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Maxwell School Events Calendar

  • Persian Culture and Conversation Table

    Maxwell Hall, 303

    The Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs and the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics presents the Persian Culture and Conversation Table.

  • Spanish Culture & Conversation Table

    Eggers Hall, 341

    The Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs and the Department of Languages, Literatures and Linguistics presents the Spanish Culture & Conversation Table.

  • From Politics to the Pews: How Partisanship and the Political Landscape Shape Religious Identity

    Eggers Hall, 220 (Strasser Legacy Room)

    The Renewing Democratic Community Speaker Series presents Michele Margolis, associate professor of political science at the University of Pennsylvania.

  • French Culture and Conversation Table

    Huntington Beard Crouse Hall (HBC), 009

    Do you want to learn more about French culture and language? Come to the French Table! All levels welcome!

  • The Troubles and Beyond. The Impact of a Museum Exhibit on a Post-Conflict Society

    Eggers Hall, 341

    Can museums influence the way visitors think about past violence and modern-day politics? Although the impacts of symbolic transitional justice (TJ) policies such as museums have largely been overlooked, Laia Balcells and Elsa Voytas hypothesize that they can shape perceptions of groups involved in violence; and preferences toward public policies to address the past.

  • Syracuse-Chicago Webinar Series on Property Tax Administration and Design: Francis Wong

    Virtual

    Francis Wong (Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich) will discuss "Taxing Homeowners Who Won't Borrow."

  • Talking Across Differences: A Conversation About Free Speech, Civil Dialogue & Respectful Discourse

    Eggers Hall, 220

    Join us for a facilitated conversation about the state of our society, the erosion of public discourse and how to respectfully talk across differences.

  • Popular Sovereignty and the Bengali Language Movement in East Pakistan

    Virtual

    Ahona Panda's talk explores the complexities of the Bengali language movement as a political event. By examining the microhistories of a few dissenters, she argues that the discourse of language was situated between two distinct political imaginaries: the nationalism of Bengali (jātī) and the formulation of the Pakistani nation-state (rāṣṭra).

  • Addiction Imaginaries: Drugs, Sovereignty and Nine Years of Russian Military Occupation in Ukraine

    Eggers Hall, 060

    Jennifer Carroll will discuss how social imaginations of people who use drugs facilitate their use (and abuse) in leveraging political authority, demonstrating how global health para-infrastructures, state biopolitics, citizenship and sovereignty are always enmeshed.

  • Lerner Center Lunch and Learn: Positive Psychology

    White Hall, 441

    In partnership with Falk College’s Public Health Week, the Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion and Population Health will be hosting a lunch and learn on positive psychology. This immersive experience will pull from the Lerner Center’s DeStress from Success programming and provide tools on how to use positive psychology to manage stress.

  • Race and Policy Talks - Can We Justly Go Green?

    Eggers Hall, 225B

    Join Professor Pete Wilcoxen for a question-and-answer session on the environmental justice impacts of decarbonizing the electric grid.

  • Secretary of State’s Office of Policy Planning Advances US Foreign Policy in Europe

    Eggers Hall, 220

    The Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs, and the Moynihan International Affairs Seminar Series is proud to host Shawanesh Underwood, Member, Secretary of State’s Policy Planning Staff (S/P).

  • Hindi-Urdu Culture and Conversation Table

    Eggers Hall, 341

    Please join us for a great opportunity to practice your Hindi-Urdu conversation skills. All are welcome to attend, from beginners to native speakers.

  • ASPI Grad Lab

    Eggers Hall, 152

    The grad lab is designed to create opportunities for graduate students to come together--share and get feedback on their work and engage across disciplines with interests in autonomous systems/artificial intelligence.

  • Evolution of Institutional Diversity in a Changing World

    Virtual

    Irene Pérez Ibarra of the University of Zaragoza will present her recently awarded grant, "Resilient Rules," funded by the European Research Council.

  • "Listen to the Elders" Speaker Series: Freida Jacques

    6680 Onondaga Lake Pkwy Liverpool, New York

    Freida will speak about "Haudenosaunee Principles of Peace and Democracy" and guide a tour of the Skä•noñh Great Law of Peace Center.

  • ChatGPT:  Charms and Challenges

    Eggers Hall, 220 (Strasser Legacy Room)

    We invite students, faculty and staff to an open conversation on ChatGPT.

  • Leveraging Financial and Peer Support to Improve Women's Reproductive Agency in India

    Maxwell Hall, 204

    Public Administration and International Affairs Department Spring Seminar Series, featuring Catalina Herrera-Almanza, associate professor of the Department of Agricultural and Consumer Economics at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign .

  • Fostering a Diverse and Healthy Democracy in a Period of Polarization

    Schine Student Center, Goldstein Auditorium

    Michael Eric Dyson and John McWhorter, prominent authors and thought leaders who express divergent views regarding free speech surrounding race and the portrayal of racial identity, will explore the health and future of democracy in a conversation moderated by Vice Chancellor, Provost and Chief Academic Officer Gretchen Ritter.

  • Geography and the Environment Colloquium Series

    Eggers Hall, 032

    "Rooted in Faith: Black Women and Black Religious Geographies of the U.S. South," with Priscilla McCutcheon, Ph.D., assistant professor, Department of Geography, University of Kentucky

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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.