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International Lawyer Interview with Professor Jerome A. Cohen
Jerome A. Cohen (사) 이준국제법연구원 2022 Journal of East Asia and International Law Vol.15 No.1
Dr. Jerome Cohen (孔傑榮/柯恩) is Professor Emeritus at New York University School of Law, Founder and Faculty Director Emeritus of its US-Asia Law Institute, and Adjunct Senior Fellow for Asia at the Council on Foreign Relations. Professor Cohen was born in Elizabeth, New Jersey as the son of a local government attorney. After graduating from Linden High School, he received his B.A. and J.D. degree from prestigious Yale University and its Law School in 1951 and 1955, respectively. As a law student, he served as the Editor-in-Chief of the Yale Law Journal. From 1955–56 he clerked at the Supreme Court under Chief Justice Earl Warren and then under Justice Felix Frankfurter. Professor Cohen joined the faculty of University of California- Berkeley School of Law in 1959. Then, Professor Cohen was asked to recommend a candidate for a four-year grant to study China offered by the Rockefeller Foundation. When there was no clear candidate, however, he decided to pursue the opportunity himself.
Beyond whiteness: exploring pedagogical aspects of resistance to multicultural education
Cohen Aviv 한국다문화교육학회 2024 Multicultural Education Review Vol.16 No.1
Recently, there has been a focus on the experiences of students who belong to society’s dominant groups. One aspect of this focus is on the resistance to multicultural concepts. While some studies have explored cultural identity as a cause of this resistance, more explorations from a social-pedagogical perspective are needed. This qualitative case study examines the resistance to multicultural education expressed by Israeli Jewish undergraduate education students who were enrolled in an academic course on multiculturalism. Using Critical Whiteness Studies as a theoretical lens, the study shows how students from this privileged group oppose multiculturalism through pedagogical aspects of teaching. This approach to resistance highlights the role of social positionality in critiquing this field without directly engaging with its core ideas. Therefore, pedagogy is presented as a crucial concept to be considered.
Cohen, J.G.,Goo, J.M.,Yoo, R.E.,Park, S.B.,van Ginneken, B.,Ferretti, G.R.,Lee, C.H.,Park, C.M. G. Thieme ; Elsevier Science Pub. Co 2016 European journal of radiology Vol.85 No.6
<P>Objectives: To evaluate the differences in semi-automatic measurements of CT attenuation and volume of part-solid nodules (PSNs) between unenhanced and enhanced CT scans. Materials and methods: CT scans including unenhanced and enhanced phases (slice thickness 0.625 and 1.25 mm, respectively) for 53 adenocarcinomas presenting as PSNs in 50 patients were retrospectively evaluated. For each nodule, semi-automatic segmentation provided the diameter, mean attenuation, mass, and volume of a whole nodule and its solid component. Interscan variability and statistical significance of the differences in those measures according to the adenocarcinoma category were evaluated by one reader. Results: All parameters except for the mean attenuation of the solid components, were significantly increased on enhanced CT (p < 0.05). For the whole nodule, the mean relative differences were as follows: the longest diameter, 1.4% (limits of agreement,-6.2-9.1); volume, 2.4% (-26.7-31.4); mass, 7.0% (-11.3-25.2); mean attenuation, 2.7% (-5.6-11). For the nodule's solid component, those differences were as follow: the longest diameter, 6.9% (-34.4-48.2); volume, 17.9% (-77.8-113.7); mass, 18.8% (-77.8-115.4). The differences of measures between the unenhanced and enhanced CT were not significantly different between two groups of adenocarcinoma in situ/minimally invasive adenocarcinomas and invasive adenocarcinomas (p > 0.05). Conclusions: As most volumetric and attenuation measurements changed significantly after contrast enhancement, care should be taken in comparing unenhanced and enhanced CT in the evaluation of PSNs. (C) 2016 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.</P>
p62- and ubiquitin-dependent stress-induced autophagy of the mammalian 26S proteasome
Cohen-Kaplan, Victoria,Livneh, Ido,Avni, Noa,Fabre, Bertrand,Ziv, Tamar,Kwon, Yong Tae,Ciechanover, Aaron National Academy of Sciences 2016 PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF Vol.113 No.47
<P>The ubiquitin-proteasome system and autophagy are the two main proteolytic systems involved in, among other functions, the maintenance of cell integrity by eliminating misfolded and damaged proteins and organelles. Both systems remove their targets after their conjugation with ubiquitin. An interesting, yet incompletely understood problem relates to the fate of the components of the two systems. Here we provide evidence that amino acid starvation enhances polyubiquitination on specific sites of the proteasome, a modification essential for its targeting to the autophagic machinery. The uptake of the ubiquitinated proteasome is mediated by its interaction with the ubiquitin-associated domain of p62/SQSTM1, a process that also requires interaction with LC3. Importantly, deletion of the PB1 domain of p62, which is important for the targeting of ubiquitinated substrates to the proteasome, has no effect on stress-induced autophagy of this proteolytic machinery, suggesting that the domain of p62 that binds to the proteasome determines the function of p62 in either targeting substrates to the proteasome or targeting the proteasome to autophagy.</P>