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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:"Civil-Military Relations From International Conflict Zones to 
 the United States."&nbsp\;Corri Zoli &amp\; Robert Rubinstein\, Maxwell Sc
 hool of Citizenship and Public Affairs\, Syracuse University.&nbsp\;&nbsp\
 ;Civil-military relations in the United States are much more militarized t
 oday than they were thirty years ago. We will discuss how efforts to impro
 ve humanitarian action and warfighting by taking a "cultural turn" created
  a web of relationships that at first entangled and later entrapped instit
 utions and actors. The processes involved began in the 1990s and accelerat
 ed as the "cultural turn" became more central to post-9/11 security develo
 pments in the United States. We consider the mutual dependences and depend
 encies attendant to these processes and consider the emergence of the mili
 tarization of local policing an exemplar of the broader societal arrangeme
 nts they entailed.Conversations in Conflict Studies is a weekly educationa
 l speaker series for students\, faculty\, and the community. The series\, 
 sponsored by PARCC\, draws its speakers from Syracuse University faculty\,
  national and international scholars and activists\, and PhD students. Piz
 za is served.&nbsp\;If you require accommodations\, please contact the PAR
 CC office&nbsp\;by email&nbsp\;or by phone at 315.443.2367 at least one we
 ek prior to the event.&nbsp\; &nbsp\;
DTEND:20190918T173000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T235938Z
DTSTART:20190918T163000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:PARCC Conversations in Conflict Studies-  Corri Zoli and Robert Rub
 instein 
UID:RFCALITEM639141263780502082
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><strong>"Civil-Military Relations From Inte
 rnational Conflict Zones to the United St</strong>ates."&nbsp\;</p><p><em>
 Corri Zoli</em> &amp\; <em>Robert Rubinstein</em>\, Maxwell School of Citi
 zenship and Public Affairs\, Syracuse University.&nbsp\;&nbsp\;<br>Civil-m
 ilitary relations in the United States are much more militarized today tha
 n they were thirty years ago. We will discuss how efforts to improve human
 itarian action and warfighting by taking a "cultural turn" created a web o
 f relationships that at first entangled and later entrapped institutions a
 nd actors. The processes involved began in the 1990s and accelerated as th
 e "cultural turn" became more central to post-9/11 security developments i
 n the United States. We consider the mutual dependences and dependencies a
 ttendant to these processes and consider the emergence of the militarizati
 on of local policing an exemplar of the broader societal arrangements they
  entailed.<br><br>Conversations in Conflict Studies is a weekly educationa
 l speaker series for students\, faculty\, and the community. The series\, 
 sponsored by PARCC\, draws its speakers from Syracuse University faculty\,
  national and international scholars and activists\, and PhD students. Piz
 za is served.&nbsp\;<br><br><em>If you require accommodations\, please con
 tact the PARCC office&nbsp\;<a href="mailto:parcc@maxwell.syr.edu">by emai
 l</a>&nbsp\;or by phone at 315.443.2367 at least one week prior to the eve
 nt.&nbsp\; &nbsp\;</em></p>
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