You searched for news/ Esso | Syracuse University Today / Fri, 16 Jan 2026 14:15:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.8.3 /wp-content/uploads/2025/08/cropped-apple-touch-icon-120x120.png You searched for news/ Esso | Syracuse University Today / 32 32 IDJC Names Veteran News Executive Spring 2026 Visiting Fellow /2026/01/16/idjc-names-veteran-news-executive-spring-2026-visiting-fellow/ Fri, 16 Jan 2026 14:15:01 +0000 /?p=331360 Merrill Brown will study existing and evolving business models across the media landscape and new ways to sustain quality journalism.

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IDJC Names Veteran News Executive Spring 2026 Visiting Fellow

Merrill Brown will study existing and evolving business models across the media landscape and new ways to sustain quality journalism.
Jan. 16, 2026
Person
Merrill Brown

Merrill Brown, a veteran news executive and media consultant, has been named a visiting professionals fellow for spring 2026 by the (IDJC).

He plans to use his fellowship to study existing and evolving business models across the media landscape and new ways to sustain quality journalism.

The founding editor in chief of MSNBC.com (now ms.now), Brown brings decades of experience at the intersection of journalism, media innovation and business strategy.

He also served as senior vice president at RealNetworks, editorial director at G/O Media, founder and CEO of the News Project, co-founder of the Online News Association and inaugural director of the School of Communication and Media at Montclair State University.

In addition, Brown has served in roles at The Washington Post and Court TV, and with numerous nonprofit and advisory boards related to journalism, media and civic engagement.

Exploring Sustainable Journalism Models

Brown’s fellowship project will examine revenue strategies, emerging technologies, artificial intelligence and opportunities for innovation to support high-quality journalism, particularly at the local level.

Brown, who holds a bachelor’s degree in political science from Washington University in St. Louis, has also served as a judge for the Newhouse School’s.

A joint initiative of the and the , the IDJC engages in research, teaching, experiential learning and industry partnerships to address challenges to democracy related to the information environment.

“I’m thrilled to have the opportunity to become a fellow at the IDJC,” Brown says. “I’ve been an admirer of the research and teaching done at Newhouse and the Maxwell School. Joining with the experts at the two schools and with [IDJC Kramer Director] to explore media business models and new ways to sustain quality journalism is a timely and important opportunity.”

As part of the fellowship, Brown will engage with students through guest lectures and public programming. His goal is to develop a long-term structure for studying media business models within an academic setting.

“I look forward to being able to conduct research on this vital topic and to share that work and my news industry experience with the University community,” Brown says. “Syracuse is at the center of the urgent future of news research and experimentation, and I look forward to contributing to those efforts.”

Talev sayd Brown’s work and experience will complement two trailblazing initiatives announced recently by the University, including IDJC’s own .

Led by , associate professor of communications, Local NeXT Lab is the first project of its kind that will connect newsrooms, funders and academics to pioneer journalism innovations, with the goal of strengthening local news.

Brown’s work will also be instrumental to the development of the University’s. The center, which is led by Newhouse and the , is building real-world skills in media, entrepreneurship and digital strategy to prepare students for the 21st-century economy.

“We are proud to host Merrill this year as he develops this important work,” Talev says. “Merrill’s research and engagement with students will focus on developing and sustaining the media and communications industries of the future.”

About IDJC’s Visiting Fellow Program

The IDJC’s fellowship program for visiting professionals reflects the institute’s broader mission to connect students with leading voices in journalism and civic life. Through public events, classroom visits and collaborative projects, fellows contribute to a dynamic learning environment that prepares students to become thoughtful, engaged communicators and citizens.

Story by Emma Hudson

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Keeping Endangered Whales Safe By Predicting Their Movements /2026/01/15/keeping-endangered-whales-safe-by-predicting-their-movements/ Fri, 16 Jan 2026 01:23:35 +0000 /?p=331327 A College of Arts and Sciences researcher is working to develop models to predict whale behavior and prevent ship collisions.

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STEM Keeping

A sei whale surfacing while researchers use a drone to gather data about their behavior off the coast of Massachusetts. (Photo by Laura Howes, NMFS Permit 18059)

Keeping Endangered Whales Safe By Predicting Their Movements

A College of Arts and Sciences researcher is working to develop models to predict whale behavior and prevent ship collisions.
Dan Bernardi Jan. 15, 2026

When colossal cargo vessels and whales navigate the same waters, their encounters can end in tragedy. In May 2024, aarrived at a New York City port with a 44-foot endangered sei whale draped across its bow—fatally struck during the voyage. Such collisions pose a catastrophic threat to endangered whale populations, including North Atlantic right whales and sei whales, which frequently feed near busy shipping lanes like those off the coasts of Massachusetts.

For massive cruise and cargo ships, changing course quickly isn’t an option. If a whale appears in their path, collisions are often unavoidable. That’s why predicting whale locations in advance is critical—allowing vessels to chart safer routes from the very beginning of their journey. This is where biologists from the College of Arts and Sciences come in.

Pinpointing when and where these collisions are most likely to occur is the focus of a research project led by, a research assistant professor in the and member of professor Susan Parks’. The project is a collaboration with the, the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, Stony Brook University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

Cusano recently received grant funding from theandto lead a four-year study focused on two endangered whale species: the North Atlantic right whale—of which only about 372 individuals remain—and the sei whale, classified as depleted under the Marine Mammal Protection Act. Both species share a risky feeding behavior that puts them in the path of maritime traffic: they hunt near the ocean’s surface, making them especially vulnerable to ship strikes.

Feeding Forecast

Traditional approaches to preventing ship strikes have relied on tracking whales in real time. Cusano is taking a fundamentally different approach by developing predictive models that anticipate where whales will go next. The research combines detailed studies of whale movement patterns, both at the surface and underwater, with advanced satellite imagery that can identify concentrations of zooplankton prey from space.

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A female North Atlantic right whale swimming at the surface with her calf close to shore. (Photo by H. Foley, NMFS Permit 14809-02)

“We’re essentially creating a forecasting system for whale behavior,” Cusano says. By understanding the conditions that drive feeding behavior and mapping prey hotspots from satellite data, the models aim to provide early warning systems for areas where whales are likely to congregate.

“The technology represents a significant advancement in marine conservation,” Cusano says. “Current methods often involve detecting whales after they’ve already arrived in shipping lanes, leaving little time for vessels to adjust their routes.”

The new predictive approach could provide hours or even days of advance notice, giving mariners sufficient time to implement safety measures.

The research will focus specifically on Massachusetts Bay and the Stellwagen Bank National Marine Sanctuary, areas known for both heavy shipping traffic and important whale feeding grounds. These waters serve as a natural laboratory where researchers can study the complex interactions between whale behavior, prey availability and shipping patterns.

The project’s immediate applications could transform maritime safety protocols. When models predict high probability feeding areas, shipping companies could receive automated alerts recommending reduced speeds or alternate routes. Slower vessel speeds significantly reduce the likelihood of strikes, the severity of injuries and damage to the vessel when collisions do occur.

Conservation at a Critical Moment

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Dana Cusano holding a suction-cup biologging tag while on a 2023 field expedition south of Cape Cod Bay.

The timing of this research proves particularly crucial for North Atlantic right whales. Recent population assessments suggest the species may be experiencing a reproductive crisis, with fewer calves born each year and increased mortality from human activities. Every individual whale lost to ship strikes represents a significant blow to the species’ survival prospects.

The sei whale faces different but equally serious challenges. As one of the least studied large whale species, basic information about their behavior, population size and habitat requirements remains limited. They also experience at rates higher than expected. This research will contribute essential data about sei whale ecology while developing tools to protect them from collisions with ships.

Cusano’s approach reflects a new generation of conservation science that combines traditional biological research with cutting-edge technology. The integration of satellite remote sensing, behavioral ecology and predictive modeling represents the kind of interdisciplinary collaboration necessary to address complex environmental challenges.

Building Conservation Strategies

The project’s success could establish a model for protecting marine mammals in high-traffic areas worldwide. Shipping lanes intersect with critical habitat for numerous whale species across the globe, from blue whales off California to humpback whales in Australian waters.

The research will also contribute to training the next generation of marine conservation scientists at the University. Graduate students and early-career researchers working on the project will gain experience with advanced analytical techniques and collaborative approaches that define modern conservation biology.

The over $2 million investment represents more than funding for a single research project—it’s an investment in developing the scientific tools necessary to safeguard marine mammals in an increasingly crowded ocean.

“For whales hovering on the edge of extinction, this research represents an important opportunity to develop effective protection strategies,” says Cusano. “As global shipping traffic increases, the need for proactive conservation measures becomes ever more urgent.”

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Drone carrying equipment hovers above a whale near a research boat on open water.
Advocating for Disability Rights in Higher Education /2026/01/09/advocating-for-disability-rights-in-higher-education/ Sat, 10 Jan 2026 00:23:54 +0000 /?p=331007 Mary J. Goodwin-Oquendo L’09 credits the College of Law for empowering her to found the Goodwin-Oquendo Law Firm, which champions disability civil rights.

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Advocating for Disability Rights in Higher Education

Mary J. Goodwin-Oquendo L’09 credits the College of Law for empowering her to found the Goodwin-Oquendo Law Firm, which champions disability civil rights.
Caroline K. Reff Jan. 9, 2026

Mary J. Goodwin-Oquendo L’09 learned what true advocacy looks like long before she ever stepped into a law school classroom. Growing up, she watched her mother tirelessly fight to secure appropriate educational services for her younger brother, who has autism and learning disabilities. Seeing firsthand how complex systems can fail families, she began to ask a powerful question: Who helps students who do not have anyone able to challenge the system for them?

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Mary J. Goodwin-Oquendo

Today, Goodwin-Oquendo is that advocate. As the founder of The Goodwin-Oquendo Law Firm in New York City, she champions disability civil rights, particularly related to education, standardized testing, professional licensing and employment. Getting to this point took grit, talent and determination. She credits the College of Law for providing the foundation, flexibility and mentorship she needed to earn her law degree and pursue the work that drives her—advocating for others through the legal system.

Goodwin-Oquendo will speak about her experiences and the process of advocating for bar exam accommodations later this spring during a webinar hosted by the ).

The presentation was purposefully planned as a virtual event, as it accommodates Goodwin-Oquendo’s disability-related needs, as well as those of attendees with disabilities, and allows both on-campus and online JDinteractive students—in addition to other guests around the country—to participate.

Walking in the Steps of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg

Goodwin-Oquendo’s desire to be a lawyer started early. She studied at the James Madison High School Law Institute in Brooklyn, New York—the same school the late U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg attended.

The four-year program helps students understand the legal system through law classes, moot court and mock trials. She came to see attorneys as “helpers,” and realized the law could be her pathway to advocate for those who needed a voice.

Facing Her Challenges and Finding a Mentor

While pursuing her undergraduate degree at St. Joseph’s University in New York, Goodwin-Oquendo was diagnosed with fibromyalgia and learned first-hand how difficult it was to navigate higher education with “an invisible, poorly understood disability.”

However, she learned how to self-accommodate her disabilities, graduated as valedictorian and set her sights on law school. She ultimately chose the College of Law because of its various clinics, particularly the Family Law Clinic, because she knew the challenges from clients who felt vulnerable or unheard would make her a more respectful and transparent lawyer.

Her first year wasn’t easy, as Goodwin-Oquendo navigated the demands as a first-year law student while managing a physical condition that fluctuated day to day. This was compounded by her lack of health insurance (prior to the Affordable Care Act), which limited her ability to receive the care she needed.

“I went from graduating first in my class in college to struggling in my first semester of law school because I didn’t have the physical stamina to keep up the pace,” she says. “Some of the strategies that had worked in high school and college just didn’t work anymore because the expectations of law school were much higher.”

Fortunately, she enrolled in a class led by who took emeritus status in 2024. Kanter is an acclaimed expert in international and comparative disability law and helped Goodwin-Oquendo understand the accommodations she was entitled to. (Kanter founded the DLPP at Syracuse Law in 2005, one of the nation’s most extensive disability law programs in the U.S.)

She is forever grateful to Kanter—who remains a role model—for helping her find ways to manage her disability and continue to succeed. For the past five years, Goodwin-Oquendo has been an adjunct professor at Fordham University School of Law, in part, she says, “to be for my students what Professor Kanter was for me.”

Professor Kanter had many resources, including this ‘holy book’ of disability law firms in the New York area, which were few and far between. She encouraged me during my 2L year to reach out to Jo Anne Simon, a disability civil rights attorney in Brooklyn, who later became a state assembly member, to learn more about working in this part of the legal field.

They connected, and soon Simon offered Goodwin-Oquendo a summer job at the firm. In 2008, the Americans with Disabilities Amendments Act was passed, reaffirming Congress’s commitment to disability rights. That law shaped a lot of the work Goodwin-Oquendo did at the firm.

“It was not light work,” she says, “but the job training I received was nothing short of phenomenal—so much so that I joined her firm after law school and stayed there for the next 14 years. Jo Anne remains a dear friend and mentor, and she has done so much to advance the rights of individuals with disabilities.”

Establishing Her Own Firm for Educational Advocacy

In 2024, she launched the Goodwin-Oquendo Law Firm in New York City, dedicated to representing individuals with cognitive, physical and psychiatric disabilities who face discrimination or need accommodations in education for admissions tests, professional licensing exams, state bar exams and medical boards.

“People come to me because they clearly need certain accommodations to fully access and complete an exam, for example, and they are being denied this for the highest stakes exam of their lives,” she says. “Others come to me because they’ve received a diagnosis later in life or have been living with a disability that wasn’t as challenging for them until they reached college, law school or medical school, and now they need someone to help them understand their options and advocate for their rights.”

Read the full story on the College of Law website

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Advocating for Disability Rights in Higher Education
Students From Shaw Center’s Nutrition Initiative Make Learning Fun /2025/12/23/students-from-shaw-centers-nutrition-initiative-make-learning-fun/ Tue, 23 Dec 2025 19:31:08 +0000 /?p=330707 Falk College students teach nutrition and cooking through hands‑on lessons that empower Syracuse schoolchildren to embrace healthy eating and lifelong food habits.

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Health, Sport & Society Students

Leadership intern Lily Judelsohn conducts a “this or that” game with students from Dr. Weeks Elementary School.

Students From Shaw Center’s Nutrition Initiative Make Learning Fun

Falk College students teach nutrition and cooking through hands‑on lessons that empower Syracuse schoolchildren to embrace healthy eating and lifelong food habits.
Dec. 23, 2025

The fruit salsa with apples, bananas, kiwi, honey and strawberries—and to be scooped with cinnamon tortilla chips—had been placed before the judges.

Only this wasn’t a celebrity chef TV show. In this case, the judges were much more finicky—a classroom of third-grade students from Dr. Weeks Elementary School in Syracuse.

And the final decision? The fruit salsa is a keeper.

“9.0,” said one boy when asked to rate the salsa on a scale of 1 to 10. “9.5,” a girl chimed in. “10.2!” exclaimed another boy.

And when asked about their favorite ingredient, one student shouted, “All of it!”

On this early November morning at Dr. Weeks, the fruit salsa was made by the third-graders with help from Syracuse University students who participate in the award-winningat the University’s.

TheNutrition Initiativeis based in, and run by, the Shaw Center and funded by the , which includes theas one its benchmark programs.

The Nutrition Initiative consists of three programs:Books and Cooks, a literacy, culture, and cooking collaboration with Syracuse City School District elementary schools;Food Busters, a program for Syracuse high school students that explores the science behind food through hands-on activities and experiments; andCooking on the Hillside, where Hillside employees in the program provide cooking lessons to Syracuse high school students.

Shaw Center Assistant Directoroversees a team of seven Nutrition Initiative leadership interns who create the curriculums, purchase and prepare food, and arrange travel for Nutrition student volunteers who participate in the program.

The current faculty advisors from the Department of Nutrition—Associate Teaching Professor (Books and Cooks), Associate Professor(Food Busters), and Associate Teaching Professor (Cooking on the Hillside)—suggest and review lesson plans for the interns.

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“The (Syracuse University) students who come in here are so engaging and our kids thrive in that environment,” says Dr. Weeks teacher Mallory Chavez.

The leadership interns for the fall 2025 semester included Nutrition Initiative coordinator Zoya Ansari ’26 (nutrition science major), Trinity Delgado ’27 (exercise science major in the Falk College), Sophie Denham ’27 (neuroscience and psychology major in the College of Arts and Sciences), Lily Judelsohn ’28 (nutrition major), Natalie Kloman ’27 (nutrition major), Mae Neuman ’27 (nutrition major) and Tracey Rodriguez ’27 (nutrition science major).

For the leadership interns, the common threads for joining the Nutrition Initiative are their fascination with nutrition, and their interest in giving back to the Syracuse community.

“Nutrition is important, especially for young children and teenagers to keep their bodies going and to maintain their health to prevent other problems,” Ansari says. “So going into these classrooms and teaching children nutrition is very important, and we’re doing it in a fun way that makes them excited about making food and trying it.”

Story by Matt Michael and Cathleen O’Hare

For a closer look at each of the Nutrition Initiative programs, visit the Falk College website:

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A classroom setting where a group of students and adults are gathered around a screen displaying images of apples. The room has educational posters on the walls and colorful decorations hanging from the ceiling.
Kivanc Avrenli Named One of Top Undergraduate Business Professors /2025/12/11/kivanc-avrenli-named-one-of-top-undergraduate-business-professors/ Thu, 11 Dec 2025 19:31:58 +0000 /?p=329975 A professor of practice in the Whitman School of Management, Avrenli earned the Poets&Quants distinction for his teaching, mentorship and impact on students.

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Kivanc Avrenli Named One of Top Undergraduate Business Professors

A professor of practice in the Whitman School of Management, Avrenli earned the Poets&Quants distinction for his teaching, mentorship and impact on students.
Dawn McWilliams Dec. 11, 2025

Kivanc Avrenli, professor of practice in finance in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management, has been named one of , a distinction recognizing exceptional teaching, mentorship and impact on students.

The honor is based on Poets&Quants’ comprehensive evaluation of nominations from schools worldwide. Professors are scored on both research (30%) and teaching (70%), with reviewers considering scholarly influence, media visibility, teaching awards, innovations in the classroom and the depth of student impact.

A Transformative Teacher

Avrenli was nominated by David Weinbaum, chair of the school’s Department of Finance, who highlighted the extraordinary reach and quality of Avrenli’s teaching. “Between Fall 2021 and Fall 2025, Dr. Avrenli has taught 65 in-person, 3-credit courses, reaching approximately 2,700 students,” Weinbaum wrote. “He consistently earns near-perfect ratings from students, and he is the highest-rated professor at Syracuse University on Rate My Professor.”

Poets&Quants noted this quote from a student evaluation, “Dr. Avrenli is hands-down the best professor I’ve had. He walks into class with a contagious smile, turns stats into something you actually look forward to, and makes you feel like you can tackle anything. He’s the gold standard for what a professor should be—clear, hilarious and always in your corner.”

When asked what sets him apart as an educator, Avrenli joked: “My energy level, which is the human equivalent of a quad-shot espresso, and the lively animated visuals I deploy to demystify complex concepts.”

A Record of Excellence

At Whitman, Avrenli teaches managerial statistics and specializes in applied statistical methods, probability theory, statistical modeling and experimental design. He received the Faculty of the Year Award in both 2021 and 2022, was named Undergraduate Faculty of the Year in 2020 and has been selected six times as Best Faculty and Class Marshal by U.S. Army students in Syracuse’s Defense Comptrollership Program. He has received the universitywide Laura J. and L. Douglas Meredith Teaching Recognition Award, the Whitman School Teaching Fellow Award and a Faculty Recognition Award from the Office of Disability Services.

Before joining Whitman, he taught at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign, where he was named to the List of Teachers Ranked as Excellent by Their Students seven consecutive times and received the Alumni Award in Teaching Excellence.

Academic and Industry Impact

Avrenli holds B.S. and M.S. degrees in civil engineering from Bogaziçi University in Istanbul—formerly Robert College, the first American college established outside the United States. He later completed a second M.S. in statistics and a Ph.D. in civil engineering with a specialization in commercial aviation safety at the University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign. His expertise in commercial aviation safety and statistical modeling has made him a frequent media commentator in outlets including Newsweek, Law360 and The Washington Post.

Well-Deserved Global Recognition

Poets&Quants received more than 1,200 nominations representing nearly 200 individual professors from more than 60 of the best undergraduate business programs worldwide. The recognition spotlights educators who shape the next generation of business leaders through extraordinary dedication and impact.

When asked what he is most grateful for, Avrenli says “my students, my colleagues and any student who watches my lecture and homework solution videos before asking me the question the video already answers. Also, the cloudy, cold and snowy Syracuse winters.”

To read Avrenli’s full profile and interview, visit

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Man in black jacket, colorful yellow tie, wearing glasses, has a beard.
Newhouse Professor Marks 30 Years Since Dayton With Balkan Photo Exhibition /2025/12/11/newhouse-professor-marks-30-years-since-dayton-with-balkan-photo-exhibition/ Thu, 11 Dec 2025 15:08:34 +0000 /?p=330118 The exhibition features powerful images that capture cultural identity and everyday life across the Balkans three decades after the historic peace agreement.

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Arts & Humanities Newhouse

Bruce Strong (second from left) speaks to visitors at the “Call to Me, Balkans” exhibition at the National Gallery in Sarajevo. (Photo by Claudia Strong)

Newhouse Professor Marks 30 Years Since Dayton With Balkan Photo Exhibition

The exhibition features powerful images that capture cultural identity and everyday life across the Balkans three decades after the historic peace agreement.
Genaro Armas Dec. 11, 2025

Snapping photos with just a smartphone, spent four months traveling across southeastern Europe to create a powerful collection of images that capture life in a region still shaped by its history of conflict and resilience.

The results from Strong’s overseas endeavor are now on display. The new “Call to Me, Balkans” photo exhibition is open on campus in the Schine Student Center’s Panasci Lounge. The exhibition, also simultaneously on display in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, features black-and-white images from Strong’s travels to the region during his 2023 sabbatical and two subsequent trips.

The timing is significant: “Call to Me, Balkans” commemorates the 30th anniversary of theDayton Peace Accords, the agreement that ended the Bosnian war of the 1990s.

“‘Call to Me, Balkans’ captures the rich, diverse and interconnected cultures of the region,” says Strong, an associate professor of visual communications who teaches photo and video storytelling at the . “It celebrates the resilience and beauty of an area heavily impacted by such a devastating conflict.”

Strong has said he hopes the exhibition also fosters connections with Central New York’s Bosnian immigrant community.

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Claudia Strong measures as she sets up the exhibition in Sarajevo. (Photo by Bruce Strong)

Strong is The Alexia Endowed Chair at the Newhouse School. Through grants, scholarships and special projects for photographers, filmmakers and other visual creatives,promotes the power of visual storytelling to shed light on significant issues around the world.

The November opening of the exhibition at Schine featured remarks from , dean of the Newhouse School; , senior associate dean for academic affairs in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs; , professor and undergraduate director of Maxwell’s anthropology department; and Imam , assistant dean for religious and spiritual life at Hendricks Chapel.

The exhibition is curated and designed by his wife, , the curator of communications, design and exhibitions for The Alexia, who also teaches graphic design and writing courses at Newhouse. Strong’s travels took him through Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Montenegro, Albania, North Macedonia, Bulgaria, Serbia and Slovenia.

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The “Call to Me, Balkans” photo exhibition is open in the Schine Student Center’s Panasci Lounge. (Photo by Md. Zobayer Hossain Joati)

Strong developed the Schine exhibition with support from the Newhouse School’s , which funds faculty and student research. The National Gallery exhibition in Sarajevo was funded by the University’s .

Strong said he challenged himself on this project to work exclusively with a smartphone in order to push creative boundaries and prove that powerful storytelling doesn’t always require expensive equipment.

This project has already received international acclaim, with work from the exhibition awarded by the Sarajevo Photography Festival and featured in China as a solo exhibition at the Pingyao International Photo Festival in 2024.

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Three visitors stand in front of a gallery wall displaying black-and-white photographs while a person gestures toward the artwork during an exhibition
9 Faculty, 5 Organizations Receive Arts Grants /2025/12/01/2026-nys-council-on-the-arts-grants-presented/ Mon, 01 Dec 2025 15:54:36 +0000 /?p=329528 College of Visual and Performing Arts faculty and University organizations are among more than 2,400 nonprofit arts and culture groups and individuals receiving NYSCA awards.

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Arts & Humanities 9

Cast members perform in 'The Hello Girls' at Syracuse Stage. (Photo courtesy Syracuse Stage)

9 Faculty, 5 Organizations Receive Arts Grants

College of Visual and Performing Arts faculty and University organizations are among more than 2,400 nonprofit arts and culture groups and individuals receiving NYSCA awards.
Diane Stirling Dec. 1, 2025

Nine faculty members in the (VPA) and five Universitywide organizations are among more than 2,400 nonprofit arts and culture organizations and individuals receiving (NYSCA) funding for 2026. NYSCA recently.

The following organizations received Support for Organizations awards totaling $110,000 to assist with general operations:

  • , $10,000
  • , $25,000
  • , $10,000
  • , $40,000
  • , $25,000
Visitors
Visitors explore exhibitions in galleries at the Syracuse University Art Museum. (Photo courtesy Syracuse University Art Museum)

Support for Artist awards of $10,000 each were also announced for these faculty members:

  • , professor, Department of Film and Media Arts, for the project “Aphrodite’s Conception”
  • , assistant professor, Department of Film and Media Arts, supporting the Light Work project “By the Skin of Her Teeth”
  • , associate professor, Department of Film and Media Arts, for “By All Your Memories”
  • , associate professor, Department of Film and Media Arts, for “Mid-Film Crisis,” presented with New York Women in Film & Television
  • , assistant professor, School of Art, for “Demigoddess Comic Series”
  • , associate professor, Setnor School of Music (in VPA) and School of Education, for “We Hold These Truths: Commemorating the 250th Birthday of The United States of America”
  • , assistant professor, Department of Drama, for the project “Wolf Women”
  • , instructor in the School of Art, for the work “Night Field,” presented at Stone Quarry Hill Art Park.

In addition, , associate professor in the School of Art, in collaboration with Columbia University faculty members Lynnette Widder and Wendy Walters, received a for the book initiative, “Seeds of Diaspora: Plants, Migrations, Settlements, Cities.” The grant program, a partnership between NYSCA and The Architecture League of New York, recognizes work in architecture, historic preservation and various fields of design.

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Visitors explore gallery spaces at an art museum, viewing paintings and sculptures displayed in rooms with colorful accent walls, track lighting and polished concrete floors.
Student Research Unlocks Protein Interaction Puzzle /2025/11/25/decoding-protein-interactions/ Tue, 25 Nov 2025 16:27:02 +0000 /?p=329368 Yuming Jiang ’25 turns undergraduate math-based research into a published physics breakthrough that could transform how scientists predict drug-protein interactions.

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Student Research Unlocks Protein Interaction Puzzle

Yuming Jiang ’25 turns undergraduate math-based research into a published physics breakthrough that could transform how scientists predict drug-protein interactions.
Renée Gearhart Levy Nov. 25, 2025

When Yuming Jiang ’25 came to Syracuse University from Nanjing, China, he was drawn by the school’s vibrant orange color and its poetic Chinese nickname—”Snow City University.” But it was the opportunity to dive into scientific research as an undergraduate that would define his Syracuse experience and launch his career in physics.

Now a first-year Ph.D. student in the College of Arts and Sciences’ , Jiang has achieved what many researchers spend years working toward: publishing groundbreaking research in the prestigious . The fundamental research has broad applicability to biochemical processes, protein analytics and drug development. The remarkable part? He completed this work as an undergraduate, demonstrating how Syracuse empowers students to conduct graduate-level research with genuine real-world implications.

Dark-haired
Yuming Jiang

Initially a major in A&S as an undergrad, Jiang’s interest in physics was sparked by an entry level course. He reached out to physics professor and began assisting with computational work and coding on high-energy particle physics research. It also turned his primary interest from mathematics to physics, adding a double major.

Two years later, professor recognized Jiang’s exceptional performance in a thermodynamics course and invited him to join his biophysics research program and collaborate with a theoretical biophysicist, assistant teaching professor .

Throughout summer 2024, Jiang immersed himself in the project—developing theoretical frameworks, creating diagrams and performing complex calculations. The work focused on understanding how proteins interact with cell receptors, a fundamental process that controls countless biological functions.

“As an undergraduate researcher, Yuming did superbly well working on a complex issue involving competitive interactions in modern molecular biology, which can be addressed through theoretical and computational physics,” says Movileanu. “He put in relentless effort to overcome any challenges during this research, and he possesses all the personal qualities necessary to achieve great success as a graduate student as well.”

Solving a Complex Puzzle

Cells rely on proteins to communicate and control what happens both inside and outside their boundaries. At the cell surface, “hub” proteins called receptors act like docking stations, connecting with numerous other proteins called ligands that deliver different signals or trigger various cellular actions.

The challenge? These protein interactions are constantly in flux—attaching, detaching and competing with one another based on concentration levels and binding strength. The goal was to predict how different types of ligands compete for the receptor—for example, which ligand has the advantage, and how that advantage shifts as each ligand’s concentration changes.

Jiang and his collaborators applied an innovative solution: queuing theory, a mathematical approach originally developed to study waiting lines. By modeling how proteins “take turns” binding to receptors, they created a system that can calculate receptor occupancy based on the rate at which each protein binds and unbinds, and its concentration.

Their findings revealed surprising complexity. Even in a simple system with just three proteins competing for the same receptor, changing the amount of one protein dramatically affects how the other two interact—similar to how one person cutting in line changes everyone else’s wait time.

For more complex systems involving many competing proteins, the team developed a simplified “coarse-grained” model that groups similar proteins together, making the calculations more manageable while maintaining accuracy.

By providing a quantitative tool to predict receptor behavior when multiple signaling molecules compete for binding sites, this research could help scientists better understand how cells process complex signals and how disruptions in these interactions might lead to disease. For pharmaceutical development, the ability to predict drug-protein interactions could accelerate development while reducing the need for certain human trials. “We might be able to predict how a drug is acting on a target protein, target cells,” Jiang says. ” I think that’s the most profound implication.”

A Pattern of Excellence

The research publication was not an isolated success. Jiang won the mathematics department’s for promising math majors as a junior and the Erdős Prize for Excellence in Mathematical Problem-Solving for his performance in the Putnam Competition, one of the most prestigious mathematics competitions in the United States. He was also named a 2025 Syracuse University Scholar, the highest undergraduate honor the University bestows.

Jiang’s story illustrates the University’s distinctive approach to undergraduate education—one where students don’t simply learn about science from textbooks, but actively contribute to advancing human knowledge. By connecting talented undergraduates with faculty conducting cutting-edge research, Syracuse creates opportunities for discoveries that resonate beyond campus.

“Working with undergraduates like Yuming is a very rewarding experience,” says Skanata, one of Jiang’s faculty mentors. “It was a joy to see him succeed and I look forward to his future contributions as he taps into the immense potential that he carries within.”

For Jiang, research was an essential component to his undergraduate experience. “Doing research as an undergrad allows you to experience more than your peers,” he says. “Undergraduate research allows you to explore different fields without the intense pressure graduate students face, providing freedom to discover genuine interests and build skills.”

As he continues his Ph.D. studies in physics, building the knowledge foundation needed for theoretical physics, Jiang carries forward the skills and confidence gained through his undergraduate work. “I love the process,” he says. “Being lost in a tough problem and working through solutions in an organized way to find what’s true and what can advance science.”

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Protein molecules
Project Mend Empowers Justice-Impacted Individuals Through Publishing /2025/11/25/writing-new-futures-project-mend/ Tue, 25 Nov 2025 14:20:54 +0000 /?p=329373 Project Mend offers storytelling platforms and professional opportunities for justice-impacted communities.

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Arts & Humanities Project

Patrick W. Berry (center) with Mend author Marvin Wade (left) and Mend editor Alexis Kirkpatrick (right) at the Project Mend event, “When I Think of Freedom…” in July 2025.

Project Mend Empowers Justice-Impacted Individuals Through Publishing

The initiative offers storytelling platforms and professional opportunities for justice-impacted communities.
Dan Bernardi Nov. 25, 2025

was founded on a powerful premise: self-expression through writing holds transformative potential.

This year, the honored Project Mend with its 2025 Outstanding College-Community Partnership Award, the initiative’s efforts to empower justice-impacted individuals through writing and publishing.

The project, developed by , associate professor of writing and rhetoric in the College of Arts and Sciences, is a multimodal, grassroots-level, open-access national archive centered on the scholarly and creative work of incarcerated and formerly incarcerated individuals and their communities. It is grounded in a digital storytelling and publishing apprenticeship for justice-impacted people, providing practical skills and professional opportunities.

Complementing the effort is “,” a print and digital journal that publishes works by anyone impacted by mass incarceration, amplifying voices that are often marginalized or silenced.

“Both components concern the power of writing to bring about change, exploring how individuals learn to write themselves into new identities and new lives,” Berry says.

The‘s Outstanding College-Community Partnership Award specifically honors initiatives that embody collaboration and reciprocity between universities and communities. The Coalition’s array of programs and member projects help catalyze community-based writing for the public good.

Berry’s work exemplifies the spirit of the award through meaningful partnerships that center the voices of justice-impacted individuals.

David Todd talked about Project Mend’s transformative role at a in the spring.

“Writing is one of the factors that boosted my confidence,” he said during the dialogue facilitated by the . “I was able to express myself, and when I’m able to express myself, people start to listen to me.”

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From left to right: David Todd, Thomas Gant and Patrick W. Berry taking part in a community dialogue in March 2025.

The success of Project Mend has been made possible through partnerships with the Center for Community Alternatives and support from the Humanities New York Post-Incarceration Humanities Partnership, funded by the Mellon Foundation and the CNY Humanities Corridor.

At the University, Project Mend is supported by the Engaged Humanities Network, CODE^SHIFT (Collaboratory for Data Equity, Social Healing, Inclusive Futures and Transformation), the Humanities Center, the SOURCE, Syracuse University Libraries and the Department of Writing Studies, Rhetoric and Composition. Berry also received an award from the Office of Research’s Good to Great (G2G) Grant Program, designed to help faculty secure major external funding by supporting the revision of promising grant proposals.

The multifaceted support has helped Berry strengthen the initiative as it prepares for its next phase of growth. Its new work includes a series of animated films that highlight selections from the pages of “Mend.” On Thursday, Nov. 13, Wade and animator Evan Bode will premiered “Prison and Time,” adapted from a piece in the 2025 issue of the journal.

In January, Project Mend will also launch “Mend Fences,” a podcast series of recorded conversations inspired by contributions to the journal.

As Project Mend applies for new grants and reconfigures as a comprehensive national archive, it continues to demonstrate how writing can be a powerful tool for transformation. By giving formerly incarcerated individuals and their families platforms to share their narratives, Berry’s initiative creates opportunities for justice-impacted people to reimagine themselves, their communities and their futures.

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Paulo Shakarian to Present at the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence Conference /2025/11/10/paulo-shakarian-to-present-at-a-a-a-i-conference/ Mon, 10 Nov 2025 20:27:11 +0000 /?p=328545 The Electrical Engineering and Computer Science professor will address metacognitive artificial intelligence at the Singapore conference in January 2026.

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STEM Paulo

Paulo Shakarian

Paulo Shakarian to Present at the Association for the Advancement of Artificial Intelligence Conference

The Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science professor will address metacognitive artificial intelligence at the Singapore conference in January 2026.
Nov. 10, 2025

KG TanEndowed Professor of Artificial Intelligence Paulo Shakarian was as one of 10 speakers to address emerging trends at the in Singapore from Jan. 20-27, 2026. AAAI is the premier scientific society dedicated to artificial intelligence (AI), advancing the scientific understanding of the mechanisms underlying behavior and their embodiment in machines.

The emerging trends in AI track at the AAAI conference aims to expose the AI community to exciting, under recognized or fast-developing ideas from the various AI subdisciplines, as well as from adjacent disciplines and domains. Talks will summarize new developments and competitions that are likely to shape future AI research agendas.

Shakarian will be discussing metacognitive artificial intelligence and a recent paper titled “Towards Artificial Metacognition.” Metacognitive AI deals with the study of artificial intelligence systems that can self-monitor and/or regulate resources. The concept has its roots in cognitive psychology studies on human metacognition. It has led to the understanding of how people monitor, control and communicate their cognitive processes.

“It is an honor to have been selected to present an emerging trend talk at AAAI,” Shakarian says. “I am really grateful to the community of researchers that have coalesced around artificial metacognition over the past two years. An exciting community has formed consisting of not only computer scientists, but from diverse disciplines including cognitive psychology, systems engineering and aerospace, among others. Developing artificial systems that reason about themselves is, in my view, a key challenge that we must address in order to deliver AI systems that are more resilient and robust.”

Shakarian has written numerous papers on metacognitive AI and has also edited a book on the topic. He has received several grant awards on the topic from the Army and DARPA, and most recently he has received funding for several high-end Nvidia-based GPU systems that will soon arrive at Syracuse.

Shakarian has also sought to create a , holding several workshops on the topic since 2023.

“Paulo’s innovative work in metacognitive and neuro-symbolic AI represents the next wave of AI research,” Alex Jones, chair of , says. “His recognition by AAAI signifies both his leadership in the field and Syracuse University’s growing role at the forefront of artificial intelligence.”

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Research Reveals How Post-9/11 Media Coverage Shaped a Controversial Conviction /2025/11/05/research-reveals-how-post-9-11-media-coverage-shaped-a-controversial-conviction/ Wed, 05 Nov 2025 16:03:34 +0000 /?p=328341 Lender Center for Social Justice research examined how media coverage of Yassin Aref's arrest and conviction shaped public understanding in ways that supported prosecution narratives.

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Communications, Law & Policy Research

"The Stories We Told Ourselves: The American War on Terror" research team conducted both data and anecdotal reviews of words, headlines and news story framing to arrive at their conclusions. (Photo by Leigh Vo)

Research Reveals How Post-9/11 Media Coverage Shaped a Controversial Conviction

Lender Center for Social Justice research examined how media coverage of Yassin Aref's arrest and conviction shaped public understanding in ways that supported prosecution narratives.
Diane Stirling Nov. 5, 2025

was an Iraqi Kurdish refugee and respected imam living in Albany, New York, when as part of a controversial FBI sting operation in 2004. Though critics argued that the government failed to provide evidence of Aref’s guilt, he was before to Iraq.

What role did media coverage play in Aref’s story? That was the focus of a research project sponsored by the and conducted by and five Lender Student Fellows.

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Faculty fellow Husain, left, says data illustrated how media framing of Yassin Aref’s arrest and trial contributed to initiatives to justify added funding for police and prosecutorial work by generating convictions related to “war on terror” charges. (Photo by Leigh Vo)

Their findings, which will be presented at a symposium, “: The American War On Terror,” on Nov. 7 and Nov. 8, showed how local and regional news coverage shaped public understanding in ways that supported prosecution narratives and made conviction more likely.

The findings are also being showcased as an exhibition on Nov. 8 and Nov. 9 at . That event is sponsored by the Lender Center with support from the New York Humanities Center, Coalition for Civil Freedoms, Muslim Counterpublics Lab and Syracuse Peace Council.

The research team’s comprehensive examination of news coverage around the case found the following themes and patterns.

Over-Reliance on Official Law Enforcement Sources

  • Reporting contained official government narratives and cited law enforcement and government officials more frequently than any other source, an imbalance that presented readers with primarily one perspective on the case.
  • Coverage failed to question the legitimacy of the sting operation via independent experts.
  • Alleged connections to terrorist organizations in news reports were based on weak or unverified evidence.
  • Most media misreported, and then failed to correct, a claim by federal government translators that Aref’s name was found with a Kurdish word meaning “commander” in front of it; the word actually means “brother.”

Uncritical Framing of Sting Operations as a National Security Necessity

  • 60% of articles portrayed terrorism stings as essential to national security and helped normalize controversial law enforcement practices.
  • Coverage celebrated the sting as a counterterrorism success before the trial had concluded.
  • Articles linked the arrest to heightened terror alerts, even when officials said cases were unrelated.

Direct Impact on Public Perception

  • An emphasis on potential terrorist connections influenced how the public viewed Aref’s credibility.
  • News coverage emphasized Aref’s identity as a Muslim more than any other identity he held.
  • Most reporting was incomplete and did not include the voices of his family, community or even his lawyer.

Gauging Fair Reporting

Husain, an assistant professor of magazine, news and digital journalism in the Newhouse School, examines and reports on the ongoing “war on terror,” including the impacts of its news coverage. She believes that newsrooms have the potential to use their resources to assure more accuracy in reporting, and that the public has the ability to assess the reliability of news coverage they see.

“One of the big solutions is to give journalists enough time to properly report a story using objective and investigative methods,” she says. “It’s Journalism 101, but reporters speaking to many and varied sources about a situation is an important step in getting as close to the truth as you can.”

News outlets can also guard against poorly reported stories and assure better accountability to their audiences “by making sure their reporting is driven not by those in power, but by the people who are most affected by the decisions of those in power,” she says.

Journalists can also audit their own systems to make sure their reporting is not harming communities, she says. “When newsroom leadership fails to do this, it falls upon individual journalists to take responsibility. Reporters have always been able to push editors and higher-ups to change coverage or to pursue certain stories.” Husain also cites the resource and its as a tool for news consumers.

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A walking tour of Manhattan history, from its origins through 9/11 and beyond, was part of the faculty-student team research. Student fellow (Mohammad) Ebad Athar, seated at left, and faculty fellow Nausheen Husain, seated second from right, followed with a workshop on the importance of sharing community stories that challenge dominant narratives about Muslims.

The student fellows for the project are:

  • Mohammad Ebad Athar (College of Arts and Sciences/history); and Azadeh Ghanizadeh (College of Visual and Performing Arts/writing studies, rhetoric, and composition); both current doctoral candidates
  • Olivia Boyer ’26 (S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications/magazine, news and digital journalism)
  • Mary Hanrahan ’25 (College of Visual and Performing Arts)
  • Tia Poquette ’25 (Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs)

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Sudha Raj Receives Medallion Award for Groundbreaking Contributions /2025/10/29/sudha-raj-receives-medallion-award-for-groundbreaking-contributions/ Wed, 29 Oct 2025 18:02:34 +0000 /?p=327849 The Falk College professor has spent over 40 years advancing nutrition science through research, teaching and service to the health of communities around the world.

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Health, Sport & Society Sudha

Alumni, faculty and staff from Falk College’s Department of Nutrition and Food Studies gathered in Nashville to celebrate Sudha Raj’s Medallion Award.

Sudha Raj Receives Medallion Award for Groundbreaking Contributions

The Falk College professor has spent over 40 years advancing nutrition science through research, teaching and service to the health of communities around the world.
Matt Michael Oct. 29, 2025

Growing up in India, Sudha Raj’s childhood dream was to become a physician. But there was one problem: She didn’t like the sight of blood.

Thanks to the influence of her parents and a friendly neighbor, Raj discovered a different way to help people by focusing her career on nutrition science and dietetics. She moved to Syracuse in 1981 to enroll at the University, and while she never left Syracuse, she has made an enormous impact around the globe.

Portrait
Prof. Sudha Raj

In particular, Raj is known worldwide for her studies to investigate dietary acculturation patterns of Asian Indian immigrants in the United States and her various leadership roles with the , the world’s largest organization of food and nutrition professionals. Closer to home, she’s an award-winning and researcher in the in the .

Recognizing Raj’s groundbreaking contributions to the field of nutrition and dietetics, the Board of Directors selected Raj as a recipient of the , which was presented at an honors breakfast Oct. 12 during the in Nashville, Tennessee.

“Sudha has an inquiring mind and has mentored thousands of students to carry that quest for inquiry, but also cultivated a culture of integrity, purpose and shared commitment to advancing the profession,” says Harlivleen “Livleen” Gill, who served as the 2024-25 president of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. “Beyond her research and education, Dr Raj is known for her warmth, compassion and genuine connection with her colleagues and students.”

Nutrition and Food Studies Associate Professor first met Raj when she joined the University faculty in 1998, and Bruening says Raj is the first faculty member to receive a national award of this stature since the legendary in the early 1990s.

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Sudha Raj’s husband, S.P. Raj, and daughter, Minakshi, joined Raj for the Medallion Award ceremony at the Food & Nutrition Conference & Expo in Nashville.

“For her many professional, scholarly and educational accomplishments at the local, national and international level, and for her selfless generosity to making all of us who are privileged to know her better global citizens, I strongly recommend Dr. Sudha Raj for the Medallion Award,” Bruening wrote in her recommendation letter to the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics’ Awards Committee.

Nutrition and Food Studies Associate Professor Lynn Brann joined the Syracuse faculty in 2003 and says Raj has brought her expertise in multiple areas to the department through new course development and her dedicated mentoring of undergraduate and graduate students.

“Seeing Sudha receive this award brings me joy,” Brann says. “Sudha has been thoughtful and deliberate to select areas of nutrition that are meaningful to her and that impact the population at large. I am inspired to follow her pursuit of advancing the profession.”

For her part, Raj says she was excited to receive the Medallion Award and mingle with the five other award recipients from around the country. But she sees the honor as a “team effort” because of the support she has received from her colleagues over the years.

“In the nutrition department we have the best colleagues to work with,” Raj says, “and a lot of things happened here (at Syracuse) through the Academy’s initiatives because my colleagues saw value in it.”

Read the full story on the Falk College of Sport .

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Estonia Fulbright Gig Launches Global Entrepreneurial Teaching Tour /2025/10/28/estonia-fulbright-gig-launches-global-entrepreneurial-teaching-tour/ Tue, 28 Oct 2025 17:00:05 +0000 /?p=327545 Branagan’s global journey began with a 2021 Fulbright Specialist grant to help universities in Estonia create media entrepreneurship programs. He has since spoken to audiences in more than a dozen countries.

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Communications, Law & Policy Estonia

Sean Branagan enjoyed a Fulbright project in Estonia in 2022 then returned as keynote speaker for the 2023 ScreenME-Net Summit on Media Entrepreneurship. (Photo courtesy of Branagan)

Estonia Fulbright Gig Launches Global Entrepreneurial Teaching Tour

Sean Branagan’s global journey began with a 2021 Fulbright Specialist grant to help universities in Estonia create media entrepreneurship programs. He has since spoken to audiences in more than a dozen countries.
Diane Stirling Oct. 28, 2025

As a “serial entrepreneur” and interactive marketer, has applied his across varied careers. More recently, he has worked with global audiences in a dozen countries, sharing his knowledge of the creator economy.

A 1980 graduate of the , Branagan returned to the school in 2011 to found the and teach media innovation courses.

The center runs the , a where students test digital content and media ideas and connect with faculty and media mentors and entrepreneurs. Branagan has also launched student startup competitions, entrepreneurship programs, the interactive series “” and , a seed fund for tech hub startups. He coaches numerous startups and venture funds.

Branagan’s global journey began with a 2021 grant to help universities in Estonia create media entrepreneurship programs. Affiliated with Tallinn University’s Baltic Film and Media School, he spent two months in 2022 conducting workshops, making presentations and immersing himself in the country’s startup scene.

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Branagan traveled to the U.K. to brief members of Parliament on the creator economy and existing technologies and their evolution as they considered a bill proposing to ban cell phones in schools.

He returned to Estonia to keynote the 2023 -Net Summit on Media Entrepreneurship. The organization is comprised of European university professionals focused on improving research into and teaching entrepreneurship teaching for the screen media industry.

More speaking requests followed. He has since spoken to journalism students in Belgium, government officials and business leaders from across the African continent in Ethiopia, sports leaders in Ireland, media researchers in Lithuania, corporate communicators in Germany, musicians in Slovakia and policy makers in the United Kingdom.

He has also participated virtually at universities and conferences in India, Nepal and South Africa, and is teaching creative entrepreneurship in a virtual format to 500,000 high schoolers across India, Indonesia and the Middle East. Recently, he traveled to the U.K. to brief members of Parliament on the creator economy and existing technologies as they considered a bill proposing to ban cell phones in schools. In December he (along with Newhouse Professor and other education technology and government leaders) will address hundreds of top students at the at in Coimbatore, India.

We asked Branagan about those experiences, his reaction to questions he receives from media innovators worldwide and how his global work impacts his teaching.

Q:
Did you expect your Fulbright project to launch a global speaking tour?
A:

I didn’t anticipate that, but I am incredibly fortunate that it did. The timing and topic were perfectly aligned. Since then, as word spread, I’ve addressed all types of groups. It has been an amazing experience.

Q:
What is your reaction to the ways media and creative entrepreneurship have taken hold in diverse cultural, geographic and economic settings?
A:

I am most surprised that participants at these events come from all over the world and from nearly all walks of life. The concept resonates with [everyone from] high school students [to]…an Olympic organizing committee in Australia. Many startups and tech companies [want] to leverage the creator economy for growth or new offerings. Others seek insights into its future. Some economies view it as a vital uplift for people to tell their stories and earn a living. In more developed economies, the focus is on building a vibrant creator economy.

Q:
With artificial intelligence (AI) tools, platform shifts and new monetization models, the digital landscape has been upended since 2021. Has your initial “power to the creators” message also evolved?
A:

There are now more tangible examples. Five years ago, I described the potential of creators; now I point to concrete successes like “” [a Latvian animated film] winning an Oscar, over 50% of Grammy winners being independent artists and numerous successful online shows.

People are increasingly interested in discussing technology, especially AI and its impact. While there is concern about job security, I emphasize how this new economy shifts access, control and ownership, empowering creators to develop and own their audience relationships and directly monetize their content.

Q:
Where is the creator economy headed?
A:

My dad used to say that immigrants to America were tailors, butchers, dressmakers, deli owners and dreamers … all looking for opportunity to start something [new]. The creator economy is almost the reverse. It comes to you, wherever you are!

Powered by digital channels with built-in capabilities and access to global markets, anyone can be a creator, develop an audience and generate a living. And startups are smaller, faster, global and making money faster because of AI. Particularly in the media and entertainment sectors, there is a lot happening in this ‘AI economy.’

Q:
How can countries and institutions support the creator economy?
A:

I generally advise them to enact laws that hold media platforms accountable, exactly as Congress’ 1996 enactment of did for television, publishing and media companies here for decades.

The act’s goal was to encourage expansion of the internet by protecting online service providers from being treated as ‘publishers’ of user-generated content. We can now see [its] unintended consequences. With GenAI tools, [countries] also need to understand how these systems work so they can augment copyright and legal rights of individuals … and creators of all kinds.

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Also invited to brief Parliament attendees was Syracuse alumna Maggie Mabie (second from right). An attorney with the Marsh Law Firm in New York whose practice includes cases involving online facilitated harms to children, she spoke about her cases against big tech in the U.S. and the success of screen-limiting legislation in New York.
Q:
How has your international experience shaped your teaching?
A:

It has significantly boosted my credibility and enhanced my ability to explain what my students are already witnessing online. They’ve watched “” and they see the movement. They fluidly follow media and channels and personalities from all over the world without even thinking about it. I help them rethink what they might want to do in their careers and where they might live and work.

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New Endowed Scholarship Supports Maxwell Undergraduates /2025/10/27/new-endowed-scholarship-supports-maxwell-undergraduates/ Mon, 27 Oct 2025 19:17:23 +0000 /?p=326849 The scholarship created with a generous gift by Maxwell School alumnus H. Lewis “Lew” Rapaport and his wife, Whitman alumna Susan Rapaport.

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Communications, Law & Policy New

Susan and H. Lewis “Lew” Rapaport

New Endowed Scholarship Supports Maxwell Undergraduates

The scholarship was created with a generous gift by Maxwell School alumnus H. Lewis “Lew” Rapaport '59 and his wife, Whitman alumna Susan Rapaport '59.
Oct. 27, 2025

As the founder of the highly successful construction services firm Component Assembly Systems (CAS), Lew Rapaport’s life’s work can be seen throughout some of the country’s most iconic structures: Yankee Stadium, Carnegie Hall and the Freedom Tower at One World Trade Center, to name just a few.

But the most important legacy we have, he says, is the way that we treat others.

“Nobody blooms alone,” says Rapaport ’59 of his achievements as the chairman and CEO of CAS.

“If you get there,” he adds, “you didn’t do it on your own—there were a lot of people behind you.”

Rapaport, who received a bachelor’s degree in American studies from the in 1959, credits a “huge amount of folks” with helping him to get where he is today, including the professionals at CAS and his wife, Susan, a 1959 graduate of the who had her own successful career.

He also credits the lessons he learned as an undergraduate at Maxwell. To help others just starting out and to show their gratitude to Maxwell and celebrate its recent 100th anniversary, Lew and Susan Rapaport have the Maxwell Endowed Undergraduate Scholarship fund.

“This generous gift by Lew and Susan demonstrates their enduring commitment to supporting Maxwell and Syracuse University in a most meaningful way—by reducing the financial burden on undergraduates, enabling them to focus on their academics and related learning opportunities,” says Dean David M. Van Slyke. “We are grateful to the Rapaports for their longstanding friendship and generosity to Maxwell, not only because of the benefit to our students, but also because their gift may inspire generosity among others.”

The $100,000 gift marks the Rapaports’ second endowed scholarship at Maxwell; in 2018 they the Susan and H. Lewis Rapaport Endowed Scholarship to benefit undergraduate students studying history or political science.

Modest Beginnings

Growing up in Queens, Lew Rapaport’s work ethic and business sense were shaped by his grandfather, a plumber and business owner on the Lower East Side of Manhattan, and his father, an architect who owned his own firm. However, the younger Rapaport’s main interests were not construction; they were American history and military history.

“I read just about every book my high school library and the local library had on the Civil War,” he says.

Rapaport came to the University in 1955 as a young ROTC candidate during the Korean War. He began taking classes in history and economics, eventually declaring a major in American Studies.

“The professors I had, some of them were world famous,” he says. “Stuart Gerry Brown was one of the foremost experts in the United States on Ralph Waldo Emerson.”

He credits the school with helping to broaden his perspective, see the world from multiple viewpoints and to understand how democracy works.

Another Maxwell professor, Władysław Kulski, served in the Polish foreign ministry before World War II and helped to negotiate the Anglo-Polish military alliance.

“He used to read to us every day from ‘Pravda,’ telling us what they were saying from the Russian point of view and then read from ‘The New York Times’and there were two different stories,” Rapaport says. “I realized right away … you needed world information and you needed information from people who were there and lived it, like Dr. Kulski.”

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He also learned how to disagree respectfully while staying true to his values—an especially important lesson for today’s undergraduates, he says.

Rapaport recalls an incident on campus in which an anti-war protest group tried to disrupt ROTC marching drills.

“I said to myself when it was all over, and I would say this today to young people: Stand up for what you think is right. You may not agree with my side, and I may not agree with your side,” he says. “But you must try to negotiate.”

Meanwhile, Rapaport’s fiancé, Susan, transferred to the University from Skidmore College and earned a business degree from Whitman.

Helping Hands

By the time Lew and Susan graduated from the University in 1959, the Korean War had ended. The two married before Lew went into the Army and graduated from the U.S. Army Artillery and Missile School at Fort Sill, later serving as a training officer at Fort Dix. After completing his service, he took a job as a construction supervisor for the Webb & Knapp Co. in New York City, which built the Lincoln Towers.

Soon, in 1964, he and a co-worker started a small business of their own, called Score Carpentry—the precursor to CAS. Their first project was the Gas Pavilion Building at the New York World’s Fair. Over the next six decades, Rapaport grew the company nationally with eight locations in major cities throughout the U.S.

A longtime Maxwell School Advisory Board member, Rapaport is a Life Trustee of the USS Constitution Museum in Boston and a member of the Patriots Circle of the World War II Museum in New Orleans. In 2024, the Maxwell School awarded Rapaport the Centennial Changemaker Award in Economic Development.

Key to his success, Rapaport says, has been his enduring credo.

“Never give up,” he says, adding, “and always do unto others as you would have done unto you.”

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Syracuse Research Featured All Week on ‘The Academic Minute’ /2025/10/24/syracuse-research-featured-all-week-on-the-academic-minute/ Fri, 24 Oct 2025 14:08:53 +0000 /?p=327451 The University will take center stage on the nationally syndicated program “The Academic Minute” during the week of Oct. 27-31, marking the first time the program has dedicated an entire week to showcasing Syracuse University research.

Five Syracuse scholars will share their groundbreaking work with audiences across more than 70 NPR-affiliated stations throughout North America and wit...

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Syracuse Research Featured All Week on ‘The Academic Minute’

Daryl Lovell Oct. 24, 2025

The University will take center stage on the nationally syndicated program “The Academic Minute” during the week of Oct. 27-31, marking the first time the program has dedicated an entire week to showcasing Syracuse University research.

The

Five Syracuse scholars will share their groundbreaking work with audiences across more than 70 NPR-affiliated stations throughout North America and with international listeners worldwide. Each day of “Syracuse Week” highlights the breadth and real-world impact of the University’s scholarship:

Monday, Oct. 27: Leonard Lopoo, associate dean, chair and professor in the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, explores how government policies—from “baby bonuses” to family leave and child care subsidies—shape fertility rates and family formation decisions.

Tuesday, Oct. 28: Claire Rubbelke, former College of Arts and Sciences postdoctoral researcher, examines what ancient climate patterns reveal about modern droughts and future water security challenges. (Related story)

Wednesday, Oct. 29: Rachael Goodwin, assistant professor in the Whitman School of Management, investigates unhealthy perfectionism in professional ballet and its parallels to high-pressure workplace cultures across industries. ()

Thursday, Oct. 30: Kristy Buzard, associate professor in the Maxwell School, analyzes today’s trade wars and tariff policies through the historical lens of early 1900s trade liberalization—revealing patterns that echo across a century.

Friday, Oct. 31: David Fastovich, former College of Arts and Sciences postdoctoral researcher, reveals the urgent story of forests failing to migrate fast enough to keep pace with Earth’s rapidly warming climate. ()

The Academic Minute is a daily two-and-a-half-minute showcase featuring researchers from leading institutions worldwide. This weeklong spotlight positions Syracuse faculty as authoritative voices on the environmental, economic and social challenges shaping our world.

Listen to each researcher’s full segment at .

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