Veterans & Military-Connected Individuals Voices of Service Symposium Showcases Breadth of Veteran-Focused Research

Students, faculty and staff attending the Voices of Service event at the National Veterans Resource Center at the Daniel and Gayle D’Aniello Building.

Voices of Service Symposium Showcases Breadth of Veteran-Focused Research

More than 100 researchers, students and community partners gathered to share findings on veteran health, employment and legal services.
Charlie Poag May 4, 2026

The National Veterans Resource Center at The Daniel and Gayle D’Aniello Building welcomed more than 100 researchers, practitioners, students and community partners for Voices of Service 2026, the second annual showcase of veteran-focused research, curricula and resources.

The event was co-organized by the Office of Academic Affairs, the D’Aniello Institute for Veterans and Military Families (IVMF) and the Veterans and Military Behavioral Health Collaborative, led by U.S. Navy veteran Joseph Ditre ’11.

The event drew presenters and attendees from across campus and Central New York for an afternoon of conversation, connection and shared purpose.

Sixty-two poster and table presentations demonstrated the breadth of work underway at the University in support of veterans and the military-connected community. Topics covered behavioral health, legal services, community programs and more. The IVMF contributed 11 presentations across its research and evaluation, community insights and impact and digital library teams.

Two professionals address the crowd during an indoor event,
Joseph Ditre (left) and Stacy Hawkins address the crowd during the Voices of Service 2026 event.

“I loved seeing students, faculty, staff and researchers from on and off campus taking time to connect, share and discuss the ways that we here in Syracuse are supporting—and can continue to support—work that improves the lives of service members, veterans and military-connected individuals,” says Stacy Hawkins, managing director of research and evaluation at the IVMF.

The event reflected the depth of collaboration that has taken shape around veteran-focused work at the University. Representatives from the Syracuse VA Medical Center and other regional veteran service organizations were among those in attendance, underscoring the NVRC’s role as a regional hub where the veteran support ecosystem comes together across institutional lines.

IVMF scholars shared findings from several active projects examining how coordinated care networks serve the military-connected community. One study, led by a team including IVMF research associate Zachary Bridgewater, examined factors influencing whether service referrals made through the AmericaServes coordinated care model were successfully resolved.

The findings suggest that network-level factors, including the accuracy of referrals and the adequacy of available resources, play a more significant role in outcomes than client demographics alone. Researchers noted that this points to the equitable design of the AmericaServes model, while also identifying areas where investment in network capacity could improve access.

A person presents a research poster on coordinated care networks to an attendee.
Zachary Bridgewater, a research associate with the IVMF, presents data collected from the IVMF’s AmericaServes program.

Additional research addressed the state of veteran services coordination in New York and New Mexico, the potential for deeper collaboration between AmericaServes networks and VA Medical Centers, and the development of a shared data standard aimed at improving interoperability across coordinated care platforms.

Rosalinda Vasquez Maury, the director of applied research and analytics, presented findings on military spouse employment that put a sharp point on one of the community’s most persistent economic challenges. Military spouses relocate 3.6 times more often than civilian families, and the earnings gap between those who moved in the past year and those who remained in place was 32 percent. The research demonstrates that the problem is not job access but career continuity.

Student researchers were also among the presenters. Paul Sagoe, a Ph.D. candidate in the College of Engineering and Computer Science and a two-time recipient of the Rostker IVMF Dissertation Research Fund, presented work on a nanoparticle-based therapeutic system designed to treat arthritis, a condition that affects veterans at a disproportionate rate.

“One in three veterans has arthritis, which is five times more compared to the civilian population,” says Sagoe, who was recently awarded the 2026 Chancellor’s Citation for Excellence in student research. “That calls for a clinical need to really look into how we can bring about a cure.”

Sagoe’s research focuses on using a nanoparticle-based delivery system to target macrophages, the key cells driving arthritis progression in the joint.

A student points to a research poster on arthritis treatment while presenting to attendees.
Paul Sagoe, a Ph.D. candidate in the College of Engineering and Computer Science, presents data from his research on nanoparticle-based delivery systems to cure arthritis.

The event also highlighted work extending beyond the IVMF. Kenneth Marfilius ’07, a U.S. Air Force veteran and director of the Office of Veteran and Military Affairs Resiliency Program (ORP), spoke to the value the showcase holds for veteran-serving organizations across the region.

“Events like the Voices of Service Symposium are critically important for the continued growth and visibility of the ORP,” Marfilius says. “This year, I was especially encouraged by the strong second-year response and the notable increase in posters, which truly reflected the breadth and depth of the work being done across campus in support of veterans and military-connected individuals. The symposium creates a space where research, practice and lived experience come together, reinforcing our commitment to innovation, collaboration and impact.”

Marfilius also highlighted the event’s value for external organizations looking to connect with the University’s veteran-focused ecosystem.

“For veteran-serving organizations and nonprofits, attending Voices of Service offers a meaningful opportunity to connect directly with students, faculty and interdisciplinary partners who are actively engaged in this work,” says Marfilius. “It allows organizations to identify emerging talent, build partnerships and gain insight into innovative programs and research that can inform and strengthen their own services.”

The ORP is currently advancing its partnership with the VA’s Veterans Integration to Academic Leadership program, a federal initiative designed to enhance student veterans’ access to healthcare, mental health services and academic support. Additional initiatives include work on veteran transition and reintegration, workforce development pathways into military and veteran-serving professions, and an interdisciplinary legal-social work partnership aimed at reducing barriers to care.

The IVMF Digital Library, now in its fourth year, also showcased its newly launched SU Research Collection, which aggregates the University’s research publications related to veterans and military-connected populations.

The posters from this year’s event can be seen in the IVMF Digital Library.