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Previous CAS Presentations
Jan 22, 2008
One Laptop Per Child: Technology and the Developing World
May 2, 2007
Serious Games: Video Games in Undergraduate General Education
February 15, 2006
The Pakistan Earthquake: A Wake-up Call for Mid-America?
January 27, 2006
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Immigration
September 26, 2005
Katrina and Other Megacatastrophes: Science, Policy and Human Behavior
February 23, 2005
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Reforming Social Security
February 17, 2005
Origins of a Networked World: From World War II to the Internet
November 16, 2004
Coole Lady
April 28, 2004
Hospital Tax Forum
October 3, 2003 Carlo Rotella
March 12, 2003
Sheldon Jacobson
February 5, 2003
George Gollin
December 5, 2002
Civil Liberty and National Security
October 7, 2002
Ania Loomba
February 28, 2002
Hans Heinrich Hock
January 22, 2002
Dianne Pinderhughes
November 5, 2001
Jean-Pierre Leburton
November 5, 2001
From Chaos to Pilgrimage
October 23, 2001
Donald Crummey
October 16, 2001
Globalization
August 29, 2001
Stem Cells
September 28, 2001
Bill Greenough
May 3, 2001
Dialogue on Toulouse-Lautrec
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cas : cas presentations
CAS Forum on Critical Issues: Civil Liberty and National Security
December 5, 2002
7:30pm, Levis Faculty Center
Do the demands for heightened security in a post-9/11 world encroach upon our liberties and freedoms as members of a civil society? Can we protect ourselves as a country from future terrorist attacks without restricting the rights of individuals, particularly those who belong to racial and ethnic groups under special scrutiny since 9/11?
We invite you to participate in an informal public forum on this timely topic. Convening faculty from across campus, this panel hopes to provoke a discussion about the impact on our civil liberties during the war on terrorism, as well as answer questions about the technologies of surveillance, and how crises of national security have played out in the past.
Prof. Jim Pfander (Law) will moderate. Panelists include:
- Prof. Tom Ginsburg (Law): international and comparative responses to terrorism; domestic civil liberties issues.
- Prof. Tom Huang (Electrical and Computer Engineering): intelligent computers; face visualization
- Prof. Sheldon Jacobson (Mechanical and Industrial Engineering): aviation security strategies
- Prof. Mark Leff (History): national security hysteria of the 1950s; crises of tolerance
- Prof. Todd Shaw (Political Science): African-American politics and ideology; public policy.
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