Migrations Program
Community Panel on the Post-Election State of Refugee Resettlement in Upstate NY
December 3, 2024
11:45 am
Physical Sciences Building, 404
As part of the day-long Refugee Pathways Symposium, organized as part of the community-engaged course, PUBPOL 3050/5050: Refugee Pathways and Resettlement Policy, in collaboration with Cornell Law School and the Migrations Program, representatives from RISE and Interfaith Works (Syracuse), The Center (Utica), and Ithaca Welcomes Refugees will discuss the post-election landscape for refugee resettlement in Upstate NY. Lunch will be provided. Registration required.
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Migrations Program
Hybrid Book Talk "Refuge: How the State Shapes Human Potential" with Dr. Heba Gowayed
December 3, 2024
10:30 am
Plant Sciences, 404
Dr. Heba Gowayed will join us virtually to discuss her recent book, Refuge: How the State Shapes Human Potential (2022) as part of the day-long Refugee Pathways Symposium, organized as part of the community-engaged course, PUBPOL 3050/5050: Refugee Pathways and Resettlement Policy course in collaboration with Cornell Law School and the Migrations Program. Refreshments provided for in-person participants.
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Migrations Program
Trump Mass Deportation Pledge Faces Legal, Economic Barriers
Stephen Yale-Loehr, Migrations
“Rhetoric is one thing,” says the Migration Program's Stephen Yale-Loehr (Law). “Actual implementation is something else.”
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Sikh Activists See It as Freedom. India Calls It Terrorism.
Gunisha Kaur, Migrations
“The threat of terrorism is used to exploit fear and justify the suppression and silencing of minorities,” says Gunisha Kaur, medical director of the Weill Cornell Center for Human Rights.
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Trump’s Immigration Plans May Upend Students And Immigrant Applicants
Stephen Yale-Loehr, Migrations
Stephen Yale-Loehr, professor of immigration law, discusses how a Trump re-election may impact H-1B work visas.
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Migratory Birds Fly into a Miasma of Human Making
Andrew Farnsworth, Migrations
Andrew Farnsworth, visiting scientist at the Lab of Ornithology, discusses avian timetables.
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Emerging Global Cities: Origin and Significance | Alejandro Portes
November 20, 2024
4:00 pm
Goldwin Smith Hall, G76, Lewis Auditorium
TALK TITLE:
Emerging Global Cities: Origin and Significance
ABSTRACT:
Certain cities—most famously New York, London, and Tokyo-- have been identified as 'global cities' whose functions in the world economy transcend national borders. Without the same fanfare, formerly peripheral and secondary cities have been growing in importance, emerging as global cities in their own right. The similarity of the skylines of Dubai, Miami, and Singapore is no coincidence. Despite their very different historical paths, all three have achieved newfound prominence by fulfilling the same set of economic and social pre-conditions.
In my recent book, Emerging Global Cities (co-authored by Ariel C. Armony of the University of Pittsburgh), we seek to identify the constellation of historical factors that allowed these cities to allow to their current prominence and the role that they play in their respective world regions—South Asia for Singapore; the Middle East for Dubai; and Central and South America for Miami. We contrast their experiences with those of other cities that, at one time or another, aspired to a similar role in their respective regions but that, for reasons identified in the study, failed to reach it. These we term 'global hopefuls'.
Time permitting, I will also describe the looming threats confronting these emerging cities-- from political crises to climate change, including rising sea levels. The experience of the three cities indicates that there are 'degrees of freedom' permitting formerly peripheral cities and nations to rise in global prominence, but that this is a difficult feat and constantly under threat from external competition and forces unleashed by the same world system that allowed their rise in the first place.
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Program
Migrations Program
The (Im)possiblity of Immigration Reform?
November 8, 2024
8:30 am
Law School, 184 Myron Taylor Hall
The Cornell International Law Journal is hosting a symposium to honor Professor Stephen Yale-Loehr's career in immigration law. The event will cover topics such as the current state of asylum law, immigrants and the economy, and the need for increased legal representation for immigrants. Additionally, there will be a lighthearted roast of Professor Yale-Loehr and opportunities for networking during lunch and the reception. Articles presented during the symposium will be published in an upcoming issue of the Cornell International Law Journal.
Please visit website to register to attend in person or via webinar.
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Migrations Program
Fish Biodiversity Benefits Household Nutrition
Kathryn Fiorella in World in Focus
Migrations Program director Kathryn Fiorella coauthored an article, “Commercially Traded Fish Portfolios Mask Household Utilization of Biodiversity in Wild Food Systems,” in the peer-reviewed journal PNAS.
“Natural resource–dependent households rely on surrounding biodiversity for their food and income. Explicating the ways households use biodiversity is critical to appreciating the true value of diverse ecosystems.”
Households living near rice field fisheries in Cambodia eat a much wider cross-section of their fish catch (43% of local species) than they take to market to sell (only 9%).
“Poorer households also consumed more species, underscoring how wild food systems may most benefit the vulnerable,” the article concludes. The results highlight the food security consequences of biodiversity loss—for families, communities, and global food systems.
The team's research integrated surveys of households and ecological sites collected over three years in the freshwater Tonlé Sap lake system in Cambodia. Cornell Chronicle coverage noted that the study—part of Cornell's 2030 Project—is one of the first to examine how diet and biodiversity interact in a wild food system.
Culinary habits are part of the reason why larger fish are more often sold, Fiorella said. “We tend to eat them as fillets, which tend to have a slightly lower nutrient content than some of the small fish where people are eating the head and the bones,” she said. To boost their household income, people sell the popular but less nutritious fish, and eat the more nutritious fish at home.
Kathryn Fiorella is director of Einaudi's Migrations Program and an associate professor of public and ecosystem health in the College of Veterinary Medicine.
Featured in World in Focus Briefs
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Global Cornell Experience Showcase
November 19, 2024
4:00 pm
Physical Sciences Building, Baker Portico & Atrium
Over 70 undergraduate students will present their international summer experiences in a poster session. Their work includes conducting research, working in Global Internships, and putting leadership into action as Laidlaw scholars.
The poster session will be in the Baker Portico & Atrium of the Physical Sciences Building. Light refreshments will be served.
Applications for Global Internships are open now. Applications for the Laidlaw Scholars Program will open on November 15.
Global Internships give undergraduate students valuable international experience in fields spanning global development, climate and sustainability, international relations, communication, business, governance, and more. They are managed by the Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies and Office of Global Learning, both part of Global Cornell.
The Laidlaw Undergraduate Leadership and Research Scholarship Program provides generous funding to first- and second-year undergraduates over two years as they pursue internationally focused research, engage in leadership training and a leadership-in-action experience, and join a global network of like-minded peers. The program is managed by the Einaudi Center.
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Program
Einaudi Center for International Studies
Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies
East Asia Program
Southeast Asia Program
Latin American and Caribbean Studies
Institute for African Development
Institute for European Studies
South Asia Program
Migrations Program