Sidney Tarrow, Emeritus Maxwell M. Upson Professor of Government, Cornell University
The historian Mary Dudziak, in her 2010 book, describes the current epoch as “War-Time.” From the Ukrainian war to the violent outcome of the Arab Spring to the ISIS takeover of parts of Iraq and Syria — nothing that has happened since softens this perspective.
The United States has been involved in conflicts for most of its history. But what is unique to the current epoch is that we are making war in what is legally a time of peace, and fighting against non-state actors in conflicts that elude the laws and practices of war.
These wars in peacetime have had contradictory effects on the peace movement, a movement that was formed to seek peace in wartime. This lecture will explore these contradictions and propose a path for the American peace movement to oppose war in peacetime. 
This lecture is free and open to the public.