Community Engagement for Improving Livelihood of Youth in Ghana’s Cocoa Sector
Democracy in Motion: Evaluating the Practice and Impact of Deliberative Civic Engagement
Climate Change and Threatened Communities: Vulnerability, capacity and action
See related: Climate Change, Environment
Spoilers of Peace and the Dilemmas of Conflict Resolution
See related: Middle East & North Africa
Conflict and Change
The latest edition of Lou Kriesberg’s classic text examines new evidence on how to wage conflicts less destructively.
State Building in Putin's Russia: Policing and Coercion After Communism
PARCC - EPARCC - Syllabus - Networks and Public Management
The audience for this course is the current or prospective public manager seeking a Master of Public Affairs or Public Policy degree or its equivalent.
A Place at the Multicultural Table: The Development of an American Hinduism
See related: Religion
Sudan: Race, Religion and Violence
See related: Africa (Sub-Saharan), Race & Ethnicity, Religion
Democracy and the Culture of Skepticism: Political Trust in Argentina and Mexico
Globalization and International Political Economy: The Politics of Alternative Futures
Progress in International Relations Theory: Appraising the Field
Explore by:
Conversations in Conflict Studies- Margaret Susan Thompson
400A Eggers Hall
Add to: Outlook, ICal, Google Calendar
"Sacraments as Weapons: Kyriarchy and Women’s Resistance in the 19th-Century Convent." Margaret Susan Thompson, Associate Professor, History and Political Science, Syracuse University.
This talk will focus on extensive and repeated examples in 19th-century conventual archives of sacraments being used by clerics—and sometimes by female superiors, as well—as weapons to control both the spirituality and the behavior of Catholic sisters. These nuns repeatedly experienced the sacraments—or, more accurately, the deprivation of sacraments—as instruments of power and control wielded by priests and hierarchs against vowed women who were considered to be deviant or insufficiently submissive. The intent is to analyze the phenomenon as more than just a collection of exceptional or arbitrary cases, but rather as systemic and oppressive behavior. What might appear as an aberrant example if the focus is on only one community can emerge as part of an important pattern by using a broader analytical lens. This is a work in progress, for which feedback is both welcome and appreciated!
Conversations in Conflict Studies is a weekly educational 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. Pizza is served. Follow us on Twitter @PARCCatMaxwell, tweet #ConvoInConflict.
If you require accommodations, please contact Deborah Toole by email at datoole@syr.edu or by phone at 315.443.2367.
Open to
Public
Contact
Accessibility
Contact to request accommodations