Maxwell School Events Calendar
Workshops Events
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Archival Research for Housing Covenants
Lyman Hall, 215
This Community Geography methods workshop will explore community-engaged archival methods with a focus on mapping racist housing covenants in Syracuse, New York.
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History Department Workshop Featuring Erika Rappaport
Eggers Hall, 151
History Department Workshop featuring Erika Rappaport.
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Conflict Management Center Presents "Interest-Based Problem Solving"
Maxwell Hall, 204
Please consider joining the Conflict Management Center for our interest-based problem-solving workshop.
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Early Modern Connected Histories Workshop Featuring Dr. Gillian Weiss
Eggers Hall, 151
Dr. Gillian Weiss will present "The Money Launderer's Daughter: A Sephardic Woman and a Slave Rumor in the Seventeenth-Century Mediterranean."
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STOP BIAS - Managing Bias
Maxwell Hall, 204
This workshop is designed to help students to learn about bias, the differences between implicit and explicit bias, how they work, and how they manifest in our daily lives.
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History Department Workshop featuring Helmut Walser Smith
Eggers Hall, 151
History Department Workshop featuring Helmut Walser Smith.
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Early Modern Connected Histories Workshop Featuring Dr. Casey Schmitt
Maxwell Hall, 204B
Dr. Casey Schmitt will present "'A Trail Would be Blazed:' Commercial Competition and the Intra-Caribbean Slave Tarde, 1650-1670."
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Ikebana Workshop: The Japanese Art of Arranging Flowers with Jia Man
Eggers Hall, 220
The Moynihan Institute’s East Asia Program presents a workshop by Jia Man of Le Moyne College.
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Early Modern Connected Histories Workshop Featuring Caroline Barraco
Eggers Hall, 151
Caroline Barraco will present "Authenticity, Commodity, and Belief in the Early Modern Spanish Relic Trade."
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History Department Workshop Featuring Professor Brian Brege
Eggers Hall, 151
History Department Workshop featuring Professor Brian Brege.
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Early Modern Connected Histories Workshop Featuring Professor Craige Champion
Maxwell Hall, 204B
Professor Craige Champion will present "History as Magister vitae."
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Sociology Department Book Workshop: Prema Kurien
Maxwell Hall, 204B
Prema Kurien’s manuscript, “Claiming Citizenship: Race, Religion, and Belonging Among New Ethnic Americans,” will be discussed in detail.
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Early Modern Connected Histories Workshop Featuring Professor Tessa Murphy
Eggers Hall, 151
Professor Tessa Murphy will present "Connected Histories in the Early Modern Caribbean: The Creole Archipelago".
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Early Modern Connected Histories Workshop Featuring Dr. Rachel Weil
Maxwell Hall, 204B
Dr. Rachel Weil will present "'Confinement No Duress?': Imprisonment in Early Modern England."
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Basic Conflict Management Skills Workshop
Maxwell Hall, 204
This workshop will help you understand the fundamentals of conflict management theory, including how various conflict styles affect the way you and others deal with conflict.
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Managing Implicit Bias-POSTPONED
Eggers Hall, 010
POSTPONED - STAY TUNED FOR RESCHEDULED DATE. PAIA-sponsored workshop run by Jessica Roberts, bias education coordinator in the Office of Community Standards
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Policy Design and Implementation in a Global Environment
Eggers Hall, 100A
Professor Saba Siddiki will lead a Policy Design Workshop, covering such topics as goal setting, policy drafting, and implementation design and assessment.
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Design Thinking Workshop
Maxwell Hall, 204
This training will be led by James Fathers, professor of design studies in the School of Visual and Performing Arts. Fathers focuses on sustainability, universal design and design in a development context. Registration is required.
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The Work of Repair: A Conversation About Community-Engaged and Participatory Research
Lyman Hall, 215
This workshop, open to faculty, staff and students by registration, will use Dr. Sara Safransky's community-engaged work in Detroit as a jumping off point for a broad conversation about how, why and for whom research might take place.
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History Department Workshop: Whose Children? Competing Conceptions of Childhood in Colonial Kenya
Eggers Hall, 151
Ph.D. candidate Thomas Bouril will present a paper on "Whose Children? Competing Conceptions of Childhood in Colonial Kenya."
![Exterior of Maxwell in black and white when there was no Eggers building](/images/default-source/callouts---large/maxwell-centennial.jpg?Status=Master&sfvrsn=2af85b3f_1)
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.