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Maxwell School Events Calendar

Social Science and Public Policy Events

  • Master of Public Administration Open House

    Eggers Hall, 426 (CPR Conference Room)

    M.P.A. open houses are informal, voluntary opportunities for current M.P.A. students to meet with Saba Siddiki, professor and director of the M.P.A. program, to discuss their experience and questions relating to the program.

  • Syracuse-Chicago Webinar Series on Property Tax Administration and Design: Jeremy Moulton

    Virtual

    During this webinar, Jeremy Moulton (University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill) will discuss “When Do Property Taxes Matter? Tax Salience and Heterogeneous Policy Effects.”

  • COVID-19 and Policy: Looking Backward and Looking Forward

    Eggers Hall, 220 (Strasser Legacy Room)

    Join us for a one-day conference exploring the multifaceted impacts of COVID-19 on public policy, health and inequality. This event brings together leading experts from a range of fields to share insights, research and experiences related to the ongoing pandemic.

  • Syracuse-Chicago Webinar Series on Property Tax Administration and Design: Sebastien Bradley

    Virtual

    Sebastian Bradley (Drexel University) will discuss "Household Asymmetric Risk of Foreclosure From Tax Assessment Limits."

  • Celebration of Undergraduate Scholarship

    Eggers Hall, 220

    The Maxwell School Celebration of Undergraduate Scholarship is our annual recognition of student research achievement in the social sciences. This event gathers the Maxwell community together to share social science research findings across disciplines.

  • Decoding Institutional Dynamics on Climate Change Adaptation in Southern South Korea

    Virtual

    Sola Kim of Arizona State University will present at the May Institutional Grammar Research Initiative research seminar. 

  • Asha Sundaram: Foreign Direct Investment, Geography and Welfare

    Eggers Hall, 341

    The Moynihan Institute and the program for Trade, Development and Political Economy are hosting an in-person talk with Asha Sundaram of the University of Auckland.

  • Blood Gun Money: How America Arms Gangs and Cartels

    Maxwell Hall, Maxwell Auditorium

    Ioan Grillo, author of the book, "Blood Gun Money: How America Arms Gangs and Cartels," will discuss the market for guns in the Americas and how it has made the continent the most murderous on earth.

  • Master of Public Administration Open House

    Eggers Hall, 426 (CPR Conference Room)

    M.P.A. open houses are informal, voluntary opportunities for current M.P.A. students to meet with Saba Siddiki, professor and director of the M.P.A. program, to discuss their experience and questions relating to the program.

  • Mini Conference: South Asian American Invisibility

    Virtual

    Organized by Professor Prema Kurien (sociology), this timely full day virtual mini-conference approaches the issue of invisibility among South Asian Americans through themes such as boundaries, queerness, gender, race, (trans)nationalism, immigration, economics and religion. The virtual mini-conference also features a professional mentorship panel on navigating academia along with several informal opportunities for participants to discuss shared concerns.

  • Neopopulism and the Challenges to Democracy: Italy in Comparative Perspective

    Crouse-Hinds Hall, 010

    The Moynihan Institute, along with the Center for European Studies is proud to host Professor Paolo Graziano.

  • Geography and the Environment- Donald Meinig Undergraduate Lecture

    Eggers Hall, 220 (Strasser Legacy Room)

    "No Analogue: What Can Tree Rings Tell Us in a Changed Climate?" with Amy Hessl, Department of Geology & Geography, West Virginia University.

  • Medieval Ife and the World it Made: Emerging Narratives from the Cradle of the Yoruba (10TH-15TH C)

    Hall of Languages, 500

    Dr. Gérard Chouin will highlight the findings from the past seven campaigns of the Ife-Sungbo Archaeological Project. she, along with Dr. Adisa Ogunfolakan, director of the Natural History Museum of the Obafemi Awolowo University, established the project in 2015.

  • CPR Seminar Series: Graduate Student Seminar

    Eggers Hall, 426

    Graduate students will present as part of the CPR Seminar Series.

  • Otey Scruggs Memorial Lecture

    Eggers Hall, 220

    The History Department presents the annual Otey Scruggs Memorial Lecture with Jamie Kreiner, professor of history at the University of Georgia.

  • Middle Eastern Studies Program Spring Reception

    Eggers Hall, 220

    Please join the Middle Eastern Studies Program for our annual reception to appreciate the contributions of our faculty and celebrate the achievements of our students.

  • Micron in Central New York: What’s at Stake for Education and the Workforce?

    Virtual

    What's at Stake for Education and the Workforce? Micron in Central New York, with Maxwell faculty members Shannon Monnat, Yingyi Ma, Alexander Rothenberg and Stuart Rosenthal.

  • The Price and Welfare Effects of Tariff Reduction on Consumer Goods: Evidence from China

    Virtual

    The Moynihan Institute, and the program for Trade, Development and Political Economy invites you to virtually join Xue Bai, associate professor from Brock University for a talk on "Tariff Reduction on Consumer Goods."

  • Gen Z and the Future of Politics

    Eggers Hall, 220 (Strasser Legacy Room)

    Please join us and participate in a conversation with renowned experts in Gen Z politics about the coming “cohort cliff” when boomers will give way to a new generation of voters and political leaders and what that will mean for the future of American democracy. Part of the Renewing Democratic Community Lecture Series.

  • PLACA Film Presentation: Children of Las Brisas

    Maxwell Hall, 204

    The Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs and the Program on Latin America and the Caribbean are proud to host Director Marianela Maldonado and Producer Luisa De La Ville, for a live screening of their film, "Children of Las Brisas."

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Exterior of Maxwell in black and white when there was no Eggers building

We’re Turning 100!


To mark our centennial in the fall of 2024, the Maxwell School will hold special events and engagement opportunities to celebrate the many ways—across disciplines and borders—our community ever strives to, as the Oath says, “transmit this city not only not less, but greater, better and more beautiful than it was transmitted to us.”

Throughout the year leading up to the centennial, engagement opportunities will be held for our diverse, highly accomplished community that now boasts more than 38,500 alumni across the globe.