• 2023 Rita Cassella Jones Lecture: The Evil of Violence Against Women and The Hope Manifest in Pope Francis’ Enduring Legacy

    Duane Library, Tognino Hall, 2nd Floor 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    The 19th Annual Rita Cassella Jones Lecture on Women and U.S. Catholicism will be presented by Nancy Pineda-Madrid, Ph.D. (Loyola Marymount University).ome Pineda-Madrid's lecture will explore how disciples of Jesus Christ must denounce and subvert this evil, finding in Pope Francis’ writings a source to encourage Christian hope through the subversion of evil. Ultimately, she

  • Financial Issues Forum: Nobel Laureate Edmund Phelps on My Journeys in Economic Theory

    McNally Amphitheatre 140 West 62nd Street, New York, NY, United States

    Join us for an in-person event with one of the most important economists of his generation. Edmund Phelps developed a new understanding of unemployment and inflation and went on to rethink the roots of innovation. His work represents a lifelong project to put “people as we know them” into economic theory. In his latest book,

  • Council on Foreign Relations Webinar: Africa on the Global Stage

    Rose Hill, Dealy Hall E-519 , United States

    Landry Signé is a senior fellow in the Global Economy and Development program and the Africa Growth Initiative at the Brookings Institution. His career and research span the areas of global political economy, global governance and sustainable development, global business and emerging markets, strategic management and leadership, fragility, state capacity and policy implementation, the Fourth

  • Physics & Engineering Physics Colloquium

    Freeman 103 441 E. Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Christopher Aubin, Ph.D., associate professor of physics at Fordham University, will present, “Established 1936: The particle that began and could end the Standard Model.” During the 20th century, there was an explosion of new particles discovered, so many that it took decades for physicists to formulate what is now known as the Standard Model of

  • Book Talk: All Oppression Shall Cease

    Zoom

    Join us for a conversation with Christopher Kellerman, S.J., about his thought-provoking work. In All Oppression Shall Cease, he provides a rigorously researched, era-by-era history of the Catholic Church's teachings and actions related to slavery. By telling stories of enslaved Catholics and Catholic slaveholders, analyzing arguments of theologians who either defended or condemned slaveholding, and

  • IPED Event: Saviors vs. Liberators—The Historical Debate on Economic Development

    Campbell Hall Multipurpose Room 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    William Easterly, Ph.D., is a renowned economist, author, and researcher in the field of economic development. His ideologies caution against the wasteful side of international aid and instead promote investing in the rights of the poor. Currently, he is a professor of economics at New York University and co-director of the NYU Development Research Institute,

  • Author Rachel Swarns onThe 272: The Families Who Were Enslaved and Sold to Build the American Catholic Church

    Duane Library, Tognino Hall, 2nd Floor 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Rachel Swarns will discuss her new book, The 272, which follows one family through nearly two centuries of indentured servitude and enslavement to illuminate the harrowing origin story of Georgetown University and the Catholic Church in the United States. Through the saga of the Mahoney family, Swarns illustrates how the Church relied on slave labor

  • Seeking Harmony and Compassion: Pastoral Care and LGBTQ+ Orthodox Faithful

    McNally Amphitheatre 140 W. 62nd St., New York, NY, United States

    Orthodox Christians are called, first and foremost, to love all—for “God is love.” But the reality for many lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer Orthodox Christians today is that their relationship to the Church is defined not by love, but by apathy, exclusion, and condemnation. We must, as a faith, choose love and compassion—to “love

  • Ukraine at the United Nations

    Flom Auditorium, Walsh Library 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Sergiy Olehovych Kyslytsya is a Ukrainian career diplomat, who serves as ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary of Ukraine and permanent representative of Ukraine to the United Nations. He previously served as deputy minister of foreign affairs of Ukraine from 2014 to 2019. Ambassador Kyslytsya will give a live talk covering topics on Ukraine current events, such

  • IPED Event: Health and Development—A Functional Approach

    Rose Hill, Dealy Hall, E-530 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Sophie Mitra is a professor of economics, founding director of the Research Consortium on Disability at Fordham University, and principal investigator of the Disability Data Initiative. Her research agenda has documented economic insecurity and evaluated policies that try to reduce it. Her work seeks to produce evidence to document disability inequalities through disaggregated statistics and

  • 2023 Anastasi Lecture: ‘Trying to Make Ourselves Useful’

    McNally Amphitheatre 140 W. 62nd St., New York, NY, United States

    Join us for a lecture with Baruch Fischhoff, Ph.D., (Carnegie Mellon University) followed by a reception. Part of society’s return on the investment in our science is the help that we provide in making public policy decisions. The return depends, in part, on the state of our science and our ability to translate it into

  • Financial Issues Forum: Robert Arnott in Conversation with Consuelo Mack

    McNally Amphitheatre 140 W. 62nd St., New York, NY, United States

    Financial thought leader and Research Affiliates’ founder Rob Arnott identifies major market myths—on inflation, value investing, and the supposedly passive nature of index funds—and the investment opportunities they are creating in a wide-ranging, in-person discussion with Consuelo Mack, executive producer of public television’s Consuelo Mack WealthTrack. About the Speakers Rob Arnott is the founder and

    Free
  • Black Studies and Jewish Studies in Conversation: Shared Past/Divided Present—Museums and Public History

    Bateman Room (2-01B), Fordham Law School 150 62nd Street, New York City, NY, United States

    Join Christy S. Coleman, Erica Lehrer, and Annie Polland (in person and on Zoom) for this panel discussion. The past does not change; the way it is told does. While scholars typically write books, public historians and museums translate this scholarship for the broader public. Museums, then, play an important role not only in shaping

  • Council on Foreign Relations Webinar: Military Strategy in the Contemporary World

    Rose Hill, Dealy Hall E-519 , United States

    Stephen Biddle is a senior fellow for defense policy at the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR), a professor of international and public affairs at Columbia University, and the author of notable books that have won prestigious prizes, such as the Council on Foreign Relations Arthur Ross Award Silver Medal for 2005, and the 2005 Huntington

  • IPED Event: Investment and Development

    Dealy E-530 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    ​​​​​Peter Lupoff is the founder and principal of Lupoff/Stevens Family Office, his family's company for direct and third-party impact investments, as well as other grant-making, advisory, research, teaching, and writing activities. He previously served as the CEO of both Net Impact (2019 to 2022) and GOOD Institute (2021 to 2022). Lupoff is a Gabelli fellow

  • Dracula: Medieval Hero and Modern Vampire

    McNally Amphitheatre 140 West 62nd Street, New York, NY, United States

    Dracula—the vampire count—has been a popular cultural mainstay portrayed in films, television shows, novels, and comic books for more than a century. The modern fascination with Dracula began in the 1920s and 1930s with the success of plays and movies based on Bram Stoker’s eponymous novel, first published in 1897. The events described in Stoker’s

  • The 15th Annual Julio Burunat Memorial Lecture

    12th-Floor Lounge, Corrigan Conference Center, Lowenstein Center Lincoln Center Campus, 113 W. 60th St., New York, NY, United States

    Thomas Massaro, S.J., Ph.D., professor of moral theology with a specialization in Catholic social ethics and public theology, will deliver the 15th annual Julio Burunat Memorial Lecture, titled "Pope Francis As Moral Leader: Ethicist, Discerner, Communicator, and Advocate for Social Justice." Recent decades have witnessed a particular type of moral leadership exercised by such global

  • Sinead O’Connor: The Music and Spirituality of an Iconic Artist

    Duane 351 441 E. Fordham Rd., Bronx, NY, United States

    A professor of theology will look back at the ways the iconic Irish singer steeped herself in religion, even as she criticized its institutions. Join us for an afternoon of reflection, conviviality, and music!

  • 2023 Economos Orthodoxy in America Lecture

    McNally Amphitheatre 140 West 62nd Street, New York, NY, United States

    Nadieszda Kizenko will deliver the 2023 Economos Orthodoxy in America Lecture, ‘‘A Vanishing Point: Unity in Orthodoxy and the Ukraine Crisis.” Until recently, it was possible to describe Orthodoxy as “unity in plurality.” Although Orthodoxy consisted of more than a dozen local churches with a wide variety of local practices, and without an overarching structure,

  • 2023 Loyola Chair Lecture

    O'Hare Special Collections Room, Walsh Library 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Join us for the St. Ignatius Loyola Chair Lecture featuring Brian Dunkle, S.J., associate professor of historical theology at the Boston College School of Theology and Ministry. As Christian poets gained status and influence in the Roman Empire, they wrote out of aemulatio, that is, the desire to rival and surpass the great pagan poets

  • The Enduring Legacy of the UCA Martyrs

    Flom Auditorium, Walsh Library 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Join us for this two-part event on the enduring legacy of the UCA Martyrs. Part two will be a lecture by José María Tojeira, S.J., professor, Central American University in El Salvador. José María Tojeira, S.J., was the Jesuit Provincial at the time of the UCA martyrs and led the legal process against the members

  • Sperber Book Prize Awards—Ceremony and Lecture

    12th-Floor Lounge, Corrigan Conference Center, Lowenstein Center Lincoln Center Campus, 113 W. 60th St., New York, NY, United States

    Please join us for the awarding of the 2023 Sperber Book Prize for exceptional achievement in biography, autobiography, or memoir in works about media figures. The Sperber Prize will be awarded to Kathryn S. Olmsted, Ph.D., a professor of history at the University of California at Davis, for her book The Newspaper Axis: Six Press

  • Loving Strangers: How Would Such a Moral Code Reshape Our Lives?

    Flom Auditorium, Walsh Library 441 East Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Social isolation and animosity are arguably the central challenges of our angry age. Can philosophy play a role in overcoming the affective, social, and political alienation that mark our communities today? Meghan Sullivan focuses her work on the ways philosophy contributes to the good life, and she is currently writing a book on the role

  • Screening: The Frontier Gandhi

    Keating First Auditorium 441 E. Fordham Road, Bronx, NY, United States

    Join us for a special screening of the documentary film The Frontier Gandhi, directed by acclaimed filmmaker T.C. McLuhan.The Frontier Gandhi tells the inspiring story of Badshah Khan, a remarkable Muslim peacemaker born in what is now Pakistan's frontier region Kyber-Pakhtunkhwa. In partnership with Mahatma Gandhi, Khan raised a nonviolent army of 100,000 individuals from