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Colloquia and Guest Lectures

United States Agency for International Development Communication Seminars.   Michigan State University, May 1972 and May 1978.

University of Wisconsin, Department of Communication Arts Proseminar:  Causal  antecedents of structure in large-scale communication networks.  April 1975.

University of Southern California Symposium on Organizational Communication:  Strategies for studying the organization's communication.  July 1975.

Stanford University Institute for Communication Research:  Conference on Network Analysis.  March 1976.

Temple University Department of Speech Colloquia:  Communication in large  organizations.  April 1977.

Michigan State University Department of Communication Colloquium:  Systems theory in the study of organizational communication.  February 1978.

University of Michigan Graduate School of Business Management Seminars:   Communication in organizations.  September 1979.

Ohio University College of Communication, Communication Week:  Research in  organizational communication.  May 1980.

University of Washington, Seattle, Department of Communication Colloquium:   Communication coorientation between supervisors and subordinates.  February 1981.

Stanford University, Institute for Communication Research Colloquium:  The process of studying process in communication research.  May 1982.

University of Southern California Colloquium: Important Issues in Studying Communication Processes.  February 1983.

University of Kansas, Department of Communication Studies Colloquia: History and Philosophy of Process Methodologies.  February 1984.

University of Kansas, Department of Communication Studies Colloquia: Systems  Theory in the Study of Human/Organizational Communication.  February, 1984.

University of Southern California, Annenberg School of Communications Symposium:  Organizational Relations: The Dynamics of Communication Networks.  March 6, 1984.

Korea University, Seoul.  Social Impacts of New Communication Technology.  Monge, P.R.  Time Series:  Definition of Communication Process and its Methodology.  May 1985.

Pepperdine University.  Monge, P.R.  Communication Theories.  November 1985.

University of Kentucky.  Monge, P.R.  Obtaining Federal Grants for Communication Research and The Scanlon Philosophy of Participative Processes in Organizations.  April 1986.

Indian Institute of Management, Ahmedabad.  Contractor, N.S., Fulk, J., Monge, P.R., & Singhal, A.  Cultural Assumptions that Influence the Implementation of Communication Technologies.  August 1986.

University of California, Santa Barbara.  Monge, P.R. Theoretical and Analytic Issues in Communication Research.  November 1990.

The Louis Guttman Institute, Jerusalem, Israel.  Monge, P.R.  Theoretical and Analytic Issues in Longitudinal Research.  August 1991.

Pepperdine University.  Monge, P.R.  Being Connected:  Communication Networks in the Information Age.  October 1991.

University of California, Riverside.  Monge, P.R.  Communication and motivational predictors of the dynamics of organizational innovation.  May 1993.

Korean Communication Association, Seoul, South Korea.  Monge, P.R. Communication theory in a globalizing world.  March 1997.

Stanford University, Department of Communication.  Monge, P.R., & Contractor, N.S.  Theoretical issues for dynamic networks.  November 1997.

Stanford University. National Science Foundation Workshop on Computational Organizational Science,  Monge, P.R., & Fulk, J.  Computational Organizational Models for Connective and Communal Public Goods. February 1998.

University of Southern California, Marshall School of Business, Distinguished Speaker Series.  Fulk, J., & Monge, P.R.  Interorganizational Alliances as Collective Action.  March 1998.

University of Southern California, Marshall School of Business, Center for Effective Organizations,  Fulk, J., & Monge, P.R. 
Knowledge Networks and Intellectual Capital, January 1999.

University of Southern California, Conference on New Technologies in Education.  P. Monge,  Collaborative Learning in Graduate Education, May 1999.

University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication, Conference on Distance Learning in Higher Education, Collaborative Learning in Graduate Education, November 1999.

London School of Economics, Media Studies Program, Conference on Globalization and Communication,  P. Monge & S. Matei  Communication and Economic Flows in an Era of Global Democracy.  December 2000

University of Illinois.  Department of Speech Communication.  N. Contractor, J. Fulk, & P. Monge.  Theories of Communication Networks.  July 2001.

Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Sloan School of Management.  Monge, P. Multitheoretical Multilevel Models for Communication Networks.  October 2001.

London School of Economics and University of Southern California Joint Conference on Critical Reflections on Globalization. Monge, P.R., & Matei, S. The Impact of Globalization on the Global Telecommunications Network.  Los Angeles, November 2001.

London School of Economics and University of Southern California Joint Conference on Globalization.  Monge, P. R.  Evolutionary perspectives on globalization.  Los Angeles, November, 2003.

University of California at Los Angeles, Department of Communication Studies Winter Forum,  Monge, P. R. Theories of Communication Networks.  April 2004.

Santa Fe Institute. Santa Fe, New Mexico. Annual Trustees Conference.  Monge, P. R. Social Theories of Human Communication Networks.  November 2004.

University of Southern California. Annenberg Networks Network Theory Seminar. Monge, P.R. “Developing Network Theory. Multilevel or Unified? If Unified, Evolutionary? If not, What? November 2005.

University of Southern California. Is social network theory evolutionary? Presented at the Network Theory Workshop. Annenberg Center for Communication, September 2006.

Harvard University. Kennedy School of Governemnt. Is social network theory evolutionary? October 2006.


 

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