EVENTS ARCHIVE

Thursday, March, 26, 2015

Global Terrorism, Jihadi Movements and the Future of War, Scottsdale, Arizona

Global Terrorism, Jihadi Movements and the Future of War

 

Peter Bergen and Daniel Rothenberg

Thursday, March 26, 2015

Topic: “Global Terrorism, Jihadi Movements and the Future of War”

TIME: 6:00pm – 8:30pm (Dinner)

 

 

LOCATION: Gainey Ranch Golf Club

7600 E Gainey Club Dr, Scottsdale, AZ  Map

 

 

Cocktails: 6:00pm Dinner: 6:45pm Program: 7:30pm

 

$55.00 per PCFR member (registrations after 05/04/15 add $10)

 $65.00 per non member (registration after 05/04/15 add $10)

 

 

          

 

 

PCFR is pleased to bring you television journalist and author Peter Bergen and Professor Daniel Rothenberg.

 

Peter Bergen is a print and television journalist and author; the director of the national security studies program at the New America Foundation in Washington D.C.; a fellow at Fordham University’s Center on National Security and CNN’s national security analyst.

 

He has held teaching positions at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University.

 

View more about Mr. Bergen here.

Daniel Rothenberg is Professor of Practice in the School of Politics and Global Studies, the Lincoln Fellow for Ethics and International Human Rights Law and Co-Director of the Center on the Future of War as well as a 2015 Fellow at New America, a DC-based think tank.

His research focuses on human rights documentation and analysis, war and conflict, as well as transitional justice with a focus on genocide, truth commissions, and post-conflict reconstruction.
From 2004 to 2010, he designed and managed human rights and rule of law projects in Iraq, Afghanistan, and Latin America. Before joining the faculty at ASU, Rothenberg was Managing Director of International Projects at the International Human Rights Law Institute at DePaul University College of Law, Senior Fellow at the Orville H. Schell, Jr. Center for International Human Rights at Yale Law School, Assistant Professor in the Department of Anthropology at the University of Michigan, and a Fellow in the Michigan Society of Fellows.
He is the author of With These Hands (University of California), Testimonies (International Human Rights Law Institute), Memory of Silence: The Guatemalan Truth Commission Report (Palgrave), and co-editor of Drone Wars: Transforming Conflict, Law, and Policy (Cambridge University Press).

 

 

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