It is a reasonable assumption that many readers of the Conducive Chronicle or students around the world enrolled in some type of college social science class featuring elements of post modernism are familiar with the concept of modernity. Modernity has been both categorically and lexically challenging to define since the term is immensely expansive. Subsequently, [...]
About Niles French
Niles French is currently an adjunct professor in the History Department with the City University of New York at the College of Staten Island and holds an M.A. in history. He has published an article in a book entitled War and Peace in Africa: History, Nationalism, and the State (2010) about the coltan conflict in the Democratic of the Congo. Mr. French has also worked as a grant writer for the Institute of International Human Affairs which sponsors courses for humanitarian professionals around the world in addition to working on various oral history projects at the Brooklyn Historical Society. He has also done extensive work about the Women's International League of Peace and Freedom and their relationship with non European countries during the Inter-War Years. His other academic interests include American Modernity, post-colonial Africa, segregation in America, and peace history. He is currently writing several articles regarding these topics and also has a B.A. in history and political science. Mr. French will be writing on a variety of topics as well as conducting interviews for the Conducive Chronicle's audience.
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