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EXCELERATE faculty and student excellence
The Charles E. Scheidt Family Foundation has given 黑料视频鈥檚 unique and groundbreaking Institute for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention (I-GMAP) a generous gift to grow the institute and its impact on undergraduate and graduate education.
This gift provides for significant investments in faculty, post-doctoral fellows, research, programming and more, bringing national and global attention to our campus as a leading actor in the international community of atrocity prevention scholars and practitioners. It鈥檒l also support the new Nadia Rubaii Prize and Lecture, as well as memorial fellowships, in her honor. Rubaii was co-director of I-GMAP and a professor before she died in March 2022.
鈥淭he Scheidt Family Foundation鈥檚 first gift established I-GMAP. Its second, larger gift allowed us to grow during some very difficult times, including the COVID pandemic and the death of our co-founder,鈥 said Max Pensky, philosophy professor and I-GMAP co-director. 鈥淭his newest and largest gift from the Foundation is transformational. With this generous support, we will dramatically scale up our existing programs and launch a range of new initiatives. Thanks to this gift, the next few years at I-GMAP will be a very exciting time.鈥
Investing in post-docs
Thanks to the donor鈥檚 generosity, I-GMAP can expand support for Charles E. Scheidt Post-Doctoral Fellows in Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention, including by increasing the number of positions from two to five, starting in 2024. The competitive fellowship, which provides a research stipend and other resources, attracts top applicants from around the world.
Fabian Krautwald, one of the two fellows selected for the 2023-24 academic year, studies African societies鈥 changing interpretations of the colonial past, focusing on the former German colonies in Namibia and Tanzania. He鈥檒l work on his book manuscript, which examines the long-term legacies of colonialism and genocide in African societies and how they鈥檝e affected contemporary campaigns for reparations and the nature of sovereignty on the continent.
鈥淚 chose to pursue this project at Binghamton to work with leading scholars of restorative justice at I-GMAP and to contribute to the University鈥檚 longstanding expertise in Africana studies through a focus on downstream atrocity prevention,鈥 he said.