Graduate School Prizes and Awards - gsas.nyu.edu.
The Dissertation Collection is hosted by NYU’s institutional repository, the Faculty Digital Archive (archive.nyu.edu). The Dissertation Collection is intended to promote access to and scholarly reuse of NYU dissertations, benefitting dissertation authors, NYU Libraries, and the greater scholarly community. Q.
GSAS Student Britto Wins Woodrow Wilson Foundation Dissertation Fellowship. Apr 20, 2011. Apr 20, 2011. Research Arts and Science Graduate School of Arts and Science Faculty Awards. Lina Britto, a doctoral candidate in the Graduate School of Arts and Science, has been awarded a Newcombe Fellowship by the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship.
Kris Larsen is the Assistant Director of the Office of Global Awards at New York University. An employee of NYU since 2000, he began his career as an administrator for the Department of Psychology. For eight years he oversaw admissions to to the doctoral program in Social Psychology.
This award honors outstanding service and leadership in student activities, including student organizations and School and University governance. The Torch Award is presented to an undergraduate student in recognition of the unique and beneficial quality of their record of service to classmates, the faculty, and the administration of Liberal Studies.
The PhD dissertation is a research document that makes a significant and original contribution to existing knowledge in the discipline. While the precise form of the dissertation will vary by field, the dissertation's fundamental function as an element of doctoral training is to attest to the author’s capacity to produce novel scholarship independently according to the standards of a.
Associate Investigator, Neuroscience Institute at the NYU Langone Medical Center (2017-present) Coordinator, Doctoral Program in Social Psychology, New York University (2013-2016) Assistant Professor, Department of Psychology, New York University (2005-2011) Assistant Professor, Center for Neural Science, New York University (2010-2011).
That conversion led me back to graduate school in Cairo, Cambridge (UK), and Princeton (US). My research explores the social history of religion—how religious identity structured people’s lived experience, but also how their social practices challenge and complicate the picture of inter-religious relations as represented in normative sources (theological, legal, and polemical).