Thinking Globally
In 2025, the International Studies Association and the Office of Global Affairs launched a three-part discussion series encouraging students, faculty, staff, and the wider community to make sense of today’s world.
Drawing on subject-area expertise from the International Studies Association and faculty across UConn, each session provided a 360 degree view of a topic across disciplinary boundaries and encouraged the audience to think critically about the connections between them. As co-organizer Alison Casaly put it, “We want students to take away a holistic understanding of the issue. By having people from different disciplines talk about the same broad theme, we’re hoping people can appreciate the diversity of perspectives that exist and the value those different perspectives bring to understanding the issue.”
Session 1: Our Digital World: Media and Misinformation
FEBRUARY 25. (Watch the recording on ISA's YouTube Channel!) Part of the Thinking Globally in 2025 Series. As the boundary between new technologies and social platforms becomes increasingly blurred, how are the ways that we communicate and share information introducing novel political and personal opportunities? How does the evolving media and communication landscape usher in new routes and challenges for navigating global relations in 2025? Consider, for example, the recent controversy surrounding the TikTok ban and the subsequent user migration to RedNote. As these processes continue to unfold, we will discuss insights and resources offered by distinct fields of academic expertise ranging from Journalism, Media and Communication, to Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and more. Join experts from the International Studies Association and the University of Connecticut in our first of three public virtual panel discussions on Thinking Globally in 2025.
Event Speakers
Moderator
Amanda J. Crawford
University of Connecticut
Department of Journalism
Panelist
Marie K. Shanahan
University of Connecticut
Department of Journalism
Panelist
Jiyoun Suk
University of Connecticut
Department of Communication
Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Institute
Panelist
Dmitry Chernobrov
University of Sheffield
School of Journalism, Media and Communication
Session 2. Our World: Public Health
MARCH 25. (Watch the recording on ISA's YouTube Channel!) The COVID-19 pandemic demonstrated how effectively addressing public health challenges demands global sharing of knowledge, treatments, and solutions. At the same time, the emergence of nationalist self-isolating states will likely hinder such jointly-enacted public health approaches, further complicating the public health landscape. How will the emergent political climate affect accessible distribution of preventative care, dissemination of health information, and abilities to address future global health crises in well-coordinated ways? We will discuss insights and resources offered by distinct fields of academic expertise including Medicine, Pathobiology, Sociology, and more. Join experts from the International Studies Association and the University of Connecticut in our second of three public virtual panel discussions on Thinking Globally in 2025.
Event Speakers
Moderator
Joy Elwell
University of Connecticut
Clinical Professor and Director
Doctor of Nursing Practice Program
School of Nursing
Panelist
Stevan M. Weine
University of Illinois
Director of Global Medicine
Director, Center for Global Health
Professor, Department of Psychiatry
Panelist
Fumilayo Showers
University of Connecticut
Assistant Professor of Sociology
Africana Studies
Panelist
Elsio A. Wunder
University of Connecticut
Department of Pathobiology
Veterinary Science
Session 3: Our Ecological World: Oceans & Waterways
APRIL 22. (Watch the recording on ISA's YouTube Channel!) Historically, oceans and waterways have both connected and divided human interaction. This pattern continues in the contemporary ways that oceans and waterways structure global relations. Consider current debates over the ownership of the Panama Canal or how the cutting of undersea cables is wreaking havoc on both international transmission of information and global supply chains. Ocean levels are also rising and warming, threatening ocean life and nearby human communities. Join experts from the International Studies Association and the University of Connecticut in our third public virtual panel discussion on Thinking Globally in 2025 to discuss insights and resources into these simultaneous processes offered by distinct fields of academic expertise including Environmental Studies, History, Law, Political Science, and Spanish.
Event Speakers
Moderator
Henry Carey
Georgia State University
Political Science
Moderator
Eduardo Urios-Aparisi
University of Connecticut
Department of Literatures, Cultures and Languages
Panelist
Neil Oculi
University of Portland
Environmental Studies
Panelist
Matthew McKenzie
University of Connecticut
Department of History
Panelist
James O’Donnell
University of Connecticut
Connecticut Institute for Resilience and Climate Adaptation
Department of Marine Sciences
What’s next?
Co-organizers Allison Casaly, Sarah Dorr, and Jane Gordon are currently designing a one-credit, 1000-level Virtual Synchronous Course Thinking Globally: Here and Now to run in the Spring 2026 Semester. For more information contact Sarah Dorr at sarah.dorr@uconn.edu