Immigration and globalization expert Marcelo Suarez-Orozco will present "Global
Migration and the American Experience," Tuesday, Oct. 28, at 7:30 p.m. in
Hendricks Chapel. The lecture, which is free and open to the public, is a presentation
of Syracuse Symposium 2008 and Syracuse University's Renee Crown University
Honors Program. Parking is available in the Irving Garage for $3.50.
Syracuse Symposium is a semester-long intellectual and artistic festival celebrating
interdisciplinary thinking, imagining and creating, presented by The College of Arts
and Sciences to the entire Syracuse community. The fall 2008 symposium theme is
migration. Further information about the symposium is available at
http://syracusesymposium.org.
Suarez-Orozco is the Courtney Sale Ross University Professor of Globalization and
Education and co-director of immigration studies at New York University. An
esteemed lecturer and author, Suarez-Orozco has made an incalculable contribution
to the worldwide discussion on the far-reaching implications of immigration and
globalization.
He is co-founder of the Harvard Immigration Project and also served as the school's
tenured professor of human development and psychology, as well as its Victor S.
Thomas Professor of Education and Culture.
Suarez-Orozco was co-director of the largest study in the history of the National
Science Foundation's Cultural Anthropology division-a comprehensive study of
Asian, Afro-Caribbean and Latino immigrant youth in American Society. His most
recent book, "Learning in a New Land: Immigrant Students in American Society"
(Belknap Press, 2008), co-authored with Carola Suarez-Orozco and Irina Todorova, is
based on an extraordinary study that followed 400 newly arrived children from the
Caribbean, China, Central America and Mexico for five years. The book received the
2007 Virginia and Warren Stone Prize, awarded annually by Harvard University
Press for an outstanding book on education and society.
Suarez-Orozco has addressed the U.N. Secretary General's First Annual Global
Colloquium of University Presidents and has been a visiting professor at the
University of Barcelona and Catholic University of Leuven in Belgium, and a fellow
at the Center for Advanced Study in Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University.