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Maxwell School Events Calendar

  • German Language Table - CES

    306B Eggers Hall

  • Maxwell Student Forum

    204 Maxwell Hall

  • Spanish Language Table - PLACA

    306B Eggers Hall

  • ''Premature Vascular Aging'' discussed by Kevin Heffernan & Wes Lefferts

    314 Lyman Hall

  • Economics presents: Tim Christensen

    112 Eggers Hall

  • Brown Bag Session - Panel on Teaching Citizenship in Challenging Times

    341 Eggers Hall

  • Portuguese Language Table - PLACA - DATE CHANGE

    352 Eggers Hall

  • The Politics of Gender and Islam

    060 Eggers

    New Approaches in Middle East & South Asia Studies Spring Symposium 10:00 AM: Welcome 10:05 AM: New Approaches in South Asian Studies Katherine Lemons, McGill University: "The Politics of Divorce: Islamic Law and the Making of Indian Secularism" Fareen Parvez, University of Massachusetts at Amherst: "Politicizing Islam: The Islamic Revival in France and India" 11:20 AM: New Approaches in Middle East Studies Begüm Adalet, Cornell University: "Hotels and Highways: Modernizing Cold War Turkey" Natalie Khazaal, Texas A&M University: "Pretty Liar: The Politics of Television, Language, and Gender in Wartime Lebanon" 12:30 PM: Roundtable Discussion Free and open to the public. For more information, please contact Juanita Horan at 315.443.4927 or jmhoran@syr.edu Co-sponsored by the Humanities Center, the Moynihan Institute, the South Asia Center, the Newhouse Center for Global Engagement, and the departments of History, International Relations, Religion, Sociology, and Women's and Gender Studies

  • SAC -Cornell-Syracuse South Asia Consortium Symposium: Small Cities

    Cornell Unitersity

    Cornell - Syracuse South Asia Consortium Symposium - Small Cities Support by: South Asia Center, Moynihan Institute Of Global Affairs :For Event questions, information on accessibility, or to request accommodation, please contact Emera Bridger 315-443.2553

  • The Department of Anthropology Presents: Dr. Steven Wernke

    204 Maxwell Hall

  • CPR Seminar Series presents: Marianna Bitler (pr)

    426 Eggers Hall

    The Center for Policy Research (CPR) conducts interdisciplinary research and related activities in social sciences and public policy, including aging and health studies, education finance and policy, public finance, social welfare, poverty, and income security, urban and regional studies, and econometrics methodology. Faculty work on a variety of research grants related to public policy, which involve graduate students as assistants and consult with government agencies and other institutions concerned with the issues they are studying;The Maxwell School is a graduate school of social science with a unique multidisciplinary character that cuts across traditional departmental lines. At Maxwell, theory and practice are regarded with equal seriousness: the barriers that divide academic disciplines from one another and from the larger world of public life are routinely breached by the wide-ranging scholarly and educational activities of an outstanding faculty and an exceptionally cosmopolitan student body

  • Arabic Language Table - MES

    306b Eggers

    Arabic Language Table - MES

  • The Egyptian Elections and the Arab Spring, with Kira Jumet

    Global Collaboratory (Eggers 060)

  • Moynihan Institute Of Global Affairs and Center for European Studies presents: Samantha Kahn Herrick

    341 Eggers

    Food, like everything else, has a history. This history offers a valuable lens through which to see how people in the past demonstrated their taste, status, religious devotion, and power. Food was a crucial factor in decisions that changed the course of history, and, in turn, food practices changed dramatically over the course of time. This talk will survey the history of food in pre-modern Europe (from ancient Rome to around 1750). Samantha Herrick is Associate Professor of History. Her research focuses on medieval Europe, particularly saints’ lives inaccurately linking European churches to the immediate associates of Jesus. She traces the ways in which communities used and shared these legends. Her courses include the history of food, the Crusades, and the legend of Mary Magdalen. She has held fellowships at the Institute for Advanced Study, SU’s Humanities Center, and the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Sponsored by Moynihan Institute Of Global Affairs, Center for European Studies For information on accessibility, or to request accommodation, please contact Marc Albert 315-443-9248.

  • Economics presents: Leah P. Boustan

    CPR Conference Room (426 Eggers Hall)

  • Russian Language Table - CES

    352 Eggers Hall

  • EAP - Wan Ming Visiting Scholar, Department of Sociology, Syracuse University

    341 Eggers Hall

    The Double World Class Project: Unequal Opportunities of Postgraduate Entrance in China In 2015, the Chinese State Council initiated a project to lift the status and international competitiveness of China’s higher education system. This “Double World Class” project supports elite universities in 100 disciplines. Recognizing that China needs a differentiated higher education system, the government is encouraging universities to exploit their advantages. Funding will be concentrated among those departments and schools close to becoming world-class, those seeking to address socio-economic needs, and those focused on emerging and interdisciplinary subjects. This talk discusses findings from a quantitative study on the Double World Class project as well as offers suggestions for enhancing postgraduate studies in Chinese higher education. Sponsored by Moynihan Institute Of Global Affairs, East Asia Program For information on accessibility, or to request accommodation, please contact Marc Albert 315-443-9248.

  • Conversations in Conflict Studies with Sylvia Sierra

    400 Eggers Hall, the PARCC Conference Room

  • FPP Session with Professor Lutz

    303 Maxwell

  • Marketing Your Study Abroad Experience

    106 Walnut Place

    Did you know that only 10% of U.S. undergraduates study abroad? Employers increasingly value international experiences when hiring, so make your study abroad experience work for you! This workshop, designed by Career Services and Syracuse Abroad, will help you: Identify special skills and competencies developed through study abroad - some of which you may not have known you have Present your study abroad experience on your resume Anticipate interview questions and articulate your study abroad experience

Show:
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.