data-craft.co.jp

The end of Columbia's 'free speech campus' myth: Administration's descent into identity politics diminishes real political discourse

4.9 (286) · $ 19.99 · In stock

During this latest round of extreme violence in historical Palestine and Israel, the story of the battle for Columbia’s conscience started with undergraduates. Naturally, this meant engaging in protest, a crucial role in any social movement that undergraduates do best. We graduate students at the School of International and Public Affairs were not so quick to start there. We did something different—we talked to each other first. After October 7, SIPA’s cohort WhatsApp group chats exploded with conversation—sometimes civil, sometimes tense, and everything in between. As I participated in the discussion and watched my classmates debate, it became apparent that Columbia needed to give students a space to engage with each other, and that it was not doing its job when it came to the issue of Israel and Palestine.

Rhodesia's Unilateral Declaration of Independence - Wikipedia

Palestine Working Group (@pwgatsipa) • Photos et vidéos Instagram

Patrick Lawrence: No, The Truth About Biden Is Not Democratic

Journalism is a public good: World trends in freedom of expression

FocaalBlog: Julia Soul: Between Confrontation and Silent

Khadijah Abdul-Nabi on LinkedIn: Honored to be a part of the Middle East Design Award Jury 🙏

The Best Books of 2022

Khadijah Abdul-Nabi on LinkedIn: When I had the pleasure to run a UX/UI Bootcamp in Iraq, I knew these…

Consequential, a policy podcast from Carnegie Mellon University

Palestine Working Group (@pwgatsipa) • Fotky a videa na Instagramu

Global Freedom of Expression REGULATING THE ONLINE PUBLIC SPHERE

Past Events @ C4E Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto

When Can We Go Back to America? Book by Susan H. Kamei, Norman Y

Free speech is not the campus problem you think it is