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PAST
EVENTS
Spring 2008
Friday, February 15, 2008, 5:30 pm, Room 5200.07
Political Theory Colloqium
“Competing Conceptions of Necessity in the Emergency Powers Debate”
Speaker: Leonard Feldman, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Oregon at Eugene
February 19, 2008 (6:00 – 8:00 pm)
Human Rights Seminar Series
Marnia Lazreg, Professor of Sociology, Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York and author of the recently published Torture and the Twilight of Empire: From Algiers to Baghdad (Princeton University Press, 2007); "Torture and Anti-Subversive War: A Lesser or Greater Evil?”
Place: Room C-201
Friday, February 29, 2008, 5:30 pm, Room 5200.07
Political Theory Colloqium
“Questioning Authority: Political Resistance and the Ethic of Science”
Speaker: Professor Diana Judd, William Paterson University
Wednesday, March 12, 2008, 6:00, Room C198 (GC)
Collaborative Political Theory Colloquium/Ralph Bunche Institute event
Wednesday, March 12, 6:00 pm
“Moral Responsibility for Civilian Casualties in Iraq and Afghanistan”
Speaker: Neta Crawford, Professor of Political Science and African American Studies, Boston University and Adjunct Professor, Watson Institute for International Studies, Brown University
March 13, 2008 (2:00 – 4:00 pm)
Human Rights Seminar Series
Darius Rejali, Professor of Political Science, Reed College, and author of the recently published torture and democracy (Princeton University Press, 2007); “Torture, Democracy and Our Future.”
Place: Room 630-T at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, 899 Tenth Av. (btw. 58th and 59th streets)
Co-sponsored with Princeton University Press
April 15, 2008 (6:00 – 8:00 pm)
Human Rights Seminar Series
Panel Discussion on Ethical and Political Ramifications of Torture
Place: Room 9207
Fall 2007
Thursday, October 11, 2007
6:30 pm, Room 5200.07
Political Theory Colloquium
“Can(n)ons of Masculinity: The Hidden History of Masculinities in the Classic Texts of Western Political Theory”
Harry Brod, Professor of Philosophy and Humanities at the University of Northern Iowa (Bio)
Co-Sponsored by the Feminist Studies Group and the Social and Political Theory Students Association
Thursday, October 18, 2007
6:00-8:00, Room 9206
Human Rights Seminar Series
“Discrimination? That's So Gay.”
Marty Rouse, National Field Director, Human Rights Campaign (HRC).
“Lobbying Legislatures for Social Reform: The Case of Same-Sex Marriage in New York State.”
Daniel R. Pinello, Prof. of Government, John Jay College of Criminal Justice.
Friday, October 19th, 2007
1:00 pm, Room 5200.07
Professional Development Workshop
"How to Get a Research Grant"
Dr. Andrew J. Grant, Grant Services Corp.
Friday, October 26, 2007
6:00 pm, Room 5200.07
Political Theory Colloquium and American Political Development Colloquium
"Right Ideas: Discourse, Partisan Regimes, and the Conservative Coalition”
Richard Meagher,
Instructor in Political Science, Marymount Manhattan College/ABD, CUNY Graduate Center
Friday, November 2
1:00 pm., Room 5200.07
Professional Development Workshop
"The Academic Job Market in Political Science: A Discussion with Recent Survivors"
Dr. Erin Ackerman, Assistant Professor at John Jay College, Dept. of Government
Dr. Joshua Wilson, Assistant Professor at John Jay College, Dept. of Government
Friday, November 9, 2007
6:00 pm, Room 9205
Political Theory Colloquium
"The Third Space of Sovereignty: Postcolonial Politics of U.S.-Indigenous Relations" (Read more)
Kevin Bruyneel,
Assistant Professor of Politics, Babson College
Tuesday, November 13, 2007
6:00-8:00 pm, Room TBA
Human Rights Seminar Series
“The Death Penalty in the United States: Why Capital Punishment Should Be Abolished.”
Robert Nave, State/Regional Death Penalty Abolition Coordinator and National Steering Committee Vice-Chairperson, Amnesty International.
Tuesday, December 4, 2007
6:00-8:00 pm, Room TBA
Human Rigths Seminar Series
“Right to Health Advocacy: Comparative and Critical Perspectives from the Ground”
Jeremy Perelman, Skirball Fellow, Human Rights Program, Harvard Law School.
Friday, December 7, 2007
1:00 pm. Room 5200
Professional Development Committee
Ms Ilene Kalish, NYU Press
"How to Get Published"
Friday, December 7, 2007
6:00 pm. Room 5200.07
Political Theory Colloquium
"Suspect Citizenship: Virtue, Vice, and the Political Identity of Women"
Jocelyn Boryczka
Assistant Professor of Politics and Director of Peace & Justice Studies, Fairfield University
Spring 2007
Friday, February 23rd
5:30 pm
Room 9206
Political Theory Colloquium &
the Colloquium on American Political Development
Barack Obama and the Politics of Immigrant and Racial Difference in the United States
Victoria Hattam, Professor of Political Science, The New School for Social Research
Disscusant - Anne Norton, Professor of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania
Friday, March 16th
3:00 pm
Room 8201
The Paradoxes of Segregation: Race, Neighborhood, and Civic Life in Multi-ethnic America
Eric Oliver, Professor of Political Science, University of Chicago
Friday, March 30th
5:30 pm
Room C201
Political Theory Colloquium and cosponsored by The Center for Sexuality and Public Policy at Hunter College
Fixing Bodies: Tracking Transgender Identities in the Post 9/11 US
Paisley Currah, Associate Professor of Political Science, Brooklyn College
Thursday, April 12th
3:00 pm
Room 8201
Asian Pride or Ambiguous Identities: Immigration Policy and the Construction of Racial Political Identity
Jane Junn, Associate Professor of Political Science, Rutgers University, Eagleton Institute of Politics
Thursday,
April 12th
5:30 pm
Room C203
Political Theory Colloquium
Is the European Union Democratic? Between Political Theory and European Studies
Muriel Rouyer, Professor of Political Theory, Nantes, France
Wednesday, April 18th
7:00 pm
Room 5200.07
Colloquium on American Political Development
A Crisis of Control Model of American Political Development:
An Overview, and an Application of the Model to the Development of the Use of Demographic Analysis in Politics
Arthur Beckman, doctoral student of Political Science, CUNY Graduate Center
Wednesday, April 25th
7:00 pm
Room 9205
From Post-Zionism to Post-Citizenship: Israel's Emerging Immigration and Citizenship Regime
Yoav Peled, Associate Professor of Political Science, Tel Aviv University
Friday, May 4th
6:00 pm
Room 9205
Political Theory Colloquium and cosponsored by The Center for Sexuality and Public Policy at Hunter College
Hate Crime and the Politics of Difference: The Case of Queer Citizens in the United States
Morris Kaplan, Professor of Philosophy, SUNY Purchase
Fall 2006
Friday,
September 29
5:30 pm
Room C203
Political Theory Colloquium
"A Patria to Die For"
Professor Nick Xenos, University of Massachusetts at Amherst
Wednesday, October 11
6:30 pm
Room 5414
Human Rights Seminar
-- Women and Human Rights
"Outsiders, Insiders, and Outsiders Within; Feminist Strategies for Global Transformation"
Professor Mary Hawkesworth, Rutgers University, Professor of Political Science and Women's and Gender Studies
Professor Joyce Gelb, Political Science at City College and the CUNY Graduate Center, will act as commentator
Friday, October 27
5:30 pm
Room 5200
Political Theory Colloquium
"Prophecy and Race in Baldwin and Morrison"
Professor George Shulman, New York University/Gallatin School for Individualized Study
Friday, November 3
5:30 pm
Room 9207
Political Theory Colloquium
"Rights of the Body in Times of War"
Distinguished Professor, Rosalind Petchesky, Political Science and Women's Studies, Hunter College and the Graduate Center
Cosponsored with Feminist Studies Group Speakers Series
Wednesday, November 8
6 pm
Room 5414
Human Rights Seminar
-- Women and Human Rights
"Trafficking and Slavery in the 21st Century"
Professor Donna M. Hughes, University of Rhode Island, Prof. Eleanor M. and Oscar M. Carlson Endowed Chair, Women's Studies Program
Thursday, November 16
5:30 pm
MA Thesis Room 5200.01
Political Theory Colloquium
"Politics, Ethics, and Education"
Tony Monchinski, PhD Program in Political Science, CUNY Graduate Center
Thursday, December 7
5:30 pm
Room 5200.07
Political Theory Colloquium
“The Spectator of Ancient Comedy: Strauss, Arendt and Aristophanes”
Rachael Sotos, Adjunct Professor, The New School
Wednesday, December 13
6 pm
Room 5414
Human Rights Seminar
-- Women and Human Rights
"Palestinian Women and the Hundred Year Struggle for Personal and National Rights"
Dr. Nadia Hijab, Senior Fellow, Institute for Palestine Studies
Spring 2006
Friday,
February 10
5:30pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Thesis Room (5200.07)
Professor Richard Wolin
"What is Heideggerian Marxism?"
Friday, February 17
1:00-2:30pm
Professional Development Committee, Thesis Room (52007.07)
Ms. Rebecca Blanton, Ph.D Program in Political Science, CUNY Graduate
Center
"Educating Americans: Multiculturalism and Citizenship"
Wednesday, February 22
6:30pm
The Student-Led Distinguished Political Science Speaker Series, Room
9207
Dr. Richard Betts, Leo A. Shifrin Professor and Director of the Institute
of War
and Peace Studies at Columbia University
"Intelligence Reform"
Thursday, February 23
7:00pm
American Political Development Colloquium, Skylight Room
Professor Ken Kersch, Princeton University
"Conceptual and Categorical Shift in American Constitutional Development"
Thursday, March 2
6:30-8:00pm
The Dankwart Rustow Commemorative Lectures on Contemporary Dilemmas
in
the Middle East, Skylight Room
Dr. Lisa Anderson, Dean of the School of International Affairs at Columbia
University, James T. Shotwell Professor of International Relations
"Democracy in the Middle East: To Whom is it Important and Why?"
Friday, March 3
5:30pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Thesis Room (5200.07)
Gerasimos Karavitis, MA Program in Political Science, CUNY Graduate
Center
Thursday, March 30
7:00pm
American Political Development Colloquium, Room C203/204
Professor Corey Robin, Brooklyn College & CUNY Grad Center
"Louis Hartz at 50: On the Varieties of Counterrevolutionary Experience
in
America"
Thursday, April 6
6:30-8:00pm
Public Square, Skylight Room (9100)
Barabara Bennett Woodhouse, David H. Levin Chair in Family Law and
Director, Center on Children and Families
“Children's Right and American Valuest”
Friday, April 7
2:00-3:30pm
Professional Development Committee, Thesis Room (5200.07)
Dr. Saul Fisher, Director of Fellowship Programs, American Council of
Learned
Societies
“How to Get a Research Grant”
5:30-7:00pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Thesis Room (5200.07)
Professor Michael Goodhart, Department of Political Science, University
of
Pittsburgh
"Democracy As Human Rights: Freedom And Equality In The Age Of
Globalization"
Thursday, April 27
7:00pm
American Political Development Colloquium, Room TBA
Professor Stephen Amberg, UT San Antonio and The New School
"Explaining Changes in the Status of American Workers: Innovation
and
Intercurrence in the Institutions that Regulate Labor"
Friday, April 28
5:30-7:00pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Room C201
Professor Andreas Kalyvas, The New School for Social Research
"The Tyranny of Dictatorship: When the Greek Tyrant Met the Roman Dictator"
Tuesday, May 2
6:30pm
Annual Alumni Awards Night
Professor Kathleen Jones, Distinguished Alumni Award recipient
"Diving for Pearls: A Thinking Woman's Journey with Hannah Arendt"
Thursday, May 4
6:30-8:00pm
The Dankwart Rustow Commemorative Lectures on Contemporary Dilemmas
in
the Middle East, Segal Theater
Dr. Gary Sick, Senior Research Scholar, Columbia University, Former
Director of
the Middle East Institute
"Iran and the United States: Conflict in Search of a Relationship"
Friday, May 19
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Room 9204
Guest Speaker: Peter Euben, Professor of Political Science, Duke University
“Thomas More: Necessity and Utopia”
Fall 2005
Friday, September 30, 1:00-3:00 pm, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Professional Development Committee
Seeing
Your Name in Print. The Ins and Outs of Getting
Yourself Published in a Scholarly Journal
Guest Speaker: Professor Andrew Polsky, Political
Science, Hunter College and the Graduate Center
Respondent: Professor Irving Leonard Markovitz,
Political Science, Queens College and the Graduate
Center
Wednesday, October 19, 7:00pm, (Room 5200.07)
New York American Political
Development Colloquium
Reforming the Jim Crow State: Race, Region
and American Political Development
Guest Speaker: Professor Kimberly Johnson,
Department of Political Science, Barnard College
Friday, October 28, 1:00 to 3:00 pm, Political
Science Thesis Room (5200.07) Professional
Development Committee
How to Get a Research
Grant
Guest Speaker: Dr. Saul Fisher, Director of Fellowship
Programs, American Council of Learned Societies
*Please note that this event has been cancelled*
Friday,
October 28, 5:30 to 7:00 pm, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Political Theory Colloquium
Rhetoric
and Hegemony in Gramsci
Guest Speaker: Professor
Benedetto Fontana, Department of Political Science,
Baruch College
Friday, November 11
10:30am
Awards Committee Meeting, Thesis Room
(5200.07)
Note: Committee members only
1:30pm
First Exam Drafting Meeting, Thesis Room
(5200.07)
Note: Committee members only
3:00pm
First Exam Committee Meeting with Students,
Thesis Room (5200.07)
4:00pm
Wine and Cheese Hour, 5200
Monday, November 14
6:30 to 8:30 pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Sky Light Room
(9100)
Reconfigurations of Sovereignty and Democracy:
Neoconservatism and
Neoliberalism
Guest Speaker: Wendy Brown
This talk explores some of the tensions
and convergences between neoliberal
and neoconservative political rationalities
in the United States in order grasp their
joint erosion of democratic citizenship
and legitimation of anti-democratic state
actions.
Tuesday, November 15
5:00pm
Deadline to apply for admission or re-admission
for the Spring 2006 semester
Friday,
November 18
10:00 to 11:30 pm
Professional Development Committee, Thesis
Room, 5200.07 Preparing A
Syllabus: A Workshop for New Instructors
Guest Speaker: Professor Thomas Halper,
Political Science, Baruch College and
the Graduate Center
Thursday, November 24-Friday, November
25
Thanksgiving Recess - No Class
Thursday, December 1
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Thesis Room
(5200.07)
On Critical Theory and Antisemitism: Horkheimer
and Adorno in Exile
Guest Speaker: Professor Jack Jacobs, Political
Science, John Jay College and
the Graduate Center
6:00-8:00 pm
Human Rights Seminar Series, Skylight Room (9100)
Panel discussion on Transitional Justice in the
Americas
Chair: Margaret Crahan, Dorothy Epstein Distinguished
Professor of History, Hunter College and the Graduate
Center, CUNY
Catalina Diaz, Program Associate, International
Center for Transitional Justice Marifeli Perez-Stable,
Vice-President, Inter-American Dialogue and Florida
International University
Peter Winn, Professor of History, Tufts University
Commentator: Katherine Hite, Associate Professor
of Political Science, Vassar College
Friday, December 2
1:00 to 2:30 pm
Professional Development Committee, Thesis
Room (5200.07)
Writing to Learn
Description: Involving students in classroom
work. A workshop for instructors (and prospective
instructors).
Guest Speaker: Professor Anne Humphreys,
English, Lehman College and the Graduate Center
Friday, December 9
10:30am
Faculty Membership Committee Meeting,
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Note: Committee members only
11:30am
Executive Committee Meeting, Thesis Room
(5200.07)
Note: Committee members only
1:30 to 3:00 pm
Professional Development Committee, Thesis
Room (5200.07)
Guidelines for Submitting an IRB Application.
A Student's Perspective
Guest Speaker: Ms. Tatiana Carayannis
Respondent: Professor Sherrie Baver, Political
Science, CCNY and the Graduate
Center
5:30 to 7:00 pm
Political Theory Colloquium, Thesis Room
(5200.07)
The Curious Incident of the Policeman in
the Night-time: John Stuart Mill, Speech
and Respect
Guest Speaker: Professor Helen Pringle,
University of New South Wales
Thursday, December 15
Last day of Classes
Friday, December 16
6:00pm
End of the Year Party, 5200
Fall
2004
Friday, October 1, 6:00 to 8:00 pm, Political
Science Thesis Room (5200.07)
Political Theory Colloquium
Globalization and Political Corruption
Peter Bratsis, PhD, CUNY Graduate
Center.
Friday,
October 8, 12:30 to 2:00 PM, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Professional Development Committee
Coping Strategies - The Art of Juggling
Multiple Responsibilities
Prof. Ruth O'Brien, Political Science, The Graduate
Center, CUNY.
Thursday,
October 14, 4:30 to 6:30 pm, Robert E. Gilleece
Lounge (Room 5409)
Human Rights Seminar Series
Rethinking the Agenda for Protection: The
Case of Children and Armed Conflict
Massimo Toschi, Associate Adviser, Division
for Sustainable Development,UN Department of Economic
and Social Affairs.
Thursday,
October 14, 6:30 to 8:30 pm, Skylight Lounge (Room
9100)
The Public Square Book Series
Changing Times: The Purpose of Government
Jeff Madrick, economics columnist, The
New York Times; editor of Challenge.
Wednesday,
October 20, 7:00 to 8:30 pm, Room C-197
New York Colloquium on American Political Development
Political Citizenship and Democratization:
The Gender Paradox
Eileen McDonagh, Professor of Political
Science at Northeastern University; Visiting Professor
at the CUNY Graduate Center and the City College
of New York.
Thursday,
November 4, 6:00 to 8:00 pm, Robert
E. Gilleece Lounge (Room 5409)
Human Rights Seminar Series
A U.S.-based NGO in a Changing
Human Rights Environment: The Case of Human Rights
First
Neil Hicks, Director of International Programs,
Human Rights First.
Discussant: Sarah Leah Whitson, Director of the
Middle East Program, Human Rights Watch.
Friday,
November 5, 3:00 to 4:30 PM, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Conversations on Current Events
The 2004 Elections: A Look Back and
a Look Ahead
Prof. Andrew Polsky, Hunter College and the CUNY
Graduate Center.
Friday,
November 5, 5:30 to 7:30 pm, Room 9204 (note
new room)
Political Theory Colloquium
Montesquieu: The Enlightenment on
Broadway
Marshall Berman, Distinguished Professor, CUNY
Graduate Center and City College.
Wednesday,
November 10, 6:30 to 8:30 pm, Martin E. Segal
Theatre (Room 1218)
The Public Square Book Series
When We Divorce
Martha Albertson Fineman, Robert W. Woodruff
Professor of Law at Emory University; Director
of the Feminism and Legal Theory Project.
Friday,
November 19, 12:30 to 2:00 PM, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
PhD Program in Political Science and Sociology
How to Plan a Course - A Workshop for Novice
Instructors
Presenters: Professor William Kornblum,
Ph.D. Program in Sociology, The Graduate Center,
and Professor Pamela Stone, Ph.D. Program in Sociology,
The Graduate Center
Thursday,
December 2, 6:00 to 8:00 pm, Robert E. Gilleece
Lounge (Room 5409)
Human Rights Seminar Series
Human Rights and U.S. Foreign Policy
Julie Mertus, Associate Professor
and Co-Director of the Ethics, Peace and Global Affairs Program, American University.
Discussant: George Andreopoulos, Associate Professor
of Government, John Jay College of Criminal Justice
and the Graduate Center.
Friday,
December 3, 2:30 to 4:00 pm, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Professional Development Committee
Student Protests and the Framing of Development
and Inequality in early New Order Indonesia (1966-1979)
- A Mock Job Talk
Stephanie Sapiie, A.B.D.
* Please note that this event has been
cancelled at the request of the speaker. *
Friday,
December 3, 5:30-7:00 pm, Political Science Thesis
Room (5200.07)
Political Theory Colloquium
Democratic Virtue and Its Obstacles
Prof. John Wallach, CUNY Graduate Center
and Hunter College
Friday,
December 10, 12:30 to 2:00 pm, Room: C-203
Professional Development Committee
Harvesting Expectations: New York Farmworker
Advocacy - A Mock Job Talk
Margaret Gray, A.B.D., Program in Political
Science, CUNY Graduate Center Candidate
Spring
2005
Friday, February 4, 5:30 to 7:30 pm, Room
9206
Political Theory Colloquium
Vicious Circles of Privatized Care
Professor Joan Tronto, CUNY Graduate Center and
Hunter College
Thursday, February 17, 6:30 to 8:30 pm, Room 5409
Human Rights Seminar Series
Challenges to Humanitarian Action after 9/11
Nicolas De Torrente, Executive Director,
Medecins Sans Frontieres in the United States.
Discussant: Dirk Salomons, Director, Program in
Humanitarian Affairs, School of
International and Public Affairs, Columbia University.
Thursday, February 17, 7:00 to 9:00 pm, room C-201
American Political Development Colloquium
Re-envisioning the American Welfare State:
Policy History from the Bottom Up
Professor Stephen Pimpare, Yeshiva
College and Wurzweiler School of Social
Work .
Friday,
February 25, 5:30 to 7:30 pm, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Political Theory Colloquium
Fear: History of an Idea, Politics of a Practice
Professor Corey Robin, CUNY Graduate
Center and Brooklyn College
Friday,
March 11, 2:00 to 4:00 pm, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Professional Development Committee
How to Get a Grant
Ms. Susan Milamed, Assistant Vice President
of Development, Hebrew Union College
Friday, March 11 (note new day), 5:30 to 7:30
pm, Political Science Thesis Room (5200.07)
Political Theory Colloquium
A Sea Change: Masculinity and Politics
Jennifer Gaboury, Ph.D. Program
in Political Science, CUNY Graduate Center
The Language of Necessity in Empire
Dan Skinner, Ph.D. Program in Political
Science, CUNY Graduate Center
Thursday, March 24, 6:00 to 8:00 pm, Sky Light
Room (9100)
Human Rights Seminar Series
Neoconservative Perceptions on
Iran
Ervand Abrahamian, Distinguished Professor
of History, Baruch College and
the Graduate Center
Discussant: Gary Sick, Columbia University
Wednesday, March 30, 7:00 to 9:00 pm, room C-201
American Political Development Colloquium
Racism Revised: From an Individual to a Political
Understanding of Racism
Professor Paul Frymer, University of
California at Santa Cruz and Princeton University.
Friday, April 1, 2:00 to 4:00 pm, Political
Science Thesis Room (5200.07)
Professional Development Committee
How to Get a Book Contract
Mr. Robert Tempio, Acquiring Editor,
Politics and international relations, Routledge
Wednesday, April 6, 6:30 to 8:00 pm, Baisley
Powell Elebash Recital Hall
The Public Square Speaker-Book Series
Globalization and Political Power
Frances Fox Piven, Distinguished Political
Science & Sociology Professor, the Graduate
Center, and author of Regulating the Poor:
The Functions of Public Welfare and Poor
People's Movements : Why They Succeed, How They
Fail (with Richard Cloward) and, most recently,
of The War at Home: The Domestic Costs of
Bush's Militarism .
The common view is that the rise of international
economic and political institutions undermines
the possibilities for democratic influence.
The influence of this idea, that democratic publics
are helpless, is undeniable, but it contributes
to popular helplessness and resignation.
But the idea does not stand up to careful scrutiny.
Professor Piven shows that the complex and fragile
economic and political arrangements associated
with globalization are extremely vulnerable to
dissent and disturbance, and thus actually increase
the potential for popular
influence.
Wednesday, April 13, 2:30 to 4:00 pm, Political
Science Thesis Room (5200.07)
"Congress, the President, and Partisan
Control of the Legislative Agenda, 1945-2000."
David Jones, CUNY Baruch College
Thursday,
April 14, 6:00 to 8:00 pm, DS Lounge (5409)
Human Rights Seminar Series
Speaker: Peter Maguire on his new book Facing
Death in Cambodia (Columbia University Press,
2005)
Discussant: Craig Etcheson, Visiting Scholar,
School of Advanced International Studies, Johns
Hopkins University
Friday, April 15, 5:30 to 7:30 pm, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Political Theory Colloquium
The American Empire: Friendly Fascism and
Why We Are All 'Good Germans'
Tito Gerassi, CUNY Graduate Center
and Queens College
Thursday, April 21, 6:30 to 8:00 pm, Sky
Light Room (9100)
The Public Square Speaker-Book Series
Why Europe Dislikes America: Anti-Americanism
in Historical Perspective
Andrei S. Markovitis, Karl W. Deutsch Collegiate
Professor of Comparative
Politics and German Studies at the University
of Michigan and the author of
Offside: Soccer and American Exceptionalism (with Steven Hellerman) and most recently,
of Amerika, Dich Hasst Sich's Besser.
There can be absolutely no doubt that the Bush
Administration's policies have created an atmosphere
in which disliking America has become a sort of
global lingua franca. While the antipathies towards
the United States in Western Europe have -- on
account of the Bush Administration's actions --
entered a hitherto unprecedented acuity and acerbity
among many different social groups, antipathies
towards America in Europe predate the establishment
of the American Republic. In addition to
discussing the historical dimensions of European
anti-Americanism, much attention will be given
to topics such as food, sports, weather and other
non-political phenomena, all highlighting the
fact that European anti-Americanism goes much
deeper than a legitimate criticism of, and even
welcome opposition to, the policies of the Bush
Administration, or that of any American government.
Tuesday, May 3, 6:30 to 8:30 pm, Sky Light Room
(9100)
Annual Alumni Award Night
The Distinguished Alumni Award will be
presented to Stephen K. White, James Hart Professor,
Department of Politics, University of Virginia,
who will speak on "Uncertain Constellations: Dignity,
Equality, Respect and ...?". The Distinguished
Service Award will be presented to Thomas G. Karis,
Professor Emeritus, CCNY and the Graduate Center.
Friday, May 6, 5:30 to 7:30 pm, Political Science
Thesis Room (5200.07)
Political Theory Colloquium
Backlash: A Neo-Gramscian Approach to the
Rise of Political Islam in Turkey
Ozgur Usenmez, PhD Program, CUNY
Graduate Center
-and-
The American Metanarrative of Sovereignty
Annelies Kamran, PhD Program, CUNY
Graduate Center
Friday, May 13, 2:00 to 4:00 pm,
Room 8301
Professional Development Committee
Student Protests and the Framing
of Development and Inequality in Early New Order
Indonesia [1966-1979] - A Mock Job Talk
Ms. Stephanie Sapiie, A.B.D.
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