| FRIDAY SEMINAR SERIES Each Friday seminar hosted by the Center on Terrorism, focuses on a singular aspect of terrorism. The seminar series has been meeting alternate Fridays from 3-5pm since the beginning of the series in the fall of 2002. An invited speaker presents on a topic and a question-and-answer period follows. Refreshments are served and post-seminar conversation is encouraged. Graduate students at John Jay College are urged to attend and participate. We also warmly welcome all those interested in pursuing graduate work or currently working in the field of terrorism. This is an excellent forum for the exchange of ideas helpful to the academic and practitioner alike. The Seminars are also open to the general public. Fall 2006 9/15 “Giuliani and 9/11,” with Wayne Barrett, Senior Editor at the Village Voice. In addition to covering city and state government and politics at the Voice for 28 years, Barrett has written 3 books: City for Sale (1988); Trump: The deals and the downfall (1991); and Rudy! An investigative biography (2000). Barrett’s new book that is just out that he wrote with Dan Collins is called Grand Illusion: The untold story of Rudy Giuliani and 9/11. 10/6 “Counter-Terrorism: Alternatives to Failed Militarism” with Alastair Millar, Vice President of Fourth Freedom Foundation. 10/20 “Global and Local Wars on Terror: International Counter-terrorism Cooperation Five Years After 9/11” with Peter Romaniuk, Assistant Professor of Government at John Jay College. 11/17 “Weapons of Terror: A Response to the Blix Report” with John Burroughs, Adjunct Professor at Rutgers University School of Law. 12/8 "The Ambiguous Synergy Between Media and Terrorism" with Bill Blakemore, Reporter, World News Tonight with Peter Jennings; Chief Science Correspondent for ABC's weekly show, Discovery News.
2/10 – “Ethical and Metaphysical Meanings of Al-Qaeda,” with Faisal Devji, Professor at the New School University, and author of Landscapes of Jihad: Militancy, Morality, and Modernity (2005, Cornell University Press). 3/24 – “Global Terrorist Networks,” with Marc Sageman, Professor at University of Pennsylvania and Foreign Policy Research Institute Senior Fellow at the Center on Terrorism, Counter-Terrorism, and Homeland Security, was a CIA case officer in the 1980's, serving in Afghanistan between 1987–89, and is now a forensic psychiatrist, author of the book Understanding Terror Networks (2004, University of Pennsylvania Press.). 4/7 – “Reflections on Contemporary Iran,” with Ervand Abrahamian, CUNY Distinguished Professor, Department of History at Baruch College and author of the books, Iran Between Two Revolutions (1982, Princeton University Press); Khomeinism: Essays on the Islamic Republic (1983, University of California Press); Inventing the Axis of Evil: The Truth About North Korea, Iran, and Syria (2004, The New Press); among many others. 4/28 – “Security Strategies & Organizational Change,” with Joseph W. Pfeifer, Chief of Counterterrorism and Emergency Preparedness for the New York City Fire Department. Pfeifer is the operational liaison with the FBI’s intelligence office in New York, is responsible for creating emergency response plans for terrorism and major disasters, develops risk assessment and critical infrastructure protection programs, conducts interagency counterterrorism exercises, and coordinates interagency incident management.
5/12 –
“Biological Weapons and the Human and Animal Public Health
Infrastructures: An Overview”
with Laura H. Kahn, physician and
researcher at the Program on Science and Global Security of the
Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at
Princeton University. Fall 2005 9/16 – “The New face of Al-Qaeda” with Alain Bauer, a criminologist at the Sorbonne University and co-author of The Al-Qaeda Enigma and author of Urban Crime in France (French University Press, 2003); Polices in France (French University Press, 2003), Violence and Crime in America (French University Press, 2000), and The War That Just Began (Lattès 2002). 10/ 28 - “Law Enforcement Counter-terrorism Efforts Around the World,” with Maria Haberfeld, Chair of the Department of Law, Police Science, and Criminal Justice Administration at John Jay College. She wrote the book, Critical Issues in Police Training (Prentice-Hall, 2003), co-edited the book, Contours of Police Integrity, (Sage Publications, 2003); and authored another book Police Leadership (Prentice Hall, 2006); in addition to numerous article contributions to law enforcement journals. 11/11 – “The Shadow of Terrorism in a Global Economy,” with Carolyn Nordstrom, Professor of Anthropology at the University of Notre Dame., whose books include: Shadows of War: Violence, Power and International Profiteering in the 21st Century (2004, University of California Press); A Different Kind of War Story (1997, University of Pennsylvania Press); and the edited volume: Fieldwork Under Fire: Contemporary Stories of Violence and Survival (1996, AGCM Robben); among others. 12/9 – “Militarism in Israel-Palestine: The Meanings of Death,” with Avram Bornstein, Associate Professor in the Department of Anthropology at John Jay College, CUNY, and author of Crossing the Green Line between the West Bank and Israel (2002, University of Pennsylvania) and numerous scholarly articles and book reviews on violence and policing, and is currently writing a book about militarism in Israel-Palestine.
SPRING 2005 2/25 – “Islamic Terrorist Networks: Recruitment in European prisons,” with Alon Daniel, a Program Director, Islamic Outreach Program at the World Policy Institute’s Counter Terrorism Project; and Douglas E. Thompkins, Assistant Professor of Sociology, at John Jay College; recipient of the Ford Pre-Dissertation Fellowship and the American Society of Criminology Minority Fellowship; former member and leader of the Gangster Disciples while incarcerated.
3/4 – “Domestic American Terrorism,” with Jeremy Varon,
Assistant Professor of History at Drew University; author of
Bringing the War Home: The Weather Underground, the Red
Army Faction, and Revolutionary Violence in the 60s and 70s
(2004, University of California Press). 4/1 – “Gender and Apocalyptic Violence,” with Lee Quinby, research fellow at the Center on Terrorism; author of Millennial Seduction: A Skeptic Confronts Apocalyptic Culture (1999, Cornell University Press); Anti-Apocalypse: Exercises in Genealogical Criticism (1994, University of Minnesota); and Freedom, Foucault, and the Subject of America (1991, Northeastern University Press); and Catherine Keller, instructor of constructive theology at Drew University; author of From a Broken Web: Separation, Sexism and Self (1988, Houghton Mifflin); Apocalypse Now & Then: A Feminist Guide to the End of the World (1997, Beacon press); and The Face of the Deep: A Theology of Becoming (2003, Routledge); among others.
4/15 – “Terrorism in Turkey,” with Omer Onhon,
Turkish Consul General in New York. Onhon has served in the
foreign services of Turkey; was a diplomat in Saudi Arabia and
Vienna; served in the International Security and Disarmament
Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Turkey; was a
member of the Turkish delegation to NATO; served two years in
Syria in the late 1990s; was head of the Department of the
Middle East in the Foreign Affairs Department in Turkey. FALL 2004
9/10 –
“The World Trade Center Disaster,”
with Sally Regenhard,
Director
of the Skyscraper Safety Campaign (SSC), created in memory of
her son, Christian Michael Otto Regenhardalong; Diana Stewart,
coping with the awful loss of her husband on 9/11; and Manuel
Chea, a survivor of the North Tower and a member of the
Survivors' Network Steering Committee.
11/5 –
“Intelligence Gathering,” with David B.
Low, National Intelligence
Officer of the CIA for Transnational Threats, and Stuart A.
Cohen, Vice Chairman of the National Intelligence Council of
the CIA and for two years a Professor of Law and Police Science
at John Jay College.
SPRING 2004 2/13 – “Terrorism in America,” with Bruce Hoffman, the Vice-President of External Affairs and Director of the Washington Office of the RAND Corporation, and author of the book, Inside Terrorism (Columbia University Press, 1998). 2/27 – “War Profiteering and the Bush Administration,“ with William D. Hartung, Senior Fellow at New School University, Director of the Arms Trade Resource Center, and author of two books: How Much Money Did You Make On the War, Daddy? A Quick and Dirty Guide to War Profiteering in the Bush Administration (Nation Books, 2003); and And Weapons for All (Harper Collins, 1994). 3/19 – “We Are Not Defeated: Justice Not Revenge,” with Marianne Perl, the wife of Wall Street Journalist murdered in Iraq, and author of The Mighty Heart: The Brave Life and Death of My Husband Danny Pearl (Scribner, 2003). 3/26 – “U.S. State Policy: Human Rights and Political Violence,” with Lesley Gill, Professor of Anthropology, American University, and author of The School of the Americas: Military Training and Political Violence in the Americas (Duke University Press, 2004); Teetering on the Rim: Global Restructuring, Daily Life and the Armed Retreat of the Bolivian State (Columbia University Press, 2000), and Precarious Dependencies: Gender, Class and Domestic Service (Columbia University Press, 1994). 4/16 – “Federal, State, and Local Jurisdictions in the Fight Against Terrorism,” with Robert Louden, Professor of Management, John Jay College, and former commander of the NY Police Department Hostage Negotiation Unit. 4/30 – “Politics and Violence in Post-Terrorism Ireland,” with Conor Brady, former editor of The Irish Times and The Sunday Tribune both newspapers in Ireland, and author of two books Guardians of Peace (Prendeville Publishing, second edition 2000) and Up With The Times (2005). 5/14 – “Intersection of Terrorism and Drug-related Violence in Contemporary Columbia,” with Gipsy Escobar, a graduate of John Jay College, and former advisor to the Presidential Office for Urban Security and Peaceful Co-Existence.
FALL 2003 9/12 - "The Selling of Fear in America: The Press, the Iraq War, and Terrorism," with John R. MacArthur, publisher of Harper's Magazine and the author of Second Front: Censorship and Propaganda in the Gulf War (1993, University of California Press).
10/10 – “9/11 and the New York Environment,” with
Juan Gonzalez, columnist for the New York Daily
News, and author of Fallout: The Environmental
Consequences of the World Trade Center Collapse (2002, WW.
Norton and Company); Roll Down Your Window: Stories of a
Forgotten America (1995, Verso Books); and Harvest of
Empire: A History of Latinos in America(2000, Penguin Books),
discussed the environmental effects of 9/11 in New York,
especially in terms of what went into the air, and the mostly
inadequate way public officials handled the information.
11/21 – “History of the Civil War in Sri Lanka and Female
Suicide Terrorists,” with Dilshika Jayamaha,
journalist for the Associated Press and graduate student at John
Jay College, who has covered Sri Lanka and the bloody war and
terrorist campaign of the Tamils.
Spring 2003
FALL 2002 9/27 - “The Nuclear Threat and the New World of Terrorism,“ with Charles B. Strozier, Director, Center on Terrorism, and author of Heinz Kohut: The Making of a Psychoanalyst (Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 2001, paperback from Other Press in 2004); the Introduction and two essays in The Year 2000: Essays on the End, senior editor with Michael Flynn (New York University Press, July, 1997); and senior editor with Michael Flynn of the companion volumes Genocide, War, and Human Survival and Trauma and Self, (Rowman and Littlefield, 1996); among many other books and articles. 10/11 - "Terrorism and the Constitution," with Professor Barry Latzer, Political Science Department, John Jay College, Barry Latzer is Professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and The Graduate Center of the City University of New York and author of two books, State Constitutional Criminal Law (Clark, Boardman, Callaghan, 1995); State Constitutions and Criminal Justice (Greenwood, 1991) and his casebook Death Penalty Cases, now in its second printing; as well as many articles. 10/25 - "The Government, the Afghanistan War, and the Detainees in Guantanamo," with Alisa Stack-O'Connor, Pentagon analyst; former Assistant Director, Counter-Terrorism Policy for the Office of the Secretary of Defense, and faculty member of the National War College. 11/8 - "The Human Consequences of the Israeli Occupation of the West Bank and Gaza," with Professor Avram Bornstein, Anthropology Department, John Jay College, author of the book Crossing the Green Line Between the West Bank and Israel . 11/22 - "Violence and Identity In the Arab World," with Marnia Lazreg, Assistant Professor of Sociology at Hunter College of the City University of New York; author of the book The Eloquence of Silence: Algerian Women in Question (1994). 12/6 - "Apocalyptic Themes in the Anti-Abortion Movement," with Carol Mason, who taught women’s studies, literature, and American Studies at Hobart & William Smith Colleges and the University of Pittsburgh, and author of two books, Killing for Life: The Apocalyptic Narrative of Pro-Life Politics (Cornell University Press, 2002.
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