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Waging Peace

April 28, 2014
All Day
Saxbe Auditorium at the Moritz College of Law

A Mershon Center event:

Program

This event serves as an exploration of non-violent approaches to resolving international conflict. Panelists and guests will discuss the sources of military conflict and explore non-violent strategies designed to promote peace. The event will examine the impact of democracy, human rights, and trade on international peace-building, explore the impact of U.N. peacekeeping, and talk about grassroots peace and anti-intervention movements,  exploring the intersections of activism and peace. 

The conversation will be informal and audience members will be encouraged to ask questions.

Moderator:

Frederick Andrle is the former WOSU Open Line radio talk show host, joined the Humanities Institute in fall 2009. He is involved in developing ways of connecting the humanities with audiences in the central Ohio community. For his full bio, please click here.

Panelists:

Craig Jenkins is director of the Mershon Center for International Security Studies and a professor of sociology, political science and environmental science at The Ohio State University. His research focuses on four major projects, including Rentier states and political conflict in the Middle East, patterns of political contention, the development and impact of the U.S. environmental movement, and the political economy of high technology development. For his full bio, please click here.

Christopher Gelpi is Chair of Peace Studies and Conflict Resolution at the Mershon Center for International Security Studies and professor of political science at The Ohio State University. His primary research interests are the sources of international militarized conflict and strategies for international conflict resolution. For his full bio, please click here.

Katherine Borland is associate professor of comparative studies and director of undergraduate studies at the Center for Folklore Studies. She studies and teaches about the artfulness of ordinary life, and the ways in which traditional expressive arenas constitute contested terrain. For her full bio, please click here.

John Carlarne is peace studies coordinator at The Ohio State University. He teaches courses on peace studies through the International Studies program. Carlarne's research focuses on nonviolence broadly conceived, with particular emphasis on the role of civilian actors in fostering change within unraveled and unraveling states. He is currently interested in the problems associated with building peace and security after nonviolent regime change. For his full bio, please click here.

This event is co-sponsored by the Mershon Center for International Security Studies and the Humanities Institute and the Middle East Studies Center.