The Axioma Center’s volumes on migration and family policy were presented on Wednesday in Washington to an American professional audience.

At an event held at the Hungarian Embassy and accompanied by a panel discussion, analytical works on the migration crisis as well as on family and nation were discussed. Áron Giró-Szász, president of the Axioma Center and prime ministerial commissioner, introduced the organization’s goals and operations to an audience of American political experts, while Norbert Filemon, head of research, presented the two professional publications as a participant in the panel discussion.

One of the highlights of the visit was a meeting between Áron Giró-Szász, Chair of the @Axiomamedia & @DavidClosson, Director of the Center for Biblical Worldview at the @FRCdc, during which they discussed potential avenues for collaboration & partnership.

🧵3⃣ pic.twitter.com/H8v12vhFhA

— Axioma Center

Reklám
Tas J Nadas, Esq


Following the event, Norbert Filemon told

that

the Christian-oriented analysis of family policy and illegal migration has been received positively in the United States.

He reported that the American visit marked the Axioma Center’s first international appearance, the purpose of which was to build relationships with potential American partners.

As a participant in the panel discussion, Roger Severino, vice president of the conservative think tank Heritage Foundation, emphasized in relation to American social processes surrounding migration that the United States no longer functions as a “melting pot” for immigrants, in which newcomers assimilate along shared cultural values. Instead, due to the ideology-driven policies pursued in recent years, a “salad bowl” model has emerged, the essence of which is that representatives of different, even competing, cultures live within a single country.

Participants in the panel discussion also included Kristen Ziccarelli, policy director at the America First Policy Institute; Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for Immigration Studies; Chad Pecknold, professor at The Catholic University of America; and Samuel Samson, representing the U.S. Department of State. Introductory remarks were delivered by Szabolcs Takács, Hungary’s ambassador.

(Hungary Today)

Cover photo: Pixabay



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