Events

Events Archive

Filtering by: A.Y. 2017-18

The Popular and Elite Roots of Republican Extremism in the United States
Nov
2
4:00 PM16:00

The Popular and Elite Roots of Republican Extremism in the United States

With Theda Skocpol, Harvard University
To explain the distinct but intertwined popular and elite roots of Republican extremism in the United States, Skocpol draws on her research on the Tea Party, on the Koch political network, and on local developments in eight pro-Trump counties in non-big-city areas of North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Wisconsin. In that latter project, she is repeatedly visiting the study counties and conducting interviews with residents, local media, and community leaders to discover their reactions to political conflicts and policy shifts in the unfolding Trump presidency.

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Religious Accommodations and "Equal But Different" Citizenship
Oct
26
4:00 PM16:00

Religious Accommodations and "Equal But Different" Citizenship

With Rogers M. Smith

Even as controversies continue to rage over preferential treatment for racial and ethnic minorities, many religious conservatives are contending with mounting intensity that their religious liberty is endangered if they are not exempted from a wide range of statutory and even constitutional requirements, including duties to provide medical insurance coverage for contraceptives; to refuse to serve LGBTQ customers; to refrain from endorsing political candidates if they wish to retain tax exemptions; and others. This paper argues that public policymakers, including courts, should subject all denials of such accommodations to strict scrutiny, granting exemptions unless their denial is necessary for compelling state interests. Religious accommodations, like other forms of differential treatment, often can advance goals of egalitarian civic inclusion and reduce resentments that contribute to conservative populist movements-- so long as the exemptions do not go so far as to represent acquiescence in denials of basic rights of persons.

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Mapping the Sacred: Preserving Life-giving Ecosystems Symposium
Oct
13
to Oct 17

Mapping the Sacred: Preserving Life-giving Ecosystems Symposium

Mapping the Sacred: Preserving Life-giving Ecosystems Symposium,

A grant-writing workshop and community-based participatory mapping training module, will be held between October 13 and 17, 2017 at the American Institute for Indian Studies Headquarters (AIIS) in Gurgaon, India.

Co-sponsored by the Institute for Religion, Culture, and Public Life; the Earth Institute; and South Asia Institute, the project draws together an interdisciplinary research collective of scholars from Columbia Arts & Sciences (MESAAS, Anthropology, Religion, and Earth and Environmental Sciences); forestry specialists affiliated with Yale and Cambridge; tribal rights scholars who work on conservation anthropology and religious issues; and activists from the indigenous-rights and conservation groups Vindhya Bachao, SGEA, and Digital Democracy

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Religious Populisms, Right and Left, in Europe and the Americas
Sep
28
4:00 PM16:00

Religious Populisms, Right and Left, in Europe and the Americas

With José Casanova

We are witnessing a global emergence of populist movements throughout the world, reacting diversely to discontents connected with ongoing processes of globalization and with the crisis of representation of liberal democracy. Most of the populisms are not per se “religious” but there are some intriguing religious dimensions to many of them. In Europe, one can discern various combinations of anti-EU and anti-globalist nationalist populisms, anti-immigrant nativist populisms, anti-Muslim and anti-Semitic Christian and secularist populisms, and paradoxically the formation of transnational alliances of right-wing anti-liberal, anti-feminist and anti-gay religious populisms sponsored by Putin’s Russia and the Moscow Patriarchate. In the US, a country with an old historical tradition of WASP nativist populism, we witnessed diverse forms of right-wing religious and not-religious populism coalescing in the election of Trump. A comparison with the left-wing populism of Bernie Sanders, with transnational popular movements such as the 3 T’s (Tierra, Techo y Trabajo) or the pan-Amazonian indigenous movements sponsored by Pope Francis and the Catholic Church in Latin America, or the anti-liberal and anti-parliamentarian populism of the Italian Five Star movement, Spanish Podemos or the Catalan CUP( Candidatura d’Unitat Popular) points to the global crisis of legitimation of liberal democracy.

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Qissebaazi: A Multilingual Storytelling Performance by Danish Husain
Sep
18
7:00 PM19:00

Qissebaazi: A Multilingual Storytelling Performance by Danish Husain

With Danish Husain

In South Asia, each region of India has its own style and tradition of storytelling in its local languages. Expanding and building on these traditions, Qissebaazi is a multilingual theatrical presentation performed by Danish Husain. On September 18th, 2017, Husain will perform a section of the classic Urdu romance Dastan-e- Amir Hamza. Leading us through the magical realm of Hoshruba, Husain will narrate the tale of Ijlal Jadoo and Amar Aiyyaar, whisking us away from the present and transporting us into an enchanted past.

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Anti-anti-anti-Semitism
Sep
15
12:00 PM12:00

Anti-anti-anti-Semitism

With Dr. Elad Lapidot and Dr. Gil Anidjar

Under this title, Dr. Elad Lapidot of Freie Universitat Berlin will introduce his critical reflections on anti-Semitism and, more importantly, on the critique of anti-Semitism (anti-anti-Semitism). His critique is done from the perspective of political epistemology, namely the relation between knowledge theory and political theory. He indicates the problematic role that anti-anti-Semitic discourse plays in post-WWII and contemporary political epistemology, in disassociating knowledge from politics. There is a certain problematic figure of the Jew, he argues, that anti-anti-Semitism and anti-Semitism share. Following Dr. Lapidot's initial presentation, he will be joined by interlocutor, Dr. Gil Anidjar of Columbia University. This conversation will draw on the works of Heidegger, Adorno, Sartre, Arendt, Badiou, and Nancy. Time for Q&A will be provided at the conclusion of the event.

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