More on Effective Communication During a Campus Crisis
September 16, 2009
Bulletproof Blog interviewed me for its weekly “What’s Next” series about effective communications during times of crisis on college campuses. With students back on campus and cases of H1N1 on the rise, understanding how to prepare is essential.
You can read the full interview here.
Preparing for H1N1 on College Campuses
September 14, 2009
H1N1 presents a real risk to college campuses this fall and developing an effective emergency response plan is critical to effectively handling an outbreak. During my tenure at American University, I oversaw emergency preparedness planning for the SARS pandemic, the 9/11 terrorist attacks on the Pentagon, Anthrax exposure, the D.C. Sniper, and the discovery of U.S. military toxic weapons on campus.
Based on my past experience, I had the opportunity to share a few pointers for colleges on handling H1N1 with The Greenville News:
Upstate colleges see few swine flu cases
Prevention takes center state as some Southern schools report spike in disease
Liv Osby
Greenville News
September 14, 2009
Swine flu has been sweeping through the nation’s college campuses in recent weeks with a spike in the Southeast, but most Upstate colleges are reporting just a handful of cases — at least so far.
Thoughts on the Episcopal Church
August 21, 2009
The State featured my op-ed today on the current struggles in the Episcopal Church. This topic is of particular interest since the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of South Carolina has spoken out against the direction of the national church.
The Significance of Silence
August 18, 2009
Words are the upsurge of silence. Indeed, all human expression is in a peculiar but definite way attended and upheld by silence, which both precedes and follows expression.
We are so used to trafficking in words that we rarely pause to pay attention to silence itself. The overwhelming technical advances in speed, amplification, and access that are enhanced by our control and manipulation of words and images only increase our infatuation and addiction. No doubt this is both unavoidable and fulfilling since we find ourselves in expression.
How is the recession reordering our cultural values?
August 11, 2009
CNN Interview: “Diplomacy’s role”
August 6, 2009
Blog Post about North Korea on Talking Points Memo
August 6, 2009
AP Interview-Analyst: Obama Trying Unconventional Diplomacy
August 5, 2009
I had the opportunity to speak with the Associated Press this afternoon about the diplomatic significance of former President Clinton’s visit to North Korea and its broader implications for U.S.-North Korea relations.
Commentary on Clinton and North Korea
August 5, 2009
I spoke with Christian Science Monitor reporter, Howard LaFranchi, today about why former President Clinton was best suited to secure the release of the two journalists in North Korea. For North Korea, his visit signaled a broader symbolic gesture that could influence future relations between North Korea and the United States.
You can read the full story on the paper’s site at: http://www.csmonitor.com/2009/0805/p02s04-usfp.html
Thoughts on Mark Sanford Published in The State
July 3, 2009
Ladner: The Sanford saga — enough!
By BENJAMIN LADNER
Guest Columnist, The State
July 2, 2009
Governor Mark Sanford’s life and career are in a terrible tangle, and the harder he tugs on this or that thread, the more tangled they become. Some wonder whether the threads this former national GOP leader, touted as presidential material, are pulling are also unraveling the Republican Party itself.
In another time and place — say, Medieval Rome — an explanation of what happened to Sanford and what it means might have been easier: He sinned, or the devil made him do it, or his soul is being fought over by God and Satan, and he’s suffering the curse of the damned.