[Ghrcmail] Global Health Resource Center mail: November 13, 2006

Daren Wade dwade at u.washington.edu
Mon Nov 13 14:58:13 PST 2006


November 13, 2006

Global Health Resource Center Mail

Newsletter Layout

-Events

-Funding/International Opportunities

-Job/Internship Announcements

-General Announcements

Events
1) November 14, 2006: World Health Cinema Film Series The Agronomist

2) November 14, 2006: African Studies Speakers' Series,"Accessing ARV Therapy in Uganda

3) November 15,2006: Thank You for Smoking showing at UW SPHCM

4) November 15, 2006: Graduate Student Workshop on Ethics

5) November 21, 2006 : Essential Medicines: Global Access, Global Responsibility

6) November 28, 2006: 2006 Distinguished Faculty Lecture "What History Tells Us About Maternal and Child Health"

7) November 29, 2006: Research Symposium Sharon Hillier, PhD

8) November 29, 2006: 2006 AIDS & STD Research Symposium

9) December 5, 2006:World Health Cinema Film Series: Yesterday, a film by Darrell Roodt

10) December 15-16, 2006: "Globalization and Regional Economic Development" Conference in Gyeong Ju, South Korea

11) February 16-18, 2007: REGISTRATION OPEN! 5th Annual Western Regional International Health Conference: Jim Yong Kim Keynote!

12) April 14-14, 2007: Public Health and International Development Conference at Stanford

13) May 29-June 1, 2007: Global Health Council Conference, Washington, DC



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1) World Health Cinema Film Series: The Agronomist, a film by Jonathan Demme



November 14, 2006

6:30p

Location: Thompson Hall, Room 101

Sponsored by the Global Health Resource Center; International Health Program, School of Public Health and Community Medicine; UW Libraries; and the Department of Communications

The Agronomist is a profile of Haitian radio journalist and human rights activist, Jean Dominique. It includes: historical footage of Haiti's vivid and tumultuous past; interviews with Dominique, himself and with Michele Montas--his heroic wife, life-long love, and extraordinary partner; and incorporates footage shot before Dominique's assassination on April 3, 2000.



2) African Studies Speakers' Series: "Accessing ARV Therapy in Uganda: Connections and Mobility"


Michael A. Whyte, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Department of Anthropology, University of Copenhagen

Susan Reynolds Whyte, Professor of Anthropology, Department of Anthropology,
University of Copenhagen



November 14, 2006; Health Sciences I-132, 4:00-5:30 PM
Co-Sponsored by the African Studies Program, Health Alliance International
and the Department of Anthropology

Uganda is a rural country but connections and mobility have long been important, joining rural, urban and external worlds. People draw upon friends and relations elsewhere to find employment or schooling, to seek care and financial support. Now another motive has emerged: seeking treatment for AIDS. With over 70,000 people on HAART (Highly Active Anti-Retroviral Therapy), Uganda leads Africa. Treatment availability, however, is skewed towards the Kampala region, and many who seek treatment must be mobile.

The Whytes' have studied people who are using this treatment in Uganda. They have gained access to biographic material that has allowed them to follow people gaining and maintaining access to anti-retroviral drugs. Mobilizing social resources that transcend locality is often a key to getting the 'second chance' that HAART represents. This may involve long journeys, taking up a new residence, or intense communication with contacts located elsewhere in the country or abroad. In this lecture, they will explore the importance of gender, class and residence for these life-saving connections. This perspective is important because HAART is a 'lifelong' therapy; user strategies being evolved today will shape the social dynamics of relationships for years to come.



3) Pizza and Public Health Movie Night "Thank You For Smoking"



Sponsored by the UW Student Public Health Association

* Wednesday, November 15

* Pizza at 5:30 pm, movie at 6:00 pm, optional discussion at 7:45 pm

* HSB D-209 (Turner Auditorium, near the E-Court Cafe)

* Free!!!



Anti-smoking propaganda? Libertarian defense of smoking? A great moment of spin? Hilarious cult movie? Decide for yourself!



4) Graduate Student Workshop on Ethics



The Graduate School invites all graduate students to the next event in our
2006-07 Professional Development series:

Common Tensions within Graduate School: How to Resolve Ethical Dilemmas
When They Come Up
Wednesday, November 15, 2006
3:30-5:00 p.m.
Thomson Hall, Room 119
Presented by Dr. Kelly Fryer-Edwards, Assistant Professor, Department of Medical History and Ethics, School of Medicine
http://www.grad.washington.edu/pff/events06/ethics.htm


No preregistration is required. Information about the series can be found at:
http://www.grad.washington.edu/pff/events06/home.htm



5) "Essential Medicines: Global Access, Global Responsibility"



Americans for Informed Democracy, along with Universities Allied for Essential

Medicines and AMSA UW Premedical Chapter, invite you to a Town Hall Event:



Tuesday, November 21, 7pm

Smith 120



Featuring Panelists:

Beth Riven

Research Associate Professor in Law; Adjunct Research Associate Professor in

Health Services



Professor Rivin directs the Global Health and Justice Project, a

multidisciplinary project that is based at the School of Law. The Project

encompasses academic activities at UW as well as field activities in developing

countries in collaboration with the Seattle-based NGO, Uplift International. She

teaches Health and Human Rights, a graduate course that enrolls students from

across campus. Her research focus is in the field of Health and Human Rights and

her field work is currently in Southeast Asia. She is a co-investigator on the

Fogarty Center funded Frameworks in Global Health Grant Project. Professor Rivin

is also a co-investigator on a grant from the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation,

Mapping of Public Health institutions: Country and Institutional Descriptions.

Her professional experience ranges from clinical pediatrics and adolescent

medicine to field research, epidemiology, and public health and human rights

program development and evaluation. She has consulted with Ministries of

Health, large governmental and international organizations, such as USAID and

WHO, and NGOs.



Sean O' Connor

Associate Director of CASRIP ; Associate Director of Graduate Program in

Intellectual Law and Policy; Associate Professor of Law ; Faculty Director of

Entrepreneurial Law Clinic. Professor O'Connor's research focuses on legal issues involved in commercializing art, science, and technology. He also studies the social and

cultural context of artistic, scientific, and technological innovation. He is

the Associate Director of both the Center for Advanced Study & Research on

Intellectual Property (CASRIP) and Intellectual Property Law & Policy Program.

Professor O'Connor has particular expertise in the multiple areas of law

impacting the biotechnology industry as well as those impacting new media and

digital arts. He lectures, publishes, and consults regularly in these areas in

the U.S. and internationally. He has served as General Counsel to the seminal

digital arts organization, Rhizome.org, since 2000. Professor O'Connor is also

regularly quoted by major local and national media and has served as an expert

witness in litigation involving intellectual property and corporate governance.



Sunil Aggarwal

3rd year Doctoral Candidate in Geography and a third-year medical student in

UW's MD/PhD program. Sunil is the Immediate Past President of the Washington Physicians for Social Responsibility. He advocates for reform of drug laws that exert a type of pre-emptive patenting that gives exclusive rights of botanical medicines to

governments while forcefully prohibiting all others from using them. He has a

BS degree in Chemistry and a BA degree in Philosophy from UC Berkeley, with a

minor in Religious Studies. His parents immigrated from India in the 1970's,

and he was born and raised in Oklahoma.



Please contact Angela Ju at angelaju at u.washington.edu or Ciara Huntington at

ciarah at u.washington.edu with questions or for more information.





6) Autumn Quarter 2006 Distinguished Faculty Lecture "What History Tells Us About Maternal and Child Health"


Irvin Emanuel, MA, MD, MS

Emeritus Professor of Epidemiology and Pediatrics



Tuesday, November 28, 2006 3:30pm-5:00pm
T-639 Health Sciences Center
Reception follows



Sponsored by the Dean's Office, School of Public Health and Community
Medicine For more information contact James Fesalbon at:

jfesal at u.washington.edu
206-543-1144



7) Research Symposium Sharon Hillier, PhD



The University of Washington Center for AIDS and STD will sponsor a
one-day research symposium on Wednesday, November 29, from 10am-4:30pm at
the Harborview Research and Training Building Auditorium, featuring
keynote speaker Sharon Hillier, PhD, Professor and Director of
Reproductive Infectious Disease Research in the Department of Obstetrics,
Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine. Her talk is entitled, "Attacking HIV at the Point of
Transmission: the Quest for Topical Microbicides".

We will also feature a panel discussion led by Laura Koutsky, PhD, MSPH,
with local distinguished faculty members on the topic "Implementation of
an HPV Vaccine: Challenges and Implications", and presentations by recent
recipients of Center for AIDS Research and STI-Cooperative Research Center
Developmental Awards, and pre- and post-doctoral fellows of the STD
training grant.

Registration is free and is requested, but not required. If possible, we
ask that you register by November 21 to get an accurate count for
refreshments and lunch. A reception will follow the program at 4:30pm.
For more information go to this website:
http://depts.washington.edu/cfas/calendar/05.11.html. To register, e-mail
Susan Mello at spmello at u.washington.edu.



8) 2006 AIDS & STD Research Symposium



The University of Washington Center for AIDS and STD will sponsor a one-day research symposium on Wednesday, November 29, from 10am-4:30pm at the Harborview Research and Training Building Auditorium, featuring keynote speaker Sharon Hillier, PhD, Professor and Director of Reproductive Infectious Disease Research in the Department of Obstetrics, Gynecology and Reproductive Sciences at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine. Her talk is entitled, "Attacking HIV at the Point of Transmission: the Quest for Topical
Microbicides".

We will also feature a panel discussion led by Laura Koutsky, PhD, MSPH, with local distinguished faculty members on the topic "Implementation of an HPV Vaccine: Challenges and Implications", and presentations by recent recipients of Center for AIDS Research and STI-Cooperative Research Center Developmental Awards, and pre- and post-doctoral fellowsof the STD training grant.

Registration is free and is requested, but not required. If possible, we ask that you register by November 21 to get an accurate count for refreshments and lunch. A reception will follow the program at 4:30pm. For more information go to this website: http://depts.washington.edu/cfas/calendar/05.11.html. To register, e-mail Susan Mello at spmello at u.washington.edu.



9) World Health Cinema Film Series: Yesterday, a film by Darrell Roodt



December 5, 2006

6:30p

Location: Ethnic Cultural Center Theater

Sponsored by the Global Health Resource Center; International Health Program, School of Public Health and Community Medicine; UW Libraries; UW Chapter of AMSA, the Office of Undergraduate Education Diversity Working Group; UW African Studies; and the International Pharmaceutical Students' Federation

Yesterday tells the story of a young mother in South Africa who has been diagnosed with AIDS, but is determined to live long enough to see her young daughter go to school.



10) "Globalization and Regional Economic Development" Conference in Gyeong Ju, South Korea



The Korea Economics and Business Association (KEBA), Research Center for International Economics (RCIE), and Korea Institute for Industrial Economics and Trade (KIET) are jointly organizing a conference on "Globalization and Regional Economic Development". It will be held in Gyeong Ju, South Korea on December 15-16, 2006.

You are cordially invited to submit papers for presentation in the conference. Papers related to the following issues, both theoretical and empirical ones, are most welcome.

a.. Globalization and its impacts on regional economies;
b.. FTAs and their impacts on regional economies;
c.. Regional innovation system and regional development strategies;
d.. Issues on local public finance, housing, and human settlements; and
e.. Case Studies of regional economic development.
Please send both Gwang-Lag Son <glson at yumail.ac.kr> and Kar-yiu Wong <karyiu at u.washington.edu> a draft of a paper or an extended abstract, 500+ words long, in English, with your name, affiliation, academic position, mail and e-mail addresses, and phone and fax numbers, by September 15, 2006. The final version of all papers for presentation will be due November 15, 2006. For more information, please visit its web site: http://faculty.washington.edu/karyiu/confer/GJ06/index.htm



11) 5th Annual Western Regional International Health Conference set for February 16-18 2007

Following on the success of the past events, PSPGH will once again sponsor the Western Regional International Health Conference here in Seattle on the University of Washington campus. Set for February 16-18, 2007, the conference theme will be "Global Health Through Different Lenses: Reflections, Perspectives, and Visions for the Future." Dr. Jim Yong Kim, of Harvard University and Partners in Health will be our keynote lecturer!

Register now on the PSPGH website, www.pspgh.org and read more about the conference.

12) Innovation, Advancement, and Best Practices To Achieve Global Goals
Unite For Sight's Fourth Annual International Health Conference



APRIL 14-15, 2007

STANFORD UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE, CALIFORNIA, USA
Learn From More Than 300 Renowned Speakers - An Energizing Weekend of Ideas and Exchange of Best Practices to Achieve Global Goals and to Make a Difference
http://uniteforsight.org/conference/2007/index.php

Register Today For A Reduced Rate! (Current Rate is $55 Students/$75 All Others - EARLY BIRD RATE INCREASES AFTER NOVEMBER 15
http://uniteforsight.org/conference/2007/index.php

When: April 14-15, 2007
Where: Stanford University School of Medicine, Palo Alto, California, USA
Theme: "Innovation, Advancement, and Best Practices To Achieve Global Goals"
Who should attend? Anyone interested in eye care, international health, medicine, health education, health promotion, public health, international service, social entrepreneurship, nonprofits, or microenterprise
Conference Goal: To exchange ideas across disciplines about best practices in public health, medicine and research, and international health and development. Conference topics range from "The Right to Health: Towards Social Inclusion and Universal Health Care in Latin America" and "Antiretroviral Drugs and Issues of Drug Access and Quality in the Developing World" to "Global Progress in Preventing the Burden of Blindness and Other Diseases Caused by Measles and Rubella" and "Once I Was Blind....The Challenges of Eye Care in Ghana"

a.. Join over 1,500 leaders, doctors, professionals, and students from 5 continents
b.. More than 300 speakers about eye care, public health, international development, entrepreneurship, microfinance, policy and advocacy, bioethics, and medicine
c.. Exchange ideas about best practices to achieve global goals in health and development
http://uniteforsight.org/conference/2007/index.php
13) 34th International Conference on Global Health: Partnerships Working Together for Global Health in Washington, DC

Regular abstract submission deadline: October 17, 2006.

The Global Health Council's 34th Annual International Conference is dedicated to partnerships: how they are built, what they have and can deliver, and how those living in poverty and disease can best benefit. These joint efforts are means to tackle and find solutions to complex health problems at all levels, and in so doing, improve the health of the world.

Abstracts are sought that detail the range of partnerships - among others, between NGOs, the private sector and governments; between and among service delivery, advocacy, research and academic organizations; among institutions based in the developing world (South-to-South), and between them and those based in industrialized countries; and among bilateral donors, multilateral institutions, and foundations, and those who implement programs. Key health issues include child health/survival; adolescent health; women's health; HIV/AIDS, TB, malaria, and other infectious diseases.

For more information contact Global Health Council, E-mail: conference at globalhealth.org; or access the website: www.globalhealth.org/conference .



Funding/International Opportunities



1) FLAS fellowship applications are available

2) Seattle Community Colleges Global Impact program is seeking program leaders for Belize and Vietnam programs

3) NIH International Research Scientist Development Award

4) Long-term International Fellowship Opportunities for Graduates

5) Master of International research bioethics



********************************************************************

1) FLAS fellowship applications are available

Apply now for Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowships

Application packets for Title VI Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowships
are now available for students to pick up from the Jackson School of International Studies,
Office of Student Services in Thomson 111. Graduate and professional students from all
departments and schools across campus are encouraged to apply. The deadline is
January 16, 2007.

M.A and Ph.D. students, who are U.S. citizens or permanent residents, and will be
studying modern foreign language*, in combination with area or international studies or
international aspects of professional fields, are eligible for Academic Year awards.
Summer fellowships are granted to those who will be engaged in intensive foreign
language study in the U.S. or abroad.

FLAS fellowships are funded by the U.S. Department of Education through eight
National Resource Centers located in the Jackson School of International Studies:
Canada, East Asia, International Studies, Middle East, Russian/East European/Central Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia and West Europe.

Summer 2007 awards will provide tuition up to $4,000, plus a living allowance of $2,500. Academic year 2007-08 fellowships will grant tuition up to $12,000, plus a stipend of $15,000.
Graduate appointee health insurance is paid out of the tuition amount.
Please publicize the fellowship by forwarding this letter to students, staff and faculty
in your department. Students may assemble the information needed to apply by
downloading materials from http://jsis.artsci.washington.edu/advise/catalog/flasapp.html .
If you have questions about fellowship requirements or the application process, please
contact me at 616-8679. I am also available to attend meetings or classes to explain the fellowship and will gladly bring application materials.

*2007-08 FLAS award languages: Arabic, Bengali, Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian, Chinese,
Czech, Danish, Estonian, Filipino/Tagalog, Finnish, French, German, Hebrew, Hindi,
Indonesian/Malay, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Latvian, Lithuanian, Norwegian, Persian,
Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish, Swedish, Tajik, Thai, Turkish, Uighur, Urdu, Uzbek, and Vietnamese.



2) Seattle Community Colleges Global Impact program is seeking program leaders for Belize and Vietnam programs



http://www.seattlecolleges.edu/international/default.asp?page=globalimpact



Just a reminder of the approaching deadline if you are applying to lead one of the two Summer 2007 projects, Belize or Vietnam.



The application is on the website. www.seattlecolleges.com/globalimpact



3) International Research Scientist Development Award (IRSDA) [K01]
Letters of Intent Receipt Date(s): December 15, 2006; December 14,
2007, December 16, 2008.
Application Receipt Date(s): January 16, 2007; January 16, 2008;
January 16, 2009
The program announcement can be found at
http://grants.nih.gov/grants/guide/pa-files/PAR-07-014.html
This program supports U.S. postdoctoral biomedical, epidemiological,
clinical, social and behavioral scientists in the formative stages of their careers to conduct research in developing countries. These awards will provide the successful candidates with a three- to four-year period of intensive mentored research, leading to an
independent research career focused on global health. This research must be directly linked to an established collaboration between a U.S. mentor/sponsor and a leading developing country scientist at an internationally recognized research institution in a developing country. Collaborations are expected to lead to advances that will
reduce the impact of global health problems and narrow the gap in health disparities between developed and developing countries.


Awardees who obtain a tenure track position may submit a competitive renewal application for up to three years of additional mentored career development support. The total amount to be awarded is expected to be $250,000 - $500,000 and the anticipated number of awards is two to five. Applicants may request salary and fringe benefits for the
Principal Investigator and support for travel and research development. This program will use the NIH career development (K01) award mechanism. The application may be submitted on behalf of the candidate (Principal Investigator) by any domestic non-profit, public or private institution, such as a university, college, hospital, or laboratory. Foreign institutions are not eligible to apply. Candidates must be U.S. citizens, non-citizen nationals, or individuals lawfully admitted for U.S. permanent residence, who have earned a doctoral, dental or medical degree within seven years of the application receipt
date.



4) The Seeds of Sustenance Fellowship Program *

*Gain Experience in **Organization** **Capacity** **Building** and
Community Training Management in *

*Sub-Saharan **Africa** or **Southeast Asia*

The Seeds of Sustenance (SOS) Fellowship Program provides an opportunity for international development and public health professionals to gain valuable international experience through their work as fellows assigned to development organizations in sub-Saharan Africa or Southeast Asia. SOS Fellows help to improve the managerial and training capacity of participating NGOs and CBOs in developing nations focused on providing community support and sustainable training programs to vulnerable
populations in the following areas: HIV/AIDS prevention and care, nutrition, sustainable agriculture, food security, Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL), and drug and alcohol abuse prevention.

Professionals with at least a Masters Degree are selected as Visiting Fellows to participate in the SOS Fellowship's four-week, intensive cross-sectoral training. Visiting Fellows are paired with counterpart Local Fellows representing local Participating Organizations (POs). Following the SOS Training Program, the fellow pairs spend five to
eleven months working together in the field offices of their respective POs as program managers and Trainers of Trainers (ToT) supporting and coaching staff members and community organization facilitators in order to increase their leadership and participatory community training abilities.

The initial four-week SOS Fellowship Training Program focuses on program development, project management, and ToT theory and practice. Technical aspects of the training program vary depending on the specific needs of the region and POs


*SOS* Program History

Since 1993 Global Service Corps (GSC) has provided assistance to organizations in five developing countries throughout Latin America, Southeast Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa in the areas of: natural resource conservation, public health, English as a Foreign Language (EFL), youth education, sustainable agriculture, nutrition and HIV/AIDS prevention education. Since 1994, GSC international volunteers, interns and partners have worked on HIV/AIDS Prevention and Care training and food production campaigns to assist rural communities and people living with HIV/AIDS in Kenya and Tanzania. The GSC Thailand program was founded in 1995 with programs in EFL, international health and Buddhist Immersion. In 2004, the SOS Fellowship Program was launched by GSC to help international development NGOs and CBOs address the growing need for
training and development resources in urban and rural communities throughout rural Africa. The first SOS Program in Southeast Asia, jointly supported by GSC and the Population and Community Development Association (PDA), is scheduled to launch in April, 2007 in Thailand. GSC headquarters are located in San Francisco, California, with offices in Arusha, Tanzani and Singburi, Thailand.

*For more information, please contact:*
Hannah Reid, SOS Program Administrator
Global Service Corps
300 Broadway Suite 28 San Francisco, CA 94133
(415) 788-3666 x.128 sos at globalservicecorps.org
<mailto:sos at globalservicecorps.org>* *
or visit our website at *www.globalservicecorps.org
<http://www.globalservicecorps.org/>*



5) Master of International research bioethics

[Five fee scholarships and stipends are available to students from developing countries in the Asia/ Pacific region].

Master of International Research Bioethics

Master of International Research Bioethics3 semesters full-time + 6 semesters part-time
Study mode and course location On-campus (Alfred Hospital, Melbourne)

Course description
This course, offered by the Department of Epidemiology and Preventative Medicine, is an interdisciplinary program covering comparative moral theory, research bioethics in an international setting, quantitative and qualitative research methodology, critical appraisal techniques and relevant law. Particular emphasis is given to ethical issues associated with research in developing countries in the Asia-Pacific Region.

Students will gain a strong theoretical framework, significant experience with ethics committees and considerable involvement with local organisations concerned with the development of bioethical policy and its implementation. This course is currently funded by the Fogarty Institute of the US National Institutes of Health.

Course objectives
The overall objectives for the course cover four main themes:

1. Basic moral theory, bioethics and the application of bioethical principles and law to research in both domestic and international collaborative contexts
2. Quantitative and qualitative methodology for international health programme planning and evaluation
3. Special issues in international health

4. Practical application of theory and knowledge

Fees:
In recognition of the fact that people from both NGOs and from developing countries may wish to undertake this program, we have a special fee policy for this program. Fees are AUS $19,785 for Australian students and AUS $22,650 for international students.

In addition, five fee scholarships and stipends are available to students from developing countries in the Asia/ Pacific region.

We are particularly interested in sponsoring students who are appropriately qualified from Thailand and Vietnam
Applicants need to have a TOEFL score of at least 8 to be eligible.

Please contact
Dr Deborah Zion
e-mail: <deborah.zion at arts.monash.edu.au>

Job/Internship Announcements

1) GHRC_jobs listserv

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1) GHRC_jobs listserv

To keep up with the information we receive here at the UW GHRC related to
global health-related employment in local and global organizations and
universities, we have created a new listserv/mailman list dedicated to
posting new jobs, fellowships or interesting internships announcements:
GHRC_jobs. Please send text descriptions and refrain from sending
attachments. Members can choose to receive those announcements individually
or in a daily digest. The list will be monitored by the GHRC to avoid
multiple postings of the same announcement, where possible.
To subscribe: http://mailman1.u.washington.edu/mailman/listinfo/ghrc_jobs



General Announcements

1) New Globalization Resource for Students and Teachers

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1) New Globalization Resource for Students, Teachers

The Carnegie Endowment for International Peace has recently launched Globalization101, an online resource for students and educators. The site includes tools and information dealing with the dilemmas and trade-offs of globalization.

http://www.globalization101.org/index.html

_________________________________________________________________

DISCLAIMER

The authorized use of this data is limited to academic and educational purposes

only. Postings within GHRCmail do not imply any endorsement of or recommendation for a particular program, opportunity, project, or event. All specific questions regarding GHRCmail listings should be directed to the contact person identified on that entry.





Daren Wade, MSW
Program Manager
Global Health Resource Center
Health Sciences Administration
C-314 Health Sciences
Box 356355
206-616-1159
dwade at u.washington.edu
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