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Maxwell School News and Commentary

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New Broadnax Fund supports PAIA students

A new scholarship, funded by Walter and Angel Broadnax, will support graduate students at the Maxwell School.  Walter Broadnax is a recently retired member of the Public Administration and International Affairs faculty and a Maxwell alumnus, with a PhD in public administration (1975).  
March 2, 2017

Meghan Mistry, senior with PSc minor, recounts time at Syracuse

Senior broadcast and digital journalism student with political science minor reflects on her four years at Syracuse University. 
February 27, 2017

CCE alumna's project helps launch reusable bag program at SU bookstore

“It is amazing, of course, to see something I worked on for a year come to fruition. It is even more gratifying to know it is something that will help SU become more sustainable and subsequently make the world a little better!," says Elizabeth Hayes '16 B.A. (Geog/CCE). Her research for the Citizenship and Civic Engagement degree's senior Capstone Project provided the legwork for the SU Bookstore's reusable bag program.

February 20, 2017

Khalil book, America’s Dream Palace, reviewed in Foreign Affairs

"This is the work of a young but mature historian: thoroughly documented, carefully argued, and well crafted. In a detailed look at the nexus of American academic expertise on the Middle East and Washington’s diplomatic and intelligence power centers, from the Wilson era through the Obama presidency, Khalil keeps his prose crisp and his judgments sober," reads a review of "America's Dream Palace," a book by Osamah Khalil, assistant professor of history.

February 14, 2017

Kyra Azzato, PSc undergrad, heads to infantry officer course (IBOLC)

Kyra Azzato, an undergrad studying political science, will become the first woman from Syracuse University—and among the first few in the nation—to attend Infantry Basic Officer Leader Course. 
February 13, 2017

QDR receives grant from Robert Wood Johnson Foundation

The award signals the importance of promoting and advancing the concept of open annotation to enhance the credibility of qualitative research, and thus its capacity to empower social change. 

February 7, 2017

Robertson Foundation extends partnership with Maxwell

The recently announced two-year funding extension will support a total of four additional Robertson fellows. All Robertson fellows receive funding for two years of study, allowing them to pursue one of the joint degrees offered through the Public Administration and International Affairs Department. 

February 7, 2017

Imagining Governance: A Q&A with Jack Manno '03 PhD (SSc)

Jack Manno G’03, professor of environmental studies at SUNY ESF and a faculty affiliate in Syracuse's Native American Studies program contends that, as a new political regime gets underway in the United States, the need for an effective governance system—one in step with climate change and the environment—is imperative.

February 1, 2017

Peter Castro receives Unsung Hero Award at SU's MLK celebration

Peter Castro, associate professor of anthropology, received the Unsung Hero Award at Sunday's Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration at the Carrier Dome. His nominator writes, "Receiving an MLK Unsung Hero Award acknowledges his long-time service to African development as an applied anthropologist, particularly with regard to the management of and access to natural resources, and efforts to alleviate hunger and poverty.”

February 1, 2017

Excerpt from Ebner's book on violence in Mussolini's Italy in Slate

Michael Ebner, associate professor of history, describes how fascism emerged in Italy as a response to the growing power of socialists, and how fascist violence was used to break their hold on local administration and labor organizations.

January 31, 2017

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