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Wake Forest hosts a Dignity and Respect program in Brendle Recital Hall on Wednesday, November 6, 2013. Students from Carter G. Woodson Academy in Winston-Salem introduce themselves to the Wake Forest men's basketball team.
clickeventonline.com/event/politica/160921-Panel_discussi...
MODERATOR: Jaime Suchlicki, Director, Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies, and Emilio Bacardi Moreau Distinguished Professor at the University of Miami. He is also editor of “Cuban Affairs,” a quarterly electronic journal published by ICCAS, and the author of Cuba: from Columbus to Castro; Mexico: from Montezuma to the Rise of PAN; and Breve Historia de Cuba. Dr. Suchlicki is a highly regarded consultant to the public and private sector in the U.S.
PANEL: Alfredo Duran, is a lawyer practicing in Miami, Florida. Mr. Duran has a long standing record of participation in Democratic Party politics including chairmanship of the Florida Democratic Party, 1976-1980 and membership in various DNC party committees and commissions. He has also served as member of the Dade County School Board, chairman of the Community Relations Board, Member of the Board of Directors of Mercy Hospital Foundation, Inc., NAFTA and Beyond Commission and other civic and community organizations. He is a former member of the Bay of Pigs Invasion; a prisoner of war in Cuba for 18 months; former president of the Bay of Pigs Veterans Association and is presently Member of the Board of Directors of the Cuban Committee for Democracy (CCD) and Member of the Board of Directors of Center for International Policy.
Otto Reich, President of Otto Reich Associates, LLC, of Washington, DC, served as U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela, from 1986 to 1989. In the 1980’s, Reich received three appointments from President Ronald Reagan: As Special Advisor to the Secretary of State from 1983 to 1986, he directed the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean, which received the Department’s Meritorious Honor Award. From 1981 to 1983, he was Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) in charge of U.S. economic assistance to Latin America and the Caribbean. He was the Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs from 2001 to 2002. He then became President Bush’s Special Envoy for Western Hemisphere Initiatives, reporting to Dr. Condoleezza Rice in the National Security Council. He left government service in June 2004.
Building a global digital marketplace - Panel debate featuring:
Rowan Conway, Director of Innovation and Development, RSA,
Wendy Lawson, Senior Director Member Services and Technology, IACCM,
Warren Smith, Director of Digital Marketplace, GDS
Participants view the panel discussion during the Civil Rights Game in Atlanta, GA May 15, 2011. (Photo by Rikki Guerrero, USAAC G7)
Wake Forest hosts a Dignity and Respect program in Brendle Recital Hall on Wednesday, November 6, 2013.
Reem Fadda in conversation with audience members at the reception.
Urgency and Relevance: A Curatorial Perspective
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
5th Avenue at 89th Street
New York City
Presented as part of Asian Contemporary Art Week’s critical Dialogues in Contemporary Art series, this program provided an insider’s view of contemporary art through the eyes of international practitioners working at the edge of advocacy and establishment. Distinguished curators presented diverse practices within a landscape of new global initiatives, told through individual case studies. The conversation was moderated by Alexandra Munroe, Samsung Senior Curator of Asian Art, and featured curators Leeza Ahmady, Thomas Berghuis, Melissa Chiu, Reem Fadda, and Pablo León de la Barra. A reception followed.
Watch the full video archive on YouTube: youtu.be/wYDZiN0uipY
Photo: Chad Heird
Learn more about Public Programs.
Let’s Talk About Race brought together ethnic minority DDaT professionals and senior leaders from across government to share inspiring stories, advice on career progression and create an action plan to move forwards.
Evolution of data science and lessons learned - panel discussion with Martin Goodson (Evolution AI), Francine Bennett (Mastodon C), Patrick J Wolfe, (UCL), Mark Girolami, (University of Warwick), Harry Powell (Head of Advanced Data Analytics, Barclays), and Magda Piatkowska, (Head of Data Science, Telegraph Media Group).
‘NODE15 – Forum for Digital Arts’ is gathering designers, creative coders and digital artists for creative explorations of technologies. With the Leitmotif ‘Wrapped in Code – the Future of the Informed Body’, NODE15 is devoted to the negotiation of the body and its fusion with technology. It’s a week long rush with hands-on vvvv workshops, exhibition, symposium, performances and artist talks.
Photo: Nemanja Knežević
Items from the Combat Paper collection are displayed during a panel discussion about the project, November 7, 2019. Photo by Shawn Miller/Library of Congress.
Note: Privacy and publicity rights for individuals depicted may apply.
Paola Bonomo Paola Caburlotto Sandra Mori Donatella Sciuto
Chiunque organizza eventi, conferenze, panel si trova spesso davanti a uno shock visivo: appena stampata la brochure oppure impaginato il sito, ci si accorge che gli speaker sono tutti uomini. Non va molto meglio nei media: solo il 18% degli esperti intervistati in TV o sui giornali italiani sono donne (Global Media Monitoring Project 2015). Come uscire dalla pigrizia mentale dell’esperto uomo per default? Come attrezzarsi per trovare e per dare voce alle esperte? E come costruire role model autorevoli per le ragazze - che siano scienziate, professioniste o manager?
Anyone organizing events, conferences and panels is often faced with a visual shock: once the leaflet is printed or the session is online, they realize there are only male speakers. The media aren’t performing much better: only 18% of the experts interviewed on Italian TV or newspapers are women (Global Media Monitoring Project 2015). How we are to extricate ourselves from the mental laziness of having a “male expert” by default? How is it possible to create authoritative role models for girls – either scientists, professionals or managers?
Video: media.journalismfestival.com/programme/2017/wheres-the-fe...
Packer legends Dave Robinson, Willie Davis, and Ahman Green participated in a Black History event at Lambeau Field.
Items from the Combat Paper collection are displayed during a panel discussion about the project, November 7, 2019. Photo by Shawn Miller/Library of Congress.
Note: Privacy and publicity rights for individuals depicted may apply.
U.S. Army veteran Patrick Sargent speaks on a panel discussion about the Combat Paper project during the Veterans Art Showcase week, November 7, 2019. Photo by Shawn Miller/Library of Congress.
Note: Privacy and publicity rights for individuals depicted may apply.
Sprint: Belfast looked at how Northern Ireland and the Government Digital Service can work together to make things better for users across the UK.
We looked at Northern Ireland’s progress so far and potential for the future and focus on how to build tools, capability and culture for digital transformation.
Building a global digital marketplace - Panel debate featuring:
Rowan Conway, Director of Innovation and Development, RSA,
Wendy Lawson, Senior Director Member Services and Technology, IACCM,
Warren Smith, Director of Digital Marketplace, GDS
US Embassy South Africa's Cultural Affairs Assistant Nomaqhawe Ndlazi joined the panel discussion with enke: Make Your Mark's Program Coordinator Zamagele Magoso, and Entrepreneur Zolani Kunene.
Wake Forest hosts a Dignity and Respect program in Brendle Recital Hall on Wednesday, November 6, 2013.
Urgency and Relevance: A Curatorial Perspective
Tuesday, March 11, 2014
5th Avenue at 89th Street
New York City
Presented as part of Asian Contemporary Art Week’s critical Dialogues in Contemporary Art series, this program provided an insider’s view of contemporary art through the eyes of international practitioners working at the edge of advocacy and establishment. Distinguished curators presented diverse practices within a landscape of new global initiatives, told through individual case studies. The conversation was moderated by Alexandra Munroe, Samsung Senior Curator of Asian Art, and featured curators Leeza Ahmady, Thomas Berghuis, Melissa Chiu, Reem Fadda, and Pablo León de la Barra. A reception followed.
Watch the full video archive on YouTube: youtu.be/wYDZiN0uipY
Photo: Chad Heird
Learn more about Public Programs.
Laura Silvia Battaglia
Ismail Einashe
Rachael Jolley
Marta Ottaviani
Duncan Tucker
Non solo dal Medio Oriente e dall'Africa, continenti-stati tradizionalmente funestati dal difficile rapporto tra potere e libertà di espressione e stampa, ma anche dalle Americhe e dall'Europa si alzano nuovi venti censori. Index on Censorship che da anni monitora lo stato della censura nel mondo, registra un trend censorio in preoccupante avanzamento ovunque nel mondo, soprattutto nei confronti di artisti, attivisti, intellettuali, giornalisti. I corrispondenti di Index da Messico, Golfo, Corno D'Africa ed Europa tracciano una mappa dettagliata del braccio di ferro tra censura e libertà di stampa e ne tirano le fila per non dimenticare, ragionare, denunciare, reagire.
New winds of censorship are blowing in not only from the Middle East and Africa, areas traditionally plagued by a troubled relationship between media and power, but also from the Americas and Europe. Index on Censorship, which monitors the state of censorship in the world, has recorded a worrying global upward trend, especially against artists, activists, intellectuals and journalists. In this session Index correspondents from Mexico, the Gulf, the Horn of Africa and Europe will provide an update on censorship worldwide and reaffirm the need for increased vigilance in the fight to maintain, or indeed reinstate, freedom of expression.
video: media.journalismfestival.com/programme/2017/censorship-in...
Giulio Albanese
Riccardo Iacona
Cristina Nadotti
Tommy Simmons
Il richiamo alla chiusura dei confini, all’isolamento, al “tornatene a casa tua”, al nazionalismo, confligge con quella globalità ed interdipendenza che i “grandi della terra” si sono dati con i nuovi obiettivi globali, in vista del 2030. Non più Nord e Sud, non più povero e ricco, ma tutto è in stretto collegamento. Questo il cardine dei nuovi obiettivi di sviluppo. La salute del mondo, quindi, non può non passare per uno dei malati più drammatici del pianeta, il continente africano. Ricco di risorse, ma depredato e con alcuni degli indici di salute più drammatici della Terra. Amref cura dal 1957 la salute delle aree più remote dell’Africa, consapevole che curare l’Africa sia prendersi cura del mondo. Riccardo Iacona, nelle sue inchieste su Presadiretta (RAI 3) ha di frequente “connesso” il nostro mondo a quello africano, costruendo ogni volta una narrazione che evidenzia quel filo rosso che li lega. Insieme ad Amref PresaDiretta ha raccontato: “la salute come strada per costruire la pace in un Sud Sudan martoriato da divisioni etniche e conseguenze della guerra civile” (2013); scandagliato il dibattito intorno ai vaccini, che ha scaturito numerosi scontri in Italia, ma che in un Paese come l’Uganda, come dimostrato con l’aiuto di Amref - sono essenziali (2016). Fino al racconto delle conseguenze del terrorismo al confine tra Kenya e Somalia, a seguito della strage di Garissa, compiuta per mano del gruppo somalo al shabab. Tale tema è stato sviluppato dal fondatore di Amref Italia, Tommy Simmons, in collaborazione con il regista Angelo Loy. Perché ci dovrebbe interessare l’Africa e la sua salute? In che modo il giornalismo può avvicinare temi che sembrano apparentemente lontani? A queste ed altre domande - grazie alla collaborazione della giornalista Cristina Nadotti - si cercherà di rispondere. Grazie anche a Padre Giulio Albanese uno dei massimi esperti delle tematiche legate all’Africa, missionario comboniano e direttore di Popoli e Missione. Saluto iniziale della presidente onoraria di Amref Ilaria Borletti Buitoni. Organizzato e sponsorizzato da Amref Italia.
The call for the closure of borders, for isolation, for others to “go back home,” for nationalism runs sharply counter to the sense of globalism and interdependence that the “great leaders of the world” have decided with new global goals, for 2030. No more North and South, no longer poor and rich, everything is in a close connection. This is the cornerstone of the new development goals.
video: media.journalismfestival.com/programme/2017/take-care-of-...
clickeventonline.com/event/politica/160921-Panel_discussi...
MODERATOR: Jaime Suchlicki, Director, Institute for Cuban and Cuban-American Studies, and Emilio Bacardi Moreau Distinguished Professor at the University of Miami. He is also editor of “Cuban Affairs,” a quarterly electronic journal published by ICCAS, and the author of Cuba: from Columbus to Castro; Mexico: from Montezuma to the Rise of PAN; and Breve Historia de Cuba. Dr. Suchlicki is a highly regarded consultant to the public and private sector in the U.S.
PANEL: Alfredo Duran, is a lawyer practicing in Miami, Florida. Mr. Duran has a long standing record of participation in Democratic Party politics including chairmanship of the Florida Democratic Party, 1976-1980 and membership in various DNC party committees and commissions. He has also served as member of the Dade County School Board, chairman of the Community Relations Board, Member of the Board of Directors of Mercy Hospital Foundation, Inc., NAFTA and Beyond Commission and other civic and community organizations. He is a former member of the Bay of Pigs Invasion; a prisoner of war in Cuba for 18 months; former president of the Bay of Pigs Veterans Association and is presently Member of the Board of Directors of the Cuban Committee for Democracy (CCD) and Member of the Board of Directors of Center for International Policy.
Otto Reich, President of Otto Reich Associates, LLC, of Washington, DC, served as U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela, from 1986 to 1989. In the 1980’s, Reich received three appointments from President Ronald Reagan: As Special Advisor to the Secretary of State from 1983 to 1986, he directed the Office of Public Diplomacy for Latin America and the Caribbean, which received the Department’s Meritorious Honor Award. From 1981 to 1983, he was Assistant Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) in charge of U.S. economic assistance to Latin America and the Caribbean. He was the Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs from 2001 to 2002. He then became President Bush’s Special Envoy for Western Hemisphere Initiatives, reporting to Dr. Condoleezza Rice in the National Security Council. He left government service in June 2004.
Wake Forest hosts a Dignity and Respect program in Brendle Recital Hall on Wednesday, November 6, 2013.
U.S. Army veteran Patrick Sargent speaks on a panel discussion about the Combat Paper project during the Veterans Art Showcase week, November 7, 2019. Photo by Shawn Miller/Library of Congress.
Note: Privacy and publicity rights for individuals depicted may apply.
Data science capabilities and community: building for success - Panel Discussion with Sue Bateman, Better Use of Data, GDS,
Tom Smith, Data Science Campus, Office for National Statistics, Charlie Boundy, DWP and Steve Dempsey, BEIS.
Ole Miss students talk about their experiences during a panel discussion titled 'Sometimes I Feel Invisible: Living with a Disability,' led by moderator and journalism professor Kathleen Wickham. Photo by Robert Jordan/Ole Miss Communications
The Conservation, Technology and Significance of the Codex.
A panel discussion centered on the physical form of the book as an expression of technology. With Sarah Lowngard, Maria Fredericks, and John Townsend, moderated by Jeff Peachey.
At the meet-up, innovators in the public and private sectors met the five winners of Round 3 of the GovTech Catalyst Challenge.
Q&A Panel Discussion with Ruth Anderson (Oxfordshire County Council), Stephen Blackburn (Leeds City Council), Brian Eardley (Scottish National Heritage), Jim Wright (Torfaen County Council), and Jane Custance (Waltham Forest Borough Council).
Sprint: Leeds focused on how the Government Digital Service and local authorities, including Leeds City Council, can work together to make things better for users.
We looked at examples of digital transformation from a number of local authorities and charted the progress of the Local Digital Declaration as it approaches its one-year anniversary.
Pictured is the panel discussion about the local digital declaration (almost) one year on. Panellists included:
Dylan Roberts, Chief Digital and Information Officer, Leeds City Council
Ben Cheetham, Head of Technology and Design, Local Digital Collaboration Unit, MHCLG
Helen Wall, National Lead, GDS
On February 13, USAID's Land Tenure and Resource Management Office hosted the panel discussion: Land Tenure and Disasters: Response, Rebuilding, Resilience. USAID's Tim Fella moderated the in-person discussion.
For more information on land tenure and disasters, including a recording of the discussion and a related USAID issue brief, please visit usaidlandtenure.net.
Photo Credit: Jessica Nabongo/Cloudburst Consulting Group
Wake Forest hosts a Dignity and Respect program in Brendle Recital Hall on Wednesday, November 6, 2013. Students from Carter G. Woodson Academy in Winston-Salem attend the event.
‘NODE15 – Forum for Digital Arts’ is gathering designers, creative coders and digital artists for creative explorations of technologies. With the Leitmotif ‘Wrapped in Code – the Future of the Informed Body’, NODE15 is devoted to the negotiation of the body and its fusion with technology. It’s a week long rush with hands-on vvvv workshops, exhibition, symposium, performances and artist talks.
photo: jessica schäfer
Paola Bonomo Paola Caburlotto Sandra Mori Donatella Sciuto
Chiunque organizza eventi, conferenze, panel si trova spesso davanti a uno shock visivo: appena stampata la brochure oppure impaginato il sito, ci si accorge che gli speaker sono tutti uomini. Non va molto meglio nei media: solo il 18% degli esperti intervistati in TV o sui giornali italiani sono donne (Global Media Monitoring Project 2015). Come uscire dalla pigrizia mentale dell’esperto uomo per default? Come attrezzarsi per trovare e per dare voce alle esperte? E come costruire role model autorevoli per le ragazze - che siano scienziate, professioniste o manager?
Anyone organizing events, conferences and panels is often faced with a visual shock: once the leaflet is printed or the session is online, they realize there are only male speakers. The media aren’t performing much better: only 18% of the experts interviewed on Italian TV or newspapers are women (Global Media Monitoring Project 2015). How we are to extricate ourselves from the mental laziness of having a “male expert” by default? How is it possible to create authoritative role models for girls – either scientists, professionals or managers?
Video: media.journalismfestival.com/programme/2017/wheres-the-fe...
I media, l'immigrazione e i giorni della paura. Il monitoraggio delle notizie come strumento per la difesa dei diritti
Giovedì 14 aprile 2011
Centro Servizi G. Alessi
06 November 2019, Rome Italy - Welcome statement, Qu Dongyu, FAO Director-General. Panel Discussion: Dialogue on Enhancing Access to Innovation in Agriculture to achieve the SDGs, (Sheikh Zayed Centre), FAO Headquarters.
Photo credit must be given: ©FAO/Alessandra Benedetti. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.