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Maxwell School Events Calendar

  • Matilde Bombardini - TDPE

    341 Eggers Hall

    Matilde Bombardini is an Associate Professor in the Vancouver School of Economics at the University of British Columbia. She is a Fellow in the Institutions, Organizations and Growth Program of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, a Research Associate in the Political Economy Program of the National Bureau of Economic Analysis, a Distinguished Scholar at the Sauder School of Business and Co-Editor of the Journal of International Economics. Her research covers various aspects of International Trade and Political Economy. In particular, she has worked on the link between skill distribution and comparative advantage, the lobbying decision of firms and the behavior of lobbyists. Matilde obtained her PhD from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2005, and her undergraduate degree from the University of Bologna in Italy in 2000. She is currently visiting the Department of Economics at Stanford University until July 2018 For information on accessibility, or to request accommodation, please contact Marc Albert 315-443-9248 Sponsored by Moynihan Institute Of Global Affairs, TDPE

  • Maxwell Faculty Meeting

    220 Eggers

  • Conflict Management Center Workshop: Cross-Cultural Communication

    204 Maxwell Hall

    Conflict Management Center: Cross-Cultural Communication Workshop

  • Camp Econometrics XIII (pr)

    The Gideon Putnam

    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

  • Geography Colloquium Series: Nancy Langston

    Eggers 018

  • German Language Table - CES

    306 B Eggers Hall

  • Spanish Language Table - PLACA

    306B Eggers Hall

  • Duncan Wood - PLACA

    341 Eggers Hall

  • ASI Seminar - ''Queering Aging'' - Corinne Reczek, Associate Professor of Sociology at Ohio State University

    312 Lyman Hall

  • CPR Seminar Series presents: Rajeev Darolia (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

  • Cancelled - Paul Hayward - CES

    341 Eggers Hall

  • The History Department Presents: Professor Michael Willrich

    151 Eggers Hall

    Michael Willrich is the Leff Family Professor of History at Brandeis University and the author of two prize-winning books, City of Courts: Socializing Justice in Progressive Era Chicago (Cambridge) and Pox: An American History (Penguin). Willrich has won fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, the American Council of Learned Societies, the National Endowment for the Humanities, the Newberry Library, and the Radcliffe Institute. His writing has appeared in the New York Times , The New Republic , The Washington Monthly , Washington City Paper , and Mother Jones.

  • Russian Language Table - CES

    352 Eggers Hall

  • Jingbo Fan - EAP

    341 Eggers

  • Conversations in Conflict Studies with Simon Kiss

    204 Maxwell Hall

  • Moynihan Institute Of Global Affairs, TNGO: Campaigning through Culture in development settings: Student reflections based on experience

    341 Eggers Hall

    The invisible threads of culture shape the thoughts, behavior and structures that govern people’s relationships and daily lives. Culture can be a powerful tool in the hands of NGO campaigns and other development actors to communicate complex ideas and mobilize populations for positive change. Students, based on their experiences working in such campaigns and projects, will discuss the role of culture and local context in developing Theories of Change, as well as the outcomes. For accessibility requests or for more information, please contact Marc Albert 315-443-9248 Sponsored by Transnational NGOInitiative and the Moynihan Institute Of Global Affairs.

  • Arabic Language Table - MES

    306B Eggers Hall

  • FPP Session with Professors Kurien & Montez

    303 Maxwell

  • Workshop on Arts Based Methods

    303 Maxwell

  • Alexander Vorontsov - KPAC

    100 Eggers

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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.