This event will celebrate the launch of two new books by Joy Ladin: Once Out of Nature: Selected Essays on the Transformation of Gender and Family, a new collection of poems. She will read from both books and reflect on what Jewish identity can teach us about trans identity, what trans identity can teach us
Lectures
Calendar of Events
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Presented by Susan B. Reynolds, Ph.D., Winner of the 2024 New Scholar Essay Prize for Catholic Studies in the Americas. Clergy sexual violence in immigrant communities is an understudied dimension of the abuse crisis in the Catholic Church. Yet records reveal how immigrant-serving parishes were regularly treated as dumping grounds for serially abusive clergy. There, |
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Join us to hear a panel of experts discuss the major technological innovations of the 2024 campaign, and how those new tactics are being used to mobilize interest groups in new ways. This panel will feature political practitioners, journalists, and academics discussing the role of political TikTok, digital grassroots mobilization, influencers, targeted social media ad
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Speaker: Stephen Sestanovich Stephen Sestanovich is the George F. Kennan Senior Fellow for Russian and Eurasian studies at CFR and the Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis Professor Emeritus at Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs. Previously, he served as the ambassador to the former Soviet Union for the U.S. State Department. Additionally, he |
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The Western Africa region is currently facing complex dynamics, including security challenges, international relations, and the impact of military engagements. Join us for an engaging discussion that promises to enhance your understanding of Western Africa’s strategic importance in today’s world. Michael Miklaucic is a senior fellow of the Institute for National Strategic Studies at National |
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This talk will explore how Jewish memorial books, yizker-bikher, created by Holocaust survivors or by pre-war Jewish émigrés from Eastern Europe, have engaged and encouraged various forms of mappings. These include both material cartographic images published in memorial books and performative acts of mapping the space of Jewish Eastern Europe undertaken by two groups of |
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In conjunction with the exhibit “Yearning to Breathe: The Art of Siona Benjamin” at Fordham Univerisity’s Walsh Family and Quinn Libraries, we invite you to join us for a screening of the documentary Blue Like Me, profiling the Indian-American artist Siona Benjamin. Raised in the small Bene Israel Jewish community in Mumbai, India, Benjamin's art |
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The IPED Department will be hosting Neda Sobhani who will talk about careers in development. Neda Sobhani is currently a chief of party, food for education at Catholic Relief Services. Sobhani brings experience from previous roles at Catholic Relief Services and Peace Corps. Sobhani is a graduate of the Boston College of Social Work and |
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Speaker: Nicole Grajewski Nicole Grajewski is a fellow in the Nuclear Policy Program for the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and associate researcher for the Project on Managing the Atom at Harvard University. Her research focuses on Russian and Iranian nuclear strategy and policy within the larger geopolitical narrative.
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The Fordham University Alumni Association (FUAA) and the Fordham Foundry, the University’s hub for innovation and entrepreneurship, invite alumni, parents, and friends to attend an engaging evening of networking, reflection, and exploration into the past, present, and future of entrepreneurship in New York City. The event will feature a fireside chat with Tommy Silk, FCRH |
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The IPED department will be organizing a panel on race and culture. Jane Bolgatz, Ph.D., is an associate professor of social studies education in the division of curriculum and teaching at Fordham University’s Graduate School of Education. She researches how teachers, students, administrators, and parents address issues of race and racism in and out of
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Third Annual Fall Symposium From Tokyo Rose to the China Initiative: Espionage and AAPIs Thursday, November 14, 2024 In-Person and Online Costantino Room Fordham Law School Agenda 5:30 – 6 p.m. Check-in 6 – 7:30 p.m. Program 7:30 – 8:30 p.m. Reception Asian Americans have long been accused of spying for foreign countries and engaging |
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The 2024 Barbara L. Jackson, Ed.D., Lecture In this keynote address, Rosa Rivera-McCutchen, Ph.D. an author and educator, will present her groundbreaking concept of radical care—a leadership practice centered on anti-racism and equity in schools. Drawing from her book, Radical Care: Leading for Justice in Urban Schools, Rivera-McCutchen will offer insights into how school leaders |
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Speaker: Inu Manak Inu Manak is a fellow for trade policy at CFR. Her research focuses on trade politics within multilateral institutions, and she regularly speaks on policies, climate, and WTO reform. Previously, Manak was a fellow at the Cato Institute’s Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies and at the Centre for Trade
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Fordham English Professor Christopher GoGwilt will discuss his recent book, The K-Effect: Romanization, Modernism, and the Timing and Spacing of Print Culture, in a conversation hosted by Professor Stephen Hong Sohn. This event will include light refreshments, and there will be door prizes for attendees. About the Book The K-Effect shows how the roman alphabet has
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Still exploring what to major in at Fordham? Join us to learn more about the undergraduate major in international political economy (IPE) with our program major advisor Giacomo Santangelo, Ph.D. This information session will be held at on November 20 (Wednesday), 4-5 p.m. at Dealy 105, at the Fordham Rose Hill campus. For questions, email |
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This event will feature Erwin Chemerinksy, Dean and Jesse H. Choper Distinguished Professor of Law from the UC Berkeley School of Law, on themes in his new book, No Democracy Lasts Forever, as well as a response by Madiba Dennie, deputy editor and senior contributor at Balls and Strikes; and author of The Originalism Trap: |
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