For Immediate Release — Tuesday, Jan. 24, 2006
Contact:
Mary E. McCrank
Media Relations Officer
(585) 245-5516
mccrank@geneseo.edu
Cornell University scientist and peace expert to
deliver annual Phi Beta Kappa lecture Feb. 2 at SUNY Geneseo
GENESEO,
N.Y. — Judith V. Reppy, a professor of science and technology and
associate director of the Peace Studies Program at Cornell University, will
deliver the State University of New York at Geneseo's annual Phi Beta Kappa
lecture at 4 p.m., Thursday, Feb. 2, in Room 204 in Newton Hall. The talk,
titled "Bioterrorism in a Historical Perspective," is
free and open to the public.
Reppy has been a visiting fellow at Science & Technology
Studies at Manchester University, the Science Policy Research Unit at Sussex
University and the Center for International Studies at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology.
She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, the
board of directors of the Federation of American Scientists and the advisory
board of Women in International Security.
In 2002-03, she served on the National Academy of Sciences'
committee on research standards and practices to prevent the destructive
application of biotechnology. From 1995 to 2000, she was co-chair of the U.S.
Pugwash Conferences on science and international affairs.
Reppy is the co-editor and contributing author of "The
Genesis of New Weapons: Decision Making for Military R&D," "The Relations
Between Defence and Civil Technologies," "Beyond Zero Tolerance: Discrimination
in Military Culture," and "Secrecy and Knowledge Production." Her current
research interests include responses to the risk of bioterrorism and issues
surrounding the public understanding of science.
Reppy received her bachelor of
arts from Mount Holyoke College, her master of arts from Yale University and
her Ph.D. in economics from Cornell University.
In 2004, Geneseo became the first non-doctoral undergraduate
institution within SUNY to house a Phi Beta Kappa chapter. The college is one
of only 270 colleges and universities in the nation to have a Phi Beta Kappa
chapter, the nation's best known and most significant honor society.
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