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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221201T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221201T130000
DTSTAMP:20260422T084313
CREATED:20220913T210702Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220913T210702Z
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SUMMARY:Centennial Speaker Series: George Serafeim on Purpose and Profit : How Business Can Lift Up the World
DESCRIPTION:Are purpose and profit mutually exclusive\, or are they complementary? What are the technological\, societal\, and market forces that reshape this relationship\, and what can we—as entrepreneurs\, managers\, consumers\, employees\, and investors—do to reshape it? Backed by cutting-edge research\, Purpose and Profit provides answers to these fundamental questions\, which are increasingly defining the competitiveness of businesses all around the world. Based on more than a decade of field and archival research\, Harvard Business School professor George Serafeim takes readers on a journey to understand: \n\nHow and why environmental and social issues are becoming increasingly relevant for businesses all around the world;\nThe ways that companies can design and implement a strategy that has more positive impact;\nThe six archetypes of value creation enabled by these new trends;\nThe role of investors in supporting companies by recognizing the value of strategic management of material ESG issues; and\nHow we can all look at our choices and our careers through the lens of these societal trends to drive impact in our lives and for our organizations.\n\nAgenda\n12 p.m.: Welcome Remarks: Sris Chatterjee\, chair\, Gabelli Center for Global Security Analysis \n12:03 p.m.: Speaker Introduction: Sris Chatterjee \n12:08: p.m.: Presentation: George Serafeim \n12:45 p.m.: Audience Q&A \n1 p.m.: Closing Remarks: Sris Chatterjee \nAbout the Author\nGeorge Serafeim is the Charles M. Williams Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School\, where he co-leads the Impact-Weighted Accounts Project and the Climate and Sustainability Impact AI Lab. He is currently teaching the course “Risks\, Opportunities\, and Investments in an Era of Climate Change\,” which he designed for the elective curriculum of the MBA program\, and the course “Financial Reporting and Control” in the required MBA curriculum. Previously\, he taught the elective course “Reimagining Capitalism: Business and Big Problems\,” which received the Ideas Worth Teaching Award from the Aspen Institute and the Grand Page Prize\, with Professor Rebecca Henderson. He has presented his research in more than 60 countries around the world and ranks among the top 10 most popular authors\, out of more than 12\,000 business authors\, on the Social Science Research Network. \nCopies of Purpose and Profit: How Business Can Lift Up the World will be raffled off to attendees. \nThis event is co-sponsored with the CFA Society New York\, the Gabelli Center for Global Security Analysis\, and the Museum of American Finance.
URL:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/event/centennial-speaker-series-george-serafeim-on-purpose-and-profit-how-business-can-lift-up-the-world/
LOCATION:Virtual
CATEGORIES:Lectures
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/23-2694-Gabelli-Newsletter_George-Serafeim.jpeg
ORGANIZER;CN="Gabelli Center for Global Security Analysis":MAILTO:gabellicenter@fordham.edu
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221201T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221201T170000
DTSTAMP:20260422T084313
CREATED:20221129T154600Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221129T154600Z
UID:10004895-1669910400-1669914000@newsuat.fordham.edu
SUMMARY:IPED Event 2022-2023: Trans in the Philanthropic Sector
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a presentation with Matthew Gembecki\, managing director of Global Impact’s fundraising and partnerships team. In this capacity\, he directs all business development\, strategy\, and implementation for fundraising and partnership development efforts to help international NGOs achieve their philanthropic goals. Gembecki also provides strategy for private and public grantmakers to maximize their impact. \nPreviously\, Gembecki served as managing director at Changing Our World\, where he partnered with some of the world’s largest nonprofit organizations to raise hundreds of millions of dollars. Select clients include The Salvation Army\, The Smithsonian\, CARE\, Pink Ribbon Red Ribbon\, and the New Jersey Institute of Technology. Gembecki has also been a featured speaker on topics related to trends in fundraising at conferences and events around the world.
URL:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/event/iped-event-2022-2023-trans-in-the-philanthropic-sector/
LOCATION:Dealy E-530\, 441 East Fordham Road\, Bronx\, NY\, 10458\, United States
CATEGORIES:Lectures
ORGANIZER;CN="Fordham IPED":MAILTO:iped@fordham.edu
GEO:40.8612275;-73.8892354
X-APPLE-STRUCTURED-LOCATION;VALUE=URI;X-ADDRESS=Dealy E-530 441 East Fordham Road Bronx NY 10458 United States;X-APPLE-RADIUS=500;X-TITLE=441 East Fordham Road:geo:-73.8892354,40.8612275
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221202T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221202T130000
DTSTAMP:20260422T084313
CREATED:20221115T215121Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221115T215121Z
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SUMMARY:Women Scholars: Divine Inspiration in Byzantium: A Conversation with Karin Krause
DESCRIPTION:The Orthodox Christian Studies Center is delighted to present the next episode of its webinar series highlighting the scholarly insights and academic careers of female scholars whose research and writing explore some facet of the history\, thought\, or culture of Orthodox Christianity. The broadcast will be livestreamed and open to all who have pre-registered. The event will include some time for live audience questions. For those who miss the live event\, the center will archive each episode on its website and YouTube channel. This episode features a conversation with Karin Krause and Ashley Purpura. \nAbout the Speakers\nKarin Krause\, who holds a Ph.D. from the University of Munich\, is an associate professor of Byzantine art and religious culture at the Divinity School of the University of Chicago. Before arriving in Chicago\, she taught in the Department of Art History at the University of Basel. She specializes in the Christian visual cultures of Byzantium and the premodern Mediterranean region. Professor Krause’s research interests include visual hermeneutics\, Byzantine manuscript culture\, the interrelation of texts and images\, the cult of relics\, the theology of the icon\, and phenomena of cultural exchange between Byzantium and the West. In her most recent book\, Divine Inspiration in Byzantium: Notions of Authenticity in Art and Theology (Cambridge University Press\, 2022)\, she examines the intersecting conceptions of divine inspiration and authenticity in the literature and visual arts of Byzantium. Krause traces how ancient ideas about the divine origin of texts and material artifacts were reinterpreted in Byzantine literature and art to promulgate claims to religious truth and authority. \nAshley Purpura is an associate professor of religious studies at the School of Interdisciplinary Studies\, a faculty fellow of the Cornerstone Integrated Liberal Arts Program\, and the director of the Women’s\, Gender\, & Sexuality Studies program at Purdue University. She is the author of God\, Hierarchy\, and Power: Orthodox Theologies of Authority from Byzantium (Fordham University Press\, 2018)\, and co-editor of Orthodox Tradition and Human Sexuality (Fordham University Press\, 2022). Purpura’s current research projects focus on rethinking assumptions about women\, gender\, and otherness in light of Orthodox sources\, traditions\, and theology.
URL:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/event/women-scholars-divine-inspiration-in-byzantium-a-conversation-with-karin-krause/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Lectures
ORGANIZER;CN="George Demacopoulos":MAILTO:demacopoulos@fordham.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221206T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221206T160000
DTSTAMP:20260422T084313
CREATED:20220901T183319Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220901T183319Z
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SUMMARY:Continuing Education: Meaning-Centered Supervision – A Structured\, Self-Reflective Model for Healthcare Social Workers
DESCRIPTION:Completion of this class will result in the receipt of three (3) continuing education hours. \nRebecca Cammy will introduce participants to the novel meaning-centered supervision (MCS) curriculum (an adaptation of meaning-centered psychotherapy) which guides healthcare social workers in connecting a sense of meaning and purpose in work as they develop personal and professional identities. MCS includes seven structured sessions in which social workers craft narratives around themes of professional attitude\, living and creating work life\, and connections with the social work profession. In this workshop\, participants will be trained in the full MCS series concepts and themes and utilize the experiential exercises in a personal self-reflective meaning-making process. MCS curriculum materials will be provided for participants to utilize with their mentees in their own supervision practice. Application of the course material to additional staff support settings will also be discussed. \nAbout the Instructor\nRebecca “Becky” Cammy is the manager of social work for the oncology service line at the Sidney Kimmel Cancer Center at Thomas Jefferson University in Philadelphia. She was a 2021 Cambia Health Foundation Sojourns scholar and 2017 leadership fellow in the New York University Zelda Foster Studies program. Cammy is passionate about health care disparities and engaged in research to highlight best practices and link patient outcomes with psychosocial support services. She co-authored two chapters in the Oxford Textbook of Palliative Social Work\, 2nd edition (2022). Cammy has a small private practice specializing in serious illnesses\, including cancer diagnoses and chronic medical issues\, as well as grief\, loss\, and bereavement. She also runs a clinical supervision group for medical social workers. She earned her master’s in social work from the University of Pennsylvania in 2009 and is currently pursuing her doctorate in palliative care at the University of Maryland Baltimore.
URL:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/event/continuing-education-meaning-centered-supervision-a-structured-self-reflective-model-for-healthcare-social-workers/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Lectures
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221208T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221208T193000
DTSTAMP:20260422T084313
CREATED:20221020T183548Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221020T183548Z
UID:10004863-1670522400-1670527800@newsuat.fordham.edu
SUMMARY:Julia Ng\, Daoism\, and Capitalism: Modern German Jewish Philosophy’s Encounter with China
DESCRIPTION:In the early decades of the 20th century\, major figures of modern German-Jewish thought converged upon Daoism as a source of capital-critical alternatives to state power. Ideas from China had been circulating in German-speaking lands since the 18th century of Leibniz and Kant\, largely facilitated by German and Dutch Jesuit and colonial networks. By the 1910s and ’20s\, translations of philosophical and literary classics and socio-political analyses enabled by a circuit of missionaries\, diplomats\, and scholar-enthusiasts had inspired Germanophone writers at large to adapt Chinese ideas in their works. Yet the German-Jewish reception was singular and pivotal to the emergence of what would later come to be known as the Frankfurt School of Critical Theory. Building on her recent work\, Julia Ng’s lecture focuses on one concept\, in particular\, that was broadly associated with Daoism—wu wei or ’non-action’—and its transformation by Martin Buber\, Franz Kafka\, Franz Rozenzweig\, and Walter Benjamin into variations of non-participation in the capitalist ethic\, non-conformity with the Christian-colonial project\, and non-absorption into the racialization of work prevalent in theories of political and economic activity to this day. \nDespite burgeoning interest in Daoism’s global reception and critical theory’s continuing relevance for analyzing transnational sociopolitical phenomena\, the historical-conceptual links between the two have received no critical attention. Using extensive new archival work to reconstruct early critical theory’s shared network of texts\, translators\, visitors\, and ideas concerning Daoism that issued from a China at the intersection of colonialism\, capitalism\, and revolution\, Ng proposes ways to begin investigating the impact of a concept from the global south on the development of this major movement within modern European philosophy. In doing so\, she calls attention to the possibility of reconfiguring critical theory’s resources for a world not organized solely around European paradigms of action and knowledge. Indeed\, she believes that the re-instantiation of the questions that Daoist ideas permitted early critical theory to pose speaks with urgency to our current predicaments involving infrastructure-based politics\, ecology\, and a globalized political economy organized increasingly around an “Asiatic mode of production.” \nMembers of the Fordham community may attend the event in person at the Lincoln Center campus\, in McMahon Hall room 109. \nAbout the Speaker\nJulia Ng is a senior lecturer in critical theory and co-director of the Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought at Goldsmiths\, University of London. She is the co-editor and translator of the new critical edition of Walter Benjamin’s Toward the Critique of Violence (2021)\, as well as of Werner Hamacher’s Two Studies of Friedrich Hölderlin (2020)\, both of which appeared with Stanford University Press. Besides writing extensively on the links between modern mathematics\, political thought\, and theories of history and language particularly in the work of Benjamin and Scholem—including a co-edited Modern Language Notes Special Issue on “Walter Benjamin\, Gershom Scholem\, and the Marburg School” (2012) and articles on Cohen\, Meyerson\, and Reinach—she is also the author of essays on critical theory more broadly\, including on Agamben\, Derrida\, Descartes\, Hölderlin\, Kraus\, Marx\, Nelson\, Baudelaire\, and Sappho. She is currently working on a project on Daoism and capitalism while a research fellow at the Center for Jewish History and Fordham University.
URL:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/event/julia-ng-daoism-and-capitalism-modern-german-jewish-philosophys-encounter-with-china/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Lectures
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221212T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221212T150000
DTSTAMP:20260422T084313
CREATED:20221014T195649Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221014T195649Z
UID:10004849-1670846400-1670857200@newsuat.fordham.edu
SUMMARY:Continuing Education: Care in Context – Advance Care Planning and the Role of Social Work
DESCRIPTION:Our current healthcare system is fragmented and in need of transformation. Care is inequitably delivered and too often incongruent with patient preferences. Advance care planning conversations lay the foundation for person-centered\, family-focused\, culturally congruent\, goal-concordant quality care. Although ideally occurring over a lifetime\, advance care planning conversations are an essential element of primary palliative care and especially important for those who are seriously ill. Social workers have the clinical background to provide nuanced\, advance-care planning conversations and are often well-positioned to offer leadership in developing advance care planning programs within their organizations. This interactive workshop will explore best practices in advance care planning with a focus on the social work role. Advance care planning tools and resources will be provided. \nCompletion of this class will result in the receipt of 3 continuing education hours.
URL:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/event/continuing-education-care-in-context-advance-care-planning-and-the-role-of-social-work/
LOCATION:Zoom
CATEGORIES:Lectures
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20221213T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20221213T160000
DTSTAMP:20260422T084313
CREATED:20221101T220910Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221101T220910Z
UID:10004879-1670947200-1670947200@newsuat.fordham.edu
SUMMARY:Maeera Shreiber on Holy Envy: Writing in the Jewish Christian Borderzone
DESCRIPTION:Join us for a book launch and public lecture\, co-sponsored with the Center for Jewish History. \nOver the last 50 years\, Jewish-Christian dialogue has made enormous strides. We now read each other’s scriptures and openly discuss differences\, as well as contiguities. Yet\, many such encounters have become somewhat rote and predictable. Holy Envy: Writing in the Jewish Christian Borderzone seeks to sharpen the dialogue by inviting readers to push past familiar terrain and explore the complex emotional landscape that sometimes colors one’s relationship with the religious “Other.” Demonstrating how such emotions as shame\, envy\, and desire can inform these encounters\, Holy Envy charts a new way of thinking about interreligious relations. Moreover\, by focusing on modern and contemporary writers who traffic in the volatile space between Judaism and Christianity\, the book calls attention to how these emotionally intense interactions make for creative possibilities. Holy Envy will engage readers who are interested in literature\, religion\, and\, above all\, interfaith dialogue. \nMaeera Y. Shreiber is an associate professor of English and former director of Religious Studies at the University of Utah\, where she teaches and writes about poetry\, Jewish American literature\, ethnic American studies\, religious studies\, and interfaith relations. Shreiber is the author of\, among other books\, Singing in a Strange Land: A Jewish American Poetics (2007). \nThis in-person event will also be livestreamed on Zoom for those unable to attend in person. Please indicate how you will attend during registration.
URL:https://newsuat.fordham.edu/event/maeera-shreiber-on-holy-envy-writing-in-the-jewish-christian-borderzone/
LOCATION:McMahon 109\, McMahon Hall\, 113 West 60th Street\, Lincoln Center Campus\, New York\, NY\, 10023\, United States
CATEGORIES:Lectures
GEO:40.7708109;-73.9851512
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