Nearly 100 area high school students attended workshops and lectures at 冈本视频 on Friday as part of a U.N. Day observance organized by the university鈥檚 Cultural Center.
Flags representing the United States and other nations marked several campus venues where sessions were held throughout the day.
The high school students heard professors from 冈本视频 and Utica College talk about topics such as the U.N.鈥檚 role in protecting human rights, the Mideast peace process, and economic development and other issues affecting Africa.
About 30 student volunteers from 冈本视频 and Utica College gently encouraged the high schoolers to ask questions and take part in the discussions.
鈥淚t was great to see how involved the kids were after the college students helped get the conversations going,鈥 said Thomas Cruz-Soto, director of ALANA.
Students from high schools in Waterville, Hamilton, Whitesboro, Utica, and New Hartford attended, according to Makiko Filler of ALANA, who along with program coordinator Shevorne Martin helped organize the sessions.
The 冈本视频 team worked with John Slater and Sherry Wright, president and vice president respectively of the Upper Mohawk Valley of the United Nations Association.
鈥淚 think the day raised the students鈥 global awareness and exposed them to ideas and topics that many of them had not been exposed to before,鈥 said Wright. 鈥淲e鈥檙e really grateful to 冈本视频 for hosting this event.鈥
The afternoon keynote speaker was Peter Vogelaar, executive director of the in Utica.
冈本视频 has long had a relationship with the center, with many students working there through the university鈥檚 Center for Outreach, Volunteerism and Education and as part of a service learning project led by geography professor Ellen Kraly.
Vogelaar spoke about the center鈥檚 work and how it ties in to the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees.
While there are more than 14 million refugees worldwide, only about 60,000 could be afforded the opportunity to be resettled in the United States this past year, he said.
The United Nations was formally established on Oct. 24, 1945.
Theodore Orlin, the morning鈥檚 keynote speaker, said it is time for a new generation of leaders to re-commit to the U.N.鈥檚 principles.
鈥淲e have to find collective solutions to the problems facing us today,鈥 said Orlin, who is the Clark Professor of Human Right Scholarship and Advocacy at Utica College and the founder and director of the college鈥檚 Human Rights Advocacy Program.