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Competing in a Global Economy UGA's Carl Vinson Institute of Government plans and conducts the three-day Biennial Institute, which consists of basic training for newly elected legislators. The Georgia General Assembly Training Institute cosponsors the event.
MISSION Photo IllustrationUGA’s Carl Vinson Institute of Government plans and conducts the three-day Biennial Institute, which consists of basic training for newly elected legislators. The Georgia General Assembly Training Institute cosponsors the event.
 
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Program Agenda
Carl Vinson Institute of Government
Public Service and Outreach
Zell Miller, who served as Georgia senator, lieutenant governor and governor before going on to the U.S. Senate, will provide a historical perspective of the Georgia General Assembly as the featured speaker during the opening session of the Biennial Institute for Georgia Legislators, to be held Dec. 10-12 at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education Conference Center and Hotel. This will be the 25th gathering for the program, which was first held in 1958 and has been ranked by the National Conference of State Legislatures as the top university-based legislative training program in the country.

The Carl Vinson Institute of Government plans and conducts the three-day agenda, which consists of basic training for newly elected legislators and policy panels for all participants. The Georgia General Assembly Training Institute cosponsors the event.

The Biennial Institute started at a time when there was a growing interest nationwide in improving state legislatures, according to Ed Jackson, Vinson Institute faculty member and long-time Biennial instructor.

“Bill Collins, who was the director of the Institute of Government and UGA’s first associate director of continuing education, proposed the creation of a program of orientation for new lawmakers and a setting for facilitated discussion of important state policy issues,” he said. (Distinguished retired law professor R. Perry Sentell Jr., who was then a third-year law student at UGA, wrote the first Handbook for Georgia Legislators, now in its 13th edition.)

Held one month after the general election, the Biennial sessions are conducted by Vinson Institute faculty, veteran lawmakers and staff, agency administrators and subject experts. New representatives and senators are instructed in everything from where to park, to the appropriations process, rules of procedure, ethics and how a bill becomes a law.

Policy programs for all lawmakers will cover some of the major issues that will face the 2007 General Assembly. Topics to be explored include education policy (with an address by Chancellor Erroll Davis), transportation, Medicaid, families and children, emergency preparedness, and the state’s energy crisis. The morning of Dec. 12 will be devoted exclusively to state health care concerns. This year’s Biennial Institute will conclude with an address by Gov. Sonny Perdue outlining his goals for the 2007 session.

“Today’s state lawmakers face increasingly complex issues and greater expectations from citizens,” said Steve Wrigley, Vinson Institute director. “The continuing value of the Biennial Institute can be attributed to the planners’ ability to recognize the changing dynamics of the legislature and respond with programming that meets their current policy information and training needs for making better informed decisions for Georgia.”

Competing in a Global Economy

The University of Georgia is at the forefront of the globalization movement in higher education with a wealth of opportunities for international experiences. Our students are flocking to study-abroad programs, thriving on the challenges inherent in confronting a new cultural environment. More and more, students on campus are also making choices that reflect an understanding of the importance of global awareness—from living in a residence hall-based language community to starting a radio program in another language to minoring in a foreign language. These experiences, whether at home or abroad, influence how our students perceive the world and their place in it. We’re producing graduates prepared to be world citizens—well informed, culturally sensitive and technologically sophisticated. They’re ready to take on the challenges of our global society, and they’ll be equally at home whether in the Peach State or the Republic of Georgia.


Previous "Competing in a Global Economy" features :

2008-2009
Local Officials Learn in New Ways
Balancing trade and security
Fossil finding new life as a landscape tree
Teaching teachers in the Andes
Cultivating Caviar
PAWS for a CAUSE: Reaching out to Clarke County schoolchildren
Inmates grow food, skills at new garden
Web site offers first complete look at Georgia’s freshwater fishes
Cortona Program celebrates its 40th anniversary
Social work professor creates Web site for cancer survivors
Class projects provide local nonprofits with valuable benefits
Liberia’s National Assembly Meets Georgia’s General Assembly
Healthy, marketable chicken feet
A Different View Of The World
UGA students experienced academics and adventure in Costa Rica
Empowering women of Kenya
UGA center helps build Georgia co-ops
Working together against terror: Public policy and international trade as it relates to animal disease transmission
Learning by serving: Project Riverway
Pictures and 1,000 words: My Place at the Boys & Girls Club
Crude Corral: Using bilge socks to help reduce oil pollution in Georgia’s coastal waters
Secretaries of State at UGA
Virtual peanut farms provide real answers
Borrowers and Lenders: The Journal of Shakespeare and Appropriation
Technology helps, doesn’t replace female workforce
Walk Georgia: Georgians invited to take online walk
Global Text Project

2006-2007
The 10th anniversary of African Perspecitves
Map It Out: The benefits of Geographic Information Systems technology
Beyond Beetlemania: study abroad program in Costa Rica
Heart fitness: Kinesiology Fitness Centers and Programs
Imported foods cause for concern
30 years of helping small business
Community Practice Clinic: Real World Training for Veterinary Students
Redefining study abroad
Conservation workshop teaches educators about shorebirds and horseshoe crabs
It's easy being green: UGA Transit buses switch to biodiesel
Surviving breast cancer
Before the well runs dry
Uganda: Finding Its Niche
UGA expert helps homeowners identify insects
Beehive Death
AgrAbility geared to aid farmers with disabilities
On the boardwalk: Jay Wolf Nature Trail
What’s in thin air: City officials in Cusco, Peru ask UGA scientists to help them find out
Training for leadership: the Biennial Institute for Georgia Legislators
Governance is no longer a foreign concept: UGA's International Center for Democratic Governance
Good Apples, Bad Apples
Foreign Laws: Georgia Law at Oxford
Padres e Hijos Fin de Semana: Parents and Students Weekend
Welcome to the state of poverty
Learning to Hear: the UGA Speech and Hearing Clinic
Energy Audit
Hispanic Heritage Month: Introducing Pedro R. Portes
Hands on animal science
Greatest Hits: The creation of a memorial fund in honor of Capricorn Records co-founder, Phil Walden, to support the recently-established Music Business Certificate Program
Carter Presidency: Lessons for the 21st Century

2005-2006
The Carter Presidency: Lessons for the 21st Century
Breathing easy: Sampling air quality around a school in Athens
Hurricane Katrina Project : A joint venture between the School of Social Work and Community Connection of Northeast Georgia
Engineering takes heart: UGA engineering students find solutions based on first-hand experience
Bringing history to life: Georgia’s civil rights history right here on campus
EweGA Cares: Public Administration students to help buy pregnant sheep for starving people in Africa
Putting the pine back in Pinewood Estates
Larger than life: Osborne Film Festival
The Redcoats are going (to China)!
Dancing the night away: the UGA Dance Marathon
Found in translation: Service-learning opportunities for UGA students in Croatia
Fulbright finesse
Bird-friendly, organic chocolate products
On the track to financial wellness: Consumer Financial Literacy Program
Speaking the same language: Teachers Training Teachers
Latino education exchange
Golden years: Georgia’s first Geriatric Education Center
Cleaning up Katrina
Walking for the cure
A recipe for success—Home food preservation
UGA’s River Basin Center — Watershed Excellence: Upper Altamaha Pilot Project
Get ready… UGA Office of Security & Emergency Preparedness
Nutrition Theater: Camp Summer Spree Horizons

2004-2005
Making a better world: Poverty research in Haiti
The Foot Soldier Project - online
Operation 4-H: Helping kids cope with soldier-parents’ absence
Georgia Local Government 101
To protect and serve: UGA's K9 force
Preventing Contamination in Food
UGA students take community service a step further
From the lab to the marketplace: UGA's BioBusiness Center
A fitting tribute: UGA's Memorial Garden
Before you go…the University Health Center’s Travel Medicine Clinic should be at the top of your to-do list
Free tax help
Helping others to help themselves
Strong families equal bright futures
Learning to Serve
Protecting food from toxins and terrorists
(The other) Vets in Iraq and Afghanistan
A cultural exchange: Visiting Filipino teacher educators
Be thankful for uninvited pests in your home
Feeling grrrr-eat! Pet therapy
Helping Hands: Preparing students to be leaders in the public sector

2003-2004
Law Students Answer the Call for Democracy
We the People
Smart Growth University: the Alliance for Quality Growth
But I still have checks left!
Touring Tico Culture
The Dog Doctors
Way Beyond Borders: Officials from Croatia recently learned about Georgia's community initiatives
An oasis in Athens
Making a difference: Gentlemen on the Move
Ridin’ Thru Da ‘Hood: Caree Jackson's play takes on childhood obesity
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Where will you sleep tonight? 2004 Habifest
And the winner is…the Sixty-Third Peabody Awards
Ecolodge San Luis: a Course in Study-Abroad
East African Entrepreneurs Visit the University of Georgia
A long way from home: Lioba Moshi shares her pride for Africa
Teaching for America
The grass is greener near greenspaces
Faraway finds: Research Experiences for Undergraduates
Sustaining Livelihoods While Protecting Biodiversity
Protecting the World from Nuclear Weapons: UGA's Center for International Trade and Security
The World at Large: Art Rosenbaum's Mural
Gaining International Legal Experience
Breaking the cycle of poverty: Studying persistent poverty in the South
Speed the plow: UGA researchers design a remote controlled "Row-bot" to perform farming tasks
Unleashing a dream: UGA's Small Business Development Center
The invisible war: Twenty years after a devastating war, the negative effects of trauma and living in refugee camps appear to be pervasive
Thinking globally, acting locally: UGA-Clarke County Schools Partnership
Student Ambassadors
Oxford Bound: UGA's residential study-abroad program at Oxford University in England
UGA reaches out to a new generation of Young Scholars
UGA's Fanning Institute offers new Latino Youth Leadership Program



This page was last updated on Wednesday, November 29, 2006 12:30 PM EST

 
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