Activity
Time:
2018 Winter Lecture Series: Imagining a Just World Order
Date:
7:00 pm –
9:00 pm
Unitarian Church of Lincoln Room: Auditorium
6300 A Street
Lincoln NE
Lincoln NE
With so much of our attention focused on decline of world order, are we over emphasizing the negatives? What would a just world look like and what steps might be taken to achieve it?
The annual Winter Lecture Series is free and open to the public. Lectures will be held from 7-9 p.m. on Sunday evenings from February 18 through March 25 at the Unitarian Church of Lincoln, 6300 A Street, Lincoln, Neb. The series is sponsored by the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at UNL and the Unitarian Church with programming funded in part by the Humanities Nebraska and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment.
Remaining lectures include:
Sun, March 4
Combating Extremism, Dehumanization, War, and Violence: Lessons from the Past for the Twenty-First Century
Jordan Kuck, assistant professor, History, West Virginia Wesleyan College
Professor Kuck will discuss past international and civil wars, terrorism, and violent instability with an eye toward extracting from that analysis those possibly useful lessons that may mitigate future disasters.
Sun, March 11
Managing Cyber Sensitivities
Gus Hurwitz, assistant professor, College of Law, UNL
Professor Hurwitz will discuss the problems that flow from our cyber existence and the potential for and the reality of hacking, fake news, cyber war and attacks on civilian infrastructure. He will also note the role and level of effectiveness of domestic and international law in confronting these threats.
Sun, March 18
Sustainable development, environmental stressors and resilience
Don Wilhite, professor, School Natural Resources, UNL
Professor Wilhite will discuss the challenge of achieving responsible economic growth in light of current and future environmental stressors (e.g., climate change, drought and water scarcity). Those stressors have implications for food security, national and regional conflicts, and environmental refugees.
Sun, March 25
Concluding Panel
David Forsythe, professor, Political Science, UNL; Tyler White, assistant professor or practice, Political Science, UNL; and Dr. Beth Ann Brooks.
The annual Winter Lecture Series is free and open to the public. Lectures will be held from 7-9 p.m. on Sunday evenings from February 18 through March 25 at the Unitarian Church of Lincoln, 6300 A Street, Lincoln, Neb. The series is sponsored by the Osher Lifelong Learning Institute at UNL and the Unitarian Church with programming funded in part by the Humanities Nebraska and the Nebraska Cultural Endowment.
Remaining lectures include:
Sun, March 4
Combating Extremism, Dehumanization, War, and Violence: Lessons from the Past for the Twenty-First Century
Jordan Kuck, assistant professor, History, West Virginia Wesleyan College
Professor Kuck will discuss past international and civil wars, terrorism, and violent instability with an eye toward extracting from that analysis those possibly useful lessons that may mitigate future disasters.
Sun, March 11
Managing Cyber Sensitivities
Gus Hurwitz, assistant professor, College of Law, UNL
Professor Hurwitz will discuss the problems that flow from our cyber existence and the potential for and the reality of hacking, fake news, cyber war and attacks on civilian infrastructure. He will also note the role and level of effectiveness of domestic and international law in confronting these threats.
Sun, March 18
Sustainable development, environmental stressors and resilience
Don Wilhite, professor, School Natural Resources, UNL
Professor Wilhite will discuss the challenge of achieving responsible economic growth in light of current and future environmental stressors (e.g., climate change, drought and water scarcity). Those stressors have implications for food security, national and regional conflicts, and environmental refugees.
Sun, March 25
Concluding Panel
David Forsythe, professor, Political Science, UNL; Tyler White, assistant professor or practice, Political Science, UNL; and Dr. Beth Ann Brooks.