Tue
May 6
2025
Room 003, Rockefeller Center, 5:00pm-6:00pm
"The Causes and Consequences of Discrimination: Lessons from (and for) Economics" - Desmond Ang, Harvard Kennedy School
Tue
May 6
2025
Moore Hall B03, 4:30pm-5:30pm
May 6 at 4:30 pm in Moore B03. Sponsored by the Political Economy Project and the Department of Sociology.
Tue
May 6
2025
Filene Auditorium, Moore Building, 4:30pm-6:00pm
How Rights Went Wrong, Jamal Greene (Columbia Law School) is a constitutional law expert whose scholarship focuses on the structure of legal and constitutional argument.
Thu
May 1
2025
Haldeman Hall 41 (Kreindler Conference Hall), 4:30pm-6:00pm
Professors Derek Penslar and Yael Berda will discuss whether Zionism is a colonial movement, exploring settler colonialism and post-colonial legacies in Israel, India, and Cyprus.
Wed
Apr 30
2025
Steele 006, 4:30pm-6:00pm
How LLMs relay morally-loaded unknowns will have a qualitative impact on the nature of future conversations: we all can (and should) do something about it.
Wed
Apr 30
2025
Haldeman 252, 1:00pm-2:00pm
Discussion / lunch with Sylvie Delacroix (King’s College London) who is visiting Dartmouth as a Montgomery Fellow!
Wed
Apr 30
2025
Online via Zoom, 12:00pm-1:00pm
Dr. Kate Burrows is an environmental health scientist whose research focuses on the relationship between climate- and weather-related extremes and public health.
Tue
Apr 29
2025
Moore Hall B03, 5:00pm-7:00pm
Only one-third of farm workers in the United States are US-born, leaving most of our food system reliant on immigrant labor, including a significant number of undocumented workers.
Tue
Apr 29
2025
Carson Hall L01, 5:00pm-6:30pm
Jenna Tang, Literary Translator, The American Literary Translators Association, Board Member At-Large
Tue
Apr 29
2025
Haldeman Hall 41 (Kreindler Conference Hall), 4:30pm-5:30pm
Sherri Goodman, climate-security expert and author of Threat Multiplier, reshaped U.S. defense policy linking climate change, energy, and national security.