March 10, 2005
William Paterson University to Host Conference
on Terrorism
A two-day international conference designed to open a discussion
about the global effects of terrorism on democracy will be held
on April 13 and 14 at William Paterson University on the campus
in Wayne.
“Terrorism and Democracy,” begins with a keynote address
by Ambassador Javier Ruperez, executive director of the United Nations
Counterterrorism Committee, on Wednesday, April 13 at 7 p.m. in
the Cheng Library Auditorium.
The conference continues on Thursday, April 14 with four panel discussions
to be held in the Martini Teleconference Center. The morning’s
events begin with a panel from 9:30 to 11 a.m. focusing on “Mapping
Contemporary Terrorism: The Global Contours Post 9/11/01.”
Panelists are Andrea Bertoli, senior research scholar and director,
Center for International Conflict Resolution, Columbia University;
Pascal Boniface, director of the Institute for International and
Strategic Relations, and professor of international relations, Institute
for European Studies, University of Paris; and Ambassador Augustine
P. Mahiga, permanent representative of the United Republic of Tanzania
to the United Nations.
“Contemporary Terrorist Movements: Latin America, the European
Union, Russia and the Caucuses” will be held from 11:15 a.m.
to 12:45 p.m. Panelists are Stephan Duso-Baudin, associate professor,
St. Cyr Military Academy, Maitre de Conferences L’Institut
des Sciences Politiques de Paris, and senior researcher at the French
Army’s Centre de Doctrin d’Emploi des Forces, Ecole
Militaire, Paris, France; Nina Krusheva, professor, Graduate Program
in International Affairs, New School University and senior editor,
Project Syndicate Association of Newspapers Around the World; and
Martin Weinstein, professor of political science, William Paterson
University.
The topic of the first afternoon panel, which will be held from
1:45 to 3:15 p.m., is “Contemporary Terrorist Movements: Israel,
Lebanon and Palestine, Indonesia, South Asia, Africa.” Panelists
are John Gersham, senior analyst, Interhemispheric Resource Center,
Asia/Pacific editor, Foreign Policy in Focus; David Makovsky, senior
fellow and director of the Project on the Middle East Peace Process,
The Washington Institute for Near East Policy, and adjunct lecturer
in Middle Eastern politics, Johns Hopkins University; and Aaron
Tesfaye, assistant professor, political science, at William Paterson
University. Bertoli, Boniface and Makovsky will join Maya Chadda,
professor of political science at William Paterson University, for
the final panel, to be held from 3:15 to 5:15 p.m. They will discuss
“Political Repercussions of the ‘Wars on Terror:’
The Domestic Impacts on Democracy, Human Rights and Peace.”
The program is sponsored by William Paterson University’s
Department of Political Science, the Master’s Program in Public
Policy and International Affairs, the Center for International Studies,
and the Department of African, African American and Caribbean Studies.
For additional information, please call John Mason, professor, political
science department, at 973.720.3421.
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