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DTSTART:20251102T020000
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DESCRIPTION:"Gastrodiplomacy\, the Use of Food as a Tool to Unite Diverse P
 opulations."Speaker&nbsp\;Jena Daggett was a McNair Scholar and received a
  National Science Foundation grant for research in conflict management and
  peace science.&nbsp\;Conflict is an ever-present part of life\, from the 
 most basic friendship squabble to large-scale wars. Lessening the conflict
  and increasing peacebuilding efforts can have great effect on issues rang
 ing from healthcare to the economy. While researchers have proposed and st
 udied many tools for conflict management and building lasting peace\, few 
 have researched the effect of gastrodiplomatic strategies. Gastrodiplomacy
 \, or the use of food as a tool to unite diverse populations\, has become 
 a tool for nation branding during the last fifteen years. &nbsp\;Because o
 f its role as a common feature of humanity\, its potential impact on minim
 izing conflict both domestically and internationally is large.Conversation
 s in Conflict Studies is a weekly educational speaker series for students\
 , faculty\, and the community. &nbsp\;The series\, sponsored by PARCC\, dr
 aws its speakers from Syracuse University faculty\, national and internati
 onal scholars and activists\, and PhD students. Pizza is served. Follow us
  on Twitter @PARCCatMaxwell\, tweet #ConvoInConflict.
DTEND:20161116T183000Z
DTSTAMP:20260513T012638Z
DTSTART:20161116T173000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Gastrodiplomacy\, the Use of Food as a Tool to Unite Diverse Popula
 tions
UID:RFCALITEM639142179988426464
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><b>"Gastrodiplomacy\, the Use of Food as a 
 Tool to Unite Diverse Populations."</b></p><p>Speaker&nbsp\;<i>Jena Dagget
 t</i> was a McNair Scholar and received a National Science Foundation gran
 t for research in conflict management and peace science.&nbsp\;<br>Conflic
 t is an ever-present part of life\, from the most basic friendship squabbl
 e to large-scale wars. Lessening the conflict and increasing peacebuilding
  efforts can have great effect on issues ranging from healthcare to the ec
 onomy. While researchers have proposed and studied many tools for conflict
  management and building lasting peace\, few have researched the effect of
  gastrodiplomatic strategies. Gastrodiplomacy\, or the use of food as a to
 ol to unite diverse populations\, has become a tool for nation branding du
 ring the last fifteen years. &nbsp\;Because of its role as a common featur
 e of humanity\, its potential impact on minimizing conflict both domestica
 lly and internationally is large.<br><i>Conversations in Conflict Studies<
 /i> is a weekly educational speaker series for students\, faculty\, and th
 e community. &nbsp\;The series\, sponsored by PARCC\, draws its speakers f
 rom Syracuse University faculty\, national and international scholars and 
 activists\, and PhD students. Pizza is served. Follow us on Twitter <a hre
 f="http://twitter.com/PARCCatMaxwell">@PARCCatMaxwell</a>\, tweet #ConvoIn
 Conflict.<br></p>
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