In the News

Umbra Italian Professor Publishes New Book

Alessandra Pettinelli, Umbra Italian professor, publishes book on how to use Perugia as a “living language laboratory.”

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Umbra Alum Takes News Job

Umbra alumna Kylie Bearse, an International Journalism Festival intern while in Perugia, will be doing TV weather forecasting.

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Umbra Faculty Present at Rome Conference

History/Food Studies professor Zachary Nowak and Associate Director for Academic Development Elgin Eckert delivered papers.

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Umbra Faculty Present in Sicily

American Association of Teachers of Italian saw a strong contingent of professors from Perugia at its annual meeting.

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Umbra Students Crucial to Study

Umbra students have been helping with an intercultural research project for years as both research interns and subjects. Continue reading

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Umbra Independent Research Projects

One on one learning with Umbra faculty advisors makes in-depth research while studying abroad possible. Continue reading

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Not Just “Americani”

This semester twenty Italian students enrich the Umbra Institute’s already integrated academic environment! Continue reading

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Umbra Professor interviewed on BBC Scotland

Umbra professor gives radio interview regarding his recently published book, Celtic Revolution, “a popular history of Celtic civilization.” Continue reading

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Umbra’s Stacks

The Umbra Institute is equipped with its own library–a great resource for students while abroad.

It’s rare that a study abroad institution has a library of its own for its students. Most institutions rely on public libraries or the local university’s library as sources for their students’ research. Local resources alone would be great…as long as the local language weren’t a barrier.


While students at the Umbra Institute have access to three local libraries–Universita’ degli Studi di Perugia’s library, Biblioteca Augusta—the public library (which houses books up to four-hundred years old!) as well as the library at the Universita’ per Stranieri, students are fortunate to have a library of their own right here at Umbra.


The Institute claims an in-house library with nearly 3,500 books that’s constantly being enriched and expanded by its professors, some of whom have authored the books themselves. Complete with books in both English and Italian, Umbra’s bibliotheca has a rich selection on books ranging in many topics from Italian history, culture and food to politics, art history literature and the arts; photography, music, opera and cinema.

Umbra has furthermore just recently updated its cataloging system, enabling students to access the library’s catalog directly from Umbra’s networked computer lab which now has over 30 PCs and high-speed WiFi coverage throught the Institute.

Even more unique is Umbra’s access to online journals and databases including JSTOR, Wilsons and more. With independent research and honors programs becoming more and more popular at Umbra, it is imperative that students have access to as many research sources as possible. It allows the professors to ask more from our students when extensive research resources at their disposal.

 

The Umbra Institute will soon be initiating a library development campaign; We hope that alumni and friends of the Institute will help us reach our goal of 5,000 well-selected books by the fall semester 2012.

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Steve Clemons Speaks at Uguccione Ranieri di Sorbello Foundation

This Tuesday, November 17th the Umbra Institute co-sponsored a public lecture given by Steve Clemons of the New America Foundation on the state of American foreign policy under the Obama administration.


The fifth in a series of public lectures sponsored by the Umbra Institute and the Uguccione Ranieri di Sorbello Foundation, the talk was entitled “Gauging the Course of US Foreign Policy: Has the Obama Bubble Burst?” Mr. Clemons serves as Executive Vice President of the New America Foundation, a nonprofit, nonpartisan public policy institute founded in 1999 in Washington, DC. He also publishes The Washington Note, a well-regarded blog on the politics of foreign policy.


Mr. Clemons spoke on the successes and failures of the Obama administration in foreign policy, focusing primarily on the challenges faced in Iran, Afghanistan, Israel-Palestine, and with China. Noting that no other president has ever taken office facing such a multitude of pressing foreign policy situations coupled with an international economic breakdown and a major domestic health care policy debate, Mr. Clemons suggested that by now – just over a year since President Obama was elected into office – there needs to have been what he called a “Nixon to China” moment where the Obama administration demonstrated to the world a significant achievement in at least one of these crises. Mr. Clemons expressed his support for the Nobel Foundation’s decision to award Obama the Nobel Peace Prize earlier this year, and called Obama’s speeches in Cairo and Turkey great successes, but said also that much more needed to be achieved in his first year than has been realized.


Following his lecture, Mr. Clemons opened up the floor to questions from the audience, and Umbra students actively participated in a discussion that continued upstairs at a reception in the Sorbello Foundation library.

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