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O Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil (CGI.br) dá sequência às comemorações de seus 20 anos com a oitava conferência guiada por seu decálogo de princípios para a governança e uso da Internet.

 

O princípio "Neutralidade da rede" foi apresentado por Barbara van Schewick, Diretora do Centro para Internet e Sociedade da Escola de Direito de Stanford, e Christopher Marsden, professor de Direito na Universidade de Sussex, Reino Unido, no dia 13 de outubro de 2015, no Hotel Blue Tree Premium, em São Paulo.

 

Mais informações em www.cgi.br/20anos

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

O Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil (CGI.br) promoveu no dia 4 de abril de 2018, em São Paulo, o Seminário “Desafios da Internet no Debate Democrático e nas Eleições”. Nos dias 5 e 6/04, um workshop realizado para convidados aprofundou os debates iniciados no seminário.

 

(Foto: Ricardo Matsukawa)

CGI Annual Meeting 2024

 

Mainstage: Everything Everywhere All At Once

 

There’s no shortage of global challenges to confront. The pressure, speed, and magnitude of these challenges – like climate change, rising inequality, and natural and manmade disasters – are creating the “perfect storm” for those of us committed to making progress on both new and longstanding international development issues. For both those on the frontlines and in positions of power, the ‘ask’ is to increasingly stretch resources, take on new work, and fix systems with an unprecedented urgency. The good news is that, in most cases, there are approaches already working that could be scaled or adapted. The question becomes – how do we marshal the resources and ingenuity to bring these solutions to scale? How do we harness one community solution and replicate it in other geographies or apply lessons learned to new challenges? How can we break down barriers and reorganize our ways of working so that the promise of one good idea has the ability to multiply? In this Mainstage Session, we’ll unpack what it really means to be charged with finding solutions for everything everywhere all at once – and offer insights into how to leverage scale, replication, and innovation to meet the moment. Participants José Andrés Founder and Executive Chairman, José Andrés Group President Bill Clinton 42nd President of the United States; Founder and Board Chair, Clinton Foundation Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus Director-General, World Health Organization (WHO) Jane Goodall Founder, The Jane Goodall Institute Bill Nelson Administrator, NASA Laurene Powell Jobs Founder and President, Emerson Collective & XQ Institute Hamdi Ulukaya CEO and Founder, Chobani; and Founder, Tent Partnership for Refugees Emma Walmsley CEO, GSK

 

Photo Credit: Erika Kapin for the Clinton Foundation

 

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2024_0924_Erika_Kapin_09_55_46_MR011332

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1.8 BILLION FUTURES: HOW TO SECURE THE LONG-TERM HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE WORLDWIDE

1.8 Billion Futures: How to Secure the Long-term Health and Well-Being of Adolescents and Young People Worldwide

 

Today’s 1.8 billion adolescents and young people are growing up in a world that is dramatically different from previous generations. It is a world shaped by digitalization, urbanization, and mobility. These changes offer unprecedented opportunities, including access to services and information, learning, employment, and connectivity that fosters and nurtures relationships. However, they also present new challenges, such as the increased risk of depression and anxiety, exposure to (often gender-based) violence and abuse, or experiences of poverty and unhealthy lifestyles, which affect young people’s health and wellbeing now, throughout the course of their lives, and as parents of future generations.

 

In support of the 1.8 Billion Young People for Change campaign, securing the health and well-being of today’s adolescents and young people requires urgent efforts and deliberate collaboration, investment, and partnership. In this focus on our collective future, everyone has a role to play.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

VICKY ARIDI YEO 2023 Program Manager - Making Cents International

SOPHIE BEREN Founder and Chief Executive Officer - The Conversationalist

HELEN CLARK Chair of the Board - Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH)

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation

CAMILLA DELLA GIOVAMPAOLA Doctoral Researcher - Geneva Graduate Institute

DAVID IMBAGO-JACOME Director - YIELD Hub

OLIVA NALWADDA FIA FOUNDATION, YOUTH AMBASSADOR

GITANJALI RAO Young Inventor, Author, Activist and STEM Promoter -

HER EXCELLENCY TOYIN OJORA SARAKI Founder and President - The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)

JACKEE SCHESS Chief Executive Officer - Generation Mental Health

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

1.8 BILLION FUTURES: HOW TO SECURE THE LONG-TERM HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE WORLDWIDE

1.8 Billion Futures: How to Secure the Long-term Health and Well-Being of Adolescents and Young People Worldwide

 

Today’s 1.8 billion adolescents and young people are growing up in a world that is dramatically different from previous generations. It is a world shaped by digitalization, urbanization, and mobility. These changes offer unprecedented opportunities, including access to services and information, learning, employment, and connectivity that fosters and nurtures relationships. However, they also present new challenges, such as the increased risk of depression and anxiety, exposure to (often gender-based) violence and abuse, or experiences of poverty and unhealthy lifestyles, which affect young people’s health and wellbeing now, throughout the course of their lives, and as parents of future generations.

 

In support of the 1.8 Billion Young People for Change campaign, securing the health and well-being of today’s adolescents and young people requires urgent efforts and deliberate collaboration, investment, and partnership. In this focus on our collective future, everyone has a role to play.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

VICKY ARIDI YEO 2023 Program Manager - Making Cents International

SOPHIE BEREN Founder and Chief Executive Officer - The Conversationalist

HELEN CLARK Chair of the Board - Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH)

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation

CAMILLA DELLA GIOVAMPAOLA Doctoral Researcher - Geneva Graduate Institute

DAVID IMBAGO-JACOME Director - YIELD Hub

OLIVA NALWADDA FIA FOUNDATION, YOUTH AMBASSADOR

GITANJALI RAO Young Inventor, Author, Activist and STEM Promoter -

HER EXCELLENCY TOYIN OJORA SARAKI Founder and President - The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)

JACKEE SCHESS Chief Executive Officer - Generation Mental Health

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

1.8 BILLION FUTURES: HOW TO SECURE THE LONG-TERM HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE WORLDWIDE

1.8 Billion Futures: How to Secure the Long-term Health and Well-Being of Adolescents and Young People Worldwide

 

Today’s 1.8 billion adolescents and young people are growing up in a world that is dramatically different from previous generations. It is a world shaped by digitalization, urbanization, and mobility. These changes offer unprecedented opportunities, including access to services and information, learning, employment, and connectivity that fosters and nurtures relationships. However, they also present new challenges, such as the increased risk of depression and anxiety, exposure to (often gender-based) violence and abuse, or experiences of poverty and unhealthy lifestyles, which affect young people’s health and wellbeing now, throughout the course of their lives, and as parents of future generations.

 

In support of the 1.8 Billion Young People for Change campaign, securing the health and well-being of today’s adolescents and young people requires urgent efforts and deliberate collaboration, investment, and partnership. In this focus on our collective future, everyone has a role to play.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

VICKY ARIDI YEO 2023 Program Manager - Making Cents International

SOPHIE BEREN Founder and Chief Executive Officer - The Conversationalist

HELEN CLARK Chair of the Board - Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH)

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation

CAMILLA DELLA GIOVAMPAOLA Doctoral Researcher - Geneva Graduate Institute

DAVID IMBAGO-JACOME Director - YIELD Hub

OLIVA NALWADDA FIA FOUNDATION, YOUTH AMBASSADOR

GITANJALI RAO Young Inventor, Author, Activist and STEM Promoter -

HER EXCELLENCY TOYIN OJORA SARAKI Founder and President - The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)

JACKEE SCHESS Chief Executive Officer - Generation Mental Health

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

O Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil (CGI.br) dá sequência às comemorações de seus 20 anos com a sétima conferência guiada por seu decálogo de princípios para a governança e uso da Internet.

 

O princípio "Universalidade" foi apresentado por Sunil Abraham, diretor executivo do Centro para Internet e Sociedade (CIS India) e por Lêda Spelta, consultora de acessibilidade e sócia fundadora da Acesso Digital no dia 23 de setembro de 2015, no Centro de Convenções Rebouças, em São Paulo.

 

Mais informações em www.cgi.br/20anos

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

O Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil (CGI.br) dá sequência às comemorações de seus 20 anos com a oitava conferência guiada por seu decálogo de princípios para a governança e uso da Internet.

 

O princípio "Neutralidade da rede" foi apresentado por Barbara van Schewick, Diretora do Centro para Internet e Sociedade da Escola de Direito de Stanford, e Christopher Marsden, professor de Direito na Universidade de Sussex, Reino Unido, no dia 13 de outubro de 2015, no Hotel Blue Tree Premium, em São Paulo.

 

Mais informações em www.cgi.br/20anos

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

THE FUTURE OF AI IS ALREADY HERE: HOW TECHNOLOGISTS AND SKEPTICS CAN WORK TOGETHER TO BALANCE THE BENEFITS AND RISKS OF AI

From precision medicine and applications in complex emergencies to deepfakes and generative AI, the benefits – and the risks – of artificial intelligence are widespread and must be managed responsibly. Despite increasing concerns about its governance, artificial intelligence is an emerging reality across nearly every facet of our daily lives. From precision medicine and applications in emergencies to deepfakes and proliferation of misinformation, the benefits – and risks – of AI are widespread and must be managed responsibly. It is estimated that AI could eliminate 300 million full-time jobs, but AI could also enhance our productivity and creativity by optimizing complex processes. Governments, the private sector, and NGOs will need to cautiously balance the tremendous potential AI presents with its challenges and dangers to best leverage this emerging and rapidly growing technology and industry.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

JOY BUOLAMWINI President and Artist-in-Chief - Algorithmic Justice League

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair - Clinton Foundation

AIDAN GOMEZ Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, Cohere

RYAN HEATH Axios, Global Tech Correspondent

TOM INGLESBY Director - Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security

SEEMA KUMAR Chief Executive Officer - Cure

KEVIN SCOTT Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President of AI - Microsoft

 

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

JOURNALISM ON THE FRONTLINES: HOW PROTECTING FREEDOM OF THE PRESS SUPPORTS ALL HUMAN RIGHTS

The media’s ability to deliver news to the public and hold institutions to account has been increasingly under assault, as seen in the imprisonment of the Wall Street Journal’s Evan Gershkovich or the 67 journalists killed globally in 2022, including for coverage of climate change. Threats to the freedom of press span the globe — from censorship in the United States and removing girls from schools in Afghanistan, to the murder of protesters in Iran and half of all journalist deaths occurring across Latin America, often for covering issues such as deforestation or polluters.

 

Our ability to tackle the greatest global challenges depends on a strong and healthy media and an environment that encourages, not restricts, the free exchange of ideas and information. Journalism probes vital issues and their daily impact on people – from the devastating effects of climate change, conflicts and threats to democracy, systemic challenges in our global health and economic systems, and more. A free press is the leading indicator of the health of democracy where ideas blossom, markets thrive, and people are empowered to make fact-based decisions. And yet, journalists are operating under historic pressures – including actual harm and physical threats.

 

This session will examine how journalists handle emerging challenges and solutions that demand their attention; how they handle threats to their profession and their livelihoods; and how we can support a vibrant journalism sector.

 

Includes special remarks by Secretary Hillary Rodham Clinton.

 

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

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Follow me on:

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Send me a message on Facebook or LinkedIn if you want me to do some design work for you!

 

www.brechtcorbeel.com/

 

Support me on:

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Follow me on:

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1.8 BILLION FUTURES: HOW TO SECURE THE LONG-TERM HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE WORLDWIDE

1.8 Billion Futures: How to Secure the Long-term Health and Well-Being of Adolescents and Young People Worldwide

 

Today’s 1.8 billion adolescents and young people are growing up in a world that is dramatically different from previous generations. It is a world shaped by digitalization, urbanization, and mobility. These changes offer unprecedented opportunities, including access to services and information, learning, employment, and connectivity that fosters and nurtures relationships. However, they also present new challenges, such as the increased risk of depression and anxiety, exposure to (often gender-based) violence and abuse, or experiences of poverty and unhealthy lifestyles, which affect young people’s health and wellbeing now, throughout the course of their lives, and as parents of future generations.

 

In support of the 1.8 Billion Young People for Change campaign, securing the health and well-being of today’s adolescents and young people requires urgent efforts and deliberate collaboration, investment, and partnership. In this focus on our collective future, everyone has a role to play.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

VICKY ARIDI YEO 2023 Program Manager - Making Cents International

SOPHIE BEREN Founder and Chief Executive Officer - The Conversationalist

HELEN CLARK Chair of the Board - Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH)

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation

CAMILLA DELLA GIOVAMPAOLA Doctoral Researcher - Geneva Graduate Institute

DAVID IMBAGO-JACOME Director - YIELD Hub

OLIVA NALWADDA FIA FOUNDATION, YOUTH AMBASSADOR

GITANJALI RAO Young Inventor, Author, Activist and STEM Promoter -

HER EXCELLENCY TOYIN OJORA SARAKI Founder and President - The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)

JACKEE SCHESS Chief Executive Officer - Generation Mental Health

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

1.8 BILLION FUTURES: HOW TO SECURE THE LONG-TERM HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE WORLDWIDE

1.8 Billion Futures: How to Secure the Long-term Health and Well-Being of Adolescents and Young People Worldwide

 

Today’s 1.8 billion adolescents and young people are growing up in a world that is dramatically different from previous generations. It is a world shaped by digitalization, urbanization, and mobility. These changes offer unprecedented opportunities, including access to services and information, learning, employment, and connectivity that fosters and nurtures relationships. However, they also present new challenges, such as the increased risk of depression and anxiety, exposure to (often gender-based) violence and abuse, or experiences of poverty and unhealthy lifestyles, which affect young people’s health and wellbeing now, throughout the course of their lives, and as parents of future generations.

 

In support of the 1.8 Billion Young People for Change campaign, securing the health and well-being of today’s adolescents and young people requires urgent efforts and deliberate collaboration, investment, and partnership. In this focus on our collective future, everyone has a role to play.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

VICKY ARIDI YEO 2023 Program Manager - Making Cents International

SOPHIE BEREN Founder and Chief Executive Officer - The Conversationalist

HELEN CLARK Chair of the Board - Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH)

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation

CAMILLA DELLA GIOVAMPAOLA Doctoral Researcher - Geneva Graduate Institute

DAVID IMBAGO-JACOME Director - YIELD Hub

OLIVA NALWADDA FIA FOUNDATION, YOUTH AMBASSADOR

GITANJALI RAO Young Inventor, Author, Activist and STEM Promoter -

HER EXCELLENCY TOYIN OJORA SARAKI Founder and President - The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)

JACKEE SCHESS Chief Executive Officer - Generation Mental Health

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

INNOVATIONS IN ACCESS: HOW TO EXPAND OUR HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE THROUGH DIVERSE COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDERS

The current medical industry has the most advanced levels of knowledge and treatments in history, and great innovations are imminent. Yet this potential is squandered in the absence of health care workers. 130 countries report a shortage of physicians, and more than 150 have a shortage of nurses and midwives. However, lay health workers, such as community health workers, doulas, birth attendants, mental health advocates, and others have the potential to transform health systems and address workforce gaps. As trusted members of the community, lay health workers provide a wide range of services from routine examinations to birth and pregnancy support, and they often work in the most rural and remote areas, caring for underserved populations. To mitigate the detrimental impact of this labor shortage, we must integrate all health worker roles into health care systems and pay them a living wage.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

ROSLYN MORAUTA Chair of the Board - The Global Fund

JANET MURGUIA President and Chief Executive Officer - UnidosUS

OWEN OLENDE Vice President of Global Strategic Initiatives - Starkey Hearing Technologies

GREGORY ROCKSON Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer - mPharma

RAJ SAXENA President of the Hillary Clinton Nursing School - Vinod Gupta Charitable Foundation

YADIRA VILLASEÑOR Regional Director - IntraHealth International

KATE WARREN Executive Vice President and Executive Editor - Devex

DIXON CHIBANDA Chief Executive Officer - Friendship Bench

SUPPLY AND DEMAND: HOW TO TRANSFORM HEALTH SUPPLY CHAINS

Today’s health supply chain is a complex and highly fragmented global system, causing both developed and developing countries to face drug and medical supply shortages. Driven by factors like compliance and regulations challenges, unpredictable demand and limited raw materials, and geopolitical tensions and natural disasters, this shortage of health care supplies and medications is putting both patients and health care workers in life-threatening situations. Experts agree that increased transparency and improved efficiency will build a more resilient system. To achieve this goal, we will need to leverage technology to modernize the supply chain and explore more localized and lower carbon solutions.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

BINAGWAHO AGNES The University of Global Health Equity (UGHE) & Former Minister of Health for the Republic of Rwanda - Co-Founder and Former Vice Chancellor

TONY BLAIR Executive Chairman - Tony Blair Institute for Global Change

JOHN NKENGASONG U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator and Senior Bureau Official for Global Health Security and Diplomacy - U.S. Department of State

NGOZI OKONJO-IWEALA Director-General - World Trade Organization

KELLER RINAUDO CLIFFTON Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer - Zipline

MARIE-ANGE SARAKA-YAO Chief Mobilization and Growth Officer - Gavi, the Vaccine Alliance

SULTAN AHMED BIN SULAYEM Group Chairman and Chief Executive Officer - DP World

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

Organizado pelo CGI.br e pelo NIC.br, o Seminário é uma oportunidade de debater questões atuais envolvendo temas da privacidade e proteção de dados com profissionais da área jurídica e demais interessados.

 

Mais informações: seminarioprivacidade.cgi.br/

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

INNOVATIONS IN ACCESS: HOW TO EXPAND OUR HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE THROUGH DIVERSE COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDERS

The current medical industry has the most advanced levels of knowledge and treatments in history, and great innovations are imminent. Yet this potential is squandered in the absence of health care workers. 130 countries report a shortage of physicians, and more than 150 have a shortage of nurses and midwives. However, lay health workers, such as community health workers, doulas, birth attendants, mental health advocates, and others have the potential to transform health systems and address workforce gaps. As trusted members of the community, lay health workers provide a wide range of services from routine examinations to birth and pregnancy support, and they often work in the most rural and remote areas, caring for underserved populations. To mitigate the detrimental impact of this labor shortage, we must integrate all health worker roles into health care systems and pay them a living wage.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

ROSLYN MORAUTA Chair of the Board - The Global Fund

JANET MURGUIA President and Chief Executive Officer - UnidosUS

OWEN OLENDE Vice President of Global Strategic Initiatives - Starkey Hearing Technologies

GREGORY ROCKSON Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer - mPharma

RAJ SAXENA President of the Hillary Clinton Nursing School - Vinod Gupta Charitable Foundation

YADIRA VILLASEÑOR Regional Director - IntraHealth International

KATE WARREN Executive Vice President and Executive Editor - Devex

DIXON CHIBANDA Chief Executive Officer - Friendship Bench

INNOVATIONS IN ACCESS: HOW TO EXPAND OUR HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE THROUGH DIVERSE COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDERS

The current medical industry has the most advanced levels of knowledge and treatments in history, and great innovations are imminent. Yet this potential is squandered in the absence of health care workers. 130 countries report a shortage of physicians, and more than 150 have a shortage of nurses and midwives. However, lay health workers, such as community health workers, doulas, birth attendants, mental health advocates, and others have the potential to transform health systems and address workforce gaps. As trusted members of the community, lay health workers provide a wide range of services from routine examinations to birth and pregnancy support, and they often work in the most rural and remote areas, caring for underserved populations. To mitigate the detrimental impact of this labor shortage, we must integrate all health worker roles into health care systems and pay them a living wage.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

ROSLYN MORAUTA Chair of the Board - The Global Fund

JANET MURGUIA President and Chief Executive Officer - UnidosUS

OWEN OLENDE Vice President of Global Strategic Initiatives - Starkey Hearing Technologies

GREGORY ROCKSON Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer - mPharma

RAJ SAXENA President of the Hillary Clinton Nursing School - Vinod Gupta Charitable Foundation

YADIRA VILLASEÑOR Regional Director - IntraHealth International

KATE WARREN Executive Vice President and Executive Editor - Devex

DIXON CHIBANDA Chief Executive Officer - Friendship Bench

FUNDING EARTH’S FUTURE: HOW TO SCALE CLIMATE FINANCE IN FRONTLINE COMMUNITIES

The financial investment to mitigate the climate crisis is staggering with the greatest need in frontline communities. While ongoing conversations are focused on who will bear this immense financial burden, we must support leaders who are taking creative and innovative steps toward climate resilience. Inaction is not an option when there are opportunities to develop partnerships with organizations that have shovel-ready projects and to scale innovative financing models that mobilize capital. There are adaptation and mitigation efforts happening all over the world, yet capital remains a key missing piece.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

NEELAM CHHIBER Co-Founding and Managing Trustee - Industree Foundation

PHILIP DAVIS Prime Minister - The Government of The Bahamas

NILI GILBERT Vice Chairwoman - Carbon Direct

ILAN GOLDFAJN President - Inter-American Development Bank

MIA MOTTLEY Prime Minister - Government of Barbados

NOEL QUINN Group Chief Executive - HSBC Holdings plc

NELSON OLE REIYIA Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder - Nashulai Maasai Conservancy Corporation

SIMON STIELL Executive Secretary - United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change

 

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

Organizado pelo CGI.br e pelo NIC.br, o Seminário é uma oportunidade de debater questões atuais envolvendo temas da privacidade e proteção de dados com profissionais da área jurídica e demais interessados.

 

Mais informações: seminarioprivacidade.cgi.br/

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

O Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil (CGI.br) dá sequência às comemorações de seus 20 anos com a sexta conferência guiada por seu decálogo de princípios para a governança e uso da Internet.

 

O princípio "Funcionalidade, Segurança e Estabilidade" foi discutido por Yurie Ito, Diretora da Divisão de Coordenação Global do Centro de Coordenação Nacional para Resposta a Incidentes do Japão (JPCERT/CC), e Maarten Van Horenbeeck, presidente do Fórum de Times de Segurança e Resposta a Incidentes (FIRST)

17 de setembro de 2015, no hotel Blue Tree Premium, em São Paulo.

 

Mais informações em www.cgi.br/20anos

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

STORY STUDIO: REPAVING ROADS: PAVING A PATH TO UNITY AND HEALING DIVISIONS

We don’t need to listen to statisticians or political pundits to know the roads that once brought us together to unite us in the face of our most significant challenges are now in disarray. What we need is to repave our roads — in every sense. By pushing past our divisions and reminding ourselves of our shared values and potential for shared prosperity, we can begin to forge new pathways and repave old ones to bring us together once again. In this session, you’ll hear stories from people repaving roads toward unity.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

SOPHIE BEREN Founder and Chief Executive Officer - The Conversationalist

CHRISTOPHER BUCKLEY CPS-MH,FPM, Exit Peer Specialist - Parents for Peace

MEGHA DESAI President - Desai Foundation

DAVID HOLT Mayor - City of Oklahoma City

MAHMOUD KHEDR Co-Founder and CEO, FloraMind

GLORIA ORWOBA Senator - Parliament of Kenya

STEVEN REED Mayor - City of Montgomery

LEAH THOMAS Founder - Intersectional Environmentalist

PATRICIA VELASQUEZ President and Founder - The Wayúu Taya Foundation

 

Photo credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

THE FUTURE OF AI IS ALREADY HERE: HOW TECHNOLOGISTS AND SKEPTICS CAN WORK TOGETHER TO BALANCE THE BENEFITS AND RISKS OF AI

From precision medicine and applications in complex emergencies to deepfakes and generative AI, the benefits – and the risks – of artificial intelligence are widespread and must be managed responsibly. Despite increasing concerns about its governance, artificial intelligence is an emerging reality across nearly every facet of our daily lives. From precision medicine and applications in emergencies to deepfakes and proliferation of misinformation, the benefits – and risks – of AI are widespread and must be managed responsibly. It is estimated that AI could eliminate 300 million full-time jobs, but AI could also enhance our productivity and creativity by optimizing complex processes. Governments, the private sector, and NGOs will need to cautiously balance the tremendous potential AI presents with its challenges and dangers to best leverage this emerging and rapidly growing technology and industry.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

JOY BUOLAMWINI President and Artist-in-Chief - Algorithmic Justice League

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair - Clinton Foundation

AIDAN GOMEZ Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder, Cohere

RYAN HEATH Axios, Global Tech Correspondent

TOM INGLESBY Director - Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security

SEEMA KUMAR Chief Executive Officer - Cure

KEVIN SCOTT Chief Technology Officer and Executive Vice President of AI - Microsoft

 

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

LEVELING THE FIGHT AGAINST CANCER: HOW TO FORGE INNOVATIVE PARTNERSHIPS IN HARD TO REACH PLACES

We have never had more knowledge about or better treatment options for cancer. However, despite these incredible medical advances, cancer continues to claim the lives of more than ten million people each year, in part because these lifesaving treatments are not equitably available to all populations. Mortality rates are declining in the wealthiest countries while lower- to middle-income countries are seeing increased rates of cancer without access to the latest breakthroughs in modern oncology to treat patients. While limited resources are a concern, there are opportunities for wiser investments and increased coordination and partnerships between governments, health policy analysts, and community organizations to begin to bridge the care gap and bring lifesaving treatments to underserved populations and communities.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

PATRICK DEMPSEY Founder - Dempsey Center

LUTZ HEGEMANN President of Global Health and Sustainability - Novartis AG

FELICIA MARIE KNAUL Director, Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas, University of Miami

CYPRIEN SHYIRAMBERE Director of Oncology - Partners In Health - Rwanda

JOETTE WALTERS Chief Executive Officer - Tuba City Regional Health Care Corporation

INNOVATIONS IN ACCESS: HOW TO EXPAND OUR HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE THROUGH DIVERSE COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDERS

The current medical industry has the most advanced levels of knowledge and treatments in history, and great innovations are imminent. Yet this potential is squandered in the absence of health care workers. 130 countries report a shortage of physicians, and more than 150 have a shortage of nurses and midwives. However, lay health workers, such as community health workers, doulas, birth attendants, mental health advocates, and others have the potential to transform health systems and address workforce gaps. As trusted members of the community, lay health workers provide a wide range of services from routine examinations to birth and pregnancy support, and they often work in the most rural and remote areas, caring for underserved populations. To mitigate the detrimental impact of this labor shortage, we must integrate all health worker roles into health care systems and pay them a living wage.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

ROSLYN MORAUTA Chair of the Board - The Global Fund

JANET MURGUIA President and Chief Executive Officer - UnidosUS

OWEN OLENDE Vice President of Global Strategic Initiatives - Starkey Hearing Technologies

GREGORY ROCKSON Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer - mPharma

RAJ SAXENA President of the Hillary Clinton Nursing School - Vinod Gupta Charitable Foundation

YADIRA VILLASEÑOR Regional Director - IntraHealth International

KATE WARREN Executive Vice President and Executive Editor - Devex

DIXON CHIBANDA Chief Executive Officer - Friendship Bench

Organizado pelo CGI.br e pelo NIC.br, o Seminário é uma oportunidade de debater questões atuais envolvendo temas da privacidade e proteção de dados com profissionais da área jurídica e demais interessados.

 

Mais informações: seminarioprivacidade.cgi.br/

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

It's been a really long time since I have been able to just sit down and play with Paint Shop. I'm not the worlds best artist, but this is done entirely using Corel's PSP. I Did this just for the fun of it. I got the idea from watching some guys years ago do a painting similar to this using only spray paint, some small tools, and a poster board. They were able to do their picture in about 10 minutes, mine took much longer.

O Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil (CGI.br) dá sequência às comemorações de seus 20 anos com a quinta conferência guiada por seu decálogo de princípios para a governança e uso da Internet.

 

O princípio "Ambiente Legal e Regulatório" foi debatido por Raúl Echeberría, Vice Presidente para Engajamento Global da Internet Society, e por Alison Gillwald, Diretora Executiva da Research ICT Africa e Professora Adjunta da University of Cape Town no dia 16 de setembro de 2015, no hotel Blue Tree Premium, em São Paulo.

 

Mais informações em www.cgi.br/20anos

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

Some 400 educators from across the state and nation converged on Des Moines July 10 through 12 to learn how to revolutionize teaching math in their classrooms. Educators learned about Cognitively Guided Instruction, or CGI, which is a professional development program aimed at making mathematics – particularly for those in elementary school – more readily understandable to each and every student. The CGI event, co-hosted by the Iowa Department of Education and Iowa State University’s Center for Excellence in Science, Mathematics and Engineering Education, focused on teaching techniques to help children understand how math is applied in the world, in addition to understanding how to use the mathematical procedures. The overarching concept behind CGI is that each student learns in different ways.

1.8 BILLION FUTURES: HOW TO SECURE THE LONG-TERM HEALTH AND WELL-BEING OF ADOLESCENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE WORLDWIDE

1.8 Billion Futures: How to Secure the Long-term Health and Well-Being of Adolescents and Young People Worldwide

 

Today’s 1.8 billion adolescents and young people are growing up in a world that is dramatically different from previous generations. It is a world shaped by digitalization, urbanization, and mobility. These changes offer unprecedented opportunities, including access to services and information, learning, employment, and connectivity that fosters and nurtures relationships. However, they also present new challenges, such as the increased risk of depression and anxiety, exposure to (often gender-based) violence and abuse, or experiences of poverty and unhealthy lifestyles, which affect young people’s health and wellbeing now, throughout the course of their lives, and as parents of future generations.

 

In support of the 1.8 Billion Young People for Change campaign, securing the health and well-being of today’s adolescents and young people requires urgent efforts and deliberate collaboration, investment, and partnership. In this focus on our collective future, everyone has a role to play.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

VICKY ARIDI YEO 2023 Program Manager - Making Cents International

SOPHIE BEREN Founder and Chief Executive Officer - The Conversationalist

HELEN CLARK Chair of the Board - Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health (PMNCH)

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation

CAMILLA DELLA GIOVAMPAOLA Doctoral Researcher - Geneva Graduate Institute

DAVID IMBAGO-JACOME Director - YIELD Hub

OLIVA NALWADDA FIA FOUNDATION, YOUTH AMBASSADOR

GITANJALI RAO Young Inventor, Author, Activist and STEM Promoter -

HER EXCELLENCY TOYIN OJORA SARAKI Founder and President - The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)

JACKEE SCHESS Chief Executive Officer - Generation Mental Health

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

INNOVATIONS IN ACCESS: HOW TO EXPAND OUR HEALTH CARE WORKFORCE THROUGH DIVERSE COMMUNITY STAKEHOLDERS

The current medical industry has the most advanced levels of knowledge and treatments in history, and great innovations are imminent. Yet this potential is squandered in the absence of health care workers. 130 countries report a shortage of physicians, and more than 150 have a shortage of nurses and midwives. However, lay health workers, such as community health workers, doulas, birth attendants, mental health advocates, and others have the potential to transform health systems and address workforce gaps. As trusted members of the community, lay health workers provide a wide range of services from routine examinations to birth and pregnancy support, and they often work in the most rural and remote areas, caring for underserved populations. To mitigate the detrimental impact of this labor shortage, we must integrate all health worker roles into health care systems and pay them a living wage.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

ROSLYN MORAUTA Chair of the Board - The Global Fund

JANET MURGUIA President and Chief Executive Officer - UnidosUS

OWEN OLENDE Vice President of Global Strategic Initiatives - Starkey Hearing Technologies

GREGORY ROCKSON Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer - mPharma

RAJ SAXENA President of the Hillary Clinton Nursing School - Vinod Gupta Charitable Foundation

YADIRA VILLASEÑOR Regional Director - IntraHealth International

KATE WARREN Executive Vice President and Executive Editor - Devex

DIXON CHIBANDA Chief Executive Officer - Friendship Bench

THE FOURTH TRIMESTER: HOW TO PROVIDE POSTPARTUM SUPPORT AND REDUCE POST-BIRTH MORTALITY

Session will begin around 3 p.m. ET

 

The time between birth and 12 weeks should be a time of bonding between mother and baby and physical recovery from birth, but this so-called fourth trimester tends to be the most dangerous. We need to invest in better physical and mental health interventions and economic and social support to help mothers thrive and reduce maternal mortality rates, both during the fourth trimester and the first year postpartum.  The so-called fourth trimester comes with great risks that are often overlooked. From physical health risks to stress and mental health challenges, to gaps in paid leave, this is one of the most underserved periods for many mothers worldwide. Moreover, in the United States, maternal mortality outcomes are significantly worse for women of color than for the general population. We can and must do more to explore strategies and physical and mental health interventions to support mothers economically, physically, and socially during this time and the entire first year postpartum, specifically focusing on underserved populations and those facing disproportionate risks.

 

PARTICIPANTS

 

SHAHED ALAM Co-Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder - Noora Health

CHELSEA CLINTON Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation

SHAWYN PATTERSON - HOWARD Mayor - City of Mount Vernon

HER EXCELLENCY TOYIN OJORA SARAKI Founder and President - The Wellbeing Foundation Africa (WBFA)

RESHMA SAUJANI Founder and Chief Executive Officer of Moms First - Moms First

  

Photo Credit: Jenna Bascom Photography

This was my entry for the May 2009 bi-weekly challenge over at BlenderNewbies. The challenge topic was "where would you like to be", and I chose the world premiere of my movie "Father Lehi". However, the movie was so terrible that the audience walked out.

O Comitê Gestor da Internet no Brasil (CGI.br) dá sequência às comemorações de seus 20 anos com a oitava conferência guiada por seu decálogo de princípios para a governança e uso da Internet.

 

O princípio "Neutralidade da rede" foi apresentado por Barbara van Schewick, Diretora do Centro para Internet e Sociedade da Escola de Direito de Stanford, e Christopher Marsden, professor de Direito na Universidade de Sussex, Reino Unido, no dia 13 de outubro de 2015, no Hotel Blue Tree Premium, em São Paulo.

 

Mais informações em www.cgi.br/20anos

 

(Fotos: Ricardo Matsukawa)

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