Purser Appointed Co-Director of Lender Center for Social Justice
Provost Gretchen Ritter announced that Gretchen W. Purser, associate professor of sociology in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, has been appointed co-director of the Lender Center for Social Justice.
See related: Promotions & Appointments
Dennison Discusses the Upstate-Crouse Hospital Merger with Syracuse.com
Professor of Practice Emeritus Tom Dennison was quoted in the Syracuse.com article "Syracuse hospital merger: Upstate and Crouse, once fierce rivals, unite to grow stronger."
See related: Health Policy, New York State
Ebner Featured in HISTORY Article on Mussolini, Fascism
Associate Professor Michael Ebner, an expert on the history of Italy and fascism, was featured in the HISTORY article "How Mussolini Seized Power in Italy—And Turned It Into a Fascist State."
See related: Europe
Delta Democracy: Pathways to Incremental Civic Revolution in Egypt and Beyond
See related: International Affairs, Middle East & North Africa
Alumni Spotlight: Joining the Global Conversation
Jen Proch ’21 M.A.I.R. took advantage of an internship with the Council of Europe and the Atlantis Program, which enables students to earn master’s degrees from both Maxwell and the Hertie School of Governance in Berlin.
See related: Internships, Student Experience, Study Abroad
Maxwell supports local government at ICMA conference
See related: State & Local
Sultana Discusses Diversity, Climate Research with Carbon Brief
See related: Climate Change
Purser Discusses Rent Relief, Eviction Moratorium
See related: Civil Rights, Housing, United States
In Memoriam: Joseph Strasser, ‘Forever an Important Figure in our History’
He was among the Maxwell School’s most generous benefactors.
See related: Giving, In Memoriam
Maxwell School Announces Montonna Professor, Dean’s Award Recipients
See related: Awards & Honors, Giving, Promotions & Appointments
#Kifaya# Enough Dangerous Speech for South Sudanese
See related: Education
Coalitional Lobbying and Intersectional Representation in American Rulemaking
In her article published in American Political Science Review, Assistant Professor of Political Science Maraam Dwidar's argues that interest groups representing women, people of color, Native nations, and the poor strategically conduct intersectional advocacy through coalitional lobbying.
See related: Civil Rights
Purser discusses employment protections in NY state on WCNY
See related: COVID-19, Labor, New York State
Trust as an Asset Building a Managed Service Organization in MACC
Politics of Structuring Interorganizational Collaboration and the Selection of Good Clients
Managing a Public-Private Joint Venture: The PTB Case
Kujichagulia: Actively Building a Public-Nonprofit Community Partnership
Indiana Household Hazardous Waste Task Force
Inclusive Management: Planning 'Green Grand Rapids'
Health Careers Institute Collaboration
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Conversations in Conflict Studies- Sustainable Change in a Fractured World
400A Eggers Hall
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Guest Speaker: Paul Hirsch, Associate Professor, Department of Environmental Studies, SUNY- Environmental Science and Forestry.
At both global and national scales, we are living in a political milieu shaped to a significant degree by polarization. Within the United States, while people’s views on policy have not changed dramatically over the years, the levels of political and social sorting have. This polarization takes place against a background of concern about environmental changes, also at levels from the local to the global. In this Conversation, Hirsch will draw on the scholarship of Bryan Norton and Chantal Mouffe to discuss the challenges inherent in fostering sustainable change in a fractured world, and on his own experience as a facilitator to discuss what it might take in the way of approach, capacities, and tools to engage those challenges.
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.
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