Student Conference on Democracy and Ethnic Conflict
Monday, November 28, 1:15-4pm, Trotter 301
The final meeting of Pols 79: Democracy and Ethnic Conflict is a conference in which students will present concrete findings from their larger research projects-in-progress. In addition to presenting evidence from a wide variety of cases of ethnic conflict, the conference will seek to identify common themes and patterns, and generate discussion and questions about the cases.
Panel presentations will be followed by comments and a brief Q&A period. Students, faculty, and any other interested parties are welcome to attend all or part of the conference. Refreshments will be provided.
1:15 pm, Migration, Minorities, and Integration
Jeewon Kim: Muslim Integration in France
Natalie Litton: Roma Integration in Western Europe
Josh Gluck: Resources, Migration, and Ethnic Conflict
2:00 pm, Managing and Responding to Ethnic Conflict in Africa
Wen Huang: Post-Genocide Justice Mechanisms
Lorand Laskai: Resource Conflict and Ethnic Identity
Katerina Stampouloglou: Liberation Movements, Democratization, & Ethnic Conflict
BaLeigh Harper: Federalism, Leadership, and Ethnic Conflict in Nigeria
3:00 pm,
Ben Geselowitz: Institutions and Ethnic Conflict in New Democracies
Hanna Kozlowska: International Intervention and Ethnic Conflict – Bosnia and Kosovo
Amalia Feld: Humanitarian Intervention and China
3:45 pm, Final Comments and Open Q&A
Discussants will include:
Matt Murphy, Political Science
Lee Smithey, Peace & Conflict Studies
Seminar students from Pol 110: Identity and Conflict
Contact: mmurphy1