The mission of PARCC is to advance research on conflict and collaboration, including theory, practice, and education. PARCC grants research awards in the range of $500- $2000 to support research activities in our areas of focus: International and Interstate Conflicts, Environmental Collaboration, Collaborative Governance, and Advocacy and Activism. The awards selection is based on potential contribution to scholarship, possibility of future funding, consistency with the goals of PARCC, and cost-effectiveness. Funds are used for such activities as data acquisition, survey design, the hosting of research conferences at Maxwell, and research assistance. Faculty who are awarded a mini-grant then present their research at one of PARCC's weekly Conversations in Conflict Studies speaker series.
PARCC Mini-Grants
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Engineering Justice: Mapping Community-Based Water Technologies and Local Initiatives
Becca Farnum
German Trade Unions and Climate Change
Nicole Gonzalez
Voluntary Grassroot Organizations in Palestine: Remobilizing Civil Society
Catherine Herrold
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2024
Understanding Organized Crime’s Role in Politics through a Candidate Survey
Jessie Trudeau
Bankrolling the Belgrade Bandits?
Catherine Herrold
Public Preferences, Gender, and Foreign Support for Armed Movements
Caglayan Baser
John Burdick Mini-Grants 2024
Social Movements amongst LGBTIQ+ Refugees in Kenya
Joy Karinge
Overcoming the constraints of organizing undocumented farmworkers in Central New York
Sergio Saravia
Housing Conditions and Civil Space in Istanbul: Insights from NGO Collaborations
Kirin Taylor
Collaborating to Create Hunger Free Communities
Amanda Bankston
Growing culture and belonging: Hispanic Caribbean Urban Agriculture efforts in the diaspora
Zuleima Vazquez
Louis Kriesberg Mini-Grants 2024
Entrenched or Abandoned? National Salience and Political Expediency in Territorial Disputes
Sobia Paracha
Naya Kashmir: Exploring the Relationship Between Surveillance, Spatiotemporal Restrictions, and Urban Development in Srinagar, Kashmir.
Kanwaljit Singh
PARCC Mini-Grants 2023
Flash Points: Faculty Development on responding to Oppression, Privilege, and Exclusions in Higher Education
Mara Sapon-Shevin & Jeanine A. Irons
"Tourism will kill us all!" Eco-populism, Eco-opportunism, and Riverine Citizenship in the Balkans
Azra Hromadzic
Today's Geographies of Imperialism
Andre Ortega
Weaponized History in Latin American Politics
Erika Arias
John Burdick Mini-Grants 2023
Examining the Impacts of Parole Reform on Formerly Incarcerated Individuals in Onondaga County through the Less Is More Act
Shaneya Simmelkjaer
Activism, Traumatization, and Political Participation
Amr ElAfifi
Access, trust, and Tourism: Coming Together for Maine's Working Waterfronts
Leah Rubin
University Students' Voice in Taiwan: Protest Experience, Formal Participation, and Informal Participation
Jun Zhang
PARCC Mini-Grants 2022
Engineering Justice: Mapping Community-Based Water Technologies and Local Initiatives
Becca Farnum
German Trade Unions and Climate Change
Nicole Gonzalez
Voluntary Grassroot Organizations in Palestine: Remobilizing Civil Society
Catherine Herrold
John Burdick Mini-Grants 2022
Building Tenant Power in Syracuse, NY
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Hindus and Sikhs in Canada and the U.S. have largely similar histories of immigration and strong transnational links with each other. However, if the differences between Canada and the U.S. can explain the variation in the mobilization patterns of the two groups, how can we explain the differences between Sikh and Hindu mobilization within Canada and the U.S.? Are these differences also shaped by variation in political opportunity structures? Or are they a result of differences in the characteristics and resources of the two groups within the two countries?
John Burdick Mini-Grants 2021
Equitable and Inclusive Development: An Investigation of Community Benefits, Agreements in Two Rust Belt Cities
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