Fall 2018: Patricia Perez Valdes | Tibi Galis | Nicolas Habarugira | Adam Lupel
Spring 2019: Tamara Reps Freeman | Savita Pawnday | Joseph Sebarenzi | Clara RamĂrez-Barat | Marlon A. Weichert | AndrĂ©s Dávila-LadrĂłn de Guevara | Steven Luckert
Tamara Reps Freeman
Reps Freeman is on campus March 4-8, 2019. She will be holding a public recital on Thursday, March 7th at 5pm in the University Art Museum. Consult our events page for more information.
For more information about Tamara Reps Freeman and her work, please .
Savita Pawnday
Pawnday oversees the Global Centre's programming in New York and Geneva, and leads on developing innovative institutional mechanisms and capacities needed to prevent mass atrocities both at national and international level. Has worked with governments and regional organizations to enhance prevention through concrete implementation of R2P. Was instrumental in launching the Global Network of R2P Focal Points, the largest network of senior governmental officials of its kind. Currently, Ms. Pawnday is involved in leading Global Centre engagement with UN Peacekeeping and in identifying strategies, including training, on how to enhance protection capacities of peacekeepers on the ground. She has worked in Zimbabwe, Zambia and Malawi with Catholic Relief Services, in New York with Trickle Up and in India with a few grass roots NGOs. She holds a M.A. from Fordham University in political economy and development, with a specialization in political economy of civil wars and a B.A. in Economics from St. Xavier's College, University of Mumbai.
Pawnday is on campus March 25-28, 2019. She will be holding a public talk on Wednesday, March 27th at 5pm in 148 Couper Administration Building. Consult our events page for more information.
Joseph Sebarenzi
Sebarenzi is on campus April 1-3, 2019. He will be holding a public presentation, "A Personal Journey to Forgiveness: Emerging from the Rwandan Genocide with a Positive Psychological Perspective" in the Admissions Center room 189 on Tuesday, April 2 at 6:30PM. Consult our events page for more information.
Clara RamĂrez-Barat
RamĂrez-Barat is on campus April 8-12, 2019. She will give a public presentation entitled, "Education as upstream or primary atrocity prevention" in the Admissions Center room 189 at 5:30PM on Thursday, April 11. Consult our events page for more information.
Marlon A. Weichert
Andrés Dávila-Ladrón de Guevara
Dávila will be here April 15th through the 17th. He will give a public presentation entitled, "The Colombian conflict: Regional contexts to build memory" at 5:50pm in the University Downtown Center room 220A on Wednesday, April 17. Consult our events page for additional information.
Steven Luckert
Luckert is on campus April 29-May 2, 2019. He will give a public presentation with reception to follow at 5PM on Thursday, May 2 in the University Art Museum. Consult our events page for additional information.
Patricia Perez Valdes
Patricia Perez Valdes from the Museum of Memory and Human Rights in Santiago, Chile,
spent the fall semester in New Hampshire on the campus of Keene State College (KSC)
as a KSG-AIPR Global Fellow.
She visited ÂĚñÉç from November 12-16, and presented on “Memory
and Human Rights in Chile.”
Tibi Galis
Tibi Galis, executive director of the Auschwitz Institute for Peace and Reconciliation, I-GMAP’s first and principle NGO partner, visited I-GMAP from October 25- 30. His visit concluded with a public presentation on “Atrocity Prevention in the Age of Trump and Taylor Swift.”
Nicolas Habarugira
Rwandan human rights activist and community organizer Nicolas Habarugira visited I-GMAP from November 26 to December 1, traveling from his temporary home at Columbia University in New York City. He shared his experiences with intergenerational trauma and community healing in a post-genocide society. His presentation was titled “Dealing with Memories in Post-Genocide Rwanda: Downstream Prevention Through Community-Based Sociotherapy.”
Adam Lupel
Dr. Adam Lupel is the Vice President and Chief Operating Officer at the . He is responsible for developing IPI’s long-term research agenda and for overseeing management and coordination among IPI’s offices in New York, Vienna, and Manama in close collaboration with the President. Between 2014 and 2016 he served as the director of research and publications for the Independent Commission on Multilateralism, a project of IPI.
Dr. Lupel also conducts research on issues related to globalization, multilateralism, and the prevention of mass atrocities. He is the author of Globalization and Popular Sovereignty: Democracy’s Transnational Dilemma (2009) and the co-editor of Peace Operations and Organized Crime: Enemies or Allies? (2011) and Responding to Genocide: The Politics of International Action (2013).