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Negotiating an End To Civil Wars: Equality Matters

Dr. Daniel Druckman, a well-known scholar and practitioner in the field of conflict resolution, negotiation and peace studies, is coming to Columbia University to present and discuss his research on negotiated agreements, specifically those in the contexts of four issues domains: peace agreements, trade, environment and arms control.

Daniel Druckman is Professor of Public and International Affairs at George Mason University and Distinguished Scholar at the Public Memory Research Centre at the University of Southern Queensland in Australia. He has been the Vernon M. and Minnie I. Lynch Professor of Conflict Resolution at George Mason, a professor at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, a member of the faculty at Sabanci University in Istanbul, and a visiting professor at the Australian National University, University of Melbourne and at National Yunlin University of Science and Technology in Taiwan. He has published widely on such topics as negotiating behavior, nationalism and group identity, human performance, peacekeeping, political stability, nonverbal communication, and research methodology. He is a board member or associate editor of eight journals. He received the 1995 Otto Klineberg award for his work on nationalism, a Teaching Excellence award in 1998 from George Mason University, awards for the outstanding article published in 2001 and the outstanding book published in 2005-2006 from the International Association for Conflict Management (IACM). He is the recipient of the 2003 Lifetime Achievement award from the IACM.

No RSVP is required.

Additional Speakers

Daniel Druckman