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Moderated High-Level Policy Session 14

Knowledge societies, capacity building and e-learning/ Media

 

© ITU/ R.Farrell

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 5

Building confidence and security in the use of ICTs

 

© ITU/ R.Farrell

Discussion moderated by Dave Karger, writer and editor for Entertainment Weekly Magazine.

 

On Nov 10, 2009, 92YTribeca and Borders were proud to join forces with Twentieth Century Fox, to present an evening of conversation with Wes Anderson (Director) and Jason Schwartzman (voice of "Ash").

 

In advance of the release of Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes and Jason discussed working together on the film, a stop motion animated adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel. In addition to the moderated discussion, we had a sneak peek of clips from the film and the opportunity to participate in audience Q&A.

 

Read more on the 92Y Blog: blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/item/what_you_missed_a_conv...

 

Fantastic Mr. Fox in select theatres Nov. 13, everywhere Nov. 25. For more information on the film and to view the trailer please visit www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com

 

Follow 92YTribeca on Twitter: Twitter.com/92YTribeca

92YTribeca Talks and Classes Facebook: www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=38456170015&ref=ts

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 9

ICT applications and services

 

Speaking: H.E. Mr. Elmir Velizade, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Transport, Communications and High Technologies, Azerbaijan

 

©ITU/I.Wood

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 5

Building confidence and security in the use of ICTs

 

© ITU/ R.Farrell

CATCA President & CEO Peter Duffey and David Grizzle of Dazzle Partners, LLC, moderated a panel on international collaboration at #NATCACFS2019. Panelists Prospect ATCOs' Branch Chair Paul Winstanley, NZALPA ATC Director Kelvin Vercoe, NAVCANADA Executive Vice President Service Delivery Rudy Kellar, Aireon Chief Technology Officer and Vice President of Engineering Vincent Capezzuto, Raytheon Executive Technical Director Rachel Jackson, and Leidos Senior VP of Operations Fran Hill discussed how partnerships strengthen ties and establish a collective voice to speak on a range of subjects.

 

Leaders of aviation safety unions in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, Spain, and New Zealand launched the Global Air Traffic Controllers Alliance at the World ATM in Madrid, Spain, in March 2018. The members of the alliance are unions who represent aviation safety professionals and advocate for their status and working conditions. The member unions work together to meet both individual and shared challenges, raise important safety issues to a global platform, and communicate with one another in a spirit of solidarity and unity. Learn more about the Alliance: www.atcalliance.world/

Credit: Cibele_Vieira / Clinton Global Initiative

 

Breakout Session: CGI Conversation moderated by Fareed Zakaria, CNN host & Washington Post columnist

 

REMARKS:

 

Gianna Angelopoulos, Ambassador at Large, The Hellenic Republic

Opening Conversation:

 

MODERATOR:

 

Fareed Zakaria, Host, CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS, Columnist, Washington Post

PARTICIPANTS:

 

Louka Katseli, Chair, National Bank of Greece

Joseph Stiglitz, Professor, Columbia University

Closing Conversation:

 

MODERATOR:

 

Fareed Zakaria, Host, CNN's Fareed Zakaria GPS, Columnist, Washington Post

Sean Means (Salt Lake Tribune film critic) moderates conversation with Robert Redford and Sundance Institute Executive Director Keri Putnam and Sundance Film Festival John Cooper

 

Moderated by Juan Goicolea (Deputy Minister for Innovation, Basque Government)

- José Luis Curbelo (Managing Director, Orkestra)

- Pedro Gómez Damborenea (Deputy Minister for the Press Office, Planning & Strategy, Department of Industry, Innovation, Trade & Tourism, Basque Government)

- Fernando Fernandez (Professor of Economics, IE Business School)

- Pedro Antonio Merino (Director of Economic Research, Repsol)

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 2: Bridging Digital Divides

 

Ms. Jane Coffin, Director, Development Strategy, Internet Society (ISOC)

 

©ITU/R.Farrell

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 14: Knowledge societies,

capacity building and e-learning / Media

 

Speaking: H.E. Mrs. Emine Dzhaparova, First Deputy Minister, Ministry of Information Policy, Ukraine

 

©ITU/R.Farrell

Skye Glas, Skye Glas (141, 191, 20) - Moderate

 

Alex Bader

 

for Sky Tropical range of landscaping products

  

Visit this location at Skye Glas in Second Life

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 5: WSIS Action Lines and the 2030 Agenda / Financing for development and role of ICT

From left to right:

Mr. Yushi Torigoe, Deputy Director, Telecommunication Development Bureau, ITU

Mr. Anders Aeroe, Director, Division of Enterprises and Institutions, ITC

Dr. Salma Abbasi, Chairperson and CEO, eWorldWide Group

Mr. Pavan Duggal, Founder and Chairman, International Commission on Cyber Security Law

 

©ITU/I.Wood

Producer and author Terry Irving moderates a panel discussion on the role of the television journalism during the Vietnam War. Panelists included journalist and former Nightline anchor Ted Koppel; Yasutsune “Tony” Hirashiki, ABC News cameraman (1966–2006) and author of "On the Frontlines of the Television War: A Legendary War Cameraman in Vietnam;" and journalist Barrie Dunsmore. The event was held at the National Archives in Washington, DC, on December 7, 2017. NARA photo by Jeff Reed.

By the time of the infamous Dred Scott decision in 1857, even a very moderate lawyer and former congressman like Abraham Lincoln became convinced there was a "Slave Power" conspiracy uniting proslavery presidents, the Supreme Court, and Southern Senators and congressmen, all intent on nationalizing the institution and overturning the Founders' dream of putting slavery on the path toward "ultimate extinction".

~ from Inhuman Bondage, David Brion Davis

 

“ It is difficult at this day to realize the state of public opinion in regard to that unfortunate race which prevailed in the civilized and enlightened portions of the world at the time of the Declaration of Independence, and when the Constitution of the United States was framed and adopted; but the public history of every European nation displays it in a manner too plain to be mistaken. They had for more than a century before been regarded as beings of an inferior order, and altogether unfit to associate with the white race, either in social or political relations, and so far unfit that they had no rights which the white man was bound to respect."

~ Roger B. Taney, Dred Scott v. Sandford decision

 

Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857), was a ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court that people of African descent brought into the United States and held as slaves (or their descendants, whether or not they were slaves) were not protected by the Constitution and could never be U.S. citizens.

 

The Opinion of the Court, written by Chief Justice Roger B. Taney, was extremely controversial. The decision was 7–2, and every Justice besides Taney wrote a separate concurrence or dissent. For the first time since Marbury v. Madison, the Court held an Act of Congress to be unconstitutional. The decision began by first concluding that the Court lacked jurisdiction in the matter because Dred Scott had no standing to sue in Court. However, in a move often criticized as being obiter dictum both at the time and in subsequent years, the Court went on to conclude that that Congress had no authority to prohibit slavery in federal territories and that, because slaves were not citizens, they could not sue in court. Furthermore, the Court ruled that slaves, as chattels or private property, could not be taken away from their owners without due process.

 

Taney had hoped to settle the issue of slavery in the United States with the Court's decision, but it had the opposite effect. The decision was fiercely debated across the country, as perhaps best exemplified by the Lincoln–Douglas debates of 1858. Abraham Lincoln, the second-ever Republican nominee for President, was able to win the presidential election in 1860; the stopping of the further expansion of slavery was a key Republican party plank.

 

Although the Supreme Court has never explicitly overruled the Dred Scott case, the Court stated in the Slaughter-House Cases that at least one part of it had already been overruled by the Fourteenth Amendment in 1868.

 

Dred Scott was born a slave in Virginia between 1795 and 1800. In 1830, he followed his owners to Missouri. In 1832, U.S. Army Major John Emerson, stationed outside of St. Louis, purchased Scott. Over the next 12 years, Emerson took Scott along to new assignments at Fort Armstrong, Illinois, and later to Fort Snelling in the Wisconsin Territory (present-day Minnesota). Illinois, a free state, had been free as a territory under the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, and had prohibited slavery in its constitution in 1819 when it was admitted as a state. The federal government had also prohibited slavery within the Wisconsin Territory in the Missouri Compromise in 1820, and had reaffirmed the ban in 1836 with the Wisconsin Enabling Act. Additionally, while at Fort Snelling, Emerson allowed Scott to marry, which slaves were generally not allowed to do under common law, as slaves had no right to enter into legal contracts.

 

Emerson left the Army. He died in the Iowa Territory in 1843, his widow Eliza inheriting his estate, including Scott. Eliza Irene Emerson continued to hire out Scott after the death of her husband, keeping the rents for herself. Scott then attempted to purchase his freedom, but Emerson refused.

 

After failing to purchase the freedom of his family and himself, and with the help of abolitionist legal advisers, Scott sued Emerson for his freedom in 1846. Scott based his legal argument on precedents such as Somersett v. Stewart, Winny v. Whitesides, and Rachel v. Walker, claiming his presence and residence in free territories required his emancipation. Scott's lawyers argued the same for Scott's wife, and further claimed that Eliza Scott's birth on a steamboat between a free state and a free territory had made her free upon birth.

 

While the case awaited trial, Scott and his family were placed in the custody of the St. Louis County Sheriff, who had continued to rent out the services of Scott, placing the rents in escrow. The jury found Scott and his family legally free. Unwilling to accept the loss of four slaves and a substantial escrow account, Emerson appealed to the Supreme Court of Missouri, although by that point she had moved to Massachusetts and transferred advocacy of the case to her brother, John F. A. Sanford.

 

The Supreme Court ruling was handed down on March 6, 1857, just two days after Buchanan's inauguration. Chief Justice Taney delivered the opinion of the Court, with each of the concurring and dissenting Justices filing separate opinions.

 

The Dred Scott decision represented a culmination of what many at that time considered a push to expand slavery. Southerners at the time, who had grown uncomfortable with the Kansas-Nebraska Act, argued that they had a right, under the federal constitution, to bring slaves into the territories, regardless of any decision by a territorial legislature on the subject. The Dred Scott decision seemed to endorse that view. The expansion of the territories and resulting admission of new states would mean a loss of political power for the North, as many of the new states would be admitted as slave states, and counting slaves as three-fifths of a person would add to the slave holding states' political representation in Congress.

 

Although Taney believed that the decision represented a compromise that would settle the slavery question once and for all by transforming a contested political issue into a matter of settled law, it produced the opposite result. It strengthened Northern slavery opposition, divided the Democratic Party on sectional lines, encouraged secessionist elements among Southern supporters of slavery to make bolder demands, and strengthened the Republican Party.

      

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 13

Digital economy and trade

 

Speaking: Dr. Cisse Kane, President, African Civil Society on the Information Society

 

©ITU/I.Wood

It is being scientifically documented and measured that animals are able to reduce and even abolish moderate depression. People get rid of antidepressants by the straightforward act of acquiring a dog—especially one that is considered a “lap” dog.

The National Women's Health Resource Center and Support Partners has a national education campaign committed to folks who have depression. Recently they publicized the benefits of a dog in rising above depression. They suggest that petting your dog will definitely help alleviate stress and anxiety, taking your dog for a walk offers you a workout and alleviates stress, and teaching your dog a brand-new trick will certainly provide you a sense of accomplishment.

Healthcare professionals and Social workers are seeing the value of pets in helping to keep people healthy and enhancing their health when we are sick, depressed or under a great deal of stress. Why is this crucial? Because the acknowledgment by nationwide companies and health care specialists will help expand the awareness of just how valuable the role pets play in our health. What more natural way to stay healthy and balanced and satisfied than by having the joy of owning an animal?

Exactly how dogs improve our health and well being by modifying our biochemistry is still under inspection.

Here are some of the ways people find benefit in their pets:

The quiet communication of petting a dog will decrease your blood strain, lower your tension hormone and increase the levels of good hormones and neurotransmitters which will certainly all assist you in feeling better.

The simple act of enjoying fish in a fish storage tank will certainly lower your blood tension and decrease feelings of stress and anxiety.

Communicating with your animal will increase your serotonin levels, which are instrumental to reducing the feelings of depression.

Strolling your animal will certainly assist you lose weight far better than other typical weight loss approaches and enhance your sense of well being.

According to a leading clinical psychologist, "While a specialist, household and pals should form the basis of a support network for medically depressed individuals, dogs are able to play a very important role by being a continual companion. Depression is frequently connected with strong social preconception, inducing people to withdraw from their lives and intensifying the psychological signs of the ailment."

We all know that owning a pet can do all of that for us. Walking a dog, for example, will help you make more social contacts and can help you slim down which is all very helpful to your psychological health and physical well being. If you look after your friend, they will look after you.

Pets work better than pills!

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 4

Enabling environment ©ITU/I.Wood

The location is in the Alaska range mountains that includes Denali to the west of the inset map. This region is very active with many small mag 2-4 quakes recorded. A small quake is captured most days in this area such as the right trace. Captured with web linked Seismometer in Anchorage.

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 3

Bridging digital divides

 

© ITU/ R.Farrell

CGI Conversation moderated by Bloomberg TV Now What? Investing in the Long Term SESSION FEATURES: FILMED FOR BROADCAST Seven years after the depths of the financial crisis, job creation is robust and unemployment is nearing its pre-recession levels. With the toughest years behind us, it is now essential that the lessons of the recession not be forgotten and that leaders take advantage of a healthier economy to invest in a more sustainable and inclusive nation. In this session, panelists will discuss smart investments that they believe will have a lasting return for all Americans and make the nation more competitive globally. These investments will pay dividends beyond the recovery and through subsequent economic cycles, creating opportunities for future generations to achieve the American Dream. Moderator: David Westin, Anchor, Bloomberg TV Participants: Robert L. Johnson, Founder and Chairman, The RLJ Companies Steven A. Sugarman, Chairman and CEO, Banc of California Alex Taylor, Executive Vice President of Strategic Investments, Cox Enterprises

Discussion moderated by Dave Karger, writer and editor for Entertainment Weekly Magazine.

 

On Nov 10, 2009, 92YTribeca and Borders were proud to join forces with Twentieth Century Fox, to present an evening of conversation with Wes Anderson (Director) and Jason Schwartzman (voice of "Ash").

 

In advance of the release of Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes and Jason discussed working together on the film, a stop motion animated adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel. In addition to the moderated discussion, we had a sneak peek of clips from the film and the opportunity to participate in audience Q&A.

 

Read more on the 92Y Blog: blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/item/what_you_missed_a_conv...

 

Fantastic Mr. Fox in select theatres Nov. 13, everywhere Nov. 25. For more information on the film and to view the trailer please visit www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com

 

Follow 92YTribeca on Twitter: Twitter.com/92YTribeca

92YTribeca Talks and Classes Facebook: www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=38456170015&ref=ts

Discussion moderated by Dave Karger, writer and editor for Entertainment Weekly Magazine.

 

On Nov 10, 2009, 92YTribeca and Borders were proud to join forces with Twentieth Century Fox, to present an evening of conversation with Wes Anderson (Director) and Jason Schwartzman (voice of "Ash").

 

In advance of the release of Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes and Jason discussed working together on the film, a stop motion animated adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel. In addition to the moderated discussion, we had a sneak peek of clips from the film and the opportunity to participate in audience Q&A.

 

Read more on the 92Y Blog: blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/item/what_you_missed_a_conv...

 

Fantastic Mr. Fox in select theatres Nov. 13, everywhere Nov. 25. For more information on the film and to view the trailer please visit www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com

 

Follow 92YTribeca on Twitter: Twitter.com/92YTribeca

92YTribeca Talks and Classes Facebook: www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=38456170015&ref=ts

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 4

Enabling environment ©ITU/I.Wood

www.thirdway.org/products/225

Mike Allen of Politico moderates Third Way's Idea Forum: Getting Health Reform Over The Finish Line in the Cannon Caucus Room on Capitol Hill July 14, 2009 with Rep John Dingell, Rep Ron Kind, Rep Jason Altmire

Shazia Ahmad moderating Session 4: Rare Diseases Therapeutics and the Role of Advocacy and Industry

Collaborations.

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 5

Building confidence and security in the use of ICTs

 

© ITU/ R.Farrell

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 3

Bridging digital divides

 

© ITU/ R.Farrell

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 6: Bridging Digital Divides

 

From left to right:

Mr. Aleph Molinari, President, Fundación Proacceso

Mr. Cliff Schmidt, Founder & Executive Director (United States), Amplio (formerly Literacy Bridge)

Dr. Alison Gillwald, Executive Director, Research ICT Africa

Mr. Jaromír Novák, Chairman of Council, Czech Telecommunication Office, Czech Republic

Dr Anuradha Rao, National University of Singapore, Singapore

Mr. Cosmas Zavazava, Chief of Department, Projects & Knowledge Management, Telecommunication Development Bureau, ITU

H.E. Mr. Masahiko Tominaga, Vice-Minister for Policy Coordination (International Affairs), Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, Japan

 

©ITU/R.Farrell

Discussion moderated by Dave Karger, writer and editor for Entertainment Weekly Magazine.

 

On Nov 10, 2009, 92YTribeca and Borders were proud to join forces with Twentieth Century Fox, to present an evening of conversation with Wes Anderson (Director) and Jason Schwartzman (voice of "Ash").

 

In advance of the release of Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes and Jason discussed working together on the film, a stop motion animated adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel. In addition to the moderated discussion, we had a sneak peek of clips from the film and the opportunity to participate in audience Q&A.

 

Read more on the 92Y Blog: blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/item/what_you_missed_a_conv...

 

Fantastic Mr. Fox in select theatres Nov. 13, everywhere Nov. 25. For more information on the film and to view the trailer please visit www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com

 

Follow 92YTribeca on Twitter: Twitter.com/92YTribeca

92YTribeca Talks and Classes Facebook: www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=38456170015&ref=ts

Discussion moderated by Dave Karger, writer and editor for Entertainment Weekly Magazine.

 

On Nov 10, 2009, 92YTribeca and Borders were proud to join forces with Twentieth Century Fox, to present an evening of conversation with Wes Anderson (Director) and Jason Schwartzman (voice of "Ash").

 

In advance of the release of Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes and Jason discussed working together on the film, a stop motion animated adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel. In addition to the moderated discussion, we had a sneak peek of clips from the film and the opportunity to participate in audience Q&A.

 

Read more on the 92Y Blog: blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/item/what_you_missed_a_conv...

 

Fantastic Mr. Fox in select theatres Nov. 13, everywhere Nov. 25. For more information on the film and to view the trailer please visit www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com

 

Follow 92YTribeca on Twitter: Twitter.com/92YTribeca

92YTribeca Talks and Classes Facebook: www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=38456170015&ref=ts

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 10: Inclusiveness – access to

information and knowledge for all

 

©ITU/R.Farrell

Moderated by Juan Goicolea (Deputy Minister for Innovation, Basque Government)

- José Luis Curbelo (Managing Director, Orkestra)

- Pedro Gómez Damborenea (Deputy Minister for the Press Office, Planning & Strategy, Department of Industry, Innovation, Trade & Tourism, Basque Government)

- Fernando Fernandez (Professor of Economics, IE Business School)

- Pedro Antonio Merino (Director of Economic Research, Repsol)

Moderated conversations among alumni and students took place in the Carnegie Building's Root Room to identify careers and activities that reflect the values Oberlin has advanced and inspired since its founding, at a time when citizen advocacy has never been more urgently needed.

 

A diverse group of alumni discussed how Oberlin values have influenced their choices and led to fulfilling lives. The program included two morning panels and audience contributions followed by networking opportunities over lunch.

 

Photo by Abe Frato '26

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 8

Inclusiveness – access to information and knowledge for all ©ITU/I.Wood

)A moderate growing Evergreen with a narrow, columnar form and an upright growth habit. Possesses dark green, glossy foliage and small purple berries in the Fall (as long as there is a male pollinator nearby). Prefers light, slightly acidic, moist, well-drained soils, but highly adaptable. Tolerates mild drought, when established. Feed with a general purpose fertilizer in spring. Prune annually to shape.Ideal for decks, patios,

Moderate Fluorosis occurs in relatively significant frequency in fluoridated communities.

 

Have you observed friends who have supra white spots on their teeth?

 

(The most popular fluorosis picture)

 

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 1

WSIS action lines and the 2030 agenda

 

© ITU/ R.Farrell

 

Moderate aroma of ripe banana, cloves and dried berries. Milk chocolate and slightly veiled due to its large portion of malted wheat and the presence of yeast in suspension. Its alcohol content makes you want to share with the approach of the holidays. Will you be breast of mind?

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 8

©ITU/D.Woldu

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 1: WSIS Action Lines and the 2030 Agenda

 

H.E. Mr. Giorgi Cherkezishvili, Deputy Minister, Ministry of Economy and Sustainable Development of Georgia

 

©ITU/R.Farrell

Moderated by Juan Goicolea (Deputy Minister for Innovation, Basque Government)

- José Luis Curbelo (Managing Director, Orkestra)

- Pedro Gómez Damborenea (Deputy Minister for the Press Office, Planning & Strategy, Department of Industry, Innovation, Trade & Tourism, Basque Government)

- Fernando Fernandez (Professor of Economics, IE Business School)

- Pedro Antonio Merino (Director of Economic Research, Repsol)

Moderated High-Level Policy Session 12

©ITU/D.Woldu

Discussion moderated by Dave Karger, writer and editor for Entertainment Weekly Magazine.

 

On Nov 10, 2009, 92YTribeca and Borders were proud to join forces with Twentieth Century Fox, to present an evening of conversation with Wes Anderson (Director) and Jason Schwartzman (voice of "Ash").

 

In advance of the release of Fantastic Mr. Fox, Wes and Jason discussed working together on the film, a stop motion animated adaptation of the Roald Dahl novel. In addition to the moderated discussion, we had a sneak peek of clips from the film and the opportunity to participate in audience Q&A.

 

Read more on the 92Y Blog: blog.92y.org/index.php/weblog/item/what_you_missed_a_conv...

 

Fantastic Mr. Fox in select theatres Nov. 13, everywhere Nov. 25. For more information on the film and to view the trailer please visit www.fantasticmrfoxmovie.com

 

Follow 92YTribeca on Twitter: Twitter.com/92YTribeca

92YTribeca Talks and Classes Facebook: www.facebook.com/#/group.php?gid=38456170015&ref=ts

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