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SU Hult Prize winners announced, history major leads winning team

The Hult Prize, known as “the Nobel Prize for student startups,” seeks out game-changing student social enterprises that compete to solve the world’s toughest challenges. Junior history major William Lee Mendes McKnight's Farm to Flame Energy, which aims build more sustainable rural economies by harnessing energy from locally grown crops, qualified to the regional finals. 

December 15, 2017

Corri Zoli participates in UN counterterrorism conference

Corri Zoli, a research assistant professor in the Maxwell School, provided insights on data-driven approaches to understanding terrorism, radicalization and countering violent extremism at two United Nations Counter Terrorism Executive Directorate workshops.

December 15, 2017

Khalil quoted in Pacific Standard article on Middle East peace process

"Although the U.S. and Israel claim they favor a peaceful settlement and the eventual creation of a Palestinian state through negotiations, their actions ensure that it will not be achieved," says Osamah Khalil, associate professor of history.

December 14, 2017

Reeher weighs in on Trump, Gillibrand in Lockport Union-Sun & Journal

"When I hear her, I hear consistency. I don't hear opportunism," says Grant Reeher, professor of political science, about Senator Gillibrand's calls for President Trump's resignation following sexual harassment allegations.

December 14, 2017

Banks discusses enemy combatant detentions on Bloomberg Radio

William Banks was a guest on Bloomberg Radio's Politics, Policy, Power and Law for the segment, "Federal Judge Questions Enemy Combatant Detentions." Banks discussed how long the Federal government should be allowed to detain legally detain a U.S. citizen before letting them challenge their detention. 
December 13, 2017

Fulbright recipient from Maxwell flourishes in living, learning abroad

The best part of living and studying abroad for Frederick “Rick” Cieri ’17 BA (IR) is learning something new every day. That includes the joy of honing his skills in foreign languages—four, so far. “You can never stop learning more about a foreign culture, just as you can never stop learning while studying a language,” Cieri says. “For me, this makes every day an exciting opportunity to learn something new, to better understand a foreign culture and to enhance my vocabulary—in whichever language I am engaging with that day.”

December 12, 2017

Mitra explains how trade spurred growth in Asia at ADBI conference

"There is a mechanism that will distribute gains from trade in a more inclusive way," said Devashish Mitra, Gerald B. and Daphna Cramer Professor of Global Affairs, "that, over time, will build the support for globalization."

December 12, 2017

Reeher discusses Gillibrand's comments on Franken, Clinton in The Hill

"She [Senator Kirsten Gillibrand] has been a leading spokesperson in the chamber for women’s issues and women’s rights and it’s not surprising to me at all that she would be one of the first Democrats to call out Sen. Franken and when the conversation inevitably turned to him, President Clinton," says Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute.

December 12, 2017

Bill Smullen speaks with Al-Monitor about US troop training in Iraq

"It needs to be a national effort," says Bill Smullen, director of the national security studies program. "There are a lot of people in civilian clothes who have ill feelings toward Iraqi military and government. It is nationwide. That’s the way they need to think of it—a national effort in all places, all ways and all times."

December 11, 2017

Reeher discusses Trump's ambassador picks in the Washington Examiner

"In this instance, the negative reaction President Trump has generated throughout the Western World may complicate the situation," says Grant Reeher, director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute. "Being Trump's ambassador, say, in Norway or Denmark, is going to be trickier than in past administrations, requiring greater skill and deftness."

December 11, 2017

Action Anthropology in a Free Clinic

Sandra D. Lane, Robert A. Rubinstein & Robert H. Keefe
December 8, 2017

Miriam Elman discusses Trump's address on Jerusalem on NPR

"What Trump is trying to get the Palestinian authority to realize is that if they want an independent state and peace, then they are going to have to do it within Israel, whose capital happens to be in Jerusalem," says Miriam Elman, associate professor of political science.

December 7, 2017

Monnat comments on risks of healthcare mergers in CBS article

Shannon Monnat, Lerner Chair for Public Health Promotion, was interviewed for the CBS Moneywatch article, "Could your pharmacy replace your doctor?" "We have to be careful that the clinics being proposed don't just become low-quality health care dumping grounds for poor and vulnerable patients," she said. "Quality of care should be a top concern."
December 7, 2017

Karas Montez explains how the tax plan attacks education in Huffington Post

"The Assault On Our Education System In The House And Senate Tax Plans Will Literally Kill," written by Jennifer Karas Montez, the Gerald B. Cramer Faculty Scholar of Aging Studies, was published in the Huffington Post. "The House bill will devastate higher education by taxing graduate students on the cost of their tuition," says Karas Montez. "Both bills also undermine K-12 education by funneling money away from public school and into private ones" 
December 6, 2017

Dennison discusses healthcare mergers in Consumer Reports

"We’re seeing consolidation in the healthcare delivery system at a rapid pace," says Tom Dennison, director of the Lerner Center for Public Health Promotion. "When you’re bigger, you have more leverage to negotiate prices."

December 6, 2017

Keck, Hoy discuss case on artistic expression, civil rights in Post Standard

"As far as the First Amendment is concerned, LGBT rights advocates should have the full and free right to advocate for their point of view and opponents of LGBT rights have the right to advocate for their point of view," Thomas M. Keck, Michael O. Sawyer Chair of Constitutional Law and Politics, says.

December 5, 2017

Reeher comments on Cuomo, tax policy issue in Press Republican

The tax policy issue has emerged as a "handy" one for Cuomo to bring up repeatedly as he prepares to seek a third term in 2018, while harboring possible ambitions for a White House run in 2020, said Grant Reeher, professor of political science and director of the Campbell Public Affairs Institute.

December 5, 2017

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