Institute for African Development
IAD Distinguished Africanist Scholar
The Allure of Scapegoating Return Migrants During a Pandemic
Wednesday, March 16, 2022 @ 4:30pm
Ato Kwamena Onoma is a Senior Program Officer at the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa (CODESRIA). His research focuses on mobility, identity, belonging and inter communal relations in Africa. He has conducted field research in many countries in West, East and Southern Africa. He is the author of Anti-Refugee Violence and African Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2013) and The Politics of Property Rights Institutions in Africa (Cambridge University Press, 2009). He previously served as the Head of the African Center for Peace and Security Training at the Institute for Security Studies and also as Assistant Professor in the Department of Political Science at Yale University.
This event is part of the IAD Distinguished Africanist Scholar Lecture series. Register here for virtual access
Co-sponsored by the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies and the Department of Government.
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The Allure of Scapegoating Return Migrants During a Pandemic
March 16, 2022
4:30 pm
Uris Hall, G-08
Ato Kwamena Onoma is a program officer at the Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. He is the author of Anti-Refugee Violence and African Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2013) and The Politics of Property Rights Institutions in Africa (Cambridge University Press, 2009).
This event is part of the IAD Distinguished Africanist Scholar Lecture series.
Regist here for virtual access
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Institute for African Development
Institute for African Development Seminar Series: Armed Conflicts and development: Lessons learned and the path forward
March 17, 2022
2:40 pm
Uris Hall, G-08
Issues in African Development Seminar Series examines critical concerns in contemporary Africa using a different theme each semester. The seminars provide a forum for participants to explore alternative perspectives and exchange ideas.
Speaker's details here
Register here
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Institute for African Development
IAD Special Topic Seminar
Armed Conflicts and Development: Lessons learned and the path forward
Thursday, March 17, 2022 2:40pm to 4:35pm G-08 Uris Hall
Issues in African Development Seminar Series examines critical concerns in contemporary Africa using a different theme each semester. The seminars provide a forum for participants to explore alternative perspectives and exchange ideas.
Additional Information
Peacebuilding, Climate Change, and Migration: Expanding the Lens
March 24, 2022
11:25 am
This is the second day of a two-day virtual workshop on peacebuilding, climate change, and migration. The first day of the workshop is March 22, 2022; participants are welcome to attend for just one or both days.
On this second day, we will examine understudied regions which are at substantial risk of climate change impacts, including Latin America, Southeast Asia, and South Asia. What resources, methods, and approaches can help us better understand the relationship between peacebuilding, climate change, and migration in these understudied regions? How can we achieve environmental justice in these areas?
The first day of the workshop is March 22, 2022.
WORKSHOP AGENDA
Introductory reflection
Karim-Aly Kassam
International Professor of Environmental and Indigenous Studies, Department of Natural Resources and the Environment & the American Indian and Indigenous Studies Program, College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Cornell University
Dr. George Wilkes
Director, Religion and Ethics in the Making of War and Peace Project
Research Fellow, School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh
Presenters
Alpa Shah
Professor, Department of Anthropology, The London School of Economics and Political Science
Jonathan Padwe
Associate Professor and Undergraduate Chair, Department of Anthropology, University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa.
Fábio Zuker
Journalist, Anthropologist, and Amazon Rainforest Journalism Fund Grantee
This workshop is being organized by Cornell University’s Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, with support from the Migrations Initiative, and co-sponsorship from the Institute for African Development, the Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program, the South Asia Program, the Southeast Asia Program, and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies
Southeast Asia Program
Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Institute for African Development
South Asia Program
Peacebuilding, Climate Change, and Migration: Conceptualizing Environmental Peacebuilding
March 22, 2022
11:25 am
This is the first day of a two-day virtual workshop which takes a novel approach to peacebuilding, climate change and migration. The first day of the workshop is March 22, 2022; participants are welcome to attend for just one or both days.
On this first day we will explore the following questions: What do we know about the relationship between peacebuilding, migration, and climate change? How can we develop a socio-environmental conception of positive peace, which entails developing means of peacefully resolving conflict, and which centers Indigenous perspectives and environmental justice?
The second day is March 24, 2022
WORKSHOP AGENDA
Introduction
Rebecca Slayton, Director, Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, Cornell University
Associate Professor, Department of Science and Technology Studies
Rachel Beatty Riedl, Director and John S. Knight Professor of International Studies, Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies
Professor, Department of Government, Cornell University
Presenters
Marieme Lo, Director, African Studies Program
Associate Professor, Women and Gender Studies, University of Toronto.
Päivi Lujala, Professor of Geography and Academy of Finland Research Fellow
Geography Research Unit, University of Oulu, Finland
Noor Ahmad Akhundzadah, Dean and Professor of Environmental Science, University of Kabul, Afghanistan
Visiting Professor, Department of Natural Resources and the Environment & the South Asia Program, Cornell University
This workshop is being organized by Cornell University’s Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies, with support from the Migrations Initiative, and co-sponsorship from the Institute for African Development, the Latin American and Caribbean Studies Program, the South Asia Program, the Southeast Asia Program, and the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies
Southeast Asia Program
Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Institute for African Development
South Asia Program
Institute for African Development Seminar: Africa in 2040: transformative change for people, food and nature
February 24, 2022
2:40 pm
Uris Hall, G-08
Mariteuw Chimère Diaw is an associate and Deputy Director General of the Consortium D’Entreprises in Senegal, and a member of the Multistakeholder Expert Panel of IPBES, the Intergovernmental Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosytem Services. He was until recently the Director General of the African Model Forest Network (AMFN) and a member of the Board of EcoAgricultural Partners and of the International Networking Committee of the International Model Forest Network (IMFN). He holds a PhD in Economic anthropology from Laval University, an MA in Rural Sociology from Michigan State University and a Master in Philosophy and Sociology from the University of Dakar. He has worked 40 years as a researcher and international scientist with the CGIAR and other organisations and has led or contributed to several international programs on Adaptive Collaborative Management, Governance, Verification, Environmental Services and Rural Livelihoods, Alternative to Slash and Burn, Environmental Decentralizations and Criteria and Indicators of sustainable forest management. He was the convener in Cameroon of the Forest Governance Learning Group (FGLG), a network active in 11 countries. His research interests and publications include African history, migrations, and modeling of the share system in fisheries; tenure regimes and property rights, climate change mitigation and adaptation, biodiversity governance and multistakeholder landscapes, Model Forests, participatory action research and interactive social methodologies. Chimère has lived and worked in the Congo Basin, West Africa, Southeast Asia, and North America.
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Institute for African Development
Institute for African Development Seminar Series: Inclusive Development in East African Cities? The Challenge of Generative Urbanization
March 10, 2022
2:40 pm
G-08 Uris Hall
Issues in African Development Seminar Series examines critical concerns in contemporary Africa using a different theme each semester. The seminars provide a forum for participants to explore alternative perspectives and exchange ideas. They are also a focal activity for students and faculty interested in African development. In addition, prepares students for higher level courses on African economic, social and political development. The presentations are designed for students who are interested in development, Africa’s place in global studies, want to know about the peoples, cultures and societies that call Africa home, and explore development theories and alternate viewpoints on development.
Speaker's details here
Registration here
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Institute for African Development
Institute for African Development Seminar Series: Benefits and Challenges of African Diaspora-Homeland Academic Collaborations
March 3, 2022
2:40 pm
Uris Hall, G-08
Issues in African Development Seminar Series examines critical concerns in contemporary Africa using a different theme each semester. The seminars provide a forum for participants to explore alternative perspectives and exchange ideas. They are also a focal activity for students and faculty interested in African development. In addition, prepares students for higher level courses on African economic, social and political development. The presentations are designed for students who are interested in development, Africa’s place in global studies, want to know about the peoples, cultures and societies that call Africa home, and explore development theories and alternate viewpoints on development
Speaker's bio here
Registration link
Additional Information
Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Institute for African Development
Contagious Coups: What Is Fueling Military Takeovers Across West Africa?
Oumar Ba Quoted in Guardian
“Many of the demonstrations showing support for these military regimes are in urban areas. But the people who live in the cities have a different perception from people who live in the rural areas, where you’re likely to find more worry,” says Oumar Ba, Global Public Voices fellow.