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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DTSTART:20250301T020000
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DESCRIPTION:Ray Smith Symposium 2023–2024: Indigenous Resilience\, Climate 
 Change\, and the Environmental HumanitiesLectures3:00 pm: Panel discussion
  with all symposium speakers moderated by Neal Powless and Michelle Shenan
 doahThe symposium was made possible with generous support from the College
  of Arts &amp\; Sciences\; Maxwell School of Citizenship &amp\; Public Aff
 airs\; Humanities Center\; Humanities Council\; Center for Global Indigeno
 us Cultures &amp\; Environmental Justice\; the Environment\, Sustainabilit
 y\, and Policy Program\; the Departments of Geography &amp\; the Environme
 nt\; Earth and Environmental Sciences\; Art &amp\; Music Histories\; Anthr
 opology\; English\; Religion\, History\, Sociology\, and Nutrition &amp\; 
 Food Studies\; the Environmental Storytelling Series of CNY &amp\; the Eng
 aged Humanities Network\; SUNY ESF Center for Native Peoples &amp\; the En
 vironment\; and the Skä•noñh Great Law of Peace Center. We also greatly ap
 preciate the contributions of our mentors and collaborators of the Haudeno
 saunee community to this symposium\, and acknowledge with respect the Onon
 daga Nation\, firekeepers of the Haudenosaunee\, the Indigenous people on 
 whose ancestral lands Syracuse University now stands.
DTEND:20231113T210000Z
DTSTAMP:20260510T231618Z
DTSTART:20231113T200000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Ray Smith Symposium Panel Discussion
UID:RFCALITEM639140373780411024
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<h3>Ray Smith Symposium 2023–2024: Indigenous 
 Resilience\, Climate Change\, and the Environmental Humanities</h3><p>Lect
 ures</p><ul style="margin-left: 30px"><li>3:00 pm: Panel discussion with a
 ll symposium speakers moderated by Neal Powless and Michelle Shenandoah</l
 i></ul><p><em></em><em>The symposium was made possible with generous suppo
 rt from the College of Arts &amp\; Sciences\; Maxwell School of Citizenshi
 p &amp\; Public Affairs\; Humanities Center\; Humanities Council\; Center 
 for Global Indigenous Cultures &amp\; Environmental Justice\; the Environm
 ent\, Sustainability\, and Policy Program\; the Departments of Geography &
 amp\; the Environment\; Earth and Environmental Sciences\; Art &amp\; Musi
 c Histories\; Anthropology\; English\; Religion\, History\, Sociology\, an
 d Nutrition &amp\; Food Studies\; the Environmental Storytelling Series of
  CNY &amp\; the Engaged Humanities Network\; SUNY ESF Center for Native Pe
 oples &amp\; the Environment\; and the Skä•noñh Great Law of Peace Center.
  We also greatly appreciate the contributions of our mentors and collabora
 tors of the Haudenosaunee community to this symposium\, and acknowledge wi
 th respect the Onondaga Nation\, firekeepers of the Haudenosaunee\, the In
 digenous people on whose ancestral lands Syracuse University now stands.</
 em><span style="background-color: initial\; font-family: inherit\; font-si
 ze: inherit\; text-align: inherit\; text-transform: inherit\; word-spacing
 : normal\; caret-color: auto\; white-space: inherit"><em></em></span></p>
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