ŮٱƵ

Students

Taylor Mangus ŮٱƵ23 Featured on Panel at United Nations

Posted
October 20, 2022
Image
Taylor Mangus at the United Nations

On Wednesday, October 19, Taylor Mangus ŮٱƵ23, Political Science, was featured on a panel on ŮٱƵDisarmament Education as a Solution to PeaceŮٱƵ at the United Nations as part of the #Leaders4Tomorrow event (PDF). MangusŮٱƵwho was joined on the panel by leaders such as Chair of the UN General Assembly First Committee Ambassador Mohan Pieris of Sri Lanka and Ambassador Thomas Goebel of GermanyŮٱƵspoke about taking courses on disarmament at Pace and interning with the Costa Rican ambassador.

Last fall, Mangus was instrumental in preparing a statement that her classmate Jeremiah Williams ŮٱƵ23, as part of a course taught by Professor of Political Science Matthew Bolton, PhD. This year, Molly Rosaaen ŮٱƵ22, Political Science, presented a statement prepared by five of her peers in BoltonŮٱƵs class, just a week before Mangus spoke on the panel. Bolton joined Mangus at this yearŮٱƵs event, and 20 students from his class on disarmament attended as part of a class trip.

Image
board that reads ŮٱƵ

More from Pace

In the Media

Philosophy Professor James Brusseau is featured in BBC asserting that ŮٱƵthe moment to opt out of AI has already passed,ŮٱƵ and offering ethical insight into the growing movement of AI refusal.

In the Media

Political Science Professor Laura Tamman provides expert commentary to Newsweek on Governor Kathy HochulŮٱƵs announcement that over 8 million New Yorkers will receive "inflation refund checks" this year.

In the Media

Environmental Studies Professor Matthew Aiello-Lammens weighs in on the ecological consequences of a Pine Barrens wildfire in New Jersey Breaking News, noting that the timing of human-caused fires can have a greater impact than natural ones.