Palestine
and Israel: History Undecided
September 26, 2006
Barnum 008 | 7:30pm | Download PDF
Afif Safieh is currently the PLO's Ambassador to the United States, after serving fifteen years as the PLO Ambassador to the United Kingdom. In January 1995, he was invited to join the International Board of Trustees of Bethlehem University, the Vatican-sponsored University in Palestine. He was involved in the November-December 1988 Stockholm negotiations that led to the official and direct American-Palestinian dialogue. From 1987 until 1990, he was PLO representative to the Netherlands.
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Dilemmas
of Globalization and Global Governance
September 28, 2006
Pearson 106 | 7:30pm
James Rosenau is a University Professor of International Relations at Elliot School of International Affairs at The George Washington University. He is a former President of the International Studies Association. His scholarship and teaching focus on the dynamics of world politics and the overlap between domestic and foreign affairs. He has published over 40 books and 200 articles including The Study of World Politics (two volumes, 2006); Globalization, Security, and the Nation State: Paradigms in Transition (edited with Ersel Aydinli, 2005); Distant Proximities: Dynamics Beyond Globalization (2003); and Turbulence in World Politics: A Theory of Change and Continuity (1990).
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Professor Turhan Canli,
EPIIC ‘86
and Neuroethics and Homeland Security conference organizer,
with Tufts Provost Jamshed Bhurucha |
Neuroethics
and Homeland Security
September 29, 2006
Cabot 205 | 9am-3pm | Download PDF
Neuroethics: Why Now and What Significance Does It Have?
Güven Güzeldere, PhD, is the Alexander Hehmeyer Associate Professor of Philosophy, Associate Professor of Linguistics, Neurobiology, Psychological and Brain Sciences at Duke University. Dr. Güzeldere is a philosopher with deep interest in brain imaging, such as functional neuroimaging of change detection, unconscious processing, pain processing, consciousness and qualia, deception in animals, artificial intelligence models. Dr. Güzeldere's research has a theoretical and an experimental component. His experimental work is on the functional neuroimaging of change detection and change blindness, and, more generally, the boundaries of unconscious processing in vision. His theoretical work focuses on the conceptual foundations of psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and artificial intelligence. In particular, he is engaged in projects on the nature of consciousness and qualia, the debate on the neural correlates of consciousness, the phenomenon of deception in non-human animals, and the role of introspection in pain perception.
Potential Applications of Neuroscience in Homeland Security: A Perspective from R&D
Don DuRousseau, MBA, is Founder and CEO of Human Bionics, an early-stage neurotechnology company specializing in physiological-based measurement of the brain and body for real-time assessment of cognitive, behavioral, and autonomic processes. Don is an internationally recognized neuroscientist, neuroimaging technology developer, and entrepreneur with twenty years experience commercializing mathematical methods and closed-loop systems for analyzing the electrical activity of the brain and body. Don has held senior management positions in the Neurodiagnostic Industry, where he was extensively involved in the development of leading edge multimodal Epilepsy source localization systems, integrated EEG/fMRI acquisition devices, and Transcranial Doppler technologies. Don's present interests lie in promoting general awareness and honest discussion on the topic of neuroethics, particularly, as it applies to the commercialization of Human Bionics' portable psychophysiological monitoring system and neurotraining architecture, which have been developed through DARPA and NIH sponsored SBIR grants.
"Private Dispositions" versus the "Power of the Situation": Can Neuroscience Predict Who Will Become a Hero or a Villian?
Turhan Canli, PhD, is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychology at Stony Brook University. Dr. Canli is a founding member and Executive Board Member of the Neuroethics Society (neuroethicssociety.org), which is concerned with ethical use of neuroscience in real-world applications. Dr. Canli's research is concerned with the molecular genetic and neural basis of emotion, personality, and individual differences. He is the editor of a book entitled "The biological basis of personality and individual differences" (2006) by Guilford Press. He is the first author of many papers on this topic, which have been published in Science, the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Behavioral Neuroscience, and many other peer-reviewed publications. He has received many honors, including the 2002 American Psychological Association D.G. Marquis Award for the best paper in Behavioral Neuroscience, and the 2006 Alumni Recognition Award from EPIIC (Education for Public Inquiry and International Citizenship), Tufts University in "recognition of your distinguished scholarly accomplishments, path-breaking ways to understand the brain, and your dedication to ethics in science and public policy".
What Makes "Special Forces" Special?
Charles Morgan III, MD, is a Associate Clinical Professor of Psychiatry & Research Affiliate at the Yale University School of Medicine. Dr. C. A. Morgan III is a Forensic Psychiatrist who is an internationally recognized expert in Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. His research examining the psychological and biological assessment of human behavior, cognition and performance under conditions of operational stress. Over the past 10 years, Dr. Morgan has served as a Subject Matter Expert to the US Special Operations Command. The results of his research on stress resilience in this community have shown that specific measures (psychological, physiological and biological) can be used to reliably predict the future performance of Special Operations candidates and personnel. His work has demonstrated that psycho-biological factors can be used to predict which types of candidates are most likely to excel under threatening situations. Dr. Morgan also has clinical and research experience in the areas of Credibility Assessments and the Detection of Deception.
Should Non-invasive Brain Stimulation Be Used to Make the World a Safer Place?
Alvaro Pascual-Leone, MD, PhD, is a Professor of Neurology and Neuroscience at Harvard Medical School. Dr. Pascual-Leone is interested in understanding the mechanisms that control brain plasticity across the lifespan and modulating brain plasticity, suppressing some changes and enhancing others, to gain a clinical benefit and behavioral advantage for a given individual. Such non-invasive approaches can lead to clinically relevant therapeutic effects in neuropsychiatry and neurorehabilitation, and provide unique insights into the neural basis of behavior. Dr. Pascual-Leone is the Director of the Center for Noninvasive Brain Stimulation at Harvard Medical School and Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. He also serves as the Associate Director of the Harvard-Thorndike General Clinical Research Center. He continues to combine clinical work as a behavioral neurologist with research. Among many honors and awards, he is the recipient of the Ramon y Cajal Award in Neuroscience from Spain, the Norman Geschwind Prize in Behavioral Neurology from the American Academy of Neurology, and the Friedrich Wilhelm Bessel Research Award from The Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, Germany. He is the author of over 250 papers in refereed professional journals, over 50 book chapters and 2 books.
Brain Enhancement and the War on Terror: A Kinder, Gentler Mind Control
Martha Farah, PhD, is the Walter H. Annenberg Professor in the Natural Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania. Dr. Farah is a founding member and Executive Board Member of the Neuroethics Society (neuroethicssociety.org). She is interested in mechanisms of vision, memory, and executive function in the human brain. Her research in recent years has shifted to a new set of issues that lie at the interface between cognitive neuroscience and "the real world", including the effects of socioeconomic adversity on children's brain development and emerging social and ethical issues in neuroscience ("neuroethics"). She was elected Fellow of the Cognitive Science Society in 2002, and elected Fellow of the Society of Experimental Psychologists in 2005.
Neuroscience and Lie Detection: Science, Ethics, and Law
Henry T. (Hank) Greely is a founding member and Executive Board Member of the Neuroethics Society (neuroethicssociety.org). Dr. Greely is the Deane F. and Kate Edelman Johnson Professor of Law and Professor, by courtesy, of Genetics at Stanford University. He specializes in legal and social issues arising from advances in the biosciences and in health law and policy. He has written on issues concerning genetic testing and discrimination, the ethics of human genetics research, human stem cell research, and ethical and legal issues in neuroscience, among other things. He chairs the California Advisory Committee on Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research and the steering committee of the Stanford University Center for Biomedical Ethics. He also directs the Stanford Center for Law and the Biosciences and the Stanford Program on Stem Cells in Society. In neuroethics, he is particularly interested in the use of neuroscience to draw inferences about a person's mental state (such as deceptive intent, bias, pain) and for purposes of cognitive enhancement.
National Security and Moral Cognition: Issues in Neuroethics and Defense Policy
William Casebeer, PhD, a Major in
the United States Air Force, is the Chief of Eurasian Intelligence
Analysis at NATO Military Headquarters.
Dr. Casebeer is a career intelligence analyst and soon-to-be
Lieutenant Colonel in the US Air Force. This past year, he was
a project fellow at the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy at
Harvard's Kennedy School of Government, where he focused on ethics
and counter-terrorism policy. Bill has published in journals
ranging from "Nature Reviews Neuroscience" to "International
Relations," is author of "Natural Ethical Facts: Evolution,
Connectionism, and Moral Cognition," (MIT Press, 2003) and
co-author of "Warlords Rising: Confronting Violent Non-State
Actors" (Lexington Books, 2005). A Council on Foreign Relations
term member, Dr. Casebeer is a distinguished graduate of Squadron
Officer School and the Naval Postgraduate School. His research
interests include neuroethics, the intersections of cognitive
science and national security policy, and military ethics (such
as the ethics of torture interrogation).
Opportunities and Challenges for Behavorial Neuroscience in Federal Counter-Terrorism Science Policy
Susan Brandon, PhD, is the Behavioral & Social Science Principal at the Mitre Corporation. In the aftermath of September 11, 2001, Dr. Brandon served as APA's senior scientist, and later as Assistant Director of Social, Behavioral, and Educational Sciences for the White House Office of Science & Technology Policy. During her tenure, Susan Brandon was instrumental in convening a unique series of workshops bringing social scientists together with operational personnel to discuss unmet needs and research opportunities on topics that included the social psychology of counter-terrorism, the detection of deception, the phenomenology of intuition, and suicide bombings. Dr. Brandon nurtured a Cabinet-level effort to establish research priorities in the social, behavioral and economic sciences for combating terrorism on behalf of the National Science and Technology Council. In December 2005, she was awarded the American Psychological Association (APA) Presidential Citation in "recognition of her visionary efforts to promote the value of the psychological and behavioral sciences as they apply to our counter-terrorism, homeland security, and national security interests".
A Washington Perspective on Neuroscience Applications in Homeland Security
Philip J. Crowley is a Senior Fellow and Director of National Defense and Homeland Security at the Center for American Progress. During the Clinton administration, Crowley was Special Assistant to the President of the United States for National Security Affairs, serving as Senior Director of Public Affairs for the National Security Council. Prior to that, he was Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs. In all, Crowley was a spokesman for the United States government and United States military for 28 years, 11 of those years at the Pentagon and three at the White House. He served for 26 years in the United States Air Force, retiring at the rank of colonel in September 1999. He is a veteran of Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm. During the Kosovo conflict, he was temporarily assigned to work with then NATO Secretary General Javier Solana. Prior to joining American Progress, he served as a national spokesman for the property/casualty insurance industry, focusing on strategic industry issues that included the impact of terrorism on commercial insurance in the aftermath of the World Trade Center tragedy.
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The Future
of Lebanon
October
4, 2006
Crane Room | 7pm
A Roundtable discussion led by Professor Malik Mufti, Director of the International Relations Program and Middle Eastern Studies Program.
The New Initiative for Middle East Peace (NIMEP) invites you to a talk with Professor Mufti. We will be focusing on the future prospects for Lebanon and the wider region in the wake of this summer's events. Professor Mufti will provide introductory remarks and then NIMEP students will moderate a discussion. Student participation encouraged. For more information, please contact Alex Zerden at Alex.Zerden@tufts.edu.
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Guantanamo:
How Should We Respond?
Live webcast from Seton Hall
October 5, 2006
9:00am - 7:00pm | Institute for Global Leadership, 96 Packard Avenue, third
floor
Watch the Seton Hall Guantanamo Teach-In proceedings with over 250 colleges and universities from around the country via a live webcast. Full day program from 9am to 6pm. For more information please visit the Guantanamo Teach-In website. Or click here for the Seton Hall program schedule.
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Alberto Mora addresses the audience as the panel looks on at Guantanamo: How Should We Respond? |
Guantanamo:
How Should We Respond?
Watch the Webcast Now!
In
collaboration with the Seton Hall Law School Guantanamo Teach-In
October 5, 2006
7:30 pm | Cabot
Auditorium, The Fletcher School | Download PDF
Victor M. Hansen teaches Criminal Law, Criminal Procedure, Evidence, and Professional Responsibility at the New England School of Law. He was a lieutenant colonel in the United States Army JAG Corps. He previously served as a regional defense counsel for the United States Army Trial Defense Service.
Pamela Merchant is the Executive Director of The Center for Justice & Accountability in San Francisco. Formerly, she was a federal prosecutor with the U. S. Department of Justice in the Criminal Division, where she specialized in white collar prosecutions. CJA’s creation was inspired by legal and psychological work with victims of torture and other grave human rights abuses.
Alberto Mora recently retired as the General Counsel for the U.S. Navy, the most senior civilian lawyer for the Navy and a rank equal to that of a four-star general. Mr. Mora was recognized with the 2006 JFK Profile in Courage Award for the moral and political courage he demonstrated in his effort to end U.S. military policy regarding the treatment of detainees held by the United States as part of the War on Terror.
Michael Posner is currently the President of Human Rights First. He has been at the forefront of the international human rights movement for nearly 30 years and, as the Executive Director of Human Rights First, he helped the organization earn a reputation for leadership in the areas of refugee protection, advancing a rights-based approach to national security, challenging crimes against humanity, and combating discrimination.
Michael Poulshock | EPIIC’97
Michael Poulshock is a Cooperating Attorney with the Center for
Constitutional Rights. He is currently representing two Yemeni
Guantanamo detainees and has worked on a number of other human
rights cases, including lawsuits brought against former Israeli
officials for their participation in attacks against civilians
and cases brought on behalf of Nigerian activists to redress
corporate complicity in human rights violations.
Robert J. Roughsedge is a partner and senior trial attorney in the Litigation Group of the law firm Lawson & Weitzen and an adjunct faculty member at the Suffolk University Law School. Mr. Roughsedge is a frequent commentator on television news programs concerning both terrorism issues and legal matters. As a former Army officer with practical experience in counter-terrorism operations, Mr. Roughsedge is currently a consultant for a joint U.S. Departments of State and Defense program advising foreign nations on issues involving counter-terrorism, peacekeeping operations and the laws of war.
Susannah Sirkin is Deputy Director of Physicians for Human Rights (PHR), a national organization that mobilizes health professionals to advance the health and dignity of all people through action that promotes respect for, protection of and fulfillment of human rights. Sirkin has organized health and human rights investigations to dozens of countries, including recent documentation of genocide and systematic rape in Darfur, PHR’s exhumations of mass graves in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda for the International Criminal Tribunals.
Ambassador John Shattuck is the Chief Executive Officer of the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation. Ambassador Shattuck’s career spans three decades of leadership in education, government service and the nonprofit sector. He is the author of Freedom on Fire: Human Rights Wars of the 90s, Rights of Privacy and many articles on civil liberties, human rights and public service. His distinguished career includes serving as the U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor.
Sabin Willett is a Partner in the firm Bingham McCutchen LLP and concentrates his practice in commercial litigation and bankruptcy litigation. Mr. Willett represents prisoners in Guantanamo Bay on a pro bono basis. His recent lecture during the 2006 EPIIC symposium, So Who’s at Guantanamo Anyway?, can be heard in its entirety at www.epiic.org.
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Genocide, Hate and Human Rights:
What Have We Learned, What Must We Do?
The Dilemmas of Darfur, Ahmadinejad and Maher Arar
October 11, 2006
Alumnae Lounge, Aidekman Arts Center| 8:00pm | 2006-07 Dr. Jean
Mayer Global Citizenship Award Recipient | Download PDF
The Honorable Irwin Cotler was Canada's Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada from 2003-2006. He currently serves in the Canadian House of Commons for the constituency of Mount Royal. Mr. Cotler was a professor of law at McGill University and the director of its Human Rights Program from 1973 until his election as a Member of Parliament in 1999. He has also been a visiting professor at Harvard Law School, a Woodrow Wilson Fellow at Yale Law School and is the recipient of five honorary doctorates. He was appointed in 1992 as an Officer of the Order of Canada. He is a past president of the Canadian Jewish Congress.
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IGL Associate Director Heather Barry, Jennifer
Selendy, and IGL Director Sherman Teichman |
The Politicization of Law
October 12, 2006
Pearson
106 | 7:30pm | Download PDF
Jennifer Selendy (Tufts'90) is a partner in the New York office with substantial litigation and arbitration experience. Ms. Selendy's practice involves all aspects of trial and appellate practice in a wide variety of substantive areas including, securities and shareholder litigation, complex commercial contracts, employment, environmental/mass tort, intellectual property, defamation, trade secrets, and capital markets disputes. She graduated from Tufts University magna cum laude in 1990, received her Master's in International Relations at Oxford University in 1992 and received her J.D. from Harvard Law School in 1995.
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Pictures Without Borders
October 12, 2006
7:30pm | Cabot 205
The EXPOSURE Lecture series presents photographer Steve Horn. Mr Horn will be showing his photographs and discussing his work.
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Back to Basics: Improved access
to Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene for AIDS Prevention, Treatment,
and Care
October 23, 2006
12pm | Barnum 104 | Download PDF
Dr. Ruth Bamela Engo is the President and Executive Director of African Action on AIDS and the former Minister of Labor of Cameroon. This is the final lecture of the Luce Seminar series convened by Luce Professor and IGL Fellow Astier Almedom.
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Mac Maharaj |
Nelson Mandela: Myth and the
Man
Lecture and book signing
October 25, 2006
8pm | Barnum 008
The inaugural event of the Robert and JoAnn Bendetson Public Diplomacy Initiative
Mac Maharaj was a member of Nelson
Mandela’s inner circle during the days of resistance in
South Africa. In 1977, after spending 12 years in prison on Robben
Island, he was appointed secretary of the Internal Political
and Reconstruction Department of the African National Congress
(ANC). He served on the Revolutionary Council and National Executive
Committee of the ANC, an underground program of armed resistance
against the apartheid government. After Nelson Mandela was released
from prison in 1990, Mr. Maharaj was a lead negotiator for the
ANC in talks with the National Party government and Joint Secretary
of the Transitional Executive Council, overseeing South Africa’s
transition to democracy. Mr. Maharaj also served as the Minister
for Transportation in President Mandela’s
government. In 2005, Mr. Maharaj was appointed to the chair of
the Democracy Project at Bennington College in Vermont. At the
2006 Norris and Margery Bendetson
EPIIC International Symposium on “The Politics of Fear,” he
received the Institute’s Dr. Jean Mayer Global Citizenship
Award. The lecture and discussion will be followed by a book
signing of Mandela: The Authorized Portrait, for which he was
an editorial consultant and contributor.
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Pandemics and Preparedness:
Physicians for Human Rights Pre-Conference
November 3, 2006
1:30pm-7:30pm | Barnum 008
In the face of a potential avian flu or other pandemic, we must anticipate and prepare for an outbreak from both a medical and humanitarian standpoint. Who will have access to flu vaccinations? Who will have access to anti-viral medications? Whose role is to be deciding this and why? As the administrators and recipients of healthcare; as the architects and enablers of policy; and as theorists and activists both inside and outside of the classroom, we must turn to the lessons of past pandemics in an attempt to create a more efficient template for our future preparedness- one that in addition to being logistically and medically effective, will guarantee the domestic and international respect of human rights.
1:30pm | Panel
Discussion: Avian Flu and Risk Analysis
Presentations
by Professor David Dapice, Professor David Gute, Dr. Bela Matyas,
Dr. Elena Naumova, and Ms. Stacie Lawson
4:00pm | Photography
and Global Health
Presentation of the work of EXPOSURE,
the photojournalism, documentary Studies and
human rights student organization of the Institute for Global
Leadership. Presentation
of the work of VII Photo Agency photographers by Matt Edmundson:
Alexandra Boulat: Emergency Room in Paris, Ron
Haviv: Darfur, Gary Knight: Tuberculosis in India, John
Stanmeyer: AIDS in Indonesia, James Nachtwey: Agent
Orange (confirmation pending)
4:30pm | Perilous Light: Photography and the Ethics of Representing Suffering from a Distance. Lecture and Discussion led by cultural and political sociologist Fuyuki Kurasawa
5:30pm | Panel Discussion: Past Pandemics and Lessons Learned: SARS and HIV/AIDS Presentations by Dr. Anne De Groot, Dr. John Mazzullo, Dr. George Saperstein, Professor Edith Balbach, and Mr. Panther Alier
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Israel and the Palestinians:
Towards Resolution or Explosion
A program with Professor Shai Feldman and Dr. Khalil Shikaki
Monday, November 13, 2006
6:00 PM | Barnum 008
Professor Shai Feldman is the Judith and Sidney Swartz Director of the Crown Center for Middle East Studies at Brandeis University. In 1997-2005 he served as Head of the Jaffee Center for Strategic Studies at Tel Aviv University. He also serves on the Council of the International Institute for Strategic Studies (IISS) in London and as a member of the Board of Directors of Harvard University's Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs. In 2001-2003 he served as a member of the UN Secretary General's Advisory Board on Disarmament Matters.
Dr. Khalil Shikaki has directed
the Palestinian Center for Policy and Survey Research in Ramallah
since 2000, and has conducted more than
one hundred polls among Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza
Strip since 1993. A world-renowned expert on Palestinian public
opinion and a widely published author, he has taught at several
institutions, including Birzeit University, An-Najah National
University, the University of Wisconsin in Milwaukee, and the
University of South Florida. He also was a visiting fellow at
the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., in 2002. Recent
publications include Palestinian Public Opinion and the Peace
Process: Long Term Trends and Policy
Implications (Washington DC: United States Institute of Peace,
2005), and "The Future of Palestine," Foreign Affairs
(November-December
2004).
Sponsored by the New Initiative for Middle East Peace (NIMEP), a project of the Institute for Global Leadership
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Allah and the War on Terror
An ALLIES event
November 13, 2006
7:00 PM | Braker 001 | Download PDF
Hassan Abbas is the ex-Pakistani Gov Official and bestselling
author of Pakistans Drift into Extremism:
Allah, the Army, and America's War on Terror. Abbas will
be speaking about Pakistan's and NATO's fight against al-Qaeda
in Afghanistan and the border region.
Sponsored by the Alliance Linking Leaders in Education and the Services (ALLIES), a project of the Institute for Global Leadership
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The Comeback of Ortega: Nicaragua,
the United States and the Latin American Left
November 16, 2006
7:00PM |
Sophia Gordon
How do we understand the recent
Nicaraguan elections in the context of the leftward shift in
Latin America? How do great powers react to major shifts in the
political landscape of the developing world? How will Ortega's
victory affect future economic relations? How will a Sandinista
democracy? Participants include Jack Spence, Associate Dean of
the College of Liberal Arts at UMass Boston and President of
Hemisphere Initiatives, a group that monitors peace processes
and democratic transitions in Central America, and Kent Norsworthy,
Content Director of the Latin American Network Information Center
at the University of Texas.
Sponsored by the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Citizenship and Public Service, the Project on Justice in Times of Transition, and the Institute for Global Leadership.
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North Korea's Nuclear Threat
January 21, 2007
7:00PM | Sophia Gordon
North Korean nuclear antagonism
and its implications for East Asia, the United States, and Iran
with Dr. Robert S. Ross, Boston College
Mr. James Schoff, The Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis,
and Dr. Jim Walsh, MIT. This event is sponsored by the Institute
for Global Leadership's ALIIES program.
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Professor Roswell Angier
and VII Photographer Eugene Richards |
Eugene Richards
January 23, 2007
7:00PM | Cabot 206
Eugene Richards was born in Dorchester, Massachusetts. After graduating from Northeastern University with a degree in English and journalism, he studied photography with Minor White at M.I.T. After publication of his first two books, Few Comforts or Surprises: The Arkansas Delta (1973) and his self-published Dorchester Days (1978), Richards was invited to become a nominee at Magnum. He was a member until he departed in 1995, returned to the cooperative in 2002, only to leave again in 2005. Richards is best known for his books--he has authored thirteen--and photo essays on such diverse topics as breast cancer, drug addiction, poverty, pediatric HIV and AIDS, the plight of the world’s mentally disabled, aging and death in America. Among numerous honors, he has won the a Guggenheim Fellowship, three National Endowment for the Arts grants, the Leica Medal of Excellence, the Leica Oskar Barnack Award, the Olivier Rebbot Award twice, and the Robert F. Kennedy Lifetime Achievement Journalism Award for coverage of the disadvantaged. In 2006, Richards became the tenth member of VII Photo Agency.
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Iraq:
Moving Forward (Click for a complete schedule)
January 29-31, 2007
The Future of Iraq
January 29, 2007
7:30PM | Cohen Auditorium, Aidekman
Arts Center
Confronting Violence and
Extremists:
Experiences from Bosnia, Guatemala, Northern Ireland, and South
Africa
January 30, 2007
2:00-4:00pm | Balch Arena Theater, Aidekman Arts Center
Sovereignty and Semi-States:
The Case of Iraqi Kurdistan
January 30, 2007
4:30pm-6:00pm | Crane Room, Paige Hall
Iraq, Iran, and the Middle East
January
31, 2007
12:00-3:00pm | Alumnae Lounge, Aidekman Arts Center
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Peter Maher, EPIIC '06,
Lt. Gen. David Barno, and the honorable Ali Jalali |
Security in Afghanistan: An Examination of Current
Dilemmas to Securing Peace and Stability in Afghanistan.
Wednesday, February 7, 2007
7:00-9:00pm | Barnum Hall 008
Lieutenant General (Ret.) David Barno is the Director of the Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies at the National Defense University. He spent 19 months starting in October 2003 commanding over 20,000 US and Coalition Forces in Combined Forces Command - Afghanistan. He was responsible to CENTCOM for regional efforts in Afghanistan, most of Pakistan and southern parts of Uzbekistan and Tajikistan.
Minister Ali A. Jalali, the former Interior Minister of Afghanistan (2003-2005), is currently serving as both a Distinguished Professor for the Near East South Asia Center for Strategic Studies and as a researcher for the Institute for National Strategic Studies at the National Defense University. As Interior Minister he created a trained force of 50,000 Afghan National Police and 12,000 Border Police to work effectively in counter-narcotics, counter-terrorism, and criminal investigation.
Sponsored by the Alliance Linking Leaders in Education and the
Services
(ALLIES) and the Institute for Global Leadership (IGL)
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TILIP
International Symposium (The China Program at Tufts University)
February 22-25, 2007
.......................................................................
EPIIC International Symposium
Global Crises: Governance and Intervention
March 1-4, 2007
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Senator Sam Nunn with
Pace Academy students |
Nuclear Proliferation: A Race Between Cooperation and Catastrophe
Thursday,
April 12, 2007
4:30PM | Cohen Auditorium, Aidekman Arts Center,
Tufts University
Senator Sam Nunn
Sam Nunn is co-chairman
and chief executive officer of the Nuclear Threat Initiative
(NTI), a charitable organization working to reduce the global
threats from nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. He served
as a United States Senator from Georgia for 24 years (1972-1996).
During his tenure in the U.S. Senate, Senator Nunn served as
chairman of the U.S. Senate Committee on Armed Services and the
Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations. He also served on the
Intelligence and Small Business Committees. His legislative achievements
include the landmark Department of Defense Reorganization Act,
drafted with the late Senator Barry Goldwater, and the Nunn-Lugar
Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, which provides assistance
to Russia and the former Soviet republics for securing and destroying
their excess nuclear, biological and chemical weapons. To date,
the Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction program has deactivated
more than 5,900 nuclear warheads. In 2005, Nunn teamed up with
former Senator Fred Thompson to promote a new film, Last Best
Chance, on the dangers of excess nuclear weapons and materials.
The film aired on HBO in October of 2005. In addition to his
work with NTI, Senator Nunn has continued his service in the
public policy arena as a distinguished professor in the Sam Nunn
School of International Affairs at Georgia Tech and as chairman
of the board of the Center for Strategic and International Studies
in Washington, D.C.
Dr.
Graham Allison
Graham Allison is Director of the Belfer Center
for Science and International Affairs and Douglas Dillon Professor
of Government at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.
Dr. Allison has served as Special Advisor to the Secretary of
Defense under President Reagan and as Assistant Secretary of
Defense for Policy and Plans under President Clinton, where he
coordinated DOD strategy and policy towards Russia, Ukraine,
and the other states of the former Soviet Union. He served as
a member of the Defense Policy Board for Secretaries Weinberger,
Carlucci, Cheney, Aspin, Perry and Cohen. Dr. Allison's publications
include: Avoiding Nuclear Anarchy: Containing the Threat of Loose
Russian Nuclear Weapons and Fissile Material and Nuclear Terrorism:
The Ultimate Preventable Catastrophe.
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Inquiry: The High School
Simulation Program
April 12-15, 2007
.......................................................................
Professor Padraig O'Malley |
Shades
of Difference: Mac Maharaj and the Struggle for South Africa
Discussion and Book Signing
Thursday, April 26
4:30PM | Barnum 104
Padraig O’Malley is the Moakley Professor of International Peace and Reconciliation at The McCormack School of Graduate Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Boston and a Senior Fellow at the Center for Democracy and Development. He is the editor of the New England Journal of Public Policy. He is an expert on democratic transitions and divided societies, with special expertise on Northern Ireland and South Africa. Dr. O’Malley is the author of a number of books, including The Uncivil Wars: Ireland Today, Biting At the Grave: The Irish Hunger Strikes and the Politics of Despair, and Shades of Difference: Mac Maharaj and the Struggle for South Africa. He is the co-editor, Sticks and Stones: Living with Uncertain Wars.
Mac Maharaj was a member of Nelson Mandela’s inner circle during the days of resistance in South Africa. In 1977, after spending 12 years in prison on Robben Island, he was appointed secretary of the Internal Political and Reconstruction Department of the ANC. He served on the Revolutionary Council and National Executive Committee of the ANC, an underground program of armed resistance against the apartheid government. After Nelson Mandela was released from prison in 1990, Mr. Maharaj was a lead negotiator for the ANC in talks with the National Party government and Joint Secretary of the Transitional Executive Council, overseeing South Africa’s transition to democracy. Mandela appointed Mr. Maharaj Minister of Transport upon becoming president in 1994; Maharaj served in parliamentrized Portrait.
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Syllabus | Simulation | Roles | Previous Year |