Summary
"I trunk in many ways they isolate themselves from each other," said Anthony Nocella Jr., referring to activists and academics. Nocella, organizer of this year's Regional Peace Studies Consortium held Nov. 13 at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, had a "secret" agenda to force activists and academics into each other's comfort zones to bridge the gap between these two communities.
The consortium was not simply an attempt to draw activists and academics together, but also to blend Syracuse the city and Syracuse the university. Nocella explained, "I think this (consortium) is interesting to people in Syracuse because the university is in some ways another city. I think it's a downfall of the university that it doesn't pay enough attention to indigenous conflicts." And by "indigenous," Nocella means Central New York issues.See the full content of this document
Extract
Immersion Therapy
"I trunk in many ways they isolate themselves from each other," said Anthony Nocella Jr., referring to activists and academics. Nocella, organizer of this ...
See the full content of this document
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