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Despite changes in movement patterns over recent decades, migration has been a natural phenomenon for millennia. Cornell Law School Distinguished Immigration Scholar and attorney Marielena Hincapié and Garvin Professor Amanda Rodewald, senior director of the Center for Avian Population Studies at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, explain why people and birds migrate — and what individuals, communities and policymakers can do to develop sustainable solutions for an interdependent world.
This episode of the Cornell Keynotes podcast from eCornell is co-sponsored by the Cornell Law School Migration and Human Rights Program and the Cornell Migrations Program.
eCornell offers more than 200 online programs, including a certificate in immigration law, to help professionals advance their careers and organizations.
Did you enjoy this episode of the Cornell Keynotes podcast? Watch the full Keynote.
Follow eCornell on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, and X.
Despite changes in movement patterns over recent decades, migration has been a natural phenomenon for millennia. Cornell Law School Distinguished Immigration Scholar and attorney Marielena Hincapié and Garvin Professor Amanda Rodewald, senior director of the Center for Avian Population Studies at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, explain why people and birds migrate — and what individuals, communities and policymakers can do to develop sustainable solutions for an interdependent world.
This episode of the Cornell Keynotes podcast from eCornell is co-sponsored by the Cornell Law School Migration and Human Rights Program and the Cornell Migrations Program.
eCornell offers more than 200 online programs, including a certificate in immigration law, to help professionals advance their careers and organizations.
Did you enjoy this episode of the Cornell Keynotes podcast? Watch the full Keynote.
Follow eCornell on Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, and X.