This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.
Boxes 612-615 contain patient records and are restricted until 2060.
Some unique time-based media items have been reformatted and are available onsite via links in the container list. Commercial materials are not routinely digitized. Email rbml@columbia.edu for more information.
The collection consists of correspondence, memoranda, documents, minutes, reports, manuscripts, notes, calendars, photographs, audio recordings, awards and other realia and printed materials. The correspondence and memoranda are of various scientists and educators, public figures, leaders of organized philanthropy, government officials, board members and staff of various national, foreign and international organizations It relates to clinical and field research, policy development, administrative responsibilities, teaching, writing and speaking, performed by Dr. David Hamburg throughout his long and distinguished career.
Arranged in 14 series.
You will need to make an appointment in advance to use this collection material in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room. You can schedule an appointment once you've submitted your request through your Special Collections Research Account.
This collection is located off-site. You will need to request this material at least three business days in advance to use the collection in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library reading room.
Boxes 612-615 contain patient records and are restricted until 2060.
Some unique time-based media items have been reformatted and are available onsite via links in the container list. Commercial materials are not routinely digitized. Email rbml@columbia.edu for more information.
Single photocopies may be made for research purposes. Permission to publish material from the collection must be requested from the Curator of the Carnegie Collection, Rare Book and Manuscript Library (RBML). The RBML approves permission to publish that which it physically owns; the responsibility to secure copyright permission rests with the patron.
Identification of specific item; Date (if known); David Hamburg papers; Box and Folder; Carnegie Collections, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Columbia University Library.
Carnegie Corporation of New York Records
Materials may have been added to the collection since this finding aid was prepared. Contact rbml@columbia.edu for more information.
Gift of David A. Hamburg and Carnegie Corporation of New York, 2005.
2005.2006.M059: Source of acquisition--David A. Hamburg and Carnegie Corp. Date of acquisition--9/29/2005.
Columbia University Libraries, Rare Book and Manuscript Library
Papers processed Jane Gorjevsky, Alyssa Meyers, Gania Barlow, Elizabeth Bonnette, Oliver Batham, Timothy Donahue, Brianna Gibson and Kevin Johnson 2009-2012.
2012-11-09 File created.
2019-05-20 EAD was imported spring 2019 as part of the ArchivesSpace Phase II migration.
Born in 1925 in Evansville, Indiana, David Alan Hamburg attended Indiana University and its medical school, receiving his M.D. in 1947. In the 1950s, Hamburg, a psychiatrist, distinguished himself as a pioneering investigator of stress and anxiety beginning at the Walter Reed Army Institute of Research, Washington, D.C. (1952-53) and then at the Institute for Psychosomatic and Psychiatric Research and Training at the Michael Reese Hospital, Chicago (1953-56). Hamburg continued his research at the Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, CA. As chair of psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine, Hamburg established a new department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, distinguished by its breadth of research on behavioral biology, especially in relation to mental illness. While chief of the adult psychiatry branch at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH, 1958-61), he created one of the nation's first clinical research centers to combine psychological and biological factors in studying depression.
In 1975, while serving as Reed-Hodgson Professor of Human Biology at Stanford (1972-76), Hamburg was confronted with a crisis that would re-direct his focus from psychiatric research to contemporary social problems. Four of Hamburg's students, studying primate behavior under the direction of Jane Goodall at a remote research station in Gombe, Tanzania, were abducted by armed rebels from Zaire (now Congo) and held for ransom and other demands. Hamburg immediately flew to Gombe and spent 10 weeks negotiating their release.
His vivid exposure to violence, disease and poverty during this time prompted him to devote his energies to using science to help meet social needs. In 1975 he became president of the Institute of Medicine, the health policy arm of the National Academy of Sciences, where he developed major initiatives on health and behavior, health promotion and disease prevention, and the health needs of the underserved as well as developing nations. From 1980 to 1983, Hamburg served as director of the university-wide Division of Health Policy Research and Education and John D. MacArthur Professor of Health Policy at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA., applying his signature cross-disciplinary approach to health policy issues.
After David Hamburg became president of Carnegie Corporation of New York in December 1982, the Corporation sought to mobilize the best scientific and scholarly talent and thinking to address contemporary issues from early childhood to international relations, using a comprehensive inter-disciplinary approach.
During Hamburg's tenure as president, the Corporation placed a priority on the education and healthy development of children and adolescents and the preparation of youth for a scientific, technological and knowledge-driven world. Three major study groups were formed to cover the educational and developmental needs of children and youth from birth to age 15: the Carnegie Council on Adolescent Development (1986), the Carnegie Task Force on Meeting the Needs of Young Children (1991), and the Carnegie Task Force on Learning in the Primary Grades (1994). Jointly with the Rockefeller Foundation, Carnegie Corporation also financed the National Commission on Teaching and America's Future, whose report, What Matters Most (1996), provided a framework and agenda for teacher education reform across the country. Characteristically these study groups drew on the knowledge generated by the previous Carnegie grant programs and from relevant fields and inspired follow up grantmaking to implement the recommendations. At that time David Hamburg also chaired the Forum on Adolescence, a joint effort of the Institute of Medicine and National Research Council to assess adolescent health and development.
In 1984, the Corporation established the Carnegie Commission on Education and the Economy. Through its major publication, A Nation Prepared (1986), the foundation reaffirmed the role of the teacher as the "best hope" for ensuring educational excellence in elementary and secondary education. An outgrowth of that report was the establishment, a year later, of the National Board for Professional Teaching Standards to consider ways of attracting able candidates to the teaching profession and recognizing and retaining them. At the Corporation's initiative, the American Association for the Advancement of Science issued two groundbreaking reports, Science for All Americans (1989) and Benchmarks for Science Literacy (1993), which recommended a common core of learning in science, mathematics, and technology for all citizens and helped set national standards of achievement in these domains.
Hamburg introduced an entirely new focus for the Corporation --- the danger to world peace posed by the superpower confrontation and weapons of mass destruction. The foundation underwrote scientific study of the feasibility of the proposed federal Strategic Defense Initiative and joined the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation in supporting the analytic work of a new generation of arms control and nuclear nonproliferation experts. After the collapse of the Soviet Union, Corporation grants helped promote the concept of cooperative security among erstwhile adversaries and projects to build democratic institutions in the former Soviet Union and central Europe. An important undertaking was the Prevention of Proliferation Task Force, coordinated under a grant to the Brookings Institution, which inspired the Nunn–Lugar Amendment to the Soviet Threat Reduction Act of 1991 aimed at dismantling Soviet nuclear weapons and reducing proliferation risks. Beginning in the mid-1990s, the Corporation addressed the problems of interethnic and regional conflict and supported projects seeking to diminish the risks of a wider war stemming from civil strife. Two Carnegie commissions, one on Reducing the Nuclear Danger (1990), the other on Preventing Deadly Conflict (1994), together addressed the full range of dangers associated with human conflict and the use of weapons of mass destruction. The Corporation's thrust in Commonwealth Africa, meanwhile, shifted to women's health and leadership development and the application of science and technology, including new information systems, in fostering research and expertise within indigenous scientific institutions and universities.
Under Hamburg, dissemination achieved even greater primacy in the arsenal of strategic philanthropy. Emphasis was on consolidation and diffusion of the best available knowledge from social science and education research and the use of such research in improving social policy and practice. Major partners in these endeavors were leading institutions that had the capability to influence public thought and action. Hamburg made increasing use of the Corporation's powers to convene leaders and experts across disciplinary and sectoral boundaries to forge policy consensus and promote collaboration.
In the international security field, Hamburg served on many policy advisory boards, including the Executive Panel for the Chief of Naval Operations, the National Academy of Sciences Committee on International Security and Arms Control, and the U.S.-Soviet Joint Study Group on Crisis Prevention. He was a member of the Defense Policy Board of the Department of Defense and co-chair, with Cyrus Vance, of the Carnegie Commission on Preventing Deadly Conflict. In 2006, Hamburg was appointed by United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan to chair the UN Advisory Committee on Genocide Prevention.
In science policy, he chaired several national groups, including committees and advisory boards of the Institute of Medicine, National Institute of Mental Health, and the National Science Foundation. From 1976 to 1988, he served on the Advisory Committee on Medical Research of the World Health Organization. He was president and board chair of the American Association for the Advancement of Science from 1984 to 1986. The Carnegie Commission on Science, Technology, and Government (1988-1993), recommended ways that government at all levels could make more effective use of science and technology in their operations and policies. In 1994, Hamburg was appointed to the President's Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology, and in 1996, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation's highest civilian honor.
From his background in public health, he brought a preventive orientation to serious problems. Across all of these programs, the common thread, said Hamburg, is the "prevention of rotten outcomes." Hamburg believed that "from child and adolescent development to international relations, the underlying logic is the same: Prevention begins with anticipation, even with long-range foresight, in which research can identify risk factors and point to steps that can be taken to counteract or avoid an undesirable outcome, and pivotal institutions can cooperate in shaping behavior away from risk factors and dangerous directions."
Hamburg served on the boards of Rockefeller University, the Mount Sinai Medical Center, and the American Museum of Natural History, New York City; and the Johann Jacobs Foundation, Zurich. He was a member of the American Philosophical Society and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, as well as author of numerous books and scholarly articles.
This series contains the materials relating to dr. Hamburg's activities as a President of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the title he assumed in 1982. His corporation files frequently contain earlier background material on various subjects, or fragments of his own earlier writings, which he edited and used as building blocks for subsequent projects. The files reflect five formal program areas, established by Carnegie Corporation : Avoiding Nuclear War (ANW); Education: Science, Technology and the Economy; Prevention of Damage to Children; Strengthening Human Resources in Developing Countries (HRDC); and Special Projects The materials in this series are closely related to the Carnegie Corporation of New York Records collection, held in the RBML. . For official records, such as Board of Trustees documents and grant information, please see the Carnegie Corporation of New York Records. In cases, when holdings, such as agenda books, or printed materials, duplicated between the two collections, the items, already held in the Carnegie Corporation of New York Records were weeded from the Hamburg papers.
The series contains chronologically arranged files related to the Board of Trustees meetings of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, including minutes, materials of Agenda Committee, Finance and Administration Committee, Executive Committee, Nomination Committee, and others), meeting preparation materials, background reading, and related correspondence, including some correspondence from the Corporation's trustees. Box 15 contains notes and background materials for Hamburg's Presidential report to the Board. For official Board of Trustees documents please see the Carnegie Corporation of New York Records collection, Series I.A.3. The materials in Subseries I.1, duplicating the ones, already held in Carnegie Corporation Records Series I.A.3, have been discarded.
Box 1 Folder 1-45
Box 2 Folder 1-35
Box 3 Folder 1-49
Box 4 Folder 1-56
Box 5 Folder 1-42
Box 6 Folder 1-41
Box 7 Folder 1-40
Box 8 Folder 1-40
Box 9 Folder 1-49
Box 10 Folder 1-31
Box 11 Folder 1-41
Box 12 Folder 1-35
Box 13 Folder 1-24
Box 14 Folder 1-21
Box 15 Folder 1-54
The series contains lists of Carnegie Corporation of New York trustees, handbook and compensation information; mixed correspondence files, and individual files on trustees, arranged alphabetically by name. Additional information about these individuals can frequently be found in Individual Correspondence files in Series III.2. of this colelction and in Carnegie Corporation of New York Records collection, Series I.E.5 (Trustee Files).
Box 16 Folder 1
Box 16 Folder 2
Box 16 Folder 3
Box 16 Folder 4
Box 16 Folder 5
Box 16 Folder 6
Box 16 Folder 7
Box 16 Folder 8
Box 16 Folder 9-10
Box 16 Folder 11-14
Box 16 Folder 15
Box 16 Folder 16-20
Box 17 Folder 1-6
Box 17 Folder 7-14
Box 17 Folder 15-18
Box 17 Folder 19-20
Box 17 Folder 21
Box 17 Folder 22
Box 17 Folder 23
Box 18 Folder 1-16
Box 19 Folder 1-17
Box 19 Folder 18-19
Box 19 Folder 20-21
Box 19 Folder 22
Box 19 Folder 23
Box 19 Folder 24
Box 19 Folder 25
Box 19 Folder 26-28
Box 19 Folder 29
Files relating to Strengthening Human Resources in Developing Countries (HRDC) program area, pursued by the Carnegie Corporation in 1983-1999, which was focused on leadership training for women and underprivilleged groups, supported pioneering research on prevention of maternal mortality, and contibuted to a more robust educational system by, for example, sponsoring the installation of first CD-Rom technologies at University libraries in Tanzania and Zimbabwe. The files include materials on Africa and, to a lesser extent, on other regions, and feature documents from organizations such as Council on Foreign Relations, World Health Organization, etc. Starting in 1986 the HRDC was chaired by the first staff member from Africa, Dr. Adetokunbo Lucas (Nigeria). Related materials can be found in the subseries I.4 (South Africa), as well as in documents from Carnegie Commission for Science, Technology and Development (CCSTG) materials, and Carnegie Commission for Preventing Deadly Conflict (CCPDC).
Box 20 Folder 1-25
Box 21 Folder 1-40
Box 22 Folder 1-42
Box 23 Folder 1-42
Box 24 Folder 1-38
Box 25 Folder 1-11
Box 25 Folder 12-55
Box 26 Folder 1-52
Materials, relating to South Africa, during its period of transition away from the apartaid regime, generated in the course of such Carnegie Corporation projects as HRDC (See subseries I.3) and the Second Carnegie Inquiry into Poverty and Development in Southern Africa. The latter study, based at the University of Cape Town and conducted with participation from the network of scholars and professionals, community leaders, social workers and 20 universities, provided a rare opportunity for research, training, and leadership development for black Africans, and its findings and practical recommendations were widely disseminated. The follow-up to the study included "South Africa: The Cordoned Heart" photo exhibition, and Omar Badsha establishing Centre for Documentary Photography at the University of Cape Town Corporation's grants made under HRDC rubric, led to Women's Charter inclusion in new 1994 South African Constitution in 1994—Carnegie grantees Frene Ginwala became first female Speaker of the National Assembly of South African Parliament and Mamphela Ramphele, first black female Vice Chancellor in South Africa at University of Cape Town.
Box 27 Folder 1-33
Box 28 Folder 1-21
Box 29 Folder 1-18
Box 30 Folder 1-34
Box 31 Folder 1-28
Box 32 Folder 1-12
Box 32 Folder 13-35
Materials on Carnegie Corporation sponsorship of projects related to the issues of science and technology, including Carnegie Commission for Science, Technology and Development. (See also the corresponding series IV.B of Carnegie Corporation of New York Records). The Series includes some Science Education files, however ESTE and other Science Education programs for children are filed in Subseries I.6 (Children and Youth). Science, Technology and Development materials relating to the commonwealth countries can be found in Subseries I.3 (HRDC). National Science Foundation and AAAS, as well as Jimmy Carter played active roles in these projects, so the correspondence files (Series III.B) with these organizations can provide additional materials on the subject.
Box 33 Folder 1-31
Box 34 Folder 1-47
Box 35 Folder 1-52
Box 36 Folder 1-44
Box 37 Folder 1-37
Box 38 Folder 1-36
Box 39 Folder 1-38
Box 40 Folder 1-35
Box 41 Folder 1-49
Box 42 Folder 1-56
Box 43 Folder 1-71
Box 44 Folder 1-88
This series included chronologically arranged correspondence, proceedings, meeting minutes, notes and background materials from a number of Children and Youth programs undertaken by the CCNY under David Hamburg's leadership, such as Carnegie Council for Adolescent Development (CCAD), Education and Healthy Development for Children and Youth (EHDCY), Prevention of Damage to Children , Education, Science Technology and the Economy(ESTE), Task Force for Learning in Primary Grades (TFLPG) and Middle Grade School State Policy Initiative. The series also contains correspondence and reports relating to Forum on Education and the Economy, and Project 2061 under the auspices of the American Association for Advancement of Science. The files document and discuss issues of health and public policy, prenatal development, families and communities, child abuse, aggression and violence, schools and educational programs. Materials frequently contain edits of Hamburg's earlier writings, or refer to his related previous work for other institutions. For additional materials on science education see also Subseries I.5 (CCSTG). Official records of CCAD, TFLPG and other special projects by the Carnegie Corporations can be found in the corresponding subseries of the Carnegie Corporation of New York Records, Series IV.
Box 45 Folder 1-25
Box 46 Folder 1-23
Box 47 Folder 1-25
Box 48 Folder 1-22
Box 49 Folder 1-27
Box 50 Folder 1-18
Box 51 Folder 1-32
Box 52 Folder 1-31
Box 53 Folder 1-29
Box 54 Folder 1-29
Box 55 Folder 1-25
Box 56 Folder 1-21
Box 57 Folder 1-19
Box 58 Folder 1-30
Box 59 Folder 1-34
Box 60 Folder 1-26
Box 61 Folder 1-33
Box 62 Folder 1-21
Box 63 Folder 1-21
Box 64 Folder 1-35
Box 65 Folder 1-32
Box 66 Folder 1-25
Box 67 Folder 1-23
Box 68 Folder 1-17
Box 69 Folder 1-25
Box 70 Folder 1-39
Box 71 Folder 1-27
Box 72 Folder 1-36
Box 73 Folder 1-31
Box 74 Folder 1-22
Box 75 Folder 1-26
Box 76 Folder 1-22
Box 77 Folder 1-38
See also the Jacobs Foundation and Today's Children Series
Box 78 Folder 1-24
Box 79 Folder 1-26
Box 80 Folder 1-10
Box 81 Folder 1-19
Box 82 Folder 1-22
See also the Jacobs Foundation and Today's Children Series
Box 83 Folder 1-11
Box 84 Folder 1-23
Box 85 Folder 1-36
See also the Jacobs Foundation and Today's Children Series
Box 86 Folder 1-46
Box 87 Folder 1-23
Box 87 Folder 24-47
Box 88 Folder 1-27
Box 89 Folder 1-53
Box 90 Folder 1-38
Box 91 Folder 1-14
Box 92 Folder 1-35
Box 93 Folder 1-32
Box 94 Folder 1-37
Box 95 Folder 1-60
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Box 843
Preventing Deadly Conflict (PDC) series documents the cluster of CCNY programs, relating to conflict prevention, including Avoiding Nuclear War (ANW) program, Cooperative Security Program, and Carnegie Commission for Preventing Deadly Conflict (CCPDC) of 1994-1999. ANW program on national security and weapons of mass destruction reintroduced and enlarged focus on Russia though reviving Russian policy studies in key US universities, and establishing new ties with think tanks and policy makers in U.S., Eastern and Western Europe and the Soviet Union. Related material can also be found in the Correspondence (Series III) of this collection and in the Carnegie Corporation of New York Y Records Series IV.A (CCPDC). The series includes pre-CCNY materials used as the basis for CCSTG, multi-year subject files through 1989, and collection of Hamburg STG-related talks and writings 1980-1989. The series contains correspondence, event handouts, Hamburg's writing and speeches; materials from other organizations such as NAS, Stanford, Harvard, WHO, Pugwash, etc. It includes correspondence with Mikhail Gorbachev and other Soviet officials, US congressmen, such as Senators Nunn and Lugar, documents legislation and activity on nuclear arms reduction. Most materials specifically related to projects in USSR/Russia and the Eastern Bloc countries have been separated into Subseries I.8
Subject files related to Preventing Deadly Conflict issues, arranged chronologically by the date of the earliest document in a folder/box. ANW program started in 1982/3-1991; then Coop. Sec. starts 1991; PDC proper starts 1995). The files contain materials on the Gulf War of 1990, the International Court of Justice, Prevention of Proliferation (PoP) program, International Peace Academy, correspondence with Robert Rubin, Al Gore, Bill and Hilary Clinton.
Box 96 Folder 1-23
Box 97 Folder 1-27
Box 98 Folder 1-25
Box 99 Folder 1-21
Box 100 Folder 1-39
Box 101 Folder 1-41
Box 102 Folder 1-37
Box 103 Folder 1-27
Box 104 Folder 1-45
Box 105 Folder 1-25
Box 106 Folder 1-28
Box 107 Folder 1-32
Box 108 Folder 1-18
Box 109 Folder 1-40
Box 110 Folder 1-27
Box 111 Folder 1-33
Box 112 Folder 1-19
Box 112 Folder 20-52
Box 113 Folder 1-38
Box 114 Folder 1-44
Box 115 Folder 1-39
Box 116 Folder 1-46
Robert Rubin/Hilary Clinton Correspondence
Box 117 Folder 1-40
Hilary Clinton Correspondence
Box 118 Folder 1-30
Box 119 Folder 1-21
Box 120 Folder 1-35
Box 121 Folder 1-40
Box 122 Folder 1-34
Box 123 Folder 1-25 [and 44-48]
Box 123 Folder 26-51
Box 124 Folder 1-47
Box 125 Folder 1-54
Al Gore & Bill Clinton; UN Security Council retreat;
Box 126 Folder 1-38
Box 127 Folder 1-47
Box 128 Folder 1-47
Box 129 Folder 1-12
Box 130 Folder 1-8
Box 131 Folder 1-8
Series consists of clippings with manuscript notes by Hamburg, journal articles, notes, and typescripts of work by others, such as papers by Joseph Nye, Sidney Drell and other prominent scientists. This group of documents also includes general materials on conflict prevention, war and ethnic conflict, including materials on specific conflicts/countries. It includes materials on conflict resolution and terrorism from Dr. Hamburg's pre-Carnegie projects.
Box 132 Folder 1-34
Box 133 Folder 1-58
Box 134 Folder 1-40
Box 135 Folder 1-72
Box 136 Folder 1-18
Box 137 Folder 1-45
Box 138 Folder 1-57
Box 139 Folder 1-20
Box 139 Folder 21-51
Box 140 Folder 1-56
Box 141 Folder 1-51
Box 142 Folder 1-71
Box 143 Folder 1-71
Box 144 Folder 1-57
Box 144 Folder 58-69
Box 145 Folder 1-45
This group of files was organized into subjects ("stages" of dealing with the problem of conflict resolution) by Hamburg; filed in original order including background. The series contains some undated folders throughout, and some materials may have later been removed and included the PDC general, chronological series.
Box 146 Folder 1-11
Box 146 Folder 12-15
Box 146 Folder 16-37
Box 147 Folder 1-15
Box 147 Folder 16-21
Box 147 Folder 22-37
Box 148 Folder 1-31
Box 148 Folder 32
Box 148 Folder 33-42
Alphabetical subject files in original order by Hamburg, including background files. Some subjects overlap with non-PDC series, such as Developing Human Resources in Developing Countries. The voluminous "Democracy" file includes "Ray Marshall Papers", "Renewing the Agenda for Democracy" with Hilary Clinton, and non-CCNY materials.
Box 149 Folder 1-7
15
Box 149 Folder 8-11
Box 149 Folder 12-21
Box 149 Folder 22-35
Box 150 Folder 1-8
Box 150 Folder 9-11
Box 150 Folder 12-13
Box 150 Folder 14-22
Box 150 Folder 23-60
Box 151 Folder 1-34
Box 152 Folder 1-50
Box 153 Folder 1-36
Box 153 Folder 37-42
Box 154 Folder 1-32
Box 155 Folder 1
Box 155 Folder 2-5
Box 155 Folder 6-29
Box 155 Folder 30-35
Box 155 Folder 36-40
Box 156 Folder 1-5
Box 156 Folder 6-27
Box 156 Folder 28-42
Box 157 Folder 1-10
Box 157 Folder 11-14
Box 157 Folder 15-17
Box 157 Folder 18-39
Box 157 Folder 40-49
Box 158 Folder 1-38
Box 158 Folder 39
Box 158 Folder 40-52
Box 159 Folder 1-45
Box 160 Folder 1-51
Box 161 Folder 1-40
Box 161 Folder 41-43
Box 162 Folder 1-4
Box 162 Folder 5-14
Box 162 Folder 15-19
Box 162 Folder 20-48
Box 163 Folder 1-39
Box 163 Folder 40-46
Materials relating to conflicts in/with Eastern Bloc Countries and assistance to them from various CCNY programs, including Avoiding Nuclear War, Cooperative Security, and partially Preventing Deadly Conflict (mostly covered in Series I.7). The Eastern Bloc subseries also documents Hamburg's activities, writings and communications relating to the former Soviet Union and its Eastern European allies, the Carnegie Corporation's sponsorship of work with these countries performed by other institutions, such as Harvard, Stanford, United Nations Association of the United States of America, Aspen Strategy Group, AAAS, IREX, IOM, and others. Materials on Committee on International Security and Arms Control (CISAC) are described in separate Series I.10.
Administrative and general subject files pertaining to the Soviet Union and its satellites in the context of Avoiding Nuclear War, East-West Security Studies and Preventing Deadly Conflict programs, projects in science, technology and educations, and building democratic mechanisms after the fall of the Soviet Union. The subseries contains materials about meeting, conferences, Carnegie-supported IREX projects in Russia, and Dr. Hamburg's visits to Moscow, and other Soviet and Eastern European locations. It also covers Nunn-Lugar Task Force to work with Belarus, Kazakhstan, Ukraine and Russia on dismantling their nuclear weapons. The subseries documents the period of rapid changes and eventual dissolution of the Soviet system, and includes eyewitness accounts and materials on and by Soviet leaders, including Mikhail Gorbachev (see also Correspondence series). The files are arranged in loose chronological order.
Box 164 Folder 1-23
Box 165 Folder 1-20
Box 166 Folder 1-24
Box 167 Folder 1-17
Box 168 Folder 1-26
Box 169 Folder 1-29
Box 170 Folder 1-22
Box 171 Folder 1-22
Box 172 Folder 1-30
Box 173 Folder 1-22
Box 174 Folder 1-35
Box 175 Folder 1-24
Box 176 Folder 1-24
Box 177 Folder 1-41
Box 178 Folder 1-32
Box 179 Folder 1-31
Box 180 Folder 1-36
Box 181 Folder 1-42
Box 182 Folder 1-45
Box 183 Folder 1-34
Box 184 Folder 1-42
Box 185 Folder 1-41
Box 186 Folder 1-51
Box 187 Folder 1-31
Box 188 Folder 1-26
Box 188 Folder 27-44
The subseries contains news clippings, printed matter, conference materials, notes, and typescripts of third-party papers and memoranda, includes Kennan Institute and Harriman Institute materials, on the issues of Eastern Bloc and its leadership, possible impact of Nuclear War; U.S.-Soviet perceptions of each other, security concerns, and so on.
Box 189 Folder 1-25
Box 190 Folder 1-44
Box 191 Folder 1-66
Box 192 Folder 1-60
Box 193 Folder 1-50
Box 194 Folder 1-40
Box 195 Folder 1-30
Box 196 Folder 1-67
Box 197 Folder 1-42
Materials document the projects, including VelHam Computer Project and International Foundation for the Survival and Development of Humanity, undertaken in collaboration with Yevgeny P. Velikhov, a physicist, a vice president of the Soviet Academy of Sciences, and a frequent adviser to Secretary General Mikhail S. Gorbachev, who was considered one of the most influential scientists in the Soviet Union
Box 197 Folder 43-69
Box 198 Folder 1-26
Box 199 Folder 1-19
See also box 205
Box 200 Folder 1-39
See also box 205
Box 201 Folder 1-18
Box 202 Folder 1-6
Box 203 Folder 1-7
Box 204 Folder 1-6
Box 204 Folder 7-9
Box 205 Folder 1-23
Internal memoranda, reports, notes, correspondence and other materials related to general administration of Carnegie Corporation of New York, grants, mixed program area materials, staffing and personnel issues etc. The subseries also contains correspondence relating to Hamburg assuming the presidency of Carnegie Corporation and his retirement from presidency.
Box 616
Box 617
Box 618
Box 619
Box 620
Box 621
Box 622
Box 623
Box 624
Box 625
Box 626
Box 627
Box 814
Box 628
Box 629
Box 630
Box 631
Box 632
Box 633
Box 634
Box 635
Box 636
Box 637
Box 638
Box 639
Box 640
Box 641
Box 642
Box 643
Box 644
Box 645
Box 646
Box 647
Box 648
Box 649
The National Academy of Sciences (NAS) formed the Committee on International Security and Arms Control (CISAC) in 1980 as a permanent committee to bring the resources of the Academy to bear on critical problems of international security and arms control. CISAC's security dialogues with Russia (since 1981) and China (since 1988) addressed technical and potentially sensitive issues in international security, arms control and disarmament. David Hamburg served on CISAC board during his tenure as the Carnegie Corporation president, and facilitated numerous "linkages" between CISAC and the Corporation's efforts in avoiding nuclear war and preventing deadly conflict. The subseries has an overlap with Subseries I.7 (PDC) and I.8 (Eastern Bloc), particularly IOM/NAS/NRC/CISAC materials from 80s contain substantial amount of material relating to the USSR. NOTE: Be careful not to confuse Committee on International Security and Arms Control with Stanford's "CISAC" (Center for International Security and Arms Control, whose name was later changed to Center for International Security and Cooperation).
Box 650
Box 651
Box 652
Box 653
Box 654
Box 655
The series pertains to Hamburg's advisory work for various agencies from the executive branch of the U.S. Government. It contains correspondence with various government officials and the White House, minutes of meetings, research materials, recommendations and reports. The series initially contained a large number of printed official U.S. government documents, which are preserved and available elsewhere. These publications were discarded, unless they contained manuscript notes by Hamburg; only their title or front pages were retained in order to document the fact of their presence in the collection.
David Hamburg served on President's Committee of Advisors on Science and Technology Policy (PCAST) within the Office of Science and Technology Policy, a part of the Executive Office of the President (EOP) of U.S. Government. The subseries contains materials on PCAST initiative on race, biodiversity initiative, Education Panel and Children's Initiative, memoranda to President Clinton, and reports to Vice-President Al Core, materials related to the National Science and Technology Council. OSTP files contain a substantial amount of CCSTG materials and reports; for additional CCSTG documents see the Carnegie Corporation of New York Series IV.B
Box 206 Folder 1-30
Box 207 Folder 1-39
Box 208 Folder 1-32
Box 209 Folder 1-40
Box 210 Folder 1-36
Box 211 Folder 1-22
Box 212 Folder 1-26
Box 213 Folder 1-32
Box 214 Folder 1-33
Box 215 Folder 1-31
Box 216 Folder 1-30
Materials relating to Hamburg's participation in Presidential Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans Illnesses, also within the Office of Science and Technology Policy, and part of the National Science and Technology Council. It includes background materials on stress and immunity from 1985-1996, and documents related to the CCSTG, PDC, and Children and Youth programs of Carnegie Corporation. The files are arranged chronologically.
Box 217 Folder 1-50
Box 218 Folder 1-35
Box 219 Folder 1-20
Box 220 Folder 1-22
Box 221 Folder 1-21
The subseries documents David Hamburg's participation in Bill Clinton's Transition Office in November 1992 through April 1993. It also contains materials relating to Hamburgs White House meetings of 1997-1999.
Box 714 Folder 1-15
Box 715 Folder 1-8
Box 715 Folder 9-16
The series contains the correspondence from the period of Hamburg's service on the Department of Energy Secretary of Energy Advisory Board (SEAB).
Box 716
Box 717
Hamburg served on a number of policy advisory boards in the international security field, including the Executive Panel for the Chief of Naval Operations. He was also a member of the Defense Policy Board of the Department of Defense under U. S. Secretary of Defense William J. Perry . The series contains correspondence, minutes of meetings, travel reports, printed matter.
Box 718
Box 719
Alphabetical correspondence files under individual or institutional names were maintained in many offices throughout Dr. Hamburg's career. This is the record of Dr. Hamburg's external correspondence in his various capacities. During his subsequent projects, he often took some of the files out of their original sequences, as he needed them, and added them to new filing systems, associated with his ongoing work. Restoring original order proved impossible, and all these correspondence files have been sorted into a single alphabetical sequence for Individuals (III.1) and another one for Institutions (III.2). From the later period, we have chronological correspondence as well (Series III.3).
Series contain a mix of personal and professional correspondence with numerous scientists and educators, public figures, leaders of organized philanthropy, government officials, board members and staff of various national, foreign and international organizations, who corresponded with David Hamburg throughout his career. Many of the letters also include attachments, such as typescripts of works sent to Hamburg for his review, and other supplementary material. As indicated by folder titles, some files in the sequence contain small amounts of correspondence with several individuals, whose names are in the same alphabetical range.
Box 232 Folder 4
Box 228 Folder 1
Box 228 Folder 2
Box 228 Folder 3
Box 228 Folder 4
Box 228 Folder 5
Box 228 Folder 6
Box 228 Folder 7
Box 228 Folder 8
Box 228 Folder 9
Box 228 Folder 10
Box 228 Folder 11
Box 232 Folder 5
Box 228 Folder 13
Box 228 Folder 14
Box 228 Folder 15
Box 228 Folder 16
Box 228 Folder 17
Box 228 Folder 18
Box 228 Folder 19
Box 228 Folder 20
Box 229 Folder 1
Box 229 Folder 2-6
Box 230 Folder 1
Box 230 Folder 2
Box 259 Folder 1
Box 230 Folder 3
Box 230 Folder 4
Box 230 Folder 5
Box 230 Folder 6
Box 230 Folder 7
Box 230 Folder 8
Box 230 Folder 9
Box 230 Folder 10
Box 230 Folder 11
Box 230 Folder 12
Box 230 Folder 13
Box 259 Folder 2
Box 230 Folder 14
Box 230 Folder 15
Box 231 Folder 1
Box 231 Folder 2
Box 231 Folder 3
Box 231 Folder 4
Box 231 Folder 5
Box 231 Folder 6
Box 231 Folder 7
Box 231 Folder 8
Box 231 Folder 9
Box 231 Folder 10
Box 231 Folder 11
Box 231 Folder 12
Box 232 Folder 1
Box 232 Folder 2
Box 232 Folder 3
Box 259 Folder 3
Box 246 Folder 1
Box 259 Folder 4
Box 259 Folder 5
Box 259 Folder 6
Box 259 Folder 7
Box 259 Folder 8
Box 259 Folder 9-10
Box 260 Folder 1
Box 260 Folder 2
Box 260 Folder 3
Box 260 Folder 4
Box 260 Folder 5
Box 260 Folder 6
Box 260 Folder 7
Box 260 Folder 8
Box 246 Folder 2
Box 260 Folder 9-10
Box 261 Folder 1
Box 261 Folder 2
Box 261 Folder 3
Box 261 Folder 3
Box 261 Folder 5
Box 261 Folder 4
Box 261 Folder 6
Box 261 Folder 7
Box 261 Folder 8
Box 246 Folder 3
Box 233 Folder 1
Box 233 Folder 2
Box 233 Folder 3
Box 233 Folder 4
Box 233 Folder 5
Box 233 Folder 6
Box 246 Folder 4
Box 233 Folder 7
Box 233 Folder 8
Box 233 Folder 9
Box 233 Folder 10
Box 233 Folder 11
Box 233 Folder 12
Box 233 Folder 13
Box 233 Folder 14
Box 233 Folder 15
Box 233 Folder 16
Box 233 Folder 17
Box 233 Folder 18
Box 246 Folder 5
Box 233 Folder 19
Box 233 Folder 20
Box 234 Folder 1-4
Box 234 Folder 6
Box 234 Folder 5
Box 246 Folder 6
Box 239 Folder 1
Box 239 Folder 2
Box 239 Folder 3
Box 239 Folder 4
Box 239 Folder 5
Box 239 Folder 6-8
Box 247 Folder 1
Box 239 Folder 9
Box 240 Folder 1-2
Box 240 Folder 3
Box 240 Folder 4
Box 240 Folder 5
Box 240 Folder 6
Box 240 Folder 7
Box 240 Folder 8
Box 247 Folder 2
Box 240 Folder 9
Box 240 Folder 10
Box 240 Folder 12
Box 240 Folder 11
Box 240 Folder 13
Box 241 Folder 1
Box 241 Folder 2
Box 241 Folder 3
Box 241 Folder 4-9
Box 241 Folder 10
Box 242 Folder 1
Box 242 Folder 2
Box 247 Folder 3-4
Box 242 Folder 3-7
Box 243 Folder 1
Box 243 Folder 2
Box 243 Folder 3
Box 243 Folder 4
Box 243 Folder 5
Box 243 Folder 6
Box 243 Folder 7
Box 247 Folder 5
Box 248 Folder 1-2
Box 243 Folder 8
Box 243 Folder 9
Box 243 Folder 10
Box 243 Folder 11
Box 243 Folder 12
Box 243 Folder 13
Box 243 Folder 14
Box 244 Folder 1
Box 244 Folder 2
Box 244 Folder 3
Box 244 Folder 4
Box 244 Folder 5
Box 244 Folder 6
Box 244 Folder 7
Box 244 Folder 8
Box 244 Folder 9
Box 245 Folder 1
Box 245 Folder 2
Box 245 Folder 3
Box 245 Folder 4
Box 245 Folder 5
Box 245 Folder 6
Box 245 Folder 7
Box 245 Folder 8
Box 245 Folder 9
Box 245 Folder 18
Box 245 Folder 10
Box 245 Folder 11
Box 245 Folder 12
Box 245 Folder 13
Box 245 Folder 15-16
Box 245 Folder 17
Box 245 Folder 14
Box 245 Folder 19
Box 245 Folder 20
Box 238 Folder 1
Box 249 Folder 1-5
Box 249 Folder 6
Box 250 Folder 1
Box 250 Folder 2
Box 250 Folder 3
Box 238 Folder 2
Box 250 Folder 4
Box 250 Folder 5
Box 250 Folder 6
Box 250 Folder 7
Box 250 Folder 8
Box 250 Folder 9
Box 250 Folder 10
Box 250 Folder 11-12
Box 251 Folder 1-5
Box 252 Folder 2
Box 252 Folder 1
Box 238 Folder 3
Box 252 Folder 3
Box 252 Folder 4
Box 252 Folder 5
Box 252 Folder 6
Box 252 Folder 7
Box 252 Folder 8
Box 252 Folder 9
Box 252 Folder 10
Box 252 Folder 11
Box 252 Folder 12
Box 253 Folder 1-2
Box 253 Folder 3
Box 253 Folder 4
Box 253 Folder 5-7
Box 254 Folder 1-8
Box 255 Folder 1
Box 255 Folder 2
Box 255 Folder 3
Box 255 Folder 4
Box 255 Folder 5
Box 255 Folder 6
Box 256 Folder 1
Box 256 Folder 2-5
Box 257 Folder 1
Box 257 Folder 2
Box 238 Folder 4
Box 257
Box 257 Folder 3
Box 257 Folder 4
Box 257 Folder 5
Box 257 Folder 6
Box 257 Folder 7
Box 257 Folder 8
Box 257 Folder 9
Box 257 Folder 10
Box 257 Folder 11
Box 257 Folder 12
Box 257 Folder 13
Box 257 Folder 14
Box 257 Folder 15
Box 258 Folder 5
Box 257 Folder 16
Box 257 Folder 17
Box 257 Folder 18
Box 238 Folder 5
Box 257 Folder 19
Box 258 Folder 1
Box 258 Folder 2
Box 258 Folder 3
Box 258 Folder 4
Box 258 Folder 6
Box 258 Folder 7
Box 258 Folder 8
Box 258 Folder 9-10
Box 258 Folder 11
Box 258 Folder 12
Box 258 Folder 13
Box 238 Folder 6
Box 258 Folder 14
Box 258 Folder 15
Box 235 Folder 1
Box 263 Folder 5-6
Box 235 Folder 2
Box 235 Folder 3
Box 235 Folder 4
Box 235 Folder 5
Box 235 Folder 6
Box 235 Folder 7
Box 235 Folder 8
Box 235 Folder 9
Box 235 Folder 12
Box 235 Folder 10
Box 235 Folder 11
Box 235 Folder 13
Box 235 Folder 14
Box 235 Folder 15
Box 263 Folder 7
Box 236 Folder 11-12
Box 235 Folder 16
Box 235 Folder 17
Box 235 Folder 18
Box 235 Folder 19-20
Box 236 Folder 1
Box 236 Folder 2
Box 236 Folder 3
Box 236 Folder 4
Box 236 Folder 5
Box 236 Folder 6
Box 236 Folder 7
Box 236 Folder 8
Box 236 Folder 9
Box 236 Folder 10
Box 237 Folder 1-3
Box 237 Folder 4-5
Box 237 Folder 6
Box 237 Folder 7
Box 237 Folder 8
Box 264 Folder 1
Box 262 Folder 1
Box 262 Folder 2
Box 262 Folder 3
Box 262 Folder 4
Box 262 Folder 5
Box 262 Folder 6
Box 264 Folder 2
Box 262 Folder 7
Box 262 Folder 8
Box 263 Folder 3
Box 262 Folder 9
Box 262 Folder 10
Box 262 Folder 11
Box 262 Folder 12-13
Box 263 Folder 1
Box 263 Folder 2
Box 263 Folder 4
Box 264 Folder 3
Box 268 Folder 1
Box 264 Folder 4
Box 264 Folder 5
Box 264 Folder 6
Box 268 Folder 2
Box 264 Folder 7
Box 264 Folder 8
Box 264 Folder 9
Box 264 Folder 10
Box 265 Folder 1
Box 265 Folder 2
Box 265 Folder 3
Box 265 Folder 4
Box 265 Folder 5
Box 265 Folder 6
Box 268 Folder 3
Box 265 Folder 7
Box 265 Folder 9
Box 265 Folder 8
Box 265 Folder 10
Box 265 Folder 11
Box 265 Folder 12
Box 265 Folder 13
Box 265 Folder 14
Box 266 Folder 2-3
Box 268 Folder 4
Box 266 Folder 4
Box 266 Folder 5
Box 266 Folder 6
Box 266 Folder 7-8
Box 222 Folder 1
Box 268 Folder 5
Box 268 Folder 6
Box 269 Folder 1
Box 269 Folder 2
Box 269 Folder 3
Box 269 Folder 4
Box 222 Folder 2
Box 269 Folder 5
Box 269 Folder 6
Box 269 Folder 7
Box 222 Folder 3
Box 269 Folder 8
Box 269 Folder 9
Box 269 Folder 10-11
Box 269 Folder 12
Box 269 Folder 13
Box 270 Folder 1-2
Box 270 Folder 3
Box 222 Folder 4
Box 270 Folder 4
Box 222 Folder 5
Box 270 Folder 5
Box 270 Folder 6
Box 270 Folder 7
Box 270 Folder 8
Box 270 Folder 9
Box 270 Folder 10
Box 270 Folder 11
Box 222 Folder 6
Box 270 Folder 12-13
Box 222 Folder 7
Box 270 Folder 14
Box 271 Folder 1-2
Box 271 Folder 3
Box 271 Folder 4
Box 271 Folder 5
Box 222 Folder 8
Box 222 Folder 9
Box 271 Folder 6
Box 271 Folder 7
Box 271 Folder 8
Box 271 Folder 9
Box 271 Folder 10
Box 271 Folder 11
Box 289 Folder 8-9
Box 223 Folder 1
Box 223 Folder 2
Box 223 Folder 3
Box 223 Folder 4
Box 223 Folder 5
Box 223 Folder 6
Box 223 Folder 7-8
Box 223 Folder 9
Box 223 Folder 10
Box 223 Folder 11
Box 223 Folder 12
Box 289 Folder 10
Box 223 Folder 13
Box 223 Folder 13
Box 223 Folder 14
Box 224 Folder 1-6
Box 225 Folder 1
Box 225 Folder 2-4
Box 225 Folder 5
Box 289 Folder 11
Box 225 Folder 6
Box 226 Folder 1
Box 226 Folder 2
Box 226 Folder 3
Box 226 Folder 4
Box 226 Folder 5
Box 226 Folder 6
Box 226 Folder 7
Box 226 Folder 8
Box 226 Folder 9
Box 226 Folder 10
Box 290 Folder 1-2
Box 226 Folder 11
Box 226 Folder 12
Box 226 Folder 13
Box 226 Folder 14
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Box 226 Folder 16
Box 226 Folder 17
Box 226 Folder 18
Box 227 Folder 1
Box 227 Folder 2
Box 227 Folder 3
Box 227 Folder 4
Box 227 Folder 5-8
Box 286 Folder 1-2
Box 286 Folder 3
Box 286 Folder 4
Box 286 Folder 5-6
Box 286 Folder 7
Box 286 Folder 8
Box 286 Folder 9
Box 286 Folder 10
Box 287 Folder 1-4
Box 287 Folder 5
Box 287 Folder 6
Box 287 Folder 7
Box 287 Folder 8
Box 287 Folder 9
Box 287 Folder 10
Box 290 Folder 3-5
Box 287 Folder 11
Box 288 Folder 5
Box 287 Folder 12
Box 288 Folder 3
Box 288 Folder 4
Box 288 Folder 6
Box 288 Folder 7
Box 288 Folder 8
Box 288 Folder 9
Box 288 Folder 10
Box 288 Folder 11
Box 288 Folder 12
Box 288 Folder 14
Box 288 Folder 13
Box 288 Folder 15
Box 289 Folder 1
Box 289 Folder 2
Box 289 Folder 3
Box 289 Folder 4
Box 289 Folder 5
Box 291 Folder 1
Box 289 Folder 6
Box 289 Folder 7
Box 276 Folder 1-4
Box 291 Folder 2
Box 291 Folder 3
Box 291 Folder 4
Box 291 Folder 5
Box 291 Folder 6
Box 291 Folder 7
Box 291 Folder 8
Box 291 Folder 9-11
Box 291 Folder 12
Box 291 Folder 13-17
Box 291 Folder 18-19
Box 292 Folder 1-2
Box 292 Folder 3
Box 292 Folder 4
Box 292 Folder 5
Box 292 Folder 6
Box 292 Folder 7
Box 292 Folder 8
Box 292 Folder 9
Box 292 Folder 10
Box 292 Folder 11
Box 292 Folder 12-17
Box 292 Folder 18
Box 292 Folder 19
Box 292 Folder 20
Box 292 Folder 21
Box 292 Folder 22
Box 272 Folder 1
Box 272 Folder 2
Box 272 Folder 3
Box 272 Folder 4
Box 272 Folder 5
Box 276 Folder 5
Box 272 Folder 6
Box 272 Folder 7-9
Box 272 Folder 10
Box 272 Folder 11
Box 273 Folder 1
Box 277 Folder 1
Box 273 Folder 2
Box 273 Folder 3
Box 273 Folder 4
Box 273 Folder 5-6
Box 273 Folder 7
Box 273 Folder 8
Box 273 Folder 9
Box 273 Folder 10
Box 273 Folder 11
Box 277 Folder 2
Box 274 Folder 1
Box 274 Folder 2
Box 274 Folder 3-4
Box 274 Folder 5
Box 277 Folder 3-5
Box 274 Folder 6
Box 274 Folder 7
Box 274 Folder 8
Box 274 Folder 9
Box 274 Folder 10
Box 274 Folder 11
Box 274 Folder 12
Box 274 Folder 12
Box 274 Folder 13
Box 275 Folder 1
Box 275 Folder 2
Box 275 Folder 3
Box 275 Folder 4
Box 278 Folder 1
Box 275 Folder 5
Box 275 Folder 6
Box 275 Folder 7
Box 275 Folder 8
Box 275 Folder 9
Box 275 Folder 10
Box 275 Folder 11
Box 275 Folder 12
Box 278 Folder 7
Box 278 Folder 2
Box 278 Folder 3
Box 278 Folder 4
Box 278 Folder 5
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Box 279 Folder 6
Box 278 Folder 8
Box 278 Folder 9
Box 278 Folder 10
Box 278 Folder 11
Box 279 Folder 7
Box 278 Folder 12
Box 278 Folder 13
Box 279 Folder 8-9
Box 278 Folder 14
Box 278 Folder 15
Box 279 Folder 1
Box 279 Folder 2
Box 279 Folder 3
Box 279 Folder 4
Box 279 Folder 10
Box 279 Folder 5
Box 284 Folder 23
Box 293 Folder 1-2
Box 280 Folder 1
Box 280 Folder 2
Box 280 Folder 3
Box 280 Folder 4
Box 280 Folder 5
Box 280 Folder 6-7
Box 280 Folder 8
Box 280 Folder 9
Box 280 Folder 10
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Box 280 Folder 12
Box 280 Folder 13
Box 280 Folder 14
Box 281 Folder 1
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Box 281 Folder 3
Box 293 Folder 3-4
Box 281 Folder 4
Box 281 Folder 5
Box 281 Folder 6
Box 293 Folder 5
Box 281 Folder 7
Box 281 Folder 8-9
Box 282 Folder 1
Box 282 Folder 2
Box 282 Folder 3
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Box 282 Folder 8
Box 293 Folder 6-7
Box 282 Folder 9
Box 283 Folder 1
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Box 283 Folder 6
Box 283 Folder 7-9
Box 283 Folder 10
Box 283 Folder 11
Box 284 Folder 1
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Box 284 Folder 3
Box 284 Folder 4
Box 294 Folder 1-3
Box 284 Folder 5
Box 284 Folder 6-7
Box 284 Folder 8
Box 284 Folder 9
Box 284 Folder 10
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Box 284 Folder 16
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Box 284 Folder 18
Box 284 Folder 21-22
Box 284 Folder 19
Box 284 Folder 20
Box 297 Folder 17
Box 298 Folder 1
Box 294 Folder 4-5
Box 294 Folder 6
Box 294 Folder 7
Box 294 Folder 8
Box 294 Folder 9-11
Box 294 Folder 12
Box 294 Folder 13
Box 294 Folder 14
Box 294 Folder 15
Box 294 Folder 16-17
Box 294 Folder 18
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Box 294 Folder 21
Box 294 Folder 22
Box 298 Folder 2-4
Box 294 Folder 23-24
Box 295 Folder 1-5
Box 295 Folder 6
Box 295 Folder 7-8
Box 295 Folder 9
Box 295 Folder 10
Box 295 Folder 11
Box 295 Folder 12
Box 295 Folder 13
Box 296 Folder 1
Box 295 Folder 14-15
Box 296 Folder 2
Box 296 Folder 3
Box 296 Folder 4
Box 296 Folder 5
Box 296 Folder 6
Box 296 Folder 7-8
Box 296 Folder 9
Box 296 Folder 10
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Box 298 Folder 5
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Box 297 Folder 1
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Box 299 Folder 1
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Box 297 Folder 10-11
Box 297 Folder 12
Box 297 Folder 13
Box 297 Folder 14
Box 299 Folder 2
Box 297 Folder 15
Box 297 Folder 16
Box 299 Folder 3
Box 285 Folder 19
Box 299 Folder 4
Box 299 Folder 5
Box 299 Folder 6
Box 299 Folder 7-8
Box 299 Folder 9
Box 299 Folder 10
Box 299 Folder 11
Box 299 Folder 12
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Box 299 Folder 14
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Box 299 Folder 16-17
Box 300 Folder 1
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Box 300 Folder 4
Box 300
Box 300 Folder 7
Box 300 Folder 8
Box 300 Folder 5-6
Box 300 Folder 9
Box 304 Folder 1
Folder 10
Box 304 Folder 2
Folder 11
Folder 12
Folder 13
Box 301 Folder 1-3
Folder 14-15
Box 301 Folder 4
Box 301 Folder 6
Box 301 Folder 5
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Box 305 Folder 2
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Box 303 Folder 18-19
Box 303 Folder 20-21
Box 303 Folder 22-23
Box 305 Folder 3
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Box 285 Folder 1
Box 305 Folder 4
Box 285 Folder 2
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Box 305 Folder 5
Box 285 Folder 9
Box 285 Folder 10
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Box 285 Folder 12-14
Box 285 Folder 15
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Box 285 Folder 18
Box 308 Folder 6
Box 305 Folder 6
Box 305 Folder 7
Box 305 Folder 8
Box 305 Folder 9
Box 305 Folder 10
Box 305 Folder 11-14
Box 308 Folder 7
Box 306 Folder 1-5
Box 306 Folder 6
Box 306 Folder 7-22
Box 307 Folder 1
Box 307 Folder 2
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Box 307 Folder 5
Box 307 Folder 6-32
Box 308 Folder 1-2
Box 308 Folder 3-5
Box 310 Folder 1
Box 308 Folder 8-14
Box 309 Folder 1-6
Box 309 Folder 7
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Box 309 Folder 10-12
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Box 310 Folder 3
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Box 313 Folder 4-5
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Box 312 Folder 2
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Box 228 Folder 12
Box 312 Folder 7-11
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Box 328 Folder 8
Box 328 Folder 9
Box 328 Folder 10
Box 328 Folder 11
Box 328 Folder 12
Box 328 Folder 13
Box 329 Folder 1
Box 329 Folder 2
Box 329 Folder 3
Box 329 Folder 4
Box 329 Folder 5
Box 329 Folder 6
Box 329 Folder 7-9
Box 335 Folder 2-4
Box 329 Folder 10
Box 329 Folder 11
Box 329 Folder 12
Box 330 Folder 1
Box 330 Folder 2
Box 330 Folder 3
Box 330 Folder 4
Box 330 Folder 5
Box 330 Folder 6
Box 330 Folder 7
Box 330 Folder 8
Box 330 Folder 9
Box 330 Folder 10
Box 330 Folder 11
Box 330 Folder 12
Box 330 Folder 13-14
Box 331 Folder 1
Box 331 Folder 2
Box 331 Folder 3
Box 331 Folder 4
Box 335 Folder 5-6
Box 336 Folder 1
Box 331 Folder 5
Box 331 Folder 6
Box 331 Folder 7
Box 331 Folder 8
Box 331 Folder 9
Box 331 Folder 10
Box 331 Folder 11
Box 331 Folder 12-13
Box 331 Folder 14
Box 331 Folder 15
Box 336 Folder 3
Box 336 Folder 2
Box 331 Folder 14
Box 332 Folder 1
Box 332 Folder 2-4
Box 332 Folder 5
Box 332 Folder 6
Box 332 Folder 7
Box 332 Folder 8
Box 333 Folder 2
Box 333 Folder 1
Box 336 Folder 4
Box 333 Folder 3
Box 337 Folder 1
Box 337 Folder 2
Box 337 Folder 3
Box 337 Folder 4
Box 337 Folder 5
Box 267 Folder 1-2
Box 337 Folder 6
Box 337 Folder 7
Box 337 Folder 9
Box 337 Folder 8
Box 337 Folder 10
Box 337 Folder 11
Box 337 Folder 12
Box 337 Folder 13
Box 337 Folder 14
Box 337 Folder 15
Box 337 Folder 16
Box 338 Folder 1
Box 338 Folder 2
Box 338 Folder 3
Box 338 Folder 4
Box 338 Folder 5
Box 338 Folder 6
Box 338 Folder 7
Box 338 Folder 8
Box 338 Folder 9
Box 267 Folder 3-4
Box 338 Folder 10
Box 338 Folder 11
Box 338 Folder 12
Box 338 Folder 13-14
Box 339 Folder 1
Box 339 Folder 2
Box 339 Folder 3
Box 339 Folder 4
Box 339 Folder 5
Box 339 Folder 7
Box 339 Folder 6
Box 339 Folder 8-9
Box 340 Folder 5
Box 340 Folder 1
Box 340 Folder 2
Box 340 Folder 4
Box 340 Folder 3
Box 341 Folder 3
Box 340 Folder 6
Box 340 Folder 10
Box 340 Folder 7-8
Box 340 Folder 9
Box 340 Folder 11
Box 340 Folder 12
Box 340 Folder 13
Box 340 Folder 14
Box 341 Folder 1
Box 341 Folder 2
Box 346 Folder 10-11
Box 347 Folder 1-3
Box 341 Folder 4
Box 341 Folder 5
Box 341 Folder 6
Box 341 Folder 7
Box 341 Folder 8
Box 341 Folder 9
Box 341 Folder 10
Box 342 Folder 1
Box 342 Folder 2
Box 342 Folder 3
Box 342 Folder 4
Box 342 Folder 5
Box 342 Folder 6
Box 342 Folder 7-8
Box 342 Folder 9-10
Box 343 Folder 1
Box 343 Folder 2
Box 343 Folder 3
Box 343 Folder 4
Box 343 Folder 5
Box 343 Folder 6
Box 343 Folder 7
Box 343 Folder 8
Box 343 Folder 9
Box 343 Folder 10
Box 343 Folder 11
Box 343 Folder 12
Box 344 Folder 1
Box 344 Folder 2
Box 344 Folder 3
Box 344 Folder 4
Box 344 Folder 5
Box 344 Folder 6
Box 344 Folder 7
Box 344 Folder 8
Box 344 Folder 9
Box 344 Folder 10
Box 345 Folder 1
Box 345 Folder 2
Box 345 Folder 3
Box 345 Folder 4
Box 345 Folder 5
Box 345 Folder 6
Box 345 Folder 7-10
Box 346 Folder 1
Box 346 Folder 2
Box 346 Folder 3
Box 346 Folder 4
Box 346 Folder 5
Box 346 Folder 6
Box 346 Folder 7
Box 346 Folder 9
Box 346 Folder 8
Box 348 Folder 2
Box 347 Folder 4
Box 347 Folder 5
Box 347 Folder 6
Box 347 Folder 7
Box 348 Folder 1
Box 348 Folder 9
Box 348 Folder 3
Box 348 Folder 4
Box 348 Folder 5
Box 348 Folder 6
Box 348 Folder 7
Box 348 Folder 8
Contains external correspondence files with various institutions, such as universities, U.S. Government and U.N. agencies, academic and professional societies, non-profit organizations, The material in these files is often closely related to the one, in correspondence files for individuals, who were affiliated with these institutions (Series III.1). Several files in this sequence were found to be based not on institutions, but rather subjects, such as "Mental Health." "VelHam" (integrated into the other Velikhov project materials in the Series I.8.C. of this collection).
Box 349 Folder 1
Box 349 Folder 2
Box 349 Folder 3
Box 349 Folder 4
Box 349 Folder 5
Box 349 Folder 6
Box 349 Folder 7
Box 349 Folder 8
Box 349 Folder 9
Box 349 Folder 10
Box 349 Folder 11
Box 349 Folder 12
Box 349 Folder 13
Box 349 Folder 14
Box 349 Folder 15
Box 350 Folder 1
Box 350 Folder 2
Box 350 Folder 3
Box 350 Folder 4
Box 350 Folder 5
Box 350 Folder 6
Box 351 Folder 1
Box 351 Folder 2
Box 351 Folder 3
Box 351 Folder 4
Box 351 Folder 5
Box 351 Folder 6
Box 351 Folder 7
Box 351 Folder 8
Box 351 Folder 9
Box 351 Folder 10
Box 351 Folder 11
Box 351 Folder 12
Box 351 Folder 13
Box 351 Folder 14
Box 352
Box 353
Box 354 Folder 1
Box 354 Folder 2
Box 354 Folder 3
Box 354 Folder 4
Box 354 Folder 5
Box 354 Folder 6
Box 354 Folder 7
Box 354 Folder 8
Box 354 Folder 9
Box 354 Folder 10
Box 354 Folder 11
Box 354 Folder 12
Box 354 Folder 13
Box 354 Folder 14
Box 354 Folder 15
Box 354 Folder 16
Box 354 Folder 17
Box 354 Folder 18
Box 354 Folder 19
Box 354 Folder 20
Box 355 Folder 1
Box 355 Folder 2
Box 355 Folder 3
Box 355 Folder 4
Box 355 Folder 5
Box 355 Folder 6
Box 355 Folder 7
Box 355 Folder 8
Box 355 Folder 9
Box 355 Folder 10
Box 355 Folder 11
Box 355 Folder 12
Box 356 Folder 1
Box 356 Folder 2
Box 356 Folder 3
Box 356 Folder 4
Box 356 Folder 5
Box 356 Folder 6
Box 356 Folder 7
Box 356 Folder 8
Box 356 Folder 9
Box 356 Folder 10
Box 357 Folder 1
Box 357 Folder 2
Box 357 Folder 3
Box 357 Folder 4
Box 357 Folder 5
Box 357 Folder 6
Box 357 Folder 7
Box 357 Folder 8
Box 357 Folder 9
Box 357 Folder 10
Box 357 Folder 11
Box 357 Folder 12
Box 357 Folder 13
Box 357 Folder 14
Box 357 Folder 15
Box 357 Folder 16
Box 357 Folder 17
Box 358
Box 359
Box 360 Folder 1
Box 360 Folder 2
Box 360 Folder 3
Box 360 Folder 4
Box 360 Folder 5
Box 360 Folder 6
Box 361 Folder 1
Box 361 Folder 2
Box 361 Folder 3
Box 362 Folder 1
Box 362 Folder 2
Box 362 Folder 3
Box 362 Folder 4
Box 362 Folder 5
Box 362 Folder 6
Box 362 Folder 7
Box 362 Folder 8
Box 363 Folder 1
Box 363 Folder 2
Box 363 Folder 3
Box 364
Box 365 Folder 1
Box 365 Folder 2
Box 365 Folder 3
Box 365 Folder 4
Box 365 Folder 5
Box 365 Folder 6
Box 365 Folder 7
Box 365 Folder 8
Box 365 Folder 9
Box 365 Folder 10
Box 366 Folder 1
Box 366 Folder 2
Box 366 Folder 3
Box 366 Folder 4
Box 366 Folder 5
Box 366 Folder 6
Box 366 Folder 7
Box 366 Folder 8
Box 367 Folder 1
Box 367 Folder 2
Box 367 Folder 3
Box 367 Folder 4
Box 367 Folder 5
Box 368 Folder 1
Box 368 Folder 2
Box 368 Folder 3
Box 368 Folder 4
Box 368 Folder 5
Box 368 Folder 6
Box 368 Folder 7
Box 368 Folder 8
Box 368 Folder 9
Box 368 Folder 10
Box 369 Folder 1
Box 369 Folder 2
Box 369 Folder 3
Box 369 Folder 4
Box 369 Folder 5
Box 369 Folder 6
Box 369 Folder 7
Box 370 Folder 1
Box 370 Folder 2
Box 370 Folder 3
Box 370 Folder 4
Box 370 Folder 5
Box 370 Folder 6
Box 370 Folder 7
Box 370 Folder 8
Box 370 Folder 9
Box 370 Folder 10
Box 370 Folder 11
Box 371 Folder 1
Box 371 Folder 2
Box 372 Folder 1
Box 372 Folder 2
Box 372 Folder 3
Box 372 Folder 4
Box 372 Folder 5
Box 372 Folder 6
Box 372 Folder 7
Box 372 Folder 8
Box 372 Folder 9
Box 372 Folder 10
Box 373
Box 374
Box 375 Folder 1
Box 375 Folder 2
Box 375 Folder 3
Box 375 Folder 4
Box 375 Folder 5
Box 375 Folder 6
Box 375 Folder 7
Box 375 Folder 8
Box 375 Folder 9
Box 375 Folder 10
Box 376 Folder 1
Box 376 Folder 2
Box 376 Folder 3
Box 376 Folder 4
Box 376 Folder 5
Box 376 Folder 6
Box 376 Folder 7
Box 376 Folder 8
Box 377 Folder 1
Box 377 Folder 2
Box 377 Folder 3
Box 377 Folder 4
Box 377 Folder 5
Box 377 Folder 6
Box 377 Folder 7
Box 378 Folder 1
Box 378 Folder 2
Box 378 Folder 3
Box 378 Folder 4
Box 379 Folder 1
Box 379 Folder 2
Box 379 Folder 3
Box 379 Folder 4
Box 379 Folder 5
Box 379 Folder 6
Box 379 Folder 7
Box 379 Folder 8
Box 380 Folder 1
Box 380 Folder 2
Box 380 Folder 3
Box 380 Folder 4
Box 381
Box 382 Folder 1
Box 382 Folder 2
Box 382 Folder 3
Box 382 Folder 4
Box 383 Folder 1
Box 383 Folder 2
Box 383 Folder 3
Box 383 Folder 4
Box 383 Folder 5
Box 383 Folder 6
Box 383 Folder 7
Box 383 Folder 8
Box 383 Folder 9
Box 383 Folder 10
Box 383 Folder 11
Box 383 Folder 12
Box 383 Folder 13
Box 384 Folder 1
Box 384 Folder 2
Box 384 Folder 3
Box 384 Folder 4
Box 384 Folder 5
Box 384 Folder 6
Box 384 Folder 7
Box 384 Folder 8
Box 385 Folder 1
Box 385 Folder 2
Box 385 Folder 3
Box 385 Folder 4
Box 385 Folder 5
Box 385 Folder 6
Box 385 Folder 7
Box 386 Folder 1
Box 386 Folder 2
Box 386 Folder 3
Box 387 Folder 4
Box 387 Folder 5
Box 388 Folder 1
Box 388 Folder 2
Box 388 Folder 3
Box 388 Folder 4
Box 389 Folder 1
Box 389 Folder 2
Box 389 Folder 3
Box 389 Folder 4
Box 389 Folder 5
Box 389 Folder 6
Box 389 Folder 7
Box 390 Folder 1
Box 390 Folder 2
Box 390 Folder 3
Box 391 Folder 1
Box 391 Folder 2
Box 391 Folder 3
Box 391 Folder 4
Box 391 Folder 5
Box 391 Folder 6
Box 391 Folder 7
Box 392 Folder 1
Box 392 Folder 2
Box 393 Folder 1
Box 393 Folder 2
Box 393 Folder 3
Box 394 Folder 1
Box 394 Folder 2
The series contains miscellaneous correspondence in original chronological order.
Box 706
Box 707
Box 708
Box 709
Box 710
Box 711
Box 712
Box 713
Correspondence, writings and speeches, meeting minutes, research data, marked-up background material, academic conference presentations, and student projects dated from 1951-1999 relating to HAMBURG's work at Stanford as a faculty member (since 1961), his work on non-human primates (NHP) there, his work on the SU Board of Trustees and the SU-Institute for International Studies Board of Visitors, and the Human Biology Middle Grades Curriculum Project. Of note is the correspondence with Jane Goodall and other NHP researchers in Gombe, and materials on late 1960s higher education controversies at Stanford and elsewhere. Series organized into five subseries, material within subseries is organized chronologically. See also the Commonwealth Fund correspondence file in Series III.2 (supported much of Hamburg's research in early 1970s).
The series consists of correspondence, memoranda, notes, drafts, teaching materials, typescripts, students' projects and dissertations, and research materials, documenting Hamburg's teaching and administrative career at Stanford's Center for Advanced Study in the Behavioral Sciences, serving as Reed-Hodgson Professor of Human Biology, and as chair of psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine. At the School of Medicine Hamburg established a new department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, distinguished by its breadth of research on behavioral biology, especially in relation to mental illness. The series also documents his collaboration with Dr. Jonas Salk, participation in NIMH Research Task Force, and work on IOM program committee ( not to be confused with Hamburg's later IOM tenure)
Box 395
Box 396
Box 397
Box 398
Box 399
Box 400
Box 401
Box 402
Box 403
Box 404
Box 405
Box 406
Box 407
Box 408
Box 409
Box 410
Box 411
Box 412
Box 413
Box 414
Box 415
Box 416
Box 417
Box 418
Box 419
Box 420
Box 421
Box 422
Box 423
Box 424
Box 425
Box 426
Box 427
not to be confused with later IOM tenure
Box 428
Box 429
Box 430
Box 431
Box 815
Box 432
Box 443
Box 444
Box 445
Box 446
The series consists of correspondence, memoranda, notes, conference presentations, primates. Box 440 formerly contained 10 reel-to-reel audio tapes of a Hamburg-Goodall presentation during the Burg Wartenstein Conference #62 (August 20-28, 1974), "The Behavior of Great Apes" organized by David Hamburg and Jane Goodall These audio recordings are now available in digital format. The NPR files document in detail the 1975 incident in Gombe, Tanzania, when for of his students, studying primate behavior under the direction of Jane Goodall were abducted by armed rebels, and Hamburg spent 10 weeks negotiating their release. The series also contained oversize blueprints for Stanford Primate Facility, and chimpanzee photographs, separated to Series XI.
Box 433
Stanford Primate Facility blueprints oversized, shelved with Realia in box 811
Box 434
Box 435
Box 436
Chimp photos removed to AV
Box 437
Box 438
Box 439
Box 440
Box 441
Box 442
Box 818
The series contains correspondence, general trustees' mailings, meeting minutes, reports, and other materials relating to the activities of the Stanford Board of Trustees. David Hamburg was a member and a vice-chairman of the Board from 1988 to 1995.
Box 447
Box 448
Box 449
Box 450
Box 816
Box 817
As the chair of psychiatry at Stanford University School of Medicine David Hamburg helped to found The Program in Human Biology. The series contains correspondence, notes, and typescripts relating to establishing the original Stanford University curriculum on human biology, and relating to a later Human Biology Middle Grades Curriculum Project, an attempt at adaptation of the SU Human Biology program to the middle school level. The Human Biology Middle Grades Curriculum Project also contains materials and writings on Puberty and Adolescence.
Box 451
Box 452
Box 453
Third-party typescript materials and various printed matter, frequently underlined or with Dr. Hamburg's notes, and used as a basis of his later works. The majority of files are related to Hamburg's activities as a member of Stanford faculty and administration, however the series also contains background materials on primate research, human biology and adolescence, and background materials received by Hamburg as a Board of Trustees member.
Box 454
Box 455
Box 456
Box 457
Box 458
Box 459
Box 460
Box 461
Box 462
Box 463
Box 464
Box 465
Box 466
Box 467
Box 468
Box 469
Box 470
Box 471
Box 472
Box 473
Box 474
Box 475
Box 476
Box 477
Box 478
Box 479
Box 480
Box 481
Box 482
Box 483
Box 484
Box 485
Box 486
Box 487
Box 488
Box 489
Box 490
Box 491
Box 492
Box 493
Box 494
Materials dating from 1967 to 1982 relating to Hamburg's work as president of the Institute of Medicine (IOM) in Washington DC. Materials in the IOM series relate to Hamburg's time as IOM President, 1975-1980, and his later correspondence as IOM member, but not to his collaboration with IOM as the Carnegie Corporation President, such as CISAC (documented in the grant files of the Carnegie Corporation of New York records and in Carnegie Corporation of New York series of this collection). The series contains general background, working papers, memoranda relating to various public health and health policy issues of the late 1970s. Also contains materials relating to the history and organization of the Institute of Medicine. Series organized into two sub-series: general/chronological and background; sub-series are organized chronologically.
Box 495
Box 496
Box 497
Box 498
Box 499
Box 500
Box 501
Box 502
Box 503
Box 504
Box 505
Box 506
Box 507
Box 508
Box 509
Box 510
Box 511
Box 512
Box 513
Box 514
Box 515
Box 516
Box 517
Box 518
Box 519
Box 520
Box 521
Box 522
Box 523
Box 524
Box 525
Box 526
Box 527
Box 528
Box 529
Box 530
Box 531
Box 532
Box 533
Box 534
Box 535
Box 536
Box 537
Box 538
Box 539
Box 540
Box 541
Box 819
Box 820
Box 821
Box 542
Box 543
Box 544
Box 545
Box 546
Box 547
Box 548
Box 549
Box 550
Box 551
Box 552
Box 553
Box 554
Box 555
Box 556
Box 557
Box 558
Box 559
Box 560
Box 561
Box 562
Box 563
Box 564
Box 565
Box 566
Box 567
Box 568
Box 569
Box 570
Box 571
Box 572
Box 573
Box 574
Box 822
Box 823
From 1980 to 1983, Hamburg served as director of the university-wide Division of Health Policy Research and Education and John D. MacArthur Professor of Health Policy at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA. The series consists some earlier contacts with Harvard initial correspondence and appointment, miscellaneous policy proposals, co-written with Elena Nightingale, and.applying a cross-disciplinary approach to health policy issues. Also included is Hamburg's correspondence with MacArthur Foundation relating to his appointment as the John D. MacArthur Professor of Health Policy. The series also contains correspondence, proceedings and handouts from various events in Harvard, in which Hamburg participated, after he left Harvard employment.
Box 575
Box 824
Box 576
Box 577
Box 578
Box 579
Box 580
Box 581
Box 582
Box 583
Box 584
Box 585
Box 586
Box 587
Box 588
Box 589
Box 590
Box 591
Box 592
Box 593
Box 594
Box 595
Box 842
Series consists of meeting minutes, correspondence, reports, memoranda, and printed materials related to the policy decisions of various organizations, where David Hamburg was involved for short-time projects, in advisory capacity or as a trustee. His work for US government and for United Nations agencies is not part of this series; it was processed as separate Series II and Series IX respectively. For more information on Dr. Hamburg's acitivies related to these institutions, see their correspondence files in Series III.2; for Pocantico Institute of Technology see also the correspondence files for its sponsors, Harvard University John F. Kennedy School of Government and the Rockefeller Foundation. Additional activities related to NIMH are documented in the Stanford series.
Box 656
Box 657
Box 658
Box 659
Box 660
Box 661
Box 662
Box 663
Box 664
Box 665
Box 666
Box 667
Box 668
Box 669
Box 670
Box 671
Box 672
Box 673
Box 674
Box 675
Box 676
Box 677
Box 678
Box 679
Box 680
Box 681
Box 682
Box 683
Box 684
Box 685
Box 686
Box 687
Box 688
Box 689
Box 690
Box 691
Box 692
Box 693
Box 694
Box 695
Box 696
Box 697
Box 698
Box 699
Box 700
Box 701
Box 702
Box 703
Box 704
Box 705
Materials dated from 1941-1961 relating to Hamburg's work as a clinical and research psychiatrist at Walter Read Medical Center, Michael Reese Hospital, and NIMH prior to Stanford appointment. Of particular interest is the body of notes, memos, and papers relating to the NIMH research, which sheds light not only on Hamburg's biography but also on the history of medicine, especially psychiatric research practices, in the mid-20th century US. Series includes also background materials on mid-century medical and social science, and notes on patients which will be sealed for 50 years. Series organized into four subseries: General/Chronological, background, NIMH r esearch, and patient files to be sealed; sub-series are organized chronologically, except the backround, which is thematically organized, and follows Hamburg's reference sub categories put in chronological order
Box 596
Box 597
Box 598
Box 599
Box 600
Box 601
Box 602
Box 603
Box 604
Box 605
Box 606
Box 607
Box 608
Box 609
Box 610
Box 611
Box 612
RESTRICTED until 2060
Box 613
RESTRICTED until 2060
Box 614
RESTRICTED until 2060
Box 615
RESTRICTED until 2060
The series contains meeting minutes, correspondence, research materials and subject files documenting Hamburg's work in international organizations on a variety of health, behavior, education and conflict resolution subjects. The agencies include UNESCO, several World Health Organization Committees (Advisory Committee on Medical Research, Pan American Committee on Health Research Policies, Research and Training in Tropical Diseases), and Office of the UN High Commissioner on Refugees, including Refugee Education Trust project. For additional information see also Institutonal Correspondence (Sereis III.2) for these institutions, particularly ms. boxes 386-388.
Box 720
Box 721
Box 722
Box 723
Box 724
Box 826
Box 725
Box 827
Box 726
Series contains Dr. Hamburg's remarks, speeches, articles, and books, CVs, Lists of Publications and presentations, reprints, and related materials. Since Hamburg tended to consult and reuse his previous works on later occasions, many older writings are grouped together with newer works that are based on them, and, occasionally, with other background materials. Many articles are undated and/or fragmentary. Some of Hamburg's writings are found in Alpha Files when associated with a person or institution, or under specific project/subject area, or in the institution-based series of the years corresponding to this period.
The series contains Chapter drafts, research material and related correspondence for Hamburg's two books on conflict resolution:Learning to Live TogetherandNo More Killing Fields(sometimes called "Book I" and "Book II" or by its draft titleEarth is Not Flat); Closely related to PDC materials in series I.7 and other conflict resolution writings during Hamburg's tenure as the Carnegie Corporation president. The series contains some speeches, presentations, etc. given based on book drafts.
Box 727
Box 728
Box 729
Box 730
Box 731
Box 732
Box 733
Box 734
Box 735
Box 736
Box 737
Box 738
Box 739
Box 740
Box 825
Box 741
Box 742
Box 743
Box 744
Box 745
Box 746
Box 747
Box 748
Box 749
Box 750
Box 751
Box 752
Box 753
Box 754
Box 755
Box 756
Box 757
The series consists of materials assembled in the course of working on the bookToday's Children,predominantly notes, marked-up copies of Hamburg's earlier writings, chapter drafts, correspondence related to publication and distribution of the book.
Box 758
Box 759
Box 760
Box 761
Box 762
Box 763
Box 764
Extensive collection of published and unpublished essays, speeches, lectures, magazine articles, reports, and research papers by David Hamburg, including many fragmentary or undated items. Arranged in loose chronological order, except for the cases when a set of writings on related subjects was deliberately kept together by Hamburg. Also includes Hamburg's cumulative lists of works and presentations, and his CVs over the years.
Box 765
Box 766
Box 767
Box 768
Box 769
Box 770
Box 771
Box 772
Box 773
Box 774
Box 775
Box 776
Box 777
Box 778
This series contains various materials relating to dr. Hamburg's life and work, but not specifically pertaining to any given project or organization.
Series consists of calendars, notebooks, documents, cumulative lists of works, personal correspondence, and materials relating to professional activities of David Hamburg's wife and two children. Also includes a box of personal correspondence related to his Carnegie Corporation presidency.
Box Box
Box 779
Box 780
Box 781
Box 782
Box 783
Box 784
Box 785
Box 786
Box 787
Box 788
This series consists of the files, representing mix of personal and professional and activities after retiring from active role at the Carnegie Corporation. The materials include correspondence, transcript of Oral History interview, autobiographical notes, typescript of memoirs, invitations and materials relating to various conferences, receptions and awards, Hamburg's participation and support of numerous projects on public health and conflict prevention.
Box 789
Box 790
Box 791
Box 792
Box 793
Box 794
Box 828
Box 829
Box 830
Box 831
Box 832
Box 833
Box 834
Box 835
Box 836
Box 837
Box 838
Box 839
Box 840
Box 841
Subject files of clippings and printed materials All subseries with "Background" in the title contain outside published materials (books, newspaper clippings, magazine articles, reports etc.); and 3rd party unpublished writings (conference papers; other writings not clearly directly done for CCNY) related to whatever series they are connected to. Most large series have their own "background" subseries, though in some "background" is included-- this will be noted in the contents description. Some "background" materials that are included in folders with other memos, notes, etc. will appear in the main series. Some material in "background" series include marginal reading notes or very brief coverletters.
Box 795
Box 796
Box 797
Box 798
Box 799
Box 800
Box 801
Box 802
Box 803
Box 804
Box 805
Box 806
This small series, described on folder and item level, consists of photographs, slide and transparencies, audio, video, and digital materials from David Hamburg collection. Audio and video materials primarily represent conference presentations and addresses, many of them were digitized for preservation and access purposes, including reel-to-reel audio tapes of a Hamburg-Goodall presentation during the Burg Wartenstein Conference #62 "The Behavior of Great Apes" organized by David Hamburg and Jane Goodall in August of 1974.
Box 440
Formerly 10 Reel-to-Reel Audio Tapes, 1/4", separated from Series IV.1 box 440
Box 128
Formerly on Audio Cassette. Separated from Series I.7.A Box 128
Box 42
Formerly on Audio Cassette. Separated from Series III.2, Box 42 and digitized
Box 807
Box 807
15 b&w prints, 8x10
Box 807
Color print, 5" x 7". Separated from Series I.6, Box 87
Box 807
2 color 8x10 prints, Separated from Series II.1, box 207
Box 807
7 color prints, 4" x 6", Separated from Series I.7.B., box 142
Box 807
Box 807
8 slides separated from Series I.7.A., Box 112
Box 807
5 1/4" Floppy Disk, Separated from Series I.8.C
Box 807
3.5" Floppy Disk, Separated from Series I.8.C
Box 807
VHS Videotape, Separated from Series I.6 Box 92
Box 807
CD
Box 807
VHS, Separated from Series I.6, Box 87
Medals, plaques and framed award certificates given to David Hamburg by various organizations over the course of his career.
Box 808
Oversized
Box 809
Oversized
Box 810
Oversized
Box 811
Oversized
Box 812
Oversized
Box 813