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For information regarding Course 21H UROP Opportunities, please see the UROP Coordinator or check the UROP Project Openings page.
Once you've found your UROP, follow all UROP procedures for pay or credit. For information on funding that may pertain to your research see the "Awards & Funds" section of this site.
- Prof. Christopher Capozzola, E51-180, x2-4960, capozzol@mit.edu
- Professor Christopher Capozzola specializes in the political and legal history of the United States in the twentieth century. His current research focuses on the U.S. military in the Philippines; in the coming year research will focus on U.S.-Asian relations in the Cold War era. Another UROP project for 2009-10 looks at civilian workers and diplomats in Afghanistan and Iraq, and is based on a newly opened collection of oral history interviews. No specialized knowledge or languages are needed; almost all research can be done at home or at MIT libraries. Students interested in a UROP for pay must secure UROP Direct Funding.
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- Prof. Anne McCants, E51-293, x8-6669, amccants@mit.edu
- Employs economic and quantitative approaches to the study of the European past, and has embarked on a project to study the various economic dimensions of cathedral building in the high middle ages. Will be trying to reconstruct where possible the financial underpinning and timing of Gothic cathedral construction in the Paris Basin, Norman England and elsewhere in France, the Low Countries and Scandinavia. The project will also assess the social overhead capital embodied in cathedral building and seek to make welfare assessments for this type of expenditure versus other possible investment or consumption opportunities.
- Prof.
Jeff Ravel, E51-179, x3-4451, ravel@mit.edu
- French political culture from the seventeenth to the early nineteenth centuries. Current projects include the cultural, social, economic, and political aspects of fraud and deception in France from the Old Regime to the nineteenth century; and the digitization of the daily receipts registers of the Comédie-Française theater troupe in Paris from 1680 to 1800, in conjunction with MIT's HyperStudio.
- Prof. Elizabeth Wood, E51-282, x3-3255, elizwood@mit.edu
- Author of two books on politics and culture in the 1920s in the Soviet Union, Professor Wood is now working on a project on the performance of politics in contemporary Russia under Vladimir Putin, drawing on insights from her work in that earlier era of Soviet history. She is looking for a UROP student to do research in an enormous database of Russian newspapers today to obtain information about images of Putin that are being generated by central and regional authorities for mass consumption.
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