Meet the Staff
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Kevin Bowen, Former Director William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027 kewin.bowen@umb.edu |
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Kevin Bowen Since 1987, he has returned to Vietnam many times, initiating cultural, educational, and humanitarian exchanges. He is an adjunct Associate Professor in the English Department where he teaches courses in creative writing, literature and war, and the literature of the Vietnam War. Playing Basketball with the Viet Cong, his first collection of poetry, was published by Curbstone Press in 1994. His poems have appeared in Agni, American Poetry Review, Boston Review, Ploughshares Press, Prairie Schooner, TriQuarterly, Witness and other places. He has edited a special feature on contemporary Vietnamese poetry in the Winter 1996 issue of Manoa. With Bruce Weigl he is co-editor of Writing Between the Lines: Writings on War and Its Consequences published by the University of Massachusetts Press in February 1997. He has been director of the center since 1993. He lives with his wife and two children in Dorchester, MA. |
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Paul Atwood, Interim Director William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027A. 617.287.5863 Paul.Atwood@umb.edu |
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Paul Atwood In 1985 he returned full-time to Boston University, and after finishing his doctorate there, started teaching at UMass Boston. His courses include The U.S. in the Sixties, The Culture of War, The U.S. in the 1940's, and The Vietnam War, The U.S. and the Middle East since 1945. His most recent book is War and Empire: The American Way of Life (London, UK, Pluto Press). He has edited Sticks and Stones: Living with Uncertain Wars (University of Massachusetts Press, 2006) and the Joiner Center publication Agent Orange: Medical, Scientific, Legal, Political and Psychological Issues. He has published articles on the consequences of warfare, for example in Barry Levy and Victor Sidel, eds. Public Health and War, New York, (Oxford University Press, 1996) and articles on the Vietnam War in Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia (1998). He also contributes to the on-line publication Counterpunch. |
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Patrick McCormack William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027A 617.287.5852 Patrick.Mccormack@umb.edu |
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Patrick McCormack Patrick joined the Joiner Center in December 2000 as a full-time staff assistant. He is a graduate of UMass Boston and currently studying Music Education for teacher certification. |
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T. Michael Sullivan William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027H 617.287.5861 Michael.Sullivan@umb.edu |
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T. Michael Sullivan T. Michael Sullivan is the Director of the Resource Project for the William Joiner Center. In that capacity, he is the coordinator the Center's Reading Series, which was awarded a National Endowment for the Arts grant in 1994. He is also the coordinator of the Writers' Workshop which is held the during the last two weeks of June each year. In addition to developing public relations initiatives and materials, he edits the Joiner Center Newsletter and multifarious research and public policy documents. Other duties include overseeing tutorial and counseling programs for student veterans and supervising a staff of student employees and volunteers. Formerly the editor of a community newspaper, he led an investigation into governmental corruption, which resulted in a national award for the paper. After leaving the paper, he continued to write a column, which was syndicated in a number of community newspapers, and has served in an advisory capacity. Prior to working in journalism, Mr. Sullivan was a high school teacher and worked in municipal government. He is a graduate of Boston College and holds a Master of Arts degree in Anglo-Irish literature from University College, Dublin. |
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Nguyen Ba Chung William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0028 617.287.5854 Chung.Nguyen@umb.edu |
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Nguyen Ba Chung Nguyen Ba Chung is a writer, poet and translator. He received a bachelor's degree in American literature from the University of Saigon in 1970 and a master's degree in American literature from Brandeis University in 1974. His essays and translations have appeared in Vietnam Forum, New Asia Review, Compost, Nation, Manoa, and other journals. He is the cotranslator of Thoi Xa Vang (A Time Far Past), the groundbreaking novel by Vietnamese writer Le Luu, and the author of three poetry collections Mua Ngan (Distant Rain) in 1996, Ngo Hanh (Gate of Kindness) in 1997, with Tuoi Ngan Nam Den Tu Buoi So Sinh (A Thousand Years Old At Birth) forthcoming. He co-edited with Kevin Bowen and Bruce Weigl the anthology - Mountain River: Vietnamese Poetry From The Wars 1948-1993 issued by the University of Massachusetts Press in Oct 1998. Every summer, Nguyen Ba Chung organizes the Summer Study Program with Hue University, Vietnam. He is currently a Research Associate at the Joiner Center. |
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Ban Al-Mahfodh William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027C 617.287.5860 Ban.Al-Mahfodh@umb.edu |
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Ban AI-Mahfodh Ban AI-Mahfodh is the Research Coordinator and Grant writer for the William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequence, located on the Boston campus of the University of Massachusetts. Previously Ban was the Development intern at the Near East Foundation in New York City, and Project manager for Education and Child protection programs at Save the Children in the Middle East ( mainly Iraq). She earned an initial Master’s at the University of Basra, focusing on Applied linguistics and teaching. More recently at the Heller School, Brandeis University she studied non-profits and their role internationally, focusing on youth, and non-profit management. Ban is currently working on a project to bring together Iraqi artists and writers from the diaspora in North America, in an exchange with counterparts in Boston, and perhaps other US cities. She is currently a Master’s in Educational Leadership candidate for 2013, and plans to take classes in the consortium focusing on interests of disabilities for children and its impact on education, educational leadership, and language learning pedagogy. Ban plans to teach language and other classes whenever possible. Prior to this in the last year she completed a year of social justice training and discussion with the Lead Boston 2011 Cohort. |
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Paul R. Camacho (Retired) William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027A. |
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Paul R. Camacho(Retired) Dr. Camacho served as a sergeant with the 9th Marines in Vietnam (1969-1969) and was wounded in action. He received his PhD in Sociology from Boston College in 1986 and his MSIS from Northeastern University in 1995. He served as the executive director of a two-year investigative legislative Commission in Massachusetts from 1982 through 1983 and authored the publication of Senate 1824 and Senate 2307 (1983), the interim and final reports of that Commission. That study included a broad range of research on a number of issues, including health care for the underserved veterans' population. He also was responsible for follow-up study to those reports in 1990. Dr. Camacho was one of several activists who played a role in the passage of HR 1568, which became PL 106-50, the Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999. He served as the principal investigator for a major federal study in 2000 (SBAHQ-99-C-0001), which involved the conduct of 24 focus groups across the nation. He has expertise in focus group and field research methods as well as a level of expertise in statistics and questionnaire design. He has been a practicing social scientist for well over twenty years. He teaches a wide range of social science courses as an adjunct faculty at a number of universities in the Boston area. He has several published articles on the military in Vietnam and the status of Vietnam veterans in various books and journals, and is a member of the Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces and Society. |
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Mary Sheinfeld (Retired) William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027A. |
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Mary Sheinfeld(Retired) A Boston native, Mary Sheinfeld received both her Bachelor and Master degrees in Education from Boston State College. Before coming to UMass Boston she had taught Math and freshman English for several years at various colleges in the Boston area. In 1980 she became a full-time Math instructor in the Veterans Educational Training Program At UMass. During that time she published Math Can Be Easy, a comprehensive text for the basics of arithmetic, algebra and geometry. The book was published by McGraw Hill in 1993, and is now being revised to include more concepts for a second edition. Mary has also taught Academic Skills math classes through the Department of Continuing Education. She designed and now teaches a Math Refresher course for students who need to review their math or who plan to take the GRE and GMAT exams. Mary was an instructor and advisor in the William Joiner Center for more than twenty years. She does individual tutoring, runs workshop and counsels students on academic issues. Although dealing primarily with the veteran student population, she has worked closely with the Academic Support Services on campus and has an ongoing relationship with various departments. |
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Jaime Rodriguez(Retired) William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027A. |
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JAIME RODRIGUEZ(Retired) Jaime Rodriguez served one tour in Vietnam in 1969. On returning, he obtained a master's degree in Education from Harvard University. Since then he had worked in a variety of projects - as team leader of the Boston Vietnam Veterans Outreach and Counseling Center, special assistant to the Office of Veterans Services of Massachusetts, and organizer of a massive three-year statewide voter registration campaign. He has received a number of awards for his outstanding contributions - the Philanthropic Inc. Boston Award, the ABCD and Latino Democratic Committee Community Service Award, the Massachusetts Hispanic Vietnam Veterans Award, the Legislators Black Caucus Award, etc. He is the President of the Massachusetts Chapter of the National Congress for Puerto Rican Rights. |
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David Hunt(Former Co-Director) William Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences Healey Library,10,0027A. |
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David Hunt(Former Co-Director) David Hunt has been in the History Department at UMass/Boston since 1969. In 1886, he was part of the first educators’ delegation to visit Vietnam after the end of the war. Later that year, after a round of talks with Kevin Bowen, he joined Kevin as Co-Director of the William Joiner Center, a post he held until 1993. Among courses he has taught are offerings on the Vietnam War, the French Revolution, and the origins of the Cold War. His book Vietnam’s Southern Revolution: From Peasant Insurrection to Total War, appeared in 2008, and he has also published essays on peasants and revolutions in Vietnam, France, and elsewhere. His article “Dirty Wars,” on counter-insurgency in Vietnam and Afghanistan, appeared in Politics and Society in 2010. He lives with his wife Thuy in Roslindale, Mass. |





