City Park: Community Collaboration and Rotating Facilitator Exercise
Collaborative Design of Citizen Engagement in City and County Comprehensive Planning
Balancing Competition within a Homeless Services Provider Network
Model EU-European Council-European Agenda on Migration Simulation
A Struggle for Power and Control over Service Delivery in the Non-Profit Sector
Collaborative Solutions to Transportation, Land Use and Community Design Issues
Developing a Young Professionals Network for the Arts
Emergency Management and Homeland Security: Interagency Collaboration - Emergency!
An International Conflict Management Simulation
Fracked: Uncertainties in Negotiated Rule Making
Gray Wolf: Fairness and Justice in Collaborative Governance
Joint Action Plan Negotiations on the Iran Nuclear Deal
Learning about Individual Collaborative Strengths: A LEGO Scrum Simulation
See related: Education, Government, State & Local
Addressing ELCA: An Exercise in Designing and Facilitating Stakeholder Processes
Mapping Network Structure in Complex Community Collaboratives
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Conversations in Conflict Studies with Renee deNevers
400 Eggers Hall, the PARCC Conference Room
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"Loose Nukes Revisited: the challenge of preventing technology spread to nuclear aspirant states.” Renee deNevers, Associate Professor of Public Administration and International Affairs. This talk will cover current knowledge about the sources of North Korea’s advances in missile technology, and examine the mechanisms by which the U.S. and the international community have sought to prevent the spread of nuclear and missile technology since the end of the Cold War.
Conversations in Conflict Studies is a weekly educational speaker series for students, faculty, and the community. The series, sponsored by PARCC, draws its speakers from Syracuse University faculty, national and international scholars and activists, and PhD students. Pizza is served. Follow us on Twitter @PARCCatMaxwell, tweet #ConvoInConflict.
If you require accommodations, please contact Deborah Toole by email at datoole@syr.edu or by phone at 315.443.2367.
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