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Converging!

Noam Ebner (Creighton University) & Yael Efron (Zefat Academic College)
July 29, 2021

Creating a Community Partnership

Keith Provan & Brint Milward (University of Arizona)
July 29, 2021

Balancing Competition within a Homeless Services Provider Network

Kelly LeRoux (University of Illinois at Chicago)
July 29, 2021

Model EU-European Council-European Agenda on Migration Simulation

Noam Ebner (Creighton University), Alexandru Balas & Andreas Kotelis (SUNY Cortland)
July 29, 2021

A Struggle for Power and Control over Service Delivery in the Non-Profit Sector

Melissa Brazil and Eli Teram (Wilfrid Laurier University)
July 29, 2021

Collaborative Solutions to Transportation, Land Use and Community Design Issues

Jeff Loux (University of California, Davis)
July 29, 2021

Developing a Young Professionals Network for the Arts

Thomas A. Bryer & Kristin N. Stewart (University of Central Florida)
July 29, 2021

Education in Adlabad

Tina Nabatchi (Syracuse University)
July 29, 2021

See related: Education

Emergency Management and Homeland Security: Interagency Collaboration - Emergency!

David E. Booher and Adam Sutkus (California State University Sacramento)
July 29, 2021

Exercise in Environmental Collaborative Planning

Mike George (University of Nebraska)
July 29, 2021

An International Conflict Management Simulation

Noam Ebner (Creighton University), Yael Efron & Nellie Munin (Zefat Academic College)
July 29, 2021

Fracked: Uncertainties in Negotiated Rule Making

Rob Alexander, Natalie Abel & Matthew Williams (James Madison University)
July 29, 2021

Gray Wolf: Fairness and Justice in Collaborative Governance

Lauren Elizabeth Colwell & Steve Smutko (University of Wyoming)
July 29, 2021

Joint Action Plan Negotiations on the Iran Nuclear Deal

Anil Raman & Steven Smutko (University of Wyoming)
July 29, 2021

Learning about Individual Collaborative Strengths: A LEGO Scrum Simulation

Heather Getha-Taylor & Alexey Krivitsky (University of Kansas)
July 29, 2021

Little Golano

Noam Ebner (Creighton University) & Yael Efron (Zefat Academic College)
July 29, 2021

Addressing ELCA: An Exercise in Designing and Facilitating Stakeholder Processes

Rob Alexander (Rochester Institute of Technology)
July 29, 2021

Mapping Network Structure in Complex Community Collaboratives

Mark W. Davis & Danielle M. Varda (University of Colorado)
July 29, 2021

Community Engagement for Organizational Change

Alexandra Wakeman Rouse & Stephen Page (University of Washington)
This teaching case allows students to examine issues related to community engagement, municipal responsibility, and public value by providing a narrative about a venerable city-run cultural and performing arts center in the midst of change.
July 29, 2021

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Conversations in Conflict Studies with Kyaw Zeyer Win

400 Eggers Hall, the PARCC Conference Room

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Securitization of the Rohingya Community: Why has the Rohingya problem become intractable?”  Kyaw Zeyer Win, MA-IR Candidate, Maxwell School, Syracuse University.  
In the last five years the Rohingya community has been subject to renewed waves of anti-Muslim propaganda and accompanying violence, killings and systematic marginalization that aim both to permanently disenfranchise and to displace them from their native land. The relaxation of media restrictions alongside the ongoing political liberalization in Myanmar has exacerbated this situation. The brutal ‘clearance operations’ inflicted upon the Rohingya community in 2017 has seen more than 650,000 people flee across the border to Bangladesh amidst reports of extrajudicial killings, sexual violence and arson by Myanmar’s state military Tatmadaw. While the United Nations has declared this to be a “textbook example of ethnic cleansing” (UNOHCHR 2017a), the attacks on government targets have validated many Myanmar citizens’ long held belief that the Rohingya pose a threat to their nation and an existential threat to Buddhism, the majority religion. So why has the Rohingya problem become so intractable? I am going to present how over time the Burmese military government “securitized” the ethnic Rohingya community based on different interests and ambitions, portraying the Rohingya ethnic group as an existential threat to the state and society. I then go on to demonstrate how these narratives are reproduced and reinforced by horizontal and bottom-up securitization processes.

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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Program for the Advancement of Research on Conflict and Collaboration
400 Eggers Hall