Environmental Design and Urbanism in Developing Countries

University of California, Berkeley

This is an archived copy of the 2015-16 guide. To access the most recent version of the guide, please visit http://guide.berkeley.edu.

About the Program

Minor

The undergraduate minor in environmental design and urbanism in developing countries serves students majoring in humanities, social sciences, and a variety of professional fields. The minor is intended to expose students to basic problems, cultural contexts, policy alternatives, and design solutions in the Third World.

There is no major program; students interested in pursuing this course of study at the major level should consider the BA in architecture program .

Declaring the Minor

For the minor to be added to the student's transcript, they must file the CED Minor Completion form  with the Office of Undergraduate Advising in 250 Wurster Hall during the semester in which they complete their last class for the minor.

Other Major and Minors Offered by the Department of Architecture

Architecture  (Major and Minor)
History of the Built Environment  (Minor only)
Social and Cultural Factors in Design  (Minor only)
Sustainable Design  (Minor only)

Visit Department Website

Minor Requirements

Students who have a strong interest in an area of study outside their major often decide to complete a minor program. These programs have set requirements and are noted officially on the transcript in the memoranda section, but they are not noted on diplomas.

General Guidelines

  1. All upper division courses used to fulfill minor requirements must be completed with a letter grade of C- or above.
  2. Any course used in fulfillment of minor requirements may also be used to fulfill major and upper-division CED non-major requirements.
  3. Courses used to fulfill a breadth requirement may also be used to satisfy minor requirements.
  4. Students may apply the non-CED version of a CED cross-listed course towards the minor.

Requirements

Prerequisite
Select one of the following:
Introduction to Environmental Design
An Historical Survey of Architecture and Urbanism
An Historical Survey of Architecture and Urbanism
Introduction to Social and Cultural Anthropology
Introduction to Economics
Introduction to Sociology
Upper Division (5 courses) 1
Select three courses from the following:
Introduction to Housing: An International Survey 2, 3
Urbanization in Developing Countries 2, 3
The City: Theories and Methods in Urban Studies 2
Special Topics in the History of Architecture (when topic relates to developing countries only)
Housing, Urbanization, and Urbanism: Design, Planning, and Policy Issues in Developing Countries (Instructor permission required)
Select two courses from the following: 4
Comparative Society
ANTHRO courses numbered between ANTHRO 170-ANTHRO 188
History of Development and Underdevelopment
ESPM 155
Course Not Available
The Middle East From the 18th Century to the Present
Topics in the History of Southest Asia: Modern Southeast Asia
Topics in the History of Southest Asia: Political and Cultural History of Vietnam
Africa: Modern South Africa, 1652-Present
Traditional Korean History
Modern Korean History
India: Medieval and Early Modern India to the Coming of the British
India: Modern South Asia
China: Two Golden Ages: China During the Tang and Song Dynasties
China: Modern China
Mexico: Modern Mexico
Social History of Latin America: Social History of Modern Latin America
Brazil
Development Politics
Politics and Government in Eastern Europe
Northeast Asian Politics
Japanese Politics
Politics of Divided Korea
South Asian Politics
Latin American Politics
1

 Graduate courses in subjects related to the upper division courses listed may be used as substitutes if approved by the faculty adviser.

2

 Urban Studies students may not select these courses for the minor. Students may take other courses offered by visiting faculty members on subjects related to developing countries with faculty minor approval. Please contact the staff adviser for more information.

3

 Other CY PLAN or ARCH courses offered by visiting faculty members related to developing countries may be taken with adviser approval, when CY PLAN 111 or CY PLAN 115 are not offered. Architecture majors may use ARCH 139 or ARCH 239 to fulfill this requirement.

4

All International and Area Studies (IAS) courses including those in Middle Eastern Studies (M E STU), Latin American Studies (LATAMST), Peace and Conflict Studies (PACS), Development Studies (DEV STD), and Political Economy of Industrial Societies (POLECON) may be used as substitutes provided prior approval of the faculty minor adviser is granted. Please contact the staff adviser for more information.

Courses

Environmental Design and Urbanism in Developing Countries

ENV DES 1 Introduction to Environmental Design 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Summer 2017 8 Week Session, Spring 2017
This course will teach anyone how to start to be a designer, not just of drawings and objects, but also buildings, landscapes, and urban spaces. And not just in isolation, but in the complex web of ecological and man-made systems which makes up our shifting environment. You will take from the course first-hand experience of drawing, measuring, and design — which form the basis of the professions of architecture, landscape architecture
, and urban planning— and which culminate in a final design project in the course. The course is open to all undergraduate students.

ENV DES 2 Introduction to Environmental Design Summer Lectures 1 Unit

Terms offered: Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 10 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course accompanies the summer studio and media classes in the architecture and landscape architecture post-baccalaureate programs, (IN)Arch and (IN)Land, of the College of Environmental Design. This series of eight lectures by faculty in the College of Environmental Design at Berkeley presents a range of approaches, theories, and practices in the design fields. Lectures will
include topics in landscape architecture, architectural practice, building construction and systems, global cities, urban ecology, building sustainability, social and political aspects of architecture, and a panel discussion by professionals who are previous students of the College.

ENV DES R3B Reading and Composition in Energy, Society, and Environmental Design 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Spring 2015
This course will expose students to key literature that examines, primarily, the relationship between sustainability and environmental design disciplines. Our goal will be not only to investigate the central ideas that inform the design of sustainable landscapes, cities, and buildings, but also to understand how competing arguments are presented in writing. Satisfies the second half of the Reading and Composition Requirement.

ENV DES 4A Design and Activism 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016, Fall 2015
This course explores the relationships between design and activism, raising critical questions about what design is, and how designers serve as guardians of culture and as agents of change. Students will participate in "spontaneous acts of design activism" that address contemporary issues through the making of forms and space to reinvent relationships between people and their environments.

ENV DES 4B Global Cities 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Fall 2015
This study of cities is more important than ever; for the first time in history more people live in urban than rural areas, and cities will account for all of the world's population growth for at least the next half-century. We will explore the challenges facing global cities in the 21st Century and expose students to some of the key texts, theories, and methods of inquiry that shape the built environment, from the human scale of home and community
to the regional scale of the megacity.

ENV DES 4C Future Ecologies: Urban Design, Climate Adaptation, and Thermodynamics 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Spring 2015
This course is intended to provide students with an overview of current thinking about cities and their components (buildings, parks, streets) as ecological and cultural systems. It will provide an introduction to methods for investigating the dynamics of flows and relationships in the built environment and students will gain experience constructing their own narratives as ways of asking and answering questions about human habitat that could
shape the future.

ENV DES 8 Summer DISCovery Program: Design & Innovation for Sustainable Cities (DISC) 5 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 10 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session
This course is about cities, their environmental challenges, and the potentials of design innovation as a catalyst for change. The course is organized in four components: global cities and global challenges, design innovators, technology and media workshop on environmental visualization, and product design and fabrication studio.

ENV DES 9 Introduction to Environmental Design: embARC 1 Unit

Terms offered: Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2016 Second 6 Week Session, Summer 2015 Second 6 Week Session
The embARC program allows high school students to explore the fields of sustainable environmental design and experience the culture of the design studio. Students study architecture, urban design, and city planning through a series of lectures, field trips, and studios. Introductory instruction in freehand sketching, drafting, model building and digital representation teaches
students how to think with and communicate two- and three-dimensional design ideas.

ENV DES 10 The History of Thought in Environmental Design 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2012, Spring 2011, Fall 2009
With emphasis on key events of the 20th and now 21st century, this course introduces the big ideas and individuals that have shaped architecture, urban planning, and landscape architecture.

ENV DES 98 Directed Group Study 1 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Summer 2017 Second 6 Week Session, Spring 2017
This is a special topics course intended to fulfill the individual interests of students, and provide a vehicle for professors to instruct students based on new and innovative developments in the field of environmental design.

ENV DES 98BC Berkeley Connect 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2014
Berkeley Connect is a mentoring program, offered through various academic departments, that helps students build intellectual community. Over the course of a semester, enrolled students participate in regular small-group discussions facilitated by a graduate student mentor (following a faculty-directed curriculum), meet with their graduate student mentor for one-on-one academic advising, attend lectures and panel discussions featuring department faculty and alumni,
and go on field trips to campus resources. Students are not required to be declared majors in order to participate.

ENV DES 100 The City: Theories and Methods in Urban Studies 4 Units

Terms offered: Summer 2017 8 Week Session, Spring 2017, Summer 2016 8 Week Session
This course is concerned with the study of cities. Focusing on great cities around the world - from Chicago to Los Angeles, from Rio to Shanghai, from Vienna to Cairo it covers of historical and contemporary patterns of urbanization and urbanism. Through these case studies, it introduces the key ideas, debates, and research genres of the interdisciplinary field of urban studies. In other words, this is simultaneously
a "great cities" and "great theories" course. Its purpose is to train students in critical analysis of the socio-spatial formations of their lived world.

ENV DES 101A Writing about Environmental Design: Short Compositions 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Spring 2015
An intensive workshop for students interested in writing about architecture, landscape, and the built environment. Recognizing that undergraduate students who take this course represent departments outside as well as within the College of Environmental Design, assignments are touchstones for students of different disciplines to bring their current academic interests into play when writing about environmental design. Weekly assignments include
prose readings, generally essays related to life experience. Brief readings and discussions during each class, along with weekly writing assignments of 3-5 pages of prose will illustrate the skills involved in the craft of writing.

ENV DES 101B Writing about Environmental Design: One Longer Composition 2 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016, Fall 2015
In 101B: The Notebook (one long composition in 14 weekly assignments) assigned readings (principally short stories) offer examples of writing which parallel the focus of the week's writing assignment. Prompts and assigned readings encourage the individual development of a "story" or "theme" that each student at the outset or in the process of writing, arrives at a personal narrative. Course approved for English department credit
and UC Undergraduate Minor in Creative Writing.

ENV DES 102 Critical Debates in Sustainable Urbanism 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016, Fall 2015
The aim of the course is to provide students with knowledge and insight into the major issues and debates relating to sustainabiltiy. By the end of the course, students should have a critical understanding of the complexity and scale of the sustainability challenge, how different actors characterize and understand sustainability, the approaches that have been developed to implement these varyig vissions, and the institutional, political, and individual
barriers to these visions

ENV DES 104 Design Frameworks 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016, Spring 1997
This course begins with an open-ended question (“What is design?”) and asks students to think critically about the central tenets, commonalities, and limits of design in an ever-changing complex world. A historical and theoretical overview of predominant schools of thought across all scales of design (i.e. industrialization, modernism, post-modernism, and beyond) will ground the discussions to follow. Topics related to environmental sustainability
including industrial ecologies, ecological design principles, lifecycle, biomimicry, LEED and accreditation systems, and closed-loop cycles will be presented.

ENV DES 105 Deep Green Design 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2013, Fall 2012, Fall 2011
Design problems from an ecological perspective. Design studies of relationships among ecosystem, energy, and resource flows, human social and cultural values, and technological variables as they interact to produce the built environment.

ENV DES 106 Sustainable Environmental Design Workshop 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Spring 2015
This course asks students to reflect back, reviewing the various disciplinary approaches introduced toward sustainability and to look forward by proposing interdisciplinary ways to affect the environment. Each year will be organized around a theme and project advanced by the faculty of the College. The workshop will require independent as well as collaborative research often in partnership with an external 'client' organization.

ENV DES 107 Design and Difference 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Fall 2016
This course explores contemporary debates around race, gender, sexuality, disability rights and other forms of embodied politics and considers their potential to transform the normative assumptions and practices of the built environment disciplines. Concepts such as self-abstraction, assimilation, and discourses of the “universal” or neutral body will be examined critically in relation to socially situated theories of power, identity, and activism. The course
will investigate case studies of everyday objects, buildings and urban space that exemplify the creative limits and possibilities of embodied difference in the design process. Weekly reading responses, class discussions, presentations, and a final project are required.

ENV DES C169A American Cultural Landscapes, 1600 to 1900 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2014, Fall 2013, Fall 2012
Introduces ways of seeing and interpreting American histories and cultures, as revealed in everyday built surroundings-- houses, highways, farms, factories, stores, recreation areas, small towns, city districts, and regions. Encourages students to read landscapes as records of past and present social relations and to speculate for themselves about cultural meaning.

ENV DES C169B American Cultural Landscapes, 1900 to Present 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2015, Spring 2014
Introduces ways of seeing and interpreting American histories and cultures, as revealed in everyday built surroundings--homes, highways, farms, factories, stores, recreation areas, small towns, city districts, and regions. Encourages students to read landscapes as records of past and present social relations, and to speculate for themselves about cultural meaning.

ENV DES 170 The Social Art of Architecture 3 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2013, Spring 2012, Spring 2011
What is the social art of architecture in America? What was it historically, where is it now, where is it going--and why should you care? In this course, we will explore contemporary and historic attempts to confront social needs through themes: Design by Professionals (Architects, City Planners, Urban Designers, Sociologists, Philosophers, Philanthropists), and Design by Laypeople (Squatters, Intentional Communities, Do It Yourself). The
objective is to discharge the false dualism that has emerged in architecture between social concerns and creative design.

ENV DES 193 Curricular Practical Training for International Students 0.0 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Summer 2017 8 Week Session, Spring 2017
This is a zero-unit internship course for F-1, non-immigrant, international students participating in internships under the Curricular Practical Training program. Requires a paper exploring how the theoretical contructs learned in Environmental Design courses were applied during the internship.

ENV DES 195 Senior Thesis 4 Units

Terms offered: Spring 2017, Spring 2016, Spring 2015
Directed study leading to preparation of a senior thesis.

ENV DES 195A Introduction to Methods and Thesis Preparation 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Summer 2017 8 Week Session, Fall 2016
The Senior Thesis in Environmental Design is an advanced research and writing project that presents an original and thorough analysis of a topic of individual interest in architecture, landscape architecture, or urban studies. This class provides an introducion to various methodologies relevant for a senior thesis including qualitative, quantitative, and descriptive research approaches.

ENV DES 195B Thesis Research and Writing 3 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Summer 2017 8 Week Session, Spring 2017
Students taking this class will use it to complete the writing of their thesis under the supervision of a Senior Thesis Advisor. This class will operate as an independent study; faculty with more than one Senior Thesis student may choose to meet them in group sessions.

ENV DES 198 Directed Group Study 1 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Summer 2017 8 Week Session, Spring 2017
This is a special topics course intended to fulfill the individual interests of students, and provide a vehicle for professors to instruct students based on new and innovative developments in the field of environmental design.

ENV DES 198BC Berkeley Connect 1 Unit

Terms offered: Fall 2014
Berkeley Connect is a mentoring program, offered through various academic departments, that helps students build intellectual community. Over the course of a semester, enrolled students participate in regular small-group discussions facilitated by a graduate student mentor (following a faculty-directed curriculum), meet with their graduate student mentor for one-on-one academic advising, attend lectures and panel discussions featuring department faculty and alumni,
and go on field trips to campus resources. Students are not required to be declared majors in order to participate.

ENV DES 199 Supervised Independent Study and Research 1 - 4 Units

Terms offered: Fall 2017, Spring 2017, Fall 2016
Enrollment is restricted by regulations in the General Catalog. Studies developed to meet individual needs.

Faculty and Instructors

Faculty

Nezar Alsayyad, Professor. Virtual reality, urban history, Architectural history, Middle Eastern Studies, cross-cultural design, cities and cinema, cultural studies of the built environment, environmental design in developing countries, housing and urban development, Islamic architecture and urbanism, traditional dwelling and settlements, urban design and physical planning.
Research Profile

Mark S. Anderson, Professor. Architecture, building design, BIM, integrated project delivery, building construction, school design, housing design, net zero energy desig, nurban design, building integrated modeling, IPD, design-build, prefabricated, modular, architecture in China, architecture in Japan, urban water.
Research Profile

William Andrew Atwood, Assistant Professor.

R. Gary Black, Associate Professor. Architecture, finite element modeling, finite element analysis, structure and space, experimental testing, timber connections, teaching structures, integrating structure and architecture.
Research Profile

Peter C. Bosselmann, Professor. Urban design, architecture, city and regional planning, landscape architecture.
Research Profile

Jean-Paul Bourdier, Professor.

Gail S. Brager, Professor. Architecture, comfort and adaptation in buildings, design and performance of offices.
Research Profile

Dana Buntrock, Professor. Architecture, construction industry, East Asian studies, architectural practice in Japan.
Research Profile

Tom Buresh, Professor.

Luisa Caldas, Professor.

Christopher L. Calott, Associate Professor.

Greg Castillo, Associate Professor.

Raveevarn Choksombatchai, Associate Professor.

Renee Y. Chow, Professor. Urban design, architectural design.
Research Profile

Galen Cranz, Professor. Architecture, sociology of space, urban parks, Alexander Technique, chairs, ergonomics, somatics, body conscious design, social research methods for architecture and urban design, ethnography, programming, post occupancy evaluation and assessment, sociology of taste, housing for the elderly.
Research Profile

Margaret L. Crawford, Professor.

C. Greig Crysler, Associate Professor. Architecture, geopolitics of architectural discourse, globalization and social production of the built environment, architecture and identity.
Research Profile

Rene Davids, Professor. Architecture and urban design and theory.
Research Profile

Nicholas De Monchaux, Associate Professor. Architecture, urban design and organization, natural and manmade systems.
Research Profile

Anthony Dubovsky, Professor.

Harrison Fraker, Professor. Urban design, architecture, environmental design, passive solar, daylighting, sustainable design, sustainable systems, urban design principles, transit oriented neighborhoods.
Research Profile

Danelle Guthrie-Buresh, Associate Adjunct Professor.

Maria Paz Gutierrez, Associate Professor. Next-generation building systems, self-regulated facades, biologically inspired technologies, multifunctional materials.
Research Profile

Lisa M. Iwamoto, Professor. Architecture, design, materials research and fabrication.
Research Profile

Raymond Lifchez, Professor. Architecture, patronage of the arts, post revolutionary France.
Research Profile

Ronald L. Rael, Associate Professor. 3D printed buildings, additive manufacturing, earth architecture, mud, dirt, dust, U.S.-Mexico border wall, arid landscapes, ranching, acequias, alipne deserts, ceramics, rural architecture, ruralism, animation, digital modeling, furry buildings, unnatural materials, rasquachetecture.
Research Profile

Stefano Schiavon, Assistant Professor. Energy, architecture, thermal comfort, indoor air quality, building energy efficiency, indoor environment quality, productivity, wellbeing, sustainable building design, simulation and verification, personal environmental control system, energy simulation, underfloor air distribution, radiant, post-occupancy evaluation.
Research Profile

Simon Schleicher, Assistant Professor.

Andrew Shanken, Professor. Memory, visionary architecture, the unbuilt, paper architecture, heritage conservation, architectural representation, urban representation, diagrams, history of professions, historiography, world's fairs, expositions, California architecture, themed environments.
Research Profile

Kyle Steinfeld, Assistant Professor. Digital design, design computation, data visualization, architectural representation, design methods.
Research Profile

Jill H. Stoner, Professor. Architecture, architecture as fiction, derivation of spatial words, Jewish ghettos in Italy.
Research Profile

M. Susan Ubbelohde, Professor. India, architecture, climate and architecture, Le Corbusier, Kahn, Correa, Doshi, culture and practice, daylighting design tools, software evaluation, sky simulator design, low-energy design, California residential industry.
Research Profile

Lecturers

Jacob R. Atherton, Lecturer.

Marco Cenzatti, Lecturer.

Roddy Creedon, Lecturer.

William W. Di Napoli, Lecturer.

Darell W. Fields, Lecturer.

Sarah Margaret Hirschman, Lecturer.

Stephanie Lin, Lecturer.

Ajay Manthripragada, Lecturer.

David Jacob Orkand, Lecturer.

Nicholas Pajerski, Lecturer.

Rudabeh Pakravan, Lecturer.

Keith D. Plymale, Lecturer.

Dominique J. Price, Lecturer.

Johnathan Puff, Lecturer.

Charles Salter, Lecturer.

Dan Spiegel, Lecturer.

Patrick Tierney, Lecturer.

Visiting Faculty

Laura Judith Allen, Visiting Associate Professor.

Leonardo Chiesi, Visiting Associate Professor.

Mark Dafydd Smout, Visiting Associate Professor.

Mitchell James Squire, Visiting Associate Professor.

Emeritus Faculty

Christopher W. J. Alexander, Professor Emeritus.

Edward A. Arens, Professor Emeritus. Indoor environment, thermal comfort, occupant surveys, building environmental control, ventilation, wind, architectural aerodynamics.
Research Profile

Richard Bender, Professor Emeritus.

Charles C. Benton, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, thermal comfort, sunlight and shadow patterns, measurement of physical building performance.
Research Profile

Gary R. Brown, Professor Emeritus.

Mary C. Comerio, Professor Emeritus. Disaster recovery, housing impacts in disasters, loss modeling, performance based design.
Research Profile

Clare Cooper Marcus, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, landscape architecture, environmental planning, medium-density housing, public housing modernization, public open-space design, childrenÕs environments, housing for the elderly.
Research Profile

Sam Davis, Professor Emeritus.

Margaret Or Penny Dhaemers, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, electronic imaging, 2D and 3D.
Research Profile

William R. Ellis, Professor Emeritus. Sociology, social issues in architecture and urban design.
Research Profile

Norma D. Evenson, Professor Emeritus.

Richard E. Fernau, Professor Emeritus.

Paul Groth, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, vernacular architecture, urban geography, suburban America, cultural landscape studies, housing (US).
Research Profile

Sara Ishikawa, Professor Emeritus.

Yehuda E. Kalay, Professor Emeritus. Virtual reality, new media, computer-aided design, design methods, colaborative design.
Research Profile

Lars G. Lerup, Professor Emeritus.

Donlyn Lyndon, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, structure of place, ethical dimensions of design.
Research Profile

W. Mike Martin, Professor Emeritus.

Richard C. Peters, Professor Emeritus.

Jean Pierre Protzen, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, design, planning, the logics of design, and construction principles of ancient civilizations, pre-columbian South America, architecture and construction, Tiwanaku in Bolivia, Tambo Colorado in Peru.
Research Profile

Stanley Saitowitz, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, architecture and cooking, urbanism and computers.
Research Profile

Maryly A. Snow, Professor Emeritus.

Daniel Solomon, Professor Emeritus.

Claude Stoller, Professor Emeritus.

Stephen Tobriner, Professor Emeritus.

E. Marc Treib, Professor Emeritus. Architecture, East Asian studies, Japanese architecture and gardens.
Research Profile

Sim H. Van Der Ryn, Professor Emeritus.

Contact Information

Department of Architecture

232 Wurster Hall

Phone: 510-642-4942

Visit Department Website

Minor Program Faculty Adviser

Nezar AlSayad

345 Wurster Hall

nezar@berkeley.edu

Minor Program Staff Adviser

Rachel Klein

250 Wurster Hall

Phone: 510-642-4944

rachelk@berkeley.edu

Department Chair

Tom J. Buresh

232A Wurster Hall

Phone: 510-642-4942

buresh@berkeley.edu

Undergraduate Major Head

Raveevarn Choksombatchai

903 Wurster Hall

rloom@berkeley.edu

Associate Dean for Undergraduate Studies

Renee Chow

382D Wurster Hall

rychow@berkeley.edu

Director, Office of Undergraduate Advising

Susan Hagstrom

250 Wurster Hall

hagstrom@berkeley.edu

CED Career Services

Maria Dawson

http://ced.berkeley.edu/ced/students/career/

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