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PACES Sparks Engagement in 2026 Conference on World Affairs

PACES Sparks Engagement in 2026 Conference on World Affairs

Malala Yousafzai joins Colorado Mesa University students and faculty for a photo before her keynote presentation at the 2026 Conference on World Affairs

4 people sit on a panel at the back of a room. Rows of chairs are in front of them, filled with audience members

Gregor MacGregor, David Meens, Patty Limerick and Benny Shendo, Jr. at the opening Conference on World Affairs panel, Mon. April 13, 2026

At the 78th Conference on World Affairs (CWA), David Meens, assistant vice chancellor for public and community-engaged scholarship, opened a session with a question that gets to the heart of CU 抖阴传媒在线鈥檚 public mission: Can a major research university be both world-class and deeply rooted in its home state?听

Meens explored his question with the audience and fellow panelists, Associate Vice Chancellor for Native American Affairs Benny Shendo, Jr. and Professor of History Patty Limerick. Their session, 鈥淭he University of Colorado鈥檚 Forgotten Land-Grant Origins and the Future of Public Impact,鈥 introduced many听audience members to something new: The university was established through Colorado鈥檚 Constitution鈥攚ith funds provided from the dispossession of Indigenous lands. Likewise, Colorado's high school network, many business and municipal systems and all four CU campuses originated from University Extension鈥檚 efforts during the first half of the 20th century. It was after World War II that the university began establishing large-scale research and funding relationships with the federal government. Community-engaged scholarship in and around Colorado continued, but the focus on service that predominated in earlier years faded. Meens, Shendo, Jr. and Limerick challenged the audience to hold the university accountable to its origins鈥攂oth how it was established and how it can be of critical and deep service to the residents of Colorado.听

In addition to the panel, Meens and other members of Public and Community-Engaged Scholarship听(PACES) found ways to invite their community partners to participate in CWA.听

Holly Oberle, assistant professor of political science at Colorado Mesa University, and Ruth Alminas, associate professor of political science at Fort Lewis College, each traveled to CWA, bringing eight undergraduate students with them. The students attended panels throughout the week, met CWA organizers and speakers and toured Colorado Law. Alminas was a panelist for 鈥淔lags, Borders and Belonging: The Politics of Nationalism鈥 and moderated 鈥淔rom Rubble to Reconstruction: What Comes Next?鈥 Oberle moderated 鈥淧retty, Palatable or Political?鈥 and is a new fellow with the PACES Higher Education and Democracy Initiative鈥攁 program that, in part, expands access to events like CWA for students and faculty at regional institutions across Colorado.听

A group of people at a long dinner table smile for a photo

Students and faculty from Colorado Mesa University and Fort Lewis College join PACES team members for dinner at Mister Oso, Tues. April 13, 2026

"The Conference on World Affairs is an extremely unique event that brings together scholars, activists, practitioners, community members and students from high school to college to have tough conversations about the most pressing issues the world faces today,鈥 said Oberle. 鈥淭his was an especially unique opportunity for Colorado Mesa University students, as rural institutions don't always have the access or the resources to attend such events. I have never seen undergraduates come back from a conference with such enthusiasm and energy! The icing on the cake was meeting Malala."

Front Range teens from the Caminos Project also attended the conference finale featuring Nobel Peace Prize recipient Malala Yousafzai. The Caminos Project receives grant funding from PACES and helps bi/multilingual youth develop research and advocacy skills about policy and programming to support their peers within school districts and to encourage civic engagement. CU 抖阴传媒在线 Research Assistant Laura Meinzen described the experience as incredibly meaningful for the Caminos students.听

鈥淪eeing Malala speak with a student from Pakistan was powerful,鈥 said Meinzen. 鈥淚n the middle of the talk, that student turned to me suddenly to remind me, full of pride: 鈥業鈥檓 from her country. I speak her language.鈥 When Malala was asked at the end of the interview what gives you hope, and she responded about all the brave girls still fighting for an education, our student turned to me and said, 鈥榣ike me.鈥欌澨

Seeing the local in the national or global and vice versa is a significant aspect of what attending CWA offers鈥攅xactly the kind of experience that becomes transformative when it includes people who wouldn鈥檛 otherwise have a seat at the table.

CWA 2026 saw an increase in faculty-sponsored speakers and a fruitful partnership between the Department of Cinema Studies and Moving-Image Arts. That partnership resulted in multiple panels, including one featuring Lulu Wang, director of the critically-acclaimed film 鈥淭he Farewell.鈥 Wang was joined by leaders from Sundance and an undergraduate film major, with moderation by Colorado Public Radio鈥檚 Ryan Warner. Ben Teitelbaum, faculty director for strategic events and public discourse, sees such rich and diverse听panels as a model to build on.听

鈥淭hese are the types of community-campus partnerships I would like to see more of,鈥 said Teitelbaum.听

鈥淐WA brings听people of different places, ages, cultures and interests to listen and learn together. That is a precious and expansive experience, and one that becomes even richer when the people in the room reflect the full range of communities CU 抖阴传媒在线 is here to serve,鈥 said Meens.听