South Asia Group: Chai and Samosa
Tuesday, September 3, 2024 2:00–3:00 PM
- Location
- DescriptionDo you have an academic interest in South Asia? Do you want to connect with faculty and students who share your interest? Join the South Asia Group for chai and samosa to kick off the new semester!
Registration Required - Sign Up Here
Originally published at asia.nd.edu. - Websitehttps://events.nd.edu/events/2024/09/03/south-asia-group-chai-and-samosa-1/
More from Upcoming Events (Next 7 Days)
- Sep 412:30 PMTrue Family Lecture SeriesThe Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government is joined by Notre Dame Law School's Program on Church, State & Society to host its inaugural True Family Lecture Series, programming made possible by Tad and Jen True. Wednesday, September 4 in Eck Hall of Law 1130: “The Great Awakenings of American Religious Freedom: Evaluating the Latest Supreme Court Teachings” Unable to attend in person? Join our livestream on Wednesday the 4th.Thursday, September 5 in Eck Hall of Law 1130: “The Great Awakenings of American Religious Freedom: Comparing the Original Teachings of the American Founders” Unable to attend in person? Join our livestream on Thursday the 5th. John Witte, Jr. is the Woodruff University Professor, McDonald Distinguished Professor, and director of the Law and Religion Center at Emory University. A leading scholar of legal history, human rights, family law, and law and religion, he has delivered 425 public lectures worldwide and published 325 articles and 45 books, in 15 languages. His most recent monographs include the following, published with Cambridge University Press: The Western Case for Monogamy over Polygamy (2015), Church, State, and Family (2019), The Blessings of Liberty (2021), as well as Faith, Freedom, and Family (Mohr Siebeck, 2021), and Religion and the American Constitutional Experiment (Oxford University Press, 2022). In addition to his administrative duties, Professor Witte serves as editor of the Cambridge Law and Christianity Series and Emory Studies in Law and Religion and coeditor of the Journal of Law and Religion, Brill Research Perspectives on Law and Religion, and the Aranzadi Colección Raíces del Derecho series. He holds degrees in law (Harvard University) and theology (Dr. Theol. h.c., University of Heidelberg). His lectures will be the inaugural True Lectures at the University of Notre Dame. This event is free and open to the public. Lunch will be provided. Originally published at constudies.nd.edu.
- Sep 45:15 PMArchitecture Lecture by Paolo CoenJoin the School of Architecture for a lecture by Paolo Coen. An exploration into how the Vittoriano Monument honoring Victor Emmanuel II: changed Roman architecture in the 19th and 20th centuries (1880-1911).Walsh Family Hall of Architecture. Register here Originally published at architecture.nd.edu.
- Sep 45:15 PMLecture: "New Light on the Victor Emmanuel II Monument — The Neo-Renaissance Movement in the Kingdom of Italy"Join the School of Architecture for a lecture by Paolo Coen, professor of art history and museum studies at the University of Teramo. An exploration into how the Vittoriano Monument honoring Victor Emmanuel II: changed Roman architecture in the 19th and 20th centuries (1880-1911). Register here Originally published at architecture.nd.edu.
- Sep 512:30 PMTrue Family Lecture SeriesThe Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government is joined by Notre Dame Law School's Program on Church, State & Society to host its inaugural True Family Lecture Series, programming made possible by Tad and Jen True. Wednesday, September 4 in Eck Hall of Law 1130: “The Great Awakenings of American Religious Freedom: Evaluating the Latest Supreme Court Teachings” Unable to attend in person? Join our livestream on Wednesday the 4th.Thursday, September 5 in Eck Hall of Law 1130: “The Great Awakenings of American Religious Freedom: Comparing the Original Teachings of the American Founders” Unable to attend in person? Join our livestream on Thursday the 5th. John Witte, Jr. is the Woodruff University Professor, McDonald Distinguished Professor, and director of the Law and Religion Center at Emory University. A leading scholar of legal history, human rights, family law, and law and religion, he has delivered 425 public lectures worldwide and published 325 articles and 45 books, in 15 languages. His most recent monographs include the following, published with Cambridge University Press: The Western Case for Monogamy over Polygamy (2015), Church, State, and Family (2019), The Blessings of Liberty (2021), as well as Faith, Freedom, and Family (Mohr Siebeck, 2021), and Religion and the American Constitutional Experiment (Oxford University Press, 2022). In addition to his administrative duties, Professor Witte serves as editor of the Cambridge Law and Christianity Series and Emory Studies in Law and Religion and coeditor of the Journal of Law and Religion, Brill Research Perspectives on Law and Religion, and the Aranzadi Colección Raíces del Derecho series. He holds degrees in law (Harvard University) and theology (Dr. Theol. h.c., University of Heidelberg). His lectures will be the inaugural True Lectures at the University of Notre Dame. This event is free and open to the public. Lunch will be provided. Originally published at constudies.nd.edu.
- Sep 512:30 PMConversation—"States Without Armies: Why They Exist and How They Survive?"Twenty-one countries around the world — one-ninth of the United Nations’ roster — do not maintain standing armies. Demilitarized states share some commonalities: (1) the decision to demilitarize, or not to have an army, always follows a pivotal moment in history (e.g. military coup, foreign invasion, reaching independence); (2) they have security arrangements with a regional hegemon and/or alliance; (3) they have not been attacked or invaded; (4) they maintain public safety and border security organizations; (5) they are consolidated democracies; and (6) they are more prosperous and spend more on healthcare, education, and socioeconomic development than their neighbors with armed forces. While “States without Armies” addresses all 21 army-less states, this conversation featuring Zoltan Barany, the Frank C. Erin, Jr., Centennial Professor at the University of Texas at Austin, and Laurie Nathan, professor of the practice of mediation and Mediation Program director at the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, focuses on the experiences of Costa Rica, Iceland, Mauritius, Panama, and the Solomon Islands. This event will be recorded and uploaded to the Kroc Institute's YouTube channel. Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- Sep 610:00 AMDiscussion: "Assessing Drivers of Implementing the UN's Sustainable Development Goals in Indiana"The Pulte Institute for Global Development invites you to join Paul Perrin, Evidence and Learning Director and Keough School Associate Professor of the Practice, and Rachel Svetanoff (MS'15), Visiting Associate of Policy and Practice, for a discussion centered on the adoption of the UN Sustainable Development Goals in American policy—including here in Indiana. Just ahead of the 79th Session of the UN General Assembly, Rachel and Paul will share research insights exploring the potential of the SDG framework to support municipal- and state-level development across the Hoosier state, and open a dialogue on the critical importance of global-to-local learnings, cultivating bipartisanship in development, and creating opportunities for vulnerable populations in the U.S. and around the world.About the Presenters Paul Perrin leads the Pulte Institute's Evidence and Learning Division and is an international health, humanitarian, and development research and practice professional with over a decade of work experience in academic, government, and non-governmental settings. To date, his work has largely focused on supporting the conceptualization, design, implementation, analysis, and reporting on monitoring and evaluation and implementation science activities in resource-challenged environments. He has extensive experience in adult education and technical writing, including briefings for senior government officials, peer-reviewed publications, and technical reports. Prior to joining the Pulte Institute, Perrin served as the director for monitoring, evaluation, accountability, and learning at Catholic Relief Services (CRS). He has also worked as senior technical advisor for health research and evaluation at CRS, and an information officer at the Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance within the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID). During his tenure at USAID, Perrin served as editor-in-chief for two of the office’s annual reports, an information coordinator for the Haiti earthquake response management team, and provided information support to the Europe, Middle East, and Central Asia team. Perrin completed his Ph.D. in international health at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, with a certificate in humanitarian assistance. He also holds a master's in public health and a bachelor's of arts in linguistics from Brigham Young University.Rachel Svetanoff is an award-winning activist and social entrepreneur with a history of supporting the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) by mobilizing resources for 120 organizations across 37 countries. She currently holds a Visiting Associateship of Policy & Practice at the University of Notre Dame Pulte Institute for Global Development where she is conducting local U.S. policy research on the SDGs in collaboration with the Pulte Institute's Director of Evidence and Learning, Paul Perrin. This research collaboration aims to broadly inform decisionmakers, civil society actors, and the public about the applicability of the SDGs as a guiding framework for municipal-level development and as a pathway for cultivating bi-partisanship on international and local development.In her entrepreneurial pursuits, Rachel founded the SDG advocacy youth organization Global Futurist Initiative™, the community development consortium Project Energy for Life Cameroon, and her consulting practice where the SDGs are intrinsic to her operations. Through consulting, Rachel worked for institutions such as UNICEF USA, Sesame Street, Johnson & Johnson, Fashion Community Foundation, and Friends U.S. of the Global Fund to foster strategic partnerships for advancing their SDGs objectives. Rachel has held appointments that have also enabled her to promote the SDGs including the United Nations Association of the USA, International Monetary Fund, U.S. Global Leadership Coalition, Foreign Policy for America, and the AFS Intercultural Programs Youth Assembly. Born and raised in Indiana, Rachel received her BS in Chemistry and MBA from Purdue University and her MS in Global Health from Notre Dame. Originally published at pulte.nd.edu.