From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman

The Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights: 14th Annual Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy

Support Convisero Mentor Irwin Cotler, the Founder and Chair of The Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights, at the 14th Annual Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy.

The Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights (RWCHR) is proud to co-sponsor, along with leading human rights NGOs from around the world, the 14th Annual Geneva Summit for Human Rights and Democracy, taking place on April 6th, 2022.

Tune in live for a discussion on the plight of political prisoners moderated by RWCHR Legal Counsel Yonah Diamond, with Areej Al-Sadhan, activist and sister of Saudi political prisoner Abdulrahman al-Sadhan, Sophie Luo, activist and wife of Chinese political prisoner Ding Jiaxi, Tatsiana Khomich, activist fighting to free Belarus political prisoners including her sister Maria Kalesnikava, and Mariam Claren, daughter of jailed political prisoner in Iran Nahid Taghavi.

See here for the full program.

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From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman

RefugePoint: Centering Refugee Voices in Humanitarian Response and Philanthropy

Join Convisero Mentor and President of RefugePoint Sasha Chanoff and other distinguished refugee and philanthropic voices in two panels on Friday, April 8, 2022, at 11 am EDT.

By 2050, a billion people may be forcibly displaced. $30 billion a year is spent on humanitarian aid today. Yet recipients have virtually no say in its use, a fact that perpetuates paternalism and inequality. As part of the Skoll World Forum Eco-System Day, RefugePoint is hosting a two-part moderated discussion that brings together refugee and philanthropic voices to discuss strategies for centering refugees in programmatic and philanthropic responses.

This event will have two 45-minute panels. Composed of former refugees, Panel #1 will flip the narrative of victimhood and define refugees more fully. Moderated by Farah Mohamed, former CEO, Malala Fund, and current RefugePoint board member. Building on the first discussion, Panel #2 brings together philanthropic and nonprofit leaders to discuss eco system funding and other programmatic and funding strategies that center refugee and community voices. Moderated by Sasha Chanoff, Founder and CEO, RefugePoint. Moderators will also invite audience participation to highlight best practices.

Speakers include:

Nasra Ismail, Senior Director, Global Strategy, Giving Tuesday Bahati Ernestine, Consultant/Advocate, RefugePoint/Economic Mobility Pathways ProjectLina Tori Jan, Public Speaker/Advocate/Founder, Chai wa Dastan/UNICEFKaren Ansara, Founder, Network of Engaged International Donors (NEID) Sana Mustafa, Director of Partnership and Engagement, Asylum Access: Resourcing Refugee Leadership Initiative

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From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman

RefugePoint: Global Task Force on Refugee Labour Mobility

Join Convisero Mentor and RefugePoint’s Founder and CEO Sasha Chanoff in a panel discussion on The Transformative Potential of Refugee Labour Mobility Pathways on Wednesday, April 6, at 3:00 pm EDT.

Across the globe, millions of people are displaced and in need of a safe, permanent place to call home. Labour complementary pathways allow people to enter or stay in another country through safe and regulated avenues for purposes of employment, with the right to either permanent or temporary residence. Sasha Chanoff, RefugePoint’s Founder and CEO, will participate in a panel discussion on The Transformative Potential of Refugee Labour Mobility Pathways during the virtual launch of the Global Task Force on Refugee Labour Mobility. RefugePoint and other founding Task Force members will provide an introduction to the goals of the Global Task Force, discuss the value of expanding labour pathways accessible to refugees, and invite interested stakeholders to become involved.

Event highlights will include addresses from The Honourable Sean Fraser, Canada’s Minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship; Mr. Filippo Grandi, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees; and Ms. Bahati Ernestine, Economic Mobility Consultant (RefugePoint) and a Continuing Care Assistant (Glen Haven Manor) who immigrated to Canada as a health worker via Canada’s Economic Mobility Pathways Pilot (EMPP).

Please confirm your attendance by registering via Zoom by Monday, April 4. 

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Benjamin Perlstein

Rabbi Ben Perlstein is a Chaplain Resident at NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital, serving primarily on the Columbia University Irving Medical Center campus. He worked previously as a Rabbinic Fellow at Romemu in Manhattan and received rabbinic ordination in 2021 from the Jewish Theological Seminary, where he also completed an M.A. in Jewish Thought focused on ethics and mysticism.

Ben previously graduated summa cum laude from Tufts University, where he studied political science and participated in the Institute for Global Leadership's EPIIC and Synaptic Scholars programs. He is also a grateful alumnus and current junior faculty member of FASPE (Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics), and through the international Jewish education organization Kivunim, Ben has spoken at the U.N. on the complexities of contemporary Holocaust commemoration and participated in the first Holocaust conference in the Arab world. He is passionate about creative, multidisciplinary and multifaith applications of spiritual wisdom and practice to issues of public concern and pastoral need.

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Abuzar Royesh

Abuzar Royesh is the co-founder and CEO of DataServeAI (Sabi Cash), a California-based startup that builds digital financial solutions for small businesses in Africa. Abuzar holds master’s degrees in Management Science & Engineering and International Policy from Stanford University as a Knight-Hennessy scholar and a bachelor’s degree from Tufts University in International Relations.

Prior to Stanford, Abuzar worked as a research lead at Afghanistan Holding Group, where he led various research and assessment projects for the office of the Afghan president, various ministries, USAID, UNHCR, and GIZ. He has also worked with marginalized youth, including international displaced persons, in Afghanistan in various capacities since 2010.

He was recently selected for Forbes 30 under 30 along with 5 other Tufts alumni.

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30 Birds Foundation: Live Update from Pakistan

On Thursday, March 17th at 9AM PST / 12PM EST / 4PM UK Time / 5PM Monaco Time, The 30 Birds Foundation will be having a special live Zoom call from Pakistan. This will be a rare opportunity to see some of the Hazara schoolgirls face to face and to talk with them about their experiences.

In August, 2021, as the Taliban violently took Afghanistan, thousands of Hazara schoolgirls were forced into hiding. Some of the most at-risk were from Marefat - the first school in Afghanistan to bring girls and boys into the same classroom.

Marefat supporters from around the world, ordinary citizens, came together to help the most at-risk girls. Now known as the 30 Birds Foundation, they partnered with the girls to plan their escape. While 30 Birds built relations with ambassadors, generals and even Nobel Laureate Malala Yousafzai, the bravest girls played an active part in coordinating their own evacuation. Under duress, moving themselves in small groups from city to city and past Taliban checkpoints, these girls helped 30 Birds guide over 400 at-risk Afghans safely across the border.

Half made it to Canada. The other half, including 50 young women who fled without families, are stuck in Pakistan. The 30 Birds Foundation, co-founded by my previous student Abuzar Royesh and The Trebuchet’s Co-Director Jennifer Selendy, is raising funds to reunite this community in Canada.

Please RSVP for the event here.

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From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman From Community Prequel Sherman Teichman

Ukraine and the Future of Arms Control: A conversation with Michael Krepon

March 26, 2022, 1:00pm EST

Russia’s brutal war against Ukraine comes at a time when every state possessing nuclear weapons is modernizing or plans to modernize its nuclear forces. One by one, arms control treaties have been discarded. Essential norms, including the norm against waging aggressive war as well as humanitarian laws of warfare have been disregarded. We live in a deeply disheartening time. But opportunities exist in in every crisis. Let’s discuss this war, how something truly awful might to turned into something good, and steps we might take to change course.

Michael Krepon is the author of Winning and Losing the Nuclear Peace: The Rise, Demise, and Revival of Arms Control, a much-needed contemporary analysis of the role arms control played in "winning" the nuclear peace. It could hardly come at a more important time. Join Mr. Krepon and Student Pugwash USA for an interactive and engaging discussion, and hear what hope might still remain to rebuild the nuclear peace.

Additional information: <https://www.studentpugwash.org/krepon-talk>

Registration for the event: <https://na.eventscloud.com/krepon-mar26>

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Liz Shelbred

Liz recently graduated from Tufts University with a Bachelor of Arts in International Relations and Civic Studies. She has spent her time at Tufts focusing her studies on the intersection between global accountability and grassroots civic action as a potential solution to social injustice.

Since her first year at Tufts, The Tufts Daily provided her not only with a strong community but also a means of preserving the truth and mobilizing change on campus. She served as Associate Editor, Executive Opinion Editor, and a member of the Editorial Board. In her last year at Tufts, she wrote for the Investigative and News sections of the Daily, and was on the Journalism Education and Diversity Report Committees. She was also a member of Amnesty International at Tufts, where she learned about practical ways to prevent human rights abuses and deliver justice. Additionally, as part of the Tufts Experimental College’s Explorations program, she taught a first-year course on the covert history of CIA involvement in Latin America.

She followed her interest in transformative education to Education for Employment (EFE), where she aided in assembling a global network of prominent influencers, entrepreneurs, and venture capitalists to fund and promote EFE’s Fall 2020 Women’s Empowerment campaign across the MENA region. In the spring of 2020, she volunteered with the World Peace Foundation to track the spread of COVID-19 in prisons, jails, and ICE detention centers. With the Oslo Scholars program at the Tufts Institute for Global Leadership, she interned for Jamila Raqib and the Albert Einstein Institution this summer. There, she tracked nonviolent action in the news, researched the role of digital technologies and social media in nonviolent resistance, and aided in developing the AEI 2.0 platform. In October 2021, she attended the Oslo Freedom Forum in Miami.

After college, she hopes to pursue a career in human rights law and conflict resolution. She joined The Trebuchet to follow my belief in education and community to be the keys to dismantling systems of oppression and division.

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Brandon Silver

Brandon Silver is an international human rights lawyer, and Director of Policy and Projects at the Raoul Wallenberg Centre for Human Rights.

In this capacity, Brandon serves on the legal teams of prisoners of conscience, representing some of the world's leading dissidents and statespeople. He also provides strategic counsel to governments, parliaments, and international organizations on rule of law and public policy reforms.

He formerly served in the office of then Liberal Party of Canada Leader and now Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, and currently acts as Chief Advisor to former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada and longtime Parliamentarian Irwin Cotler.

Brandon’s work has been featured in major publications, including TIME magazine, Canada's national news-magazine Maclean's, the Globe and Mail, Foreign Policy, and the Washington Post, and is a past nominee of the Quebec Literary Awards and winner of the CBC Reader’s Choice Prize. In 2016, the World Economic Forum named him a “Global Shaper.”

He is a graduate of the University of Ottawa Faculty of Law, and received his Masters of Law from UC Berkeley on a scholarship for excellence in Public Law.

Brandon has had a transformative impact not only on the law, but on lives; not only in the courthouse, but in the court of global opinion; in each and all of his endeavours, he has represented the very best of what the Canadian legal profession stands for, securing liberty and dignity for the most vulnerable.

As international counsel to dissidents, he led the global advocacy that achieved freedom for political prisoners, including the release of our pro bono client Raif Badawi, the celebrated Saudi blogger whose wife and children are Canadian citizens.

As head of our Global Human Rights Sanctions Program, Brandon has become a trusted interlocutor and confidante to civil society and decisionmakers in Canada and internationally, making major contributions to the adoption, implementation, and refinement of sanctions frameworks for global justice and accountability. In the last 18 months, this has included among others, providing counsel to government and Parliament on recalibrating Canada’s sanctions frameworks - including Asset repurposing, legislation that is currently under consideration in the Senate - and successfully submitting sanctions proposals; advising and guiding the Australian Parliamentary Inquiry that led to the successful adoption of targeted sanctions legislation in that jurisdiction; and Canadian Chair of the Global Magnitsky Civil Society Coalition, representing over 275 organizations around the world engaged in human rights sanctions multilateralization and implementation.

At a time of resurgent intolerance, where Antisemitism remains the most frequent motivation of hate crime in Canada, and Holocaust distortion and denial runs rampant internationally, the creation of the role of Special Envoy on Preserving Holocaust Remembrance and Combatting Antisemitism is as timely as it is necessary. After leading advocacy for the creation of the Office, and subsequently negotiating and drafting its mandate with Government, Brandon was also instrumental in the recent announcement that it will be a permanent Office with a dedicated staff.

When the International Bar Association and International Association of Women Judges reached out to highlight the plight and pain of Afghan legal leaders under threat, Brandon spearheaded our Centre’s response, working with committed and compassionate lawyers across Canada to successfully secure their safe resettlement. With hundreds of Afghans already being resettled thanks to his leadership, our efforts continue with partners in Canada and internationally to secure life-saving support for the many more who remain at risk.

Brandon has also served as trusted advisor to the High-Level Panel of Legal Experts on Media Freedom, established jointly by the governments of Canada and the UK to provide independent and substantive advice to governments on matters of law reform and public policy initiatives to protect and promote press freedom. In this capacity, Brandon has worked closely with Panel Vice-Chair Barrister Amal Clooney and her successor Barrister Can Yeginsu to publish important reports - and pursue advocacy - on myriad pressing matters ranging from consular protection to sanctions, and from hate speech to immigration and refugee measures, the latter of which led to Canada’s recent announcement of a dedicated visa stream for human rights defenders and journalists at risk.

I have known Brandon for years, having first met him in Oslo at the Human Rights Foundation's forums, I have been wonderfully impressed by his decency and initiative, and I am very honored to be his friend and "accomplice" in supporting dissidents and people at risk. I know from our common close friend, Irwin Cotler, just how valuable he is to the Wallenberg Foundation.

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Allister Chang

Allister Chang was a Synaptic Scholar in the Tufts class of 2012. He is an elected member of the DC State Board of Education, a board member of Bibliothèques Sans Frontières, and an advisory board member of the Library of Congress Literacy Awards. Allister is currently developing social determinant of health interventions that meet underserved families where they are. 

Allister was a competitive figure skater growing up, which taught him how to fall. He studied social history at Tufts and at Oxford. For his senior thesis, he conducted an oral history of the first LGBTQ organization in East Asia, and moved to Taiwan to support this organization post-graduation. Allister studied social policy at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government, where he was elected President of Student Government. As Executive Director of Libraries Without Borders, Allister supported library systems around the world and developed education technologies that won the Google Impact Challenge and the Library of Congress Literacy Award. He is a Humanity in Action Senior Fellow, and an alumnus of the Robert Bosch Stiftung Fellowship, the Voqal Fellowship, and the Halcyon Fellowship. Allister has been a Visiting Researcher at the Global Public Policy Institute in Berlin and UNESCO’s Institute for Lifelong Learning in Hamburg. At home in DC, Allister manages his local farmers’ market in Georgetown.

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Lauren Lovelace

Lauren H. Lovelace participated in the Education for Public Inquiry and International Citizenship (EPIIC) program at Tufts University under the guidance of Director (and Mentor Extraordinaire) Sherman Teichman (1990-92).  This EPIIC experience redirected her academic trajectory and inspired her professional life in public service.  

Lauren is a career Foreign Service Officer and currently serves as a Senior Advisor to the State Department’s Bureau of East Asian and Pacific Affairs, focusing the Indo-Pacific region.   Her previous diplomatic assignments include Public Affairs Officer (PAO) in Chennai, India; Director of the Transatlantic Diplomatic Fellowship program; PAO Dublin, Ireland; Executive Director of the U.S.-Afghan Women’s Council at Georgetown University; PAO and Acting Deputy Chief of Mission, Dhaka, Bangladesh;  Assistant Information Officer, Cairo, Egypt; Political Officer and Staff Assistant, New Delhi, India; Vice Consul, Mumbai, India; Special Assistant on UN Reform at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations in New York; and speechwriter to the Secretary of State and Bureau of European Affairs leadership on transatlantic security.  Lauren previously worked as an advisor to the Chancellor of the New York City Board of Education on school design and worked to develop schools for underserved communities in Harlem and Newark at the not-for-profit The Learning Project.   

Lauren is a graduate of Tufts University (BA94), the Fletcher School of International Law and Diplomacy (MALD95), and the University of Kentucky (MPA98).   She is the recipient of the State Department's Distinguished, Superior, and Meritorious Honor Awards.  She was a Transatlantic Diplomatic Fellow to the Irish Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and a National Security Education Program/Boren Fellow in St. Petersburg, Russia.  She is the Founder of the Edward M. Kennedy Center for Public Service and the Arts in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Lauren speaks French, Arabic, and Russian. She is a native of Kentucky.

Lauren provided one of the most compelling moments I can remember of my thirty plus years at the helm of the Institute. In our "Confronting Political and Social Evil " symposium of 1991, Lauren was a first-year student. She magnificently played the harp to accompany former prisoner of conscience Alicia Partnoy's reading her poignant and powerful poetry, which was introduced by Majorie Agosín. It took but several hours of a drive back and forth to Wellesley to meet with Marjorie for me to understand and witness the transformation of what such immersive exposure could mean for Lauren as a student and myself as an educator.

Decades before we explored the future of Russia in EPIIC, she travelled there in 1992 to conduct her prescient research theme — “Economic Growth vs. Environmental Security: The Future of Russia." Then, years later, as a seasoned professional, she accompanied another exemplary alum, Matan Chorev, in a dialogue on US foreign policy with a wonderful friend and ally of the Institute, the Hon. Les Gelb, in the wonderful garden of another friend and generous benefactor of the Institute, Edward Merrin.

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Troy Lewis

Troy Lewis is an accomplished educator, youth development specialist, professional advisory muse, and social justice advocate. As the Chief Executive Officer of Education Services of Greater Washington, LLC (ESGW), he provides program-based services in the areas of workforce development, organizational capacity building, college access and personal responsibility. Troy’s professional background includes advanced program development and management skills, talent acquisition, mentor programming, leadership development, large group facilitation, college completion, professional development, and life skills. 

Troy provides expert services to local and federal government agencies, community-based organizations, educational institutions, and corporations to empower learners to reach their optimum potential through purposeful programming, intentional exposure, and access to reliable resources. He achieves results through innovative and high impact interactive turnkey Smart workshops, network training sessions, conferences, retreats, and other comprehensive program development platforms. Notably, Troy has consulted with the DC Department of Employment Services to develop a program to address the negative impact of gentrification. His work has aided DC young adults, who are out of the education pipeline, with college enrollment and international educational experiences abroad.  

Troy tributes his professional skill to his experiences with leading youth development programs and higher education institutions. After teaching high school mathematics at an alternative charter school, Troy was a Senior Trainer at the Posse Foundation. He helped identify, recruit, and train diverse student leaders to attend top-tier colleges. Troy directly supported college students and served as a Post-secondary Advisor at KIPP DC KIPP Through College office and academic advisor at the University of Maryland at College Park. At American University, he provided high profile federal internships to American Indians, Alaskan Natives, and Native Hawaiians at the USDA, Social Security Administration, National Institute of Health and the National Science Foundation. Troy also served as the Manager of Talent Acquisition and Campus Relations - Internships for the Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF), supporting college students and graduates of historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) with securing federal internships across the country.

Troy provides resources and tools to those who aspire to achieve their educational, career, and life goals with a passion for inspiring and educating youth, young adults, and professionals. His activism on local and state boards and community volunteerism reflects his dedication to impact lives in various ways.

Troy holds a Bachelor of Science in Business Administration from Florida A&M University, studied Higher Education at University of Maryland College Park, and is pursuing a Master’s in Education in Education Leadership, Organizations, and Entrepreneurship at Harvard University

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Dwijo Goswami

Dwijo Goswami is an Engagement Manager in digital and analytics at McKinsey & Company, living in New Delhi, India. At McKinsey, he leads digital strategy and transformation projects for leading consumer-facing enterprises across various industries and geographies. Prior to working with McKinsey, he was a financial management consultant in the skills division of India’s Ministry of Rural Development. 

There Mr. Goswami designed and implemented India’s first end-to-end real-time public expenditure tracking platform, in addition to coordinating policy and technology requirements and executing national roll-out of financial systems. 

Mr. Goswami also worked for The World Bank as a Consultant in Financial Management, where he piloted multiple technology innovations to reduce fund leakage. He implemented expenditure tracking systems in over 2,000 government primary schools in Odisha as well as scaled an e-payment system Odisha village health workers.

Mr. Goswami previously was a research associate at Abdul Latin Jameel Poverty Action Lab, where he worked with Nobel laureates Professors Esther Duflo and Abhijeet Banerjee on their largest public health project, which addressed anemia and low rural household incomes in Bhojpur district. 

As a John F. Kennedy Fellow, Mr. Goswami earned a Master degree in Public Administration and International Development at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University in 2017. In 2011, he earned his Bachelor of Arts in Economics and International Relations at Tufts University. 

Dwijo was a stellar student in EPIIC, and participated in many of the Institute’s other initiatives and programs, including this photographic workshop of our EXPOSURE program in the summer of 2009 in Ajmer, India. He was also involved in the Empower program, in which he embarked on the study of microfinance.

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Jeanette Bailey

Jeanette Bailey is the Nutrition Research and Innovation Lead at the International Rescue Committee (IRC), and an associate professor at the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. She was the Principal Investigator on the Combined Protocol for Acute Malnutrition Study (ComPAS), a global clinical trial that tested a simplified and combined approach to treating severe and moderate acute malnutrition in children under age 5. The ComPAS protocol is now being researched in clinical and operational trials by non-governmental organizations, the United Nations, and governments in more than 12 countries. Jeanette is currently leading a research team at the IRC to design and test new interventions to improve the care and delivery of treatment to malnourished children globally.

Prior to joining the IRC, Jeanette spent nearly a decade overseas working in humanitarian programs with Doctors Without Borders, Save the Children and Action Against Hunger in multiple countries in Africa, Asia and South America. She received her PhD and MSc in Nutrition from the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM), and her BA in International Relations from Tufts University.

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Roderick Cowan

Roderick Cowan may be the most famous person you have never heard of. His work has appeared in media around the world — from the New York Times and Washington Post to the Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian — and on the desks of presidents, prime ministers (one of whom wanted Cowan's head on a platter), politicians, academics, intellectuals, and corporate leaders. Yet, his name rarely appears in print, online, or on electronic media.

Cowan honed his persuasion skills disarming dangerous criminals or getting them to confess to crimes as a police officer and investigator in two of Britain's toughest districts — the east end of Glasgow and the east end of London. While on a leave of absence from London's Metropolitan Police, he discovered he had a talent for journalism, writing, and public speaking. He later added teaching to his skillset and did so from a practitioner's perspective.

Cowan prefers to remain behind the scenes, speechwriting, advising, and training. He now has over 30 years of experience writing, teaching, speaking at conferences and public events, and assisting in various government and corporate research and communications programs.

Cowan is currently the Executive Director, University of Chicago Center for Security and Threats (CPOST).

He has previously held several senior advisory roles, such as Research Fellow with the Research Network for a Secure Australia; Strategic Advisor to the Dubai-based Emirates Group Security/Edith Cowan University Centre of Aviation and Security Studies (CASS); Advisor to Macquarie University’s Centre for Policing, Intelligence and Counterterrorism (PICT), where he developed and delivered its first Media Studies and Terrorism unit for its master’s course (MPICT).

His research focuses on digital communication issues in the security, intelligence, and law enforcement context, notably illicit trade, cyber security and human factors, social media, open-source risk, and communications skills. He has conducted workshops for and consulted with law enforcement, intelligence agencies, government entities, and corporations in Australia, Middle East, UK, and the EU on how digital technology, although providing many benefits, also represents severe threats to governments, businesses, communities, and individuals.

He regularly teaches communications subjects, such as crisis media management, interviewing, and practical writing skills. His clients include international corporations, such as IAG and Emirates Airlines, and Governments, such as the Georgian Parliament, Tbilisi, and the Australian Federal Attorney-General.

A speechwriter and advisor to public and private individuals, he is a member of the American Professional Speechwriters Association and the UK Speechwriters Guild.

Cowan has written for print media, appeared on national television and radio, and has received two industry awards for excellence for reporting in the security industry.

Before his communications career, Cowan was a police officer in the UK, initially serving in Scotland and then London's Metropolitan Police.

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Amir Grinstein

Amir Grinstein is Associate Professor of Marketing at Northeastern University and VU Amsterdam. He completed all his studies at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and was a post-doctorate fellow at Harvard Business School. Amir’s research and teaching interests are focused on two core issues: (1) the interface between marketing and society/public policy, especially topics such as the enhancement of “green”, healthy or other socially-desirable behaviors, and the effectiveness of de-marketing, Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) and brand activism; (2) marketing strategy, including the study of strategic orientations and international marketing topics. He applies multiple methods in his research including field studies, lab and online experiments, survey research, secondary data analysis, and meta-analysis.

Amir published over 40 academic papers in leading journals such as Journal of MarketingJournal of Marketing Research, and Journal of Consumer Research among others. He is currently an Associate Editor at Journal of International Marketing and on the editorial review boards of the Journal of Marketing and International Journal of Research in Marketing. Amir’s received multiple recognitions for his work including in recent years the Thomas C. Kinnear award for outstanding article in Journal of Public Policy and Marketing on his co-authored work on food waste, the Journal of International Marketing’s outstanding Associate Editor, mostly for co-leading a special issue on Well-Being in a Global World, and a Teaching Excellence Award for the course Bridging Conflict, Creating Diversity: an Entrepreneurship and Marketing Experience.

Amir co-founded and is a board member of 50:50 Startups (www.5050startups.org), a non-profit accelerator that helps create and mentor equally owned Jewish-Arab/Israeli-Palestinian technology startups. The accelerator has engaged since 2019 about 100 participants and mentored 10 early-stage ventures.

Amir writes a weekly column for the Israeli business and economics newspaper Globes about managerial and behavioral research.  

He lives in Brookline MA, is married to Yana (a leadership development expert and executive coach) and has 3 boys.

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Christopher Ghadban

Christopher Ghadban is an MBA Candidate majoring in Healthcare Management at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. In addition to pursuing his MBA, he is juggling several roles in the early innovation space. These include his Venture Fellowship with Alix Ventures; consulting with VC firms and startups such as Rejuvenate Bio, Third Rock Ventures, Ensoma, and GeneGuard; assisting the City of Philadelphia as they seek to build their life science ecosystem; developing an executive leadership program with Wharton and McKinsey for early-career professionals in healthcare; advising the launch of Nucleate, a national program for translating academic life science innovation out of academia; and launching a biotech startup in sustainability/clean tech.

Prior to beginning at Wharton, Chris was Senior Strategy & Innovation Associate with AstraZeneca's Emerging Innovations Unit. This role involved a combination of developing and launching innovation strategy; conducting search and evaluation of early-stage, high potential bio-innovations and establishing collaborative research projects for catalysis; and leading engagement with the global, biopharma entrepreneurial ecosystem.

Before joining AstraZeneca, Chris operated as an independent consultant for over a dozen emerging and established biotechnology and technology companies. The experience enabled broad exposure to numerous functional roles, during which Chris ensured client success by designing and implementing organic growth, business development, product development, and operational effectiveness strategies.

Chris attended Tufts University, completing degrees in MS Bioengineering (’17) and BS Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology Engineering (’14). While at Tufts, he co-founded Tufts Synthetic Biology, an independent organization that enables undergraduates to step into the roles of research project design and execution while considering the commercial, social, and ethical implications of their work. Chris continues to advise emerging life science leaders as a mentor with programs such as Nucleate, iGEM, GapSummit, MassBio, Kickstart Carolina, and the NCI’s SBIR Program.

In his spare time Chris can be found creating new recipes, exploring used bookstores, filling his sketchbook, and advising new and growing ventures.

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UNDERSTANDING GLOBAL POLITICAL VIOLENCE: REVIEW OF 2021

Understanding Global Political Violence

Review of 2021

Building on the success of this year’s review of 2020, CPOST researchers and guests will presents findings and insights into political violence across the globe. Importantly, subsequent discussions will focus on practical implications, strategies, and policies.

Date: February 23 &24, 2022 

Location: Virtual event.

Agenda: 

  • Global trends in political violence — what the evidence tells us

    • Militant attacks and threat analysis

    • Pandemic effect on terrorism

  • Arabic Propaganda Analysis — what terrorists are saying and why

    • Tracking and understanding jihadist videos

    • Scriptural Reasoning as a rhetorical tool

  • American Political Violence — implications for the Middle East and beyond

    • Diminished capacity overseas

    • Reframing counter-terrorism efforts

Special Workshop 

  • Deep dive into data, processes, and findings

    • CPOST Arabic Propaganda Analysis Team (APAT) conducts two in-depth workshops: one in Arabic, the other in English.

Timing

Speakers

Prof. Robert Pape + Researchers

Prof. Paul Poast

H.E. Dr. Ali Al Nuaimi is a Member of the UAE Federal National Council for the Emirate of Abu Dhabi and Chairman of the Defense Affairs, Interior & Foreign Affairs Committee at the Council. (TBC)

Ambassador Douglas A. Silliman

President, AGSIW (TBC)


Previous event: https://vimeo.com/510360212

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