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A visiting critic in the Institute for European Studies, part of the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, Dmitry Bykov will be in residence for one to two years, engaging with Cornell faculty and students and completing several writing projects.
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When the COVID-19 pandemic struck in 2020, Cornell’s international students were faced with a tough decision: Return home before borders closed and risk uncertainty about re-entering the U.S., or remain on campus far away from loved ones.
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Our Global Hub at the University of Sydney will promote collaborative research between institutions and offer students reciprocal exchange opportunities.
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A Migrations initiative collaboration led by the Einaudi Center's Migrations team is crossing medicine, law, technology, and communication and aiming to encourage the increased use of healthcare benefits by refugees in the U.S.—who often suffer poor health but are using these entitlements less than they have i
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“I don’t see how the administration is going to be able to speed up processing with the expected flood of humanitarian parole applications from Ukrainians. And if the administration does speed it up for Ukrainians, I think there will be legitimate complaints about why they were able to do it for Ukrainians so much more quickly than for Afghans and people from other countries,” says Steve Yale-Loehr, professor of immigration law.
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Steve Yale-Loehr, professor of immigration law, says that the question of whether a person is still fully protected by the First Amendment at the border has rarely been addressed by courts.
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The Speaking of Language podcast talks about Cornell’s new collaborative Global Hubs with Wendy Wolford, Rachel Beatty Riedl, Sebnem Ozkan, and Cindy Tarter.
Partnerships exist with institutions in Australia, China, Ecuador, Ghana, India, Mexico, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, United Kingdom, and Zambia.
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Migrations faculty fellow and anesthesiologist Gunisha Kaur writes about India’s farmers. Although they are critical to providing food for the country, they're dying by suicide in huge numbers. Kaur argues for more than just agricultural reform, but also how India should decriminalize suicide and provide mental health support.
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We’re going global! We will talk about Cornell’s new collaborative Global Hubs with our colleagues Wendy Wolford, Rachel Beatty Riedl, Sebnem Ozkan, and Cindy Tarter.
Partnerships exist with institutions in Australia, China, Ecuador, Ghana, India, Mexico, Singapore, South Korea, Thailand, United Kingdom, and Zambia.
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Rachel Bezner Kerr, part of the Einaudi Center's "qualities of life" research team, contributes to a new cautionary report from the IPCC.