Celebrate the International Day of Peace with the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies

(part of a series)

Location: Hesburgh Center for International Studies (View on map )

Interested in studying peace? Curious about the status of international human rights?

 

Join us for two days of events focused on this year’s United Nations International Day of Peace theme, “The Right to Peace: The Universal Declaration of Human Rights at 70.”

 

Thursday, September 20

 

Thania Paffenholz Lecture

<a data-type=“url” href=“https://kroc.nd.edu/news-events/events/2018/09/20/pathways-to-inclusive-societies-opportunities-and-challenges-for-international-and-local-peacemaking-and-peacebuilding/”>Pathways to Inclusive Societies: Opportunities and Challenges for International and Local Peacemaking and Peacebuilding in a Turbulent World"

12: 30 p.m., Hesburgh Center for International Studies Auditorium

 

Thania Paffenholz is Director of the Inclusive Peace and Transition Initiative at the Graduate Institute Geneva.

 

Film Screening: “In the Name of Peace: John Hume in America”

7:00 p.m., Hesburgh Center for International Studies Auditorium

 

A documentary film following the story of John Hume, who helped build the framework for peace in Northern Ireland by cultivating relationships with the White House and U.S. Congress. Film director Maurice Fitzpatrick will attend the screening.

 

Friday, September 21: International Day of Peace

 

The Status of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights at 70: A Panel Discussion

11:00 a.m., Hesburgh Center for International Studies Auditorium

 

Featuring Diane Desierto, Maurice Fitzpatrick, Jennifer Mason McAward, and Ernesto Verdeja. Moderated by Erin Corcoran.

 

Lunch and Conversation

12:30 p.m., Hesburgh Center for International Studies Great Hall  

 

Continue the conversation begun during the panel discussion while enjoying a complimentary lunch provided by the Kroc Institute. 

 

Co-sponsored by the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies and the Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies.

 

Free and open to the public. 

 

Image from By VectorOpenStock from Wikimedia Commons. 

Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.