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College of Arts and Sciences Centennial

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A&S Centers and Institutes

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About the College of Arts and Sciences Today

A&S Centers and Institutes

 

The Anne Braden Institute for Social Justice Research

The Anne Braden Institute for Social Justice Research bridges the gap between academic research and social justice community advocates who might apply that research. The Institute seeks to advance understanding of the legacy of the southern civil rights movement and to honor the vision of longtime Louisville racial justice organizer and journalist Anne Braden, whose outlook was global, but whose activism was concentrated at the grassroots level. The Institute sponsors, stimulates, and disseminates research relevant to the Louisville community and the U.S. border South on social movements, citizen participation, public policy reforms, and social, racial, gender and economic justice. The Anne Braden Institute for Social Justice Research is an interdisciplinary project of the College of Arts and Sciences that seeks final approval from the Board of Trustees in Fall 2006.

Institute for Democracy and Development

The mission of the Institute for Democracy and Development (IDD) is to promote research, while providing teaching, learning and service opportunities to the community of faculty, staff and students at the University of Louisville on issues related to democracy and development.  Through singular and collaborative efforts, IDD exists to cultivate new knowledge about the process of democratic development in a diverse, rapidly changing world. http://www.louisville.edu/democracydevelopment/

Center for Asian Democracy

The mission of the Center for Asian Democracy is to promote research and teaching about democracy and the prospects for democratization in Central, South, Southeast and East Asia. Through publications, conferences, workshops, visiting scholars programs, colloquia, and research projects in Asian countries, the Center creates a forum for studying political dynamics in this vital region. The Center for Asian Democracy is administered by the Institute for Democracy and Development, within the University of Louisville’s Department of Political Science. The Center is funded by a $5 million appropriation from the Federal Governement and a $1 million match from the University of Louisville. The Center currently has about 20 full time Faculty Affiliates from different disciplinary backgrounds. http://www.louisville.edu/asiandemocracy

Cressman Center for Visual Arts

A new downtown center houses the university's glass and sculpture programs thanks to a $1 million commitment by retired physicians and art collectors Elizabeth and Frederick Cressman to launch the center. The 12,000-square-foot Cressman Center for Visual Arts is located at First and Main streets. The center features a creative laboratory approach to three-dimensional art in glass (hotshop and coldworking), wood and metal and offers exhibition galleries and a seminar room. Street-level windows allow the public to watch artists work. More information: Cressman Center for Visual Arts

Center for Geographic Information Systems

The University of Louisville Center for Geographic Information Systems (ULCGIS) was established in 1996, and is located on Belknap Campus in Lutz Hall. As an integral part of the Department of Geography and Geosciences, the facilities of the ULCGIS are available to faculty, students and staff, and are used to assist other university departments in research and mapping. The Center offers training, software, data sources and other services. http://www.ulcgis.org/

Center for Regulatory and Environmental Metabolomics

The Center for Regulatory and Environmental Metabolomics (CREAM) will develop cutting-edge methodologies and approaches for the emerging metabolomic and system biochemical research. This area of research has the promise of revolutionizing biological research in the 21st century for the ability to resolve biological complexity. Thus, metabolomic development will find applications in a broad array of pressing societal problems ranging from human health, biotechnology, to environmental pollution and ecosystem health. http://www.louisville.edu/conference/metabolomics/mission.htm

IMD 3 -- Institute for Molecular Diversity and Drug Design

The College of Arts and Sciences and the Health Sciences Center both provide support to the collaborative efforts of the Institute for Molecular Diversity and Drug Design, which was established in 1999. IMD 3 combines all aspects of modern medicinals research from basic science and the design and synthesis of new structures to the assays and clinical testing required to treat disease. Twenty faculty members representing at least eight units at UofL -- Biochemistry, Cancer Center, Chemistry, Engineering Math and Computer Sciences, Biological Sciences, Pathology, Pharmacology and Opthalmology—are members of the Institute, which reports to the Vice President for Research. http://www.imd3.org/aboutimd3.html

National Crime Prevention Institute

The Institute, which is a division of the Department of Justice Administration, focuses on prevention through education by offering a series of workshops and programs designed for local and state police, campus safety officials, school administrators, juvenile justice personnel, architects and structural engineers, and municipal planners. Topics include intervention strategies, preventing workplace violence, terrorism, environmental design and grant writing. The Institute also offers a campus security certification program. http://www.louisville.edu/a-s/ja/ncpi/

Southern Police Institute

The Southern Police Institute, which is a division of the Department of Justice Administration, is an advanced education and training institute with the mission to enhance the professional development of law enforcement practitioners. The Institute accomplishes this mission by providing educational and career development programs that are designed to challenge and to prepare law enforcement practitioners for the demands of today and tomorrow. The Southern Police Institute consistently is ranked among the top law enforcement educational and training schools in the nation. Since the creation of the Southern Police Institute in 1951, its program of instruction has been grounded in the belief that law enforcement is a demanding activity requiring the highest level of professional preparation. http://www.louisville.edu/a-s/ja/spi/

The Writing Center

The Writing Center offers one-on-one consultation, workshops and other services to assist students in enhancing their written communication skills. The Center, which is a part of the English Department, is located in Ekstrom Library and is open to all UofL students. Through the Writing Centers Research Project at the University of Louisville, the Center also conducts and supports research on writing center theory and practice and maintains a research repository of historical, empirical, and scholarly materials related to Writing Center Studies. http://coldfusion.louisville.edu/webs/a-s/writingcenter.

 


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