Join us for part three of a distinguished lecture series with professor Adele Reinhartz, featuring an introduction by Dakota Hampton and a faculty response by Michael Peppard. This is a hybrid event, with in-person details to follow. Hybrid: In person at Lincoln Center and Virtual on Zoom
Lectures
Calendar of Events
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Trauma-informed care is more than just the newest catchphrase: It’s a paradigmatic shift away from delineating the traumas themselves and aids the clinician in focusing on a person having traumatic responses. In health care, where long-term trauma therapy is not often the focus of work, it's necessary to help clinicians better understand how trauma-informed care |
3 events,
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Join us for a special event featuring Paul Johnson and Paul Sonkin on their new book, The Enduring Value of Roger Murray (Columbia Business School Press). The event will feature a fireside chat-style conversation between the book authors, noted investor and hedge fund manager Leon Cooperman (joining virtually), and Fordham's own Mario Gabelli, GABELLI '65,
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We learned from Thomas Merton's private journals—published 25 years after his death—of an affair Merton had in the summer of 1966 with a nurse ("M") who cared for him after a medical procedure. If we take seriously Merton's status and contributions as a Catholic thinker, then Merton's description of his relationship with "M" needs to |
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Ntombana Mbele is a passionate policy and trade economist whose focus is on demystifying economics and making it an inclusive discipline that speaks to all economic agents. She holds a master’s degree from the University of Johannesburg in economics and industrial policy. Mbele currently works as an economic and trade advisor at the Embassy of Join us for part two of a distinguished lecture series with professor Adele Reinhartz, with an introduction by Natalie Reynoso and a faculty response by Karina Martin Hogan. This is a hybrid event, with in-person details to follow. Hybrid: In person at Lincoln Center and Virtual on Zoom |
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Come learn about the current realities of migrants and asylum seekers at the U.S./Mexico border and here in NYC. Hear from three dynamic speakers: Joanna Williams, director of the Kino Border Initiative, will be joined by NYC activists Adama Bah and Power Malu. |
4 events,
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In today’s complex business world, where “soft skills” like ethical decision-making and communicating across differences are crucial for success, our career partners increasingly tell us they prefer to hire graduates with liberal arts backgrounds. FCLC alumni consistently build outstanding careers in fields like finance, management, and consulting. If you’re thinking about your own path from
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Come enjoy presentations and videos created by graduate students in the International Political Economy and Development (IPED) program. Two of the four project assessment teams will present their findings and analysis from the Philippines Project Assessment course. The two highlighted projects will be Pilkan Elderly Project and Gawang Kamay Project. Join us for part three of a distinguished lecture series with professor Adele Reinhartz, featuring an introduction by Mara Foley and a faculty response by Emanuel Fiano. This is a hybrid event, with in-person details to follow. Hybrid: In person at Lincoln Center and Virtual on Zoom |
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Caring for those impacted by cancer is an increasingly common occurrence, regardless of a social worker’s practice setting. As our population ages, more people are diagnosed, and although treatments have significantly prolonged life for many, cancer is still a leading cause of death in the U.S. and across the world. And unfortunately, treatment for cancer |
3 events,
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Join us for a virtual event with Alan Blinder, one of the world’s most influential economists, as he discusses his latest book, in conversation with renowned economic historian and former Museum of American Finance chairman Richard Sylla. In A Monetary and Fiscal History of the United States, 1961–2021, Blinder draws on his deep firsthand experience
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Jeremy Tinker, Ph.D., associate professor of physics at NYU, will present “The History of the Universe from 1919 to Today.” From the Speaker: I will review some of the fundamental observations that have led us to the understanding that the universe is not only expanding but that this expansion is currently accelerating. I will begin |
3 events,
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This lecture, featuring Bryan Roby in conversation with Aomar Boum and Ahmad Greene-Hayes, is part of the Black Studies and Jewish Studies in Conversation lecture series.
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Social workers are well-positioned to provide high-quality, culturally responsive care rooted in an anti-oppression framework that attends to historic harms. In fact, it is an obligation of a profession that is rooted in social justice. Yet social workers still cause harm and are complicit to racism in micro, mezzo, and macro practice. This two-part class
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Come enjoy presentations and videos created by graduate students in the International Political Economy and Development (IPED) program. Two of the four project assessment teams will present their findings and analysis from the Philippines Project Assessment course. The two highlighted projects will be Pilkan Elderly Project and Gawang Kamay Project. |
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1 event,
Join us for a hybrid lecture with Eyal Ben-Eliyahu, part of the Fordham-NYPL lecture series. |
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3 events,
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Social workers are well-positioned to provide high-quality, culturally responsive care rooted in an anti-oppression framework that attends to historic harms. In fact, it is an obligation of a profession that is rooted in social justice. Yet social workers still cause harm and are complicit to racism in micro, mezzo, and macro practice. This two-part class
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Before 1870, much of humanity lived in dire poverty, with a slow crawl of invention offset by a growing population. Then came a great shift: Invention sprinted forward, doubling our technological capabilities each generation and utterly transforming the economy again and again. Our ancestors would have presumed we'd use such powers to build a utopia.
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Every year for Black History Month, the Department of African and African American Studies at Fordham University invites a guest speaker to address the Fordham community. This year's keynote speaker is Khiara M. Bridges, Ph.D., J.D., who will discuss critical race theory and the important place of Black studies in the present and future. Bridges |
1 event,
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The Gabelli School of Business will be hosting a private screening of Farm Free or Die, a unique documentary that looks at how extreme climate changes are impacting our agriculture and food supply. Combined with the mounting costs of conventional farming methods that require increasingly expensive fossil-based fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides for ever-decreasing yields, these |
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1 event,
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Join us for a final guided tour of our exhibit Confronting Hate: Antisemitism, Racism, and the Resistance, curated by Westenley Alcenat, Lesley East, FCRH '24, and Magda Teter. Also on view is an exhibit of photographs by Julian Voloj, curated by Ray Felix. Light refreshments will be served. Please RSVP yourself and any guests you |
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Join us for a presentation from David Adipietro, a mechanical engineering student in Fordham's Department of Physics and Engineering Physics, will present "SpaceX." SpaceX was founded under the belief that a future where humanity is out exploring the stars is fundamentally more exciting than one where we are not. Today, SpaceX is actively developing the
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This hybrid event will feature undergraduate research by Reyna Stovall, FCLC ‘25, and Sophia Maier, FCRH ‘23, in conversation with professors Ayelet Brinn, Ayala Fader, and Daniel Soyer. This event is hosted by Fordham’s Center for Jewish Studies and co-sponsored with FCRH Undergraduate Research; the Urban Studies Program; Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies; and Fordham’s |
3 events,
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Innovations rarely come from “experts.” When it comes to improbable innovations, a legendary tech venture capitalist told Sebastian Mallaby, the future cannot be predicted, it can only be discovered. It is the nature of the venture-capital game that most attempts at discovery fail; very few succeed, and on such a scale that they more than
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Please join the Fordham community for a discussion of chaplaincy in combat, with a reception to follow. The guest speaker is Andriy Zelinskyy, S.J., First Chaplain of the Ukrainian Marine Corps and the Chief Chaplain of the Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church. This event is part of the celebration of 175 years of Fordham's military legacy.
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Giacomo Santangelo, Ph.D., is a senior lecturer in Fordham's Department of Economics. He serves as the director of the International Political Economy and Development (IPED) undergraduate program. Santangelo is also a professor at the W. Paul Stillman School of Business at Seton Hall University, where he lectures on economics and quantitative analysis. He is a |
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