebril (ELI). “Test Preparation in Egypt and Germany: Secondary School teachers’ Beliefs and Practices.” Berlin, Germany. June-July 2013.
*Amy Motlagh (ECLT). “Imitation, Appropriation, and Pseudotranslation: The Ethics of Literary Theft in Galway Kinnell’s Black Light and Sadeq Hedayat’s The Blind Owl.” Bloomington, IN, USA. July-August 2013.
*Gavin Rae (PHIL). “Emergent Morphology: Ontology, Law, and the Question of Anthropocentrism.” Madrid, Spain. July-August 2013.
*Surti Singh (PHIL). “Adorno’s Concept of Experience: Rethinking the Post-Metaphysical Turn in Critical Theory.” Berlin, Germany. June 2013.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Mina Abd-el-Malek. “Visit to Specialized Library in the Field of Theoretical Mechanics.” Udine, Italy. March 2013.
*Wael Ahmed (CHEM). “Novel Polymer Nanocomposites and Electrospun Natural Remedies Nanofibers and Their Applications.” Cairo. March-May 2013.
*Tarek Madkour (CHEM). “Development and Characterization of ‘Environmentally Friendly’ Bioanocomposite Polymeric Blends for Water Desalination and Purification.” Cairo. March 2013-February 2014.
*Khaled Tarabieh (CANG). “Measurement of the Thermal Characteristics of External Envelope Materials for Typical Residential Buildings in Egypt Using the Hot Box Guarded Method ASTM C1363.” Cairo. April-May 2013.
RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT GRANTS
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Hassanein Amer (EENG). “Traffic Control for Intelligent Transportation System Using LTE.” Cairo. March 2013-February 2014.
TEACHING ENHANCEMENT GRANTS
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Kevin Keenan (JRMC). “Teaching International Public Relations Colloquium.” Charlotte, NC, USA. April 2013.
GSE (Graduate School of Education)
*Stacie Rissmann-Joyce (GSE). “The Future of Learning.” Cambridge, MA, USA. July-August 2013.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Yasser Gadallah (EENG). “ABET Accreditation Workshop.” Portland, OR, USA. April 2013.
*Karim Seddik (EENG). “ABET Accreditation Workshop.” Portland, OR, USA. April 2013.
CO-ORDINATION OF CONFERENCE/WORKSHOP GRANTS
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Magda Shahin (CASAR). “The Politics and Practice of American Studies in the Middle East.” April 2013.
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*David Blanks (HIST). “Big History on Dar al-Islam.” June-July 2013.
*Mounira Soliman (ECLT). “Literature and Representation of Identity.” April 2013.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Khaled Nassar (CANG). “Learning from Cairo: Global Perspectives and Future Visions.” April 2013.
recipients of faculty support grants for the April cycle
May 22nd, 2012
The following list includes faculty grants only. Graduate student grants are now handled exclusively by Dr. Amr Shaarawi, Dean of Graduate Studies. Please contact Dr. Shaarawi’s office for news about the status of applications for Graduate Student Grants.
My office will process the checks for the following grants as quickly as we can, but please allow some time for this to happen, since there is a very heavy workload for my assistant (Nancy Wadie) once the grant decisions are made. If you have not yet provided a letter of acceptance from the conference for which you have received a grant, no check will be issued until we receive such a letter.
CONFERENCE GRANTS
BUS (School of Business)
*Ahmed Abdel-Meguid (ACCT). Washington, DC, USA. August 2012.
*Neveen Ahmed (MGMT). Cambridge, UK. June 2012.
*Samer Atallah (ECON). Calgary, AB, Canada. June 2012.
*Samer Atallah (ECON). Athens, Greece. July 2012.
*Mohammed Bouaddi (ECON). Montreal, QC, Canada. May 2012.
*Mohammed Bouaddi (ECON). Calgary, AB, Canada. June 2012.
*Mohamed Elbannan (ACCT). Rome. Italy. June 2012.
*Mohamed Elbannan (ACCT). Washington, DC, USA. August 2012.
*Dalia ElEdel (ECON). Istanbul, Turkey. May 2012.
*Dalia ElEdel (ECON). Valencia, Spain. June 2012.
*Steven Formaneck (MGMT). Istanbul, Turkey. May 2012.
*Ibrahim Hegazy (MGMT). Istanbul, Turkey. May 2012.
*Glenn Williams (MGMT). Istanbul, Turkey. May 2012.
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Hussein Amin (JRMC). Las Vegas, USA. April 2012.
*Mohamed Elmasry (JRMC). Chicago, USA. August 2012.
*Usha Natarajan (Law). Cambridge, MA, USA. May-June 2012.
*Gianluca Parolin (Law). Rabat, Morocco. June 2012.
*Gianluca Parolin (Law). Denver, USA. November 2012.
*Sheila Peuchaud (JRMC). Chicago, USA. August 2012.
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*Tahia Abdel Nasser (ECLT). Beirut, Lebanon. May 2012.
*Holger Albrecht (POLS). New Orleans, USA. August-September 2012.
*Soraya Altorki (SAPE). Cambridge, UK. July 2012.
*Mona Amer (SAPE). Orlando, FL, USA. August 2012.
*David Blanks (HIST). Grand Rapids, MI. August 2012.
*Jason Blum (HIST). Chicago, USA. November 2012.
*Ebony Coletu (RHET). Philadelphia, USA. May 2012.
*Ira Dworkin (ECLT). San Juan, Puerto Rico. November 2012.
*Andrea Eberle (SAPE). Rome, Italy. September 2012.
*Amina Elbendary (ARIC). Prague, Czech Republic. August-September
2012.
*Lori Fredricks (ELI). Paris, France. September 2012.
*Raghda El Essawi (ALI). Denver, USA. November 2012.
*Nadia Harb (ALI). Denver, USA. November 2012.
*Hani Henry (SAPE). Klagenfurt, Austria. July 2012.
*Hanan Kholoussy (HIST). Denver, USA. November 2012.
*Sanaa Makhlouf (ELI). Dubrovnik, Croatia. June 2012.
*Rose Parfitt (POLS). New York, USA. May 2012.
*Michael Reimer (HIST). Denver, USA. November 2012.
*Yasmine Salah El-Din. Ankara, Turkey. May-June 2012.
LLT (School of Libraries and Learning Technologies)
*Carolyn Runyon (Library). San Diego, USA. August 2012.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Shereef Abdelazeem (EENG). Bari, Italy. September 2012.
*Ashraf Abdelbar (CSCE). Philadelphia, USA. July 2012.
*Ashraf Abdelbar (CSCE). Washington, DC, USA. November 2012.
*Mohamed Aly (MENG). Chicago, USA. August 2012.
*Sherif Aly (CSCE). Istanbul, Turkey. June 2012.
*Hassan Azzazy (CHEM). Santa Clara, CA, USA. June 2012.
*Florin Balasa (CSCE). Karlsruhe, Germany. June 2012.
*Necla Demir (CHEM). Las Vegas, NV, USA. June 2012.
*Mohamed El-Morsi (MENG). Chicago, USA. August 2012.
*Nermine El Sissi (MACT). Madison, WI, USA. August 2012.
*Wafik Lotfalla (MACT). Clearwater, FL, USA. June 2012.
*Tarek Madkour (CHEM). Kobe, Japan. October 2012.
*Magda Mostafa (CANG). Barcelona, Spain. June 2012.
*Ahmed Rafea (CSCE). Groningen, The Netherlands. June 2012.
*Mohammed M. Sadek (MACT). Würzburg, Germany. August 2012.
*Sherif Saleh Safar (CANG). Dubrovnik, Croatia. September 2012.
*Mohamed Shalan (CSCE). San Francisco, USA. June 2012.
*Ahmed H. Sherif (CANG). Lima, Peru. November 2012.
RESEARCH GRANTS
Core (Teaching Fellow)
*Karl Galle (Core). “Art, Science, and the Mathematical Communities Who Brought Them Together in Renaissance Central Europe.” Nuremberg, Germany & Munich, Germany, and London, UK. July-August 2012.
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Hamid Ali (PPAD). “Darfur Political Economy: A Quest for Development.” Cairo. June-October 2012.
*Hamid Ali (PPAD). “Oil and OPEC: Oligopoly or Oligarchy.” Cairo. June 2012-May 2013.
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*Richard Fincham (PHIL). “Faith and Reason: The Role of Human Skepticism in the Development of German Idealism.” Tübingen, Germany. August 2012.
*Salima Ikram (SAPE). “Plymouth Museum Animal Mummies.” Plymouth, UK. June 2012.
*Gavin Rae (PHIL). “Thinking About Thought: Hegel, Heidegger, and Deleuze.” Madrid, Spain. June-July 2012.
*Mark Westmoreland (SAPE). “Catastrophic Images: Documenting the Wars in Lebanon.” Beirut, Lebanon. May-June 2012.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Karim Addas (PHYS). “Force Calibration for Optical Traps Employed for Microrheology of Non-equilibrium in vitro and in vivo Cytoskeletal Systems.” Göttingen, Germany. October 2012.
*Asma Amleh (BIOL). “Ultra-High Molecular Weight Polyethylene (UHMWPE) Coated Nylon: Novel Biomaterial for Prosthetic Implants.” Cairo. June 2012-June 2013.
*Mohab Anis (EENG). “Design of Nanometer SRAM Circuits for Yield Maximization.” Cairo and Waterloo, ON, Canada. July-December 2012.
*Mahmoud Farag (MENG). “Materials and Process Selection for Engineering Design, 3rd edition.” Cairo and London. June 2012-April 2013.
*Walid Fouad (BIOL). “Molecular Characterization of Transgenic Bahiagrass Expressing Regulatory and Structural Genes Conferring Freezing and Chilling Tolerances.” Gainesville, FL, USA. June 2012-Janaury 2013.
*Magdi Moustafa (MACT). “Availability of Cloud Computing Systems Subject to Hardware and Software Failures.” Storrs, CT, USA. September 2012.
*Jehane Ragai (CHEM). “Anti-tumor and Anti-LeishmanialCharacteristics of Some Nitrogen and/or Sulfur Containing Heterocyclic Compounds.” Cairo. May 2012-May 2013.
*Ahmed H. Sherif (CANG). “Sustainable Hospital Architecture: Configuration of the Window Openings of Intensive Care Units for Comfort and Energy Saving.” Cairo. September 2012-December 2012.
*Suher Zada (BIOL). “The Cytokine and Chemokine Profiles in Egyptian
Hepatitis C Virus Genotype-4 in Relation to Liver Disease Progression.” Cairo. June 2012-May 2013.
TEACHING ENHANCEMENT GRANTS
BUS (School of Business)
*Steven Formaneck (MGMT). “Case Teaching Workshop.” London, ON, Canada. August 2012.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Ahmed Moustafa (BIOL). “Development of Course: Systems and Comparative Genomics.” Roscoff, France and Reykjavik, Iceland. June 2012.
recipients of Faculty Support Grants for the February cycle
March 22nd, 2011
This post contains the list of successful Faculty Support Grant applications for the February application cycle. (Anyone interested in the results of a student grant application should contact me directly.)
AUC is proud of its Faculty Support Grant program, which ranks among the most generous of any university in the world. In addition to looking for your own grant on the list below, please take a few minutes to read through some of the other interesting research topics and conference trips of your AUC colleagues. Enhancing mutual recognition of faculty research is one of the motivations for listing successful grant applicants here in the Bulletin.
If you see any mistaken information in the list, including minor spelling errors in any names, please contact me immediately at gharman@aucegypt.edu. We aspire to have a completely accurate list for each grant cycle.
Official letters of approval will be sent to everyone shortly. However, please note the following two points:
1. My assistant, Nancy, has been asked to help organize the March 31 Commencement Ceremony, and this needs to be her top priority at the moment. This could lead to delays of several days in processing your grant letters.
2. At the request of the Payroll Office, we will no longer be sending approval letters for Conference Grants that have been approved “pending acceptance of paper.” The new policy is that we need to see your acceptance letter from the conference before issuing the approval letter, or at least see your name on the official conference schedule.
CONFERENCE GRANTS
BUS (School of Business)
*Steven Formaneck (Management). San Jose, California, USA. June 2011.
*Dilip Ghosh (Management). Bangkok, Thailand. April 2011.
*Mohamed Hegazy (Accounting). Rome, Italy. April 2011.
*Mohamed Hegazy (Accounting). Istanbul, Turkey. June 2011.
*Maha Mourad (Management). Dubai, U.A.E. March 2011.
*Hamed Shamma (Management). Coral Gables, Florida, USA. May 2011.
*Hamed Shamma (Management). Washington D.C., USA. June 2011.
*Ahmed Tolba (Management). Coral Gables, Florida, USA. May 2011.
*Samir Youssef (Management). Ashridge, U.K. June 2011.
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Hussein Amin (JRMC). Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. April 2011.
*Kim Fox (JRMC). Las Vegas, Nevada, USA. April 2011.
*Gianluca Parolin (Law). Hong Kong. April 2011.
*AKM Ahsan Ullah (CMRS). Bangkok, Thailand. May 2011.
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*Hala Abd AlHak (SAPE). Montreal, Canada. May 2011.
*Nora Abdel Wahab (ALI). Washington D.C., USA. December 2011.
*Dalal Abo El Seoud (ALI). Washington D.C., USA. December 2011.
*David Blanks (HIST). Beijing, China. July 2011.
*Valerie Carpenter (ELI). Dubai, U.A.E. March 2011.
*Matthew Crippen (PHIL). Toronto, Canada. April 2011.
*Ira Dworkin (ECLT). Baltimore, Maryland, USA. October 2011.
*Lori Fredricks (ELI). Chicago, Illinois, USA. March 2011.
*Atta Gebril (ELI). Nicosia, Cyprus. June 2011.
*Atta Gebril (ELI). Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA. June 2011.
*Belle Gironda (Rhet/Comp). Atlanta, Georgia. USA. April 2011.
*Inas Hafez (ALI). Washington D.C., USA. December 2011.
*Mona Hassan (ALI). Washington D.C., USA. December 2011.
*Abeer Heider (ALI). New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA. April 2011.
*Noelle Houssney (Rhet/Comp). Melbourne, Australia. June-July 2011.
*Salima Ikram (SAPE). Chicago, Illinois. April 2011.
*Heba Kotb (SAPE). Montreal, Canada. May 2011.
*Sanaa Makhlouf (ELI). Brighton, U.K. April 2011.
*Gretchen McCullough (Rhet/Comp). Lisbon, Portugal. June-July, 2011.
*Mate Tokić (HIST). Berlin, Germany. February 2011.
*Dan Tschirgi (Poli. Sci.). San Juan, Puerto Rico. April 2011.
*Elena Tzelepis (PHIL). Tainan, Taiwan. May 2011.
*Loubna Youssef (Rhet/Comp). Washington D.C., USA. December 2011.
LLT (School of Libraries and Learning Technologies)
*Amanda Click (Library). London, U.K. April 2011.
*Meggan Houlihan (Library). Beirut, Lebanon. April-May 2011.
*Meggan Houlihan (Library). Athens, Greece. May 2011.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Sherif Abdelazeem (EENG). Beijing, China. September 2011.
*Mustafa Arafa (MENG). Washington D.C., USA. August 2011.
*Gregg De Young (MACT). Thessaloniki, Greece. July 2011.
*Ayman Elezabi (EENG). Ayia Napa, Cyprus. May 2011.
*Lamyaa El Gabry (MENG). Vancouver, Canada. June 2011.
*Justin Grubich (BIOL). Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA. July 2011.
*Ossama Hosny (CANG). Miami, Florida. June 2011.
*Alaa Ibrahim (PHYS). Cape Town, South Africa. April 2011.
*Jeff Langman (CORE/PENG). Monaco. March-April 2011.
*Magda Mostafa (CANG). Tokyo, Japan. September-October 2011.
*Mohammad Sadek (MACT). Vilnius, Lithuania. June-July 2011.
*Sherif Safar (CANG). Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA. June 2011.
*Nagwa Sherif (CANG). Bari, Italy. May 2011.
RESEARCH GRANTS
BUS (School of Business)
*Angie Abdel Zahar (Accounting). “The Association Between CEO Incentives and Complex Outsourcing Decisions.” Cairo. March-October 2011.
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Jennifer Bremer (PPAD). “Cairo’s Neighborhood Watch Groups: A Case Study of Spontaneous Collective Action.” Cairo. March-May 2011.
*David London (JRMC). “25th January Multimedia Exhibition.” Cairo. March-July 2011.
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*Agnes Czajka (SAPE). “Migrants and Refugees in Revolutionary Egypt: Discourses of Nationhood and Foreignness During and in the Aftermath of the January 25th Uprising.” Cairo, Egypt. June-August 2011.
*Aissa Deebi (PVA). “My Dreams Have Destroyed My Life.” Germany and Palestine. May 2011.
*Lori Fredricks (ELI). “Investigating Tajikistani EFL Teachers’ Views and Experiences Through Critical Literature Circles.” Dushanbe, Tajikistan. May-August 2011.
*Atta Gebril (ELI). “Conceptions of Assessment Among Egyptian Pre-Service Teachers.” Sohag, Egypt. March 2011-March 2012.
*Amy Motlagh (ECLT). “Beyond the Boundaries of Nation: Dreaming of a Modern Iran in Cairo.” Princeton, New Jersey, USA. June-July 2011.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Sherif Aly (CSCE). “Novel Software Engineering Practices for Pervasive Systems.” Ottawa, Canada. June-December 2011.
*Khaled Nassar (CANG). “Digital Fabrication Techniques for Low-Cost Housing Using Local Sustainable Material.” Cairo. June 2011-March 2012.
*Sherif Sedky (PHYS). “Laser-Based Processing of Thin Films for MEMS Applications.” Palto Alto, California, USA. July 2011.
*Ezzeldin Soliman (PHYS). “Novel Miniaturized Antennas for Radio Frequency Identifcation (RFID) Systems.” Leuven, Belgium. June 2011.
*Suher Zada (BIOL). “MicroRNA as a Novel Diagnostic and Therapeutic Tool on HCV-Induced Liver Fibrosis and Hepatocellular Carcinoma.” Cairo. March 2011-March 2012.
RESEARCH DEVELOPMENT GRANT
GAPP (School of Global Affairs and Public Policy)
*Rasha Abdulla (JRMC). “Social Media and Political Participation: The Case of the Egyptian Revolution.” Cairo. February-June 2011.
*Naila Hamdy (JRMC). “State Media and Private Media vs. Social Media: Monitoring and Analyzing Media Coverage of the Egyptian Revolution 2011.” Cairo and Alexandria, April-July 2011.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Hassanein Amer (EENG). “Effect of Failure Criteria on WSN Lifetime.” Cairo. March 2011-February 2012.
TEACHING ENHANCEMENT GRANT
HUSS (School of Humanities and Social Sciences)
*Frank Bradley (PVA). “Teaching Creativity: Current Trends and Critical Encounters.” Winston-Salem, North Carolina, USA. March-April 2011.
*Sophie Farag (ELI). “Skilled Helping and Feedback.” Canterbury, U.K. July 2011.
*Wael Mahallawy (PVA). “Pro Tools Training Professional Certification Package.” New York, USA. April 2011.
SSE (School of Sciences and Engineering)
*Christian Bauriedel (CANG). “Supplements to Enhance the Performance of the 3D-Lab.” Cairo. June-December 2011.
late December, 2009
December 23rd, 2009
Faculty Bulletin
Editor: Graham Harman,
Associate Vice Provost for Research
2010 AUC Research Conference
The 2010 AUC Research Conference is now open to all faculty and graduate students of all Egyptian Educational Institutions (Universities and Research Institutes). The Conference will be held April 10 to 12, 2010 on the AUC New Cairo Campus. Please send all submissions by e-mail to researchconf@aucegypt.edu. The deadlines are as follows:
STAGE I: Abstracts (maximum 300 words) should be submitted for roundtables, panels, and workshops no later than February 27, 2010.
STAGE II: The organizing committee will select the most appropriate proposals and inform the respective coordinators by March 6, 2010.
STAGE III: Coordinators of the selected proposals will be expected to submit abstracts and/or papers for their respective roundtable, panels, or workshops no later than March 27, 2010.
For more information please click this link for the Conference Website.
If you have any questions please contact the Chair of the Conference Committee, Dr. Graham Harman at gharman@aucegypt.edu.
FACULTY PROFILE
For this week’s profile we turn to Professor Nelly Hanna, a distinguished Middle Eastern historian in our Department of Arab and Islamic Civilizations (ARIC). Nelly has studied an impressive variety of topics in her scholarly work, and has been a member of our faculty since 1991. Moreover, we can proudly claim Nelly not just as a scholar but also as an alumna, since she received both her B.A. and M.A. degrees from the American University in Cairo. She is the 2004 winner of the AUC Excellence in Research and Creative Endeavors Award, and currently serves as Chair of the Department of ARIC.

Q: The first thing that stands out about your historical work is its great versatility. Along with discussions of economics and family issues, you have also published on the history of sugar, coffee, textiles, and construction work, to name just a few of your topics. What led you to study such a variety of different themes?
A: I touched on many subjects, but essentially I am interested (at least now) in economic history. It is at the basis of many other things, and can explain important dimensions in society, culture. So researching coffee, sugar and textiles, was part of this broader interest in the economy, but here I must clarify, I mean economy in the broader sense that incorporates people, individuals, society, not graphs and figures or statistics.
Q: Many readers of the Bulletin are inexperienced with archival work, myself included. When I see one of your article titles, such as “Coffee and Coffee Merchants in Cairo, 1580-1630,” the first thing I wonder is: how many records are available about this? Is it easy to find enough information to write such detailed studies about a distant period?
A: Easy is not the right word. There are very rich archives: court registers that record the daily dealings of the population in front of the qadi, including transactions of various kinds, marriage contracts, divorces, commercial ventures, inheritances, litigation and many more subjects. There is a lot on merchants, but also on others.What this means is that you need to go through a lot of material to get to the subject that you are researching. So it is possible but it is a lot of work.
Q: Your first book was on the Cairo neighborhood of Bulaq during the Mamluk and Ottoman periods. When we walk through the area today, it might be hard to imagine such a glorious past for Bulaq. Tell us, if you would, what makes the history of the neighborhood so interesting.
A: When I did the work on Bulaq, I was often in the area visiting buildings, markets. I was astonished to find that the people there had ties to this district for generations and were therefore quite attached it. I was also surprised to find the streets and alleys, for the most part, to be identical to the map of Bulaq that the Napleonic expedition had drawn in 1800, even had the same names. In short, a high level of continuity, which may have eroded since my research there in the 80s. Essentially for several centuries this was the port of Cairo for goods coming from the Mediterranean, so it was a pretty important place.
Q: Your second book also has an interesting title— Construction Work in Ottoman Cairo.
A: This is a short work, it is really about the guilds involved in construction, who did private jobs, but who were also involved in the large scale state projects.
Q: You have also written about the French expedition to Egypt during the Ottoman period. What is the most lasting French influence on Egypt today? (From the Napoleonic period, I mean.)
A: French culture had quite an impact: when French political influence decreased after the Napoleonic era, French was still the language of the elite. French-speaking schools were opened in the mid-19th century.
Q: You have written a lot about the textile industry in Egypt. But from a layperson’s perspective, it often seems that this industry is minimal in Egypt these days. It seems as though Egyptian cotton is sold abroad rather than being processed into textiles in Egypt itself. Is that true? And if so, when and why did the textile industry in Egypt start to decline?
A: The textile industry, especially linen, was the most important industry for many many centuries. Textile workers produced an enormous variety of cloth (before 1800) much of which was exported to Ottoman and European markets. The textile industry faced major crises in the 19th century: the switch to exporting raw material and importing English cloth was one of the factors; the monoculture in cotton, developed also in the 19th century: these are elements of a colonial economy.
Q: Here’s another of your many interesting article titles: “Sources for the Study of Slave Women and Concubines in Ottoman Egypt.” They kept detailed records of this?
A: As I said, the records we have are so rich you can find the most amazing subjects.
Q: Moving to a more general question, did you have any “hero” historians during your student years? Or at least any scholars whose work you adopted as a model?
A: Sure, André Raymond (French historian on the Ottoman Arab world). He was my advisor for my Doctorat D’État in France and has since then remained a friend and a model.
Q: What is the biggest scholarly controversy in your field right now, and what do you think of it?
A: The most important controversies are about approaches: should one write history as a broad meganarrative? should one write microhistory? Is culture the moving force in history? is the economy the moving force? They are many and complex, often ideologies are the forces that move them.
Q: You’ve invested so much energy in studying the past of Cairo. Are you optimistic about the future of the city? What will be the biggest dangers over the next century?
A: I cannot say I am optimistic as long as growth and development are haphazard and guided mainly by business concerns.
FACULTY NEWS
(as reported by the faculty members)
David Blanks, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of History was selected as Executive Secretary of the African Network in Global History/Réseau Africain d’Histoire Mondiale.
Graham Harman, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Associate Vice Provost for Research, is the subject of a review article in the December 16 issue of the French journal Actu Philosophia. “Graham Harman, Prince of Networks. Bruno Latour, cheval de Troie métaphysique,” by Olivier Surel. http://actu-philosophia.com/spip.php?article181
FACULTY RESEARCH BY SCHOOL
(as reported by the faculty members)
In this issue of the Bulletin, we have:
2 books
1 journal article
2 invited lectures
3 conference presentations
Humanities and Social Sciences (HUSS)
David Blanks, Associate Professor and Chair of the Department of History
•Conference presentation: “The African University in a World Historical Context,” conference on African and Global History, University of Ilorin, Nigeria. December 9-11, 2009.
Heather Browne, Writing Instructor, Department of Rhetoric and Composition
•Conference presentation: “Overcoming Foreign Aid Backlash: Supporting Community Schools to Promote Democratization” at the Northeastern Political Science Association annual meeting held in Philadelphia, PA, November 19-21, 2009.
•Conference presentation: “The Potential of Facebook as a Channel of Civic Engagement in Egypt” at the Middle East Studies Association annual meeting held in Boston, MA, November 21-24, 2009.
Kathleen Saville, Senior Writing Instructor, Department of Rhetoric and Composition
• Book. The Advanced English Handbook: Reading, Writing, Listening. Shabka, Margaret and Kathleen Saville. (Cairo: Anglo Engyptian Bookshop, 2009) Note: this is the companion book to The Advanced English Handbook: Structure and Form. (Cairo: Anglo Egyptian Bookshop, 2008.)
Margaret Shabka, Senior Writing Instructor, Department of Rhetoric and Composition
• Book. The Advanced English Handbook: Reading, Writing, Listening. Shabka, Margaret and Kathleen Saville. (Cairo: Anglo Engyptian Bookshop, 2009) Note: this is the companion book to The Advanced English Handbook: Structure and Form (Cairo: Anglo Egyptian Bookshop, 2008)
Dan Tschirgi, Professor of Political Science
• Book. Origins of U.S. Involvement in the Modern Middle East Problem: U.S.-Israeli Relations Over Arab Lands Occupied in the June War, 1967-1969. (Saarbrücken: VDM Publishers, 2010.)
• Invited lectures, two lectures to be given at the Leonard Davis Institute of The Hebrew University of Jerusalem during the week of January 17, 2010.
School of Business (SoB)
Hamed M. Shamma, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Heikal Department of Management
•Journal article, “Customer and Non-customer Perspectives for Examining Corporate Reputation,” Journal of Product & Brand Management, Vol. 18, No. 5, pp. 326-337.