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X-WR-CALNAME;VALUE=TEXT:Disasters in and of the Middle East: Event, Place, Intensity (Day 1)
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SUMMARY:Disasters in and of the Middle East: Event, Place, Intensity (Day 1)
DESCRIPTION:<p><strong>The Disaster Studies Initiative </strong>at the <strong>Center for Middle Eastern Studies</strong> presents a conference</p><p><em><strong>Disasters in and of the Middle East: Event, Place, Intensity</strong></em></p><p>Foregrounding the Middle East and North Africa in scholarly discourse on disasters, the Disaster Studies Initiative at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University is pleased to announce an international conference, to take place March 28 to 30, 2025.</p><p>The MENA region has been the site of earthquakes, famine, floods, wars, conflicts, genocides, massacres, and other environmental, industrial, and technological catastrophes. One recent example, the devastating 2023 earthquake sequence in Turkey and Syria, was the catalyst for the formation of the Disaster Studies Initiative at CMES. Within disaster studies, however, the region is rarely the focus of discussions on changing environments or diverse responses to superlative events.</p><p>In the present time, under the shadow of an intensifying climate crisis, is it still possible to think of disasters such as earthquakes, floods, fires, and wars as significant events? Are they political events at all? For whom are they non-eventful, and for whom are they still experienced as shocks and ruptures? If they are no longer considered to be analytically or politically relevant events, what are we to make of the landscape, trauma, pain, and avenues of desirable change that disasters often generate? How, then, should we deal with disasters—both past and present?</p><p>CMES thanks the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs for their generous support.</p><p>This conference was organized by Cemal Kafadar, Elif Irem Az, Jesse Howell, and Evangeline McGlynn.</p><p><a href="/node/1631161" data-entity-type="node" data-entity-uuid="d85b4bd2-e0b0-46d5-b534-6a77e9ac5b18" data-entity-substitution="canonical">Link to Day 2 of the conference</a>.</p><p><a href="/node/1632356" data-entity-type="node" data-entity-uuid="3054c863-db6d-4c1d-ba2f-ad0daa520c20" data-entity-substitution="canonical">Link to Professor Kim Fortun's Opening Keynote of the conference on March 28</a>.</p><p><a href="https://cmes.fas.harvard.edu/event/rupture-and-repair-towards-critical-phenomenology-disaster">Link to Professor Aidan Seale-Feldman's Closing Keynote of the conference on March 30</a>.</p><p><a href="https://cmes.fas.harvard.edu/sites/hwpi.harvard.edu/files/ds_conf_program.pdf">Link to the conference program</a>.</p><p>Speakers include<br>Onder Akgul, Northwestern University<br>Irem Az, Harvard University<br>Christina Banalopoulou, University of Milan<br>Tylor Brand, Trinity College Dublin<br>Jordan Cannon, Harvard University<br>Ali Çapar, Çankırı Karatekin University<br>Christopher Dole, Amherst College<br>Begum Ergun, Boston University<br>Kim Fortun, UC Irving<br>Matthew Ghazarian, Yale University<br>Peter Habib, Emory University<br>Zuhal Ibidan,&nbsp;Bogazici University<br>Leila Khodabaksh,&nbsp;Catholic University of Eichstäett-Ingolstadt<br>Cyntia Kreichati, McGill University<br>Evangeline&nbsp;McGlynn, Harvard University<br>Soha Mohsen, UC Davis<br>Nathaniel Moses, Harvard University<br>Moad Musbahi, Princeton University<br>Burcu Ozdemir, Graduate Center CUNY<br>Eda Ozel, Postdoctoral Researchers, Istanbul<br>Aidan Seale-Feldman, Notre Dame University</p><p><strong>Co-sponsor:</strong> Weatherhead Center for International Affairs</p><p><strong>Contact: </strong><a href="mailto:eaf073@fas.harvard.edu">Liz Flanagan</a></p>
LOCATION:CGIS South Bldg, Tsai Auditorium, Concourse level, 1730 Cambridge St, Cambridge, MA 02138
STATUS:CONFIRMED
DTSTART:20250329T140000Z
DTEND:20250329T220000Z
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