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In 2022–23, 15 U.S. Student Program winners from Cornell will head out to host countries worldwide. The program is administered by the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies.
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The Einaudi Center awarded seed grants, student travel grants and internships totaling $355,000 in the 2021–22 academic year.
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Migrations postdoctoral fellow Eleanor Paynter writes that anti-migration sentiments persist across Europe despite countries welcoming Ukrainians fleeing war.
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Migrations: A Global Grand Challenge has awarded grants totaling more than $500,000 to support faculty research addressing wide-ranging questions around domestic and global migration.
Funded projects this cycle reflect the Migrations initiative’s interdisciplinary priorities of racism, dispossession and migration in the United States and international, multispecies migration.
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In her talk, “Forging Lasting Peace: Movements for Justice in a Pluralist World,” Gbowee wove personal stories with what she sees as the tenets, the requirements, of successful peace-building movements – movements that not only end conflict but ensure dignity for all citizens.
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The Cornell Chinese Students and Scholars Association and Cornell REAL A Capella created a Chinese version of the alma mater as a gift to the university on the occasion of Cornell's 157th anniversary.
Launched by the Office of Global Learning (OGL), the story circles initiative is intended to bridge the gaps in intercultural understanding between Cornell’s international and domestic populations.
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Leymah Gbowee, 2011 Nobel Peace Prize winner and activist, will give the annual Bartels World Affairs Lecture.
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Eleanor Paynter and Rachel Beatty Riedl, Migrations postdoctoral fellow and faculty member respectively, co-write this article about how a new United Kingdom program will endanger migrants, not protect them.