Allan Goodman

Dr. Allan E. Goodman is the Chief Executive Officer of the Institute of International Education, which marked its Centennial in 2019. IIE promotes the exchange of scholars and students, rescues scholars, students, and artists from persecution, displacement, and crises, conducts research on international academic mobility, and administers the Fulbright program sponsored by the United States Department of States.  The Institute collaborates with a wide range of corporate, government and foundation partners across the globe.  108 of its directors, grantees, and alumni of programs administered by IIE are recipients of Nobel Prizes.

Dr. Goodman served as Presidential Briefing Coordinator for the Director of Central Intelligence and as Special Assistant to the Director of the National Foreign Assessment Center in the Carter Administration. He was the first American professor to lecture at the Foreign Affairs College of Beijing. Dr. Goodman also helped create the first U.S. academic exchange program with the Moscow Diplomatic Academy for the Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs and developed the diplomatic training program of the Foreign Ministry of Vietnam.

Dr. Goodman is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations, and serves on the selection committees for the Rhodes and Schwarzman Scholars and the Yidan Prize. He also serves on the Council for Higher Education Accreditation International Quality Group Advisory Council and the Board of Trustees of the Education Above All Foundation. Dr. Goodman has a Ph.D. in Government from Harvard, an M.P.A. from the John F. Kennedy School of Government and a B.S. from Northwestern University, and is the recipient of honorary degrees from Canadian, European, Japanese, UK, and US universities. He received decorations for his work in promoting educational exchange and scholar rescue from the governments of France, Germany, and Norway; he received the first Gilbert Medal from the Universitas 21 Organisation.

Before joining IIE, Dr Goodman was Executive Dean of the School of Foreign Service and Professor at Georgetown University. His books on international relations are published by Princeton, Harvard, and Yale University presses. He has served at the Department of State and the Central Intelligence Agency.

I was greatly informed and influenced by Allan's academic work for my efforts on secrecy, covert action and democracy at Emerson College where I conducted a graduate seminar symposium in 1982 on FOIA concerns and US foreign policy, Secrecy or Disclosure; at the Institute in 1988 on our Covert Action and Democracy and colloquium /symposium year, and my work with former CIA director, Admiral Stansfield Turner on democracy and terrorism.

Allan was the coauthor of Best Truth: Intelligence in the Information Age, Strategic Intelligence for American National Security, and The Need to Know: The Report of the Twentieth Century Fund Task Force on Covert Action and American Democracy, among other publications. 

I was specifically privileged to have wonderful conversations with Allan about global education and the powerful juxtaposition of higher education and human rights, and honored to award Allan one of the Institute's Dr. Jean Mayer Awards for Global Citizenship.

One of my regrets during my time as director of the Institute was my failure to enact David Cuttino's and my vision of the initiative, Passport to Leadership with the IEE. (See below* ) 

David and I traveled to NYC to discuss these plans on the morning of September 11th, 2001 - thereafter understood as 9/11 - and witnessed the crash of the terrorist's second plane hitting the second World Trade Center's tower in the foyer of the headquarters of IIE opposite the United Nations buildings. We had a very hurried hello before the security police hustled us out of the building fearing the UN might be a significant target. I had left Boston very early that morning and parked my car next to one of the hijacker's cars where police had discovered an Arabic translation of aircraft flying instructions, a fact I discovered when surrounded by secret service and police vehicles upon my return that day to Logan airport to retrieve my car 

I am introducing Allan to Convisero's Sasha Abaskin https://www.the-trebuchet.org/blog/2022/4/8/alexander-sasha-abashkin in hopes that IEE might be helpful with Scholars at Risk efforts on behalf of Russian and Ukrainian academic and other professionals who have fled their countries in the face of the Putin invasion of Ukraine. Likewise I am introducing Allan to SaiU and Krea Universities in India to see what collaborations might occur with IEE programs. 

  • Passport to Leadership: A Demonstration Project of the Institute for Global Leadership at Tufts University and The Institute for International Education

Vision Statement

• Provide a transforming international experience for first year students with a clear focus on developing leaders with the ability to act effectively on complex world issues across cultures.

Goal

• Develop a pilot program involving an estimated 20% of the enrolling class at Tufts (200 -250 students) in an intensive program preparing them for project based international learning to be held at the end of the first year in five to six international locations (including Hong Kong, Mexico and Hungary). Participating Tufts students from the United States and other nations will be paired with an equal number of students from the leading universities in those countries. The goal will be to engage a total of 400 - 500 new university students at leading institutions in this new initiative

Objective

• The objective will be the eventual participation of a larger percentage of enrolling Tufts students and a larger involvement of international students around the world in this program based upon the success of the pilot project. This initiative will:

– Increase the preparation for rigorous scholarship and a passion for inquiry and active learning

– Increase the quality and amount of student research and engagement in special projects

– Increase the understanding of real issues of national and international importance

– Create a clear international orientation and the ability to operate effectively across cultures.

– Increase faculty and staff collaboration among leading international universities

– Foster an understanding of global citizenship

The Program

• Students will be selected during their first semester of university study

• Orientation to the project will begin during the second semester after their arrival on campus.

• Material will be prepared at Tufts to orient and prepare students for their international experience.

• Leaders from the public and private sectors in a wide variety of fields will be invited to meet with students throughout the program, e.g., Fulbright Scholars and Humphrey fellows

• Using the internet, Tufts students and participating international students will begin sharing their findings with one another and with their mentors during the spring semester prior to beginning the program.

• Students arrive on location following the completion of their first year of university study in 2003.

• Participants in the passport to leadership program will engage in the study of issues relating to several themes e.g., issues related to the environment

Outcomes

• Increase the percentage of students with an international perspective—both Tufts students and students from collaborating international universities

• Develop cross-cultural understanding among students, university faculty, administrators and leaders

• Enhance research and leadership skills for all participating students

• Increase communication skills

• Establish a replicable national orientation model

• Establish a network for international cooperation and collaboration among leading international universities

• Draw additional attention and effort to working with significant national and international issues

Advantages

• Students will meet leaders and experts in a wide variety of fields throughout the program and will be engaged in a rigorous program related to important national or international issues.

• Continuing educational projects, research and partnerships will result from this program at home and away.

• In an environment where less than 5% of US students study abroad, this project will establish a model that can be measured for its success in increasing foreign study, international understanding and the development of important leadership skills which can be repeated by other institutions in the United States and abroad.

• This model will accelerate the focus on international understanding and the development of leadership skills at a modest cost and will increase the value of the university experience for students.

Peter Kurey

I first encountered Sherman when I was a junior at Emerson College in Boston. I enrolled in his course entitled, Political Analysis, in the spring of 1981. The course was not only interesting and engaging but taught me a lot about critical thinking--something that was in short supply during the rest of my academic career.

Wanting to continue working with Sherman, he agreed to serve as my faculty advisor for my senior thesis during the fall semester of my senior year at Emerson in 1981. The topic of my thesis was the sale of AWACS radar planes to Saudi Arabia. Working one-on-one with Sherman was extremely rewarding and stretched my thinking into areas of foreign policy that I had never considered.

During my final semester at Emerson in the spring of 1982, I was part of the team, led by Sherman, that organized a symposium on the Freedom of Information Act. The symposium attracted an impressive array of figures from Washington and across the country including: The former Director of the CIA, William Colby, the radical lawyer William KunstlerMort Halperin of the National Security Council, the author of a book on the Rosenberg’s, novelist Robert Coover; the Official Historian of the US Department of State, William Slany; and the Director of the Ralph Nader Freedom of Information Clearinghouse, Katherine Myer. Working on the symposium was a rewarding and amazing experience that I will never forget.

While at Emerson I worked on three college newspapers. I was co-founder of, The Independent, which was totally run on advertising revenue. In my senior year, I was Managing Editor of the official school newspaper, The Berkeley Beacon, which won an award from the Society of Professional Journalists.

I graduated with a degree in Mass Communication in the spring of 1982 from Emerson, valedictorian of my class, summa cum laude, Gold Key Honor Society.

Wanting to pursue a career in publishing, my first stop was as an editor at the trade publisher Lebhar-Friedman in New York. After two years, I was put in charge of the biweekly editorial production of the trade publication, National Home Center News. My interest in publishing went beyond editorial to the business side, and I left this position in the fall of 1988 to pursue an MBA at The University of Michigan. I completed my MBA in the spring of 1990.

After a short stint in financial services, I was hired as a Senior International Marketing Manager at The Wall Street Journal/Dow Jones. I was in a small group that supported international advertising sales globally. After a year, I was promoted to Director of International Marketing focusing on providing creative solutions for the sales staff to sell the Dow Jones suite of products as well as primary and secondary research to support ad sales that grew from $30 million to $130 million over a period of approximately 5 years. I also took on an operational role in 1996 managing the $10 million operating budget of the group and working with offices around the world on their technology needs as well as logistical support.

In 1999 I was asked to work on a corporate project at Dow Jones to examine the computing environment within Dow Jones, with a specific focus on how to improve employees’ work experience. The outcome of this project was a new portal which included a heavy emphasis on company and competitive news as well as applications for expense filing and human resource transactions.

After my time on this project, I was hired as Director of Marketing for Dow Jones Newswires, the news service that is used across financial enterprises from traders to financial advisors. This market was in a state of change, and, in addition to supporting $250 million in sales through collateral, advertising and sponsorships, I developed a robust primary and secondary research program where we were able to identify key changes in the market where Dow Jones might have an advantage. We worked extensively with John Bowen and Russ Prince of CEG, two pioneers in high-net-worth investor research, to understand various business models used by financial advisors and what drove client loyalty. This led to the launch of Dow Jones Wealth Manager, an application designed to help financial advisors develop deeper relationships with their clients.

In 2006 I was asked to join a corporate strategy group within Dow Jones. The group I ran was responsible for market research, market sizing and competitive research across the Enterprise Media Group within Dow Jones.

In 2008, I found it necessary to re-invent my career with the collapse of the publishing industry due, in part, to the recession. Given the research and product development, focused on financial advisors, I was engaged in at Dow Jones Newswires, I was hired by Merrill Lynch as part of their Wealth Management Communications Department as a Senior Vice President. I wrote various types of communications and produced presentations for the Head of Wealth Management and Chief Operating Officer, among others. I also produced internal video presentations aimed at the Merrill financial advisors. I was assigned to be the communications lead on many large, regulatory projects. Most notably, I was on the team that rolled out the Department of Labor Fiduciary Rule. This was a regulatory initiative that sought to provide better advice to retirement investors with smaller balances.

Due to my work at Merrill, I was recruited by Union Bank of Switzerland (UBS) as a Director to run their Advisor Communications Department, within the U.S., in 2016. I had a staff of five that coordinated communications from all departments in the firm to the U.S.-based financial advisors at UBS. This position also had a significant regulatory communications function.

Around 2018, my wife and I started to re-evaluate our careers and our work/life balance. After serious consideration, we both decided to retire in 2019 to pursue our passions of cross-country skiing, fly fishing and bicycling. We sold our house in Chatham, New Jersey and relocated to Bozeman, Montana, where we live today. When not enjoying the great outdoors, which are abundant around Bozeman, I can be found playing classical guitar, tying flies for fly fishing, writing articles about fly fishing and cooking. I am happy to have reconnected with Sherman after all these years and be part of the Convisero.

Joshua Laub

This is my 29th year with the New York City Department of Education. I have served in the role of teacher, assistant principal, principal, and Director of Youth Development. Schools play a vital role in identifying children and families that need help and support, I  support school leaders and work collaboratively with all city agencies and community-based organizations (CBOs) to provide our neediest families with the necessary resources to help their children succeed in our schools. Working shoulder to shoulder to design parent engagement strategies that establish trust and build pathways to resources and supports in the community. I help to identify and provide schools with training to identify children and families in crisis, develop effective screening tools, and strengthen mental health programs in our schools.

We have been building a network of external partners both in city agencies and CBOs to effectively address the unmet needs of our most vulnerable children and families. I am determined to create a cross-sector culture that addresses racism, shame, and stigma–as well as confusion and bureaucracy– that many of our families have to endure when seeking help. We need to make it easier for families to connect to the support and services they desperately need.

Innovation requires a deep understanding of the challenges and barriers that get in the way of connecting families to resources and support. After many years of experience working with families, we realize that relationships are a critical piece of this reform, and we must listen to the people we serve and honor their feedback. With experience working in low-income neighborhoods for years, I bring a deep understanding of the needs of our families.  I bring a love of children and families to the work. As a proud father of four children, three of which currently attend our public schools, I see the impact the pandemic has had on each of them and the extra care, understanding, and support they need.  My personal experience helps me appreciate the need to customize our efforts to the specific needs of every child and family in our city.

In many ways the school I served as Principal; Banana Kelly High School in the Bronx was a community school in practice. We invested a lot of time and energy in ensuring that our students and families felt heard, respected, and supported. During that time, I was recognized by the Department of Education and Advocates for Children for my work with children and families in shelters.  Our school was celebrated for having one of the highest graduation rates for students in temporary housing. I am proud of the work I have accomplished over the last 29 years but I am most proud of what I have learned from the children and families I have had the privilege of working with in my various roles.  I am excited about the prospect of bringing all that I have learned to this moment and helping our public schools provide a 21st-century education for all of the children we serve.

Presently I am leading an interagency team that is committed to connecting 11,000 children (ages 5-17)  living in shelters to a caring adult at school.  Our team recognizes that real support is much more than connecting a child and family to benefits it requires a relationship. In order to build trust, and strong partnership we need to engage with them about the challenges and obstacles that are getting in the way and problem solve together.

 

I greatly honor and admire Joshua for the extraordinary educator that he is. He has purposively taken on the most arduous and complex challenges that an educator could confront in the New York city public school system. I have witnessed firsthand the passion, concern, and dedication that he has for his students who I met with him over the span of almost a decade as the Director the Institute and the Co-Founder with my Associate Director, Heather Barry, of the Institutes’ Inquiry program – an immersive secondary school experiential learning program (now in its 31st year) dedicated to enabling high school students to confront and discern global challenges. Josh prepared them, accompanied them, and encouraged them every step of the way. So much so, that they often competed extremely well with private schools and specialized schools.

 

He has a distinctive sensitivity and at the same time, a very bold and courageous intelligent, confrontational style. Joshua backs down from no one and is one of the least intimidate-able people I know. While a man of strength and conviction, he is delicately attentive and thoughtful and an ideal mediator.

 

I first mt him in an unusual moment, I have laughed that he is the sole person responsible for my missing any of my symposia over 30 years. During EPIIC’s 1988 symposium on covert action and democracy, Joshua stood up to denounce our having brought a former director of the CIA, members of the US military and others he found morally objectionable. We held our symposia under the university’s controversial speakers program and campus police moved in to remove him. I suspended our session to escort him out, dismissed the police, and spent perhaps 3 hours with him discussing his thinking and opinions. He was a sophomore and I admired his passion, and his commitment to what he deemed an ethical protest. I reasoned with him and enunciated my commitment to not only an open spectrum of opinion but did not base my argument on freedom of expression, but freedom of thought and argued that it was essential for our students to confront dilemmas of the most vexing kind to debunk cant arguments and not to polarize but o seek to understand and intelligently confront policies that he and I agreed were in any ways deplorable. He realized that there were many people we had invited that were famed dissidents and protestors, from Daniel Ellsberg to Frank Snepp, from Mort Halperin and Senator Eagleton. No one was allowed to speak without knowing they would be confronted by other narratives and credible challenges. I invited him to present his thinking at Institute forums and encouraged him to enroll, as he did, in the following years’ EPIIC theme on drugs, international security and US public policy. I supported his research on CIA complicity and drug dealing in South Asia. As a member of the program committee, he was responsible for invitations, once again, to a wide spectrum of actors He moderated this panel and Peter Dale Scott later wrote a book in which he acknowledged the information he gained at the forum.

 

Joshua Laub gained notoriety when he disrupted a speech at Harvard Law School by a contra leader, Aldolfo Calero and denounced the school for inviting him to speak without any rebuttal.

 

Joshua was a wonderful student - very thoughtful - who based his arguments on research and reason. He went on to take his Masters work under the distinguished educator, Professor Theodore Sizer at Brown University who told me Josh was one of his very best students.

Sookrit Malik

Sookrit founded Energeia, an energy service company (ESCO) invested in creating a future where industries and commercial facilities can leverage their energy data to build, operate and finance more sustainable, energy efficient and economical utilities. Energeia works with companies ranging from 

He holds a MALD from The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy in International Energy and Resource Policy and a BA from Tufts University. He is a Renewable Energy Innovation Fellow at The Liechtenstein Institute for Strategic Development (LISD) , a member of Honor Civicus and the Aspen Institute Socrates Program.

Roland Gillah

Roland GILLAH is a conflict analyst and humanitarian access negotiator.

Roland was born in New York City and graduated from Tufts University with a degree in International Relations. He began his career in California as a consultant with the Department of Defense, examining how cutting-edge technologies were reshaping the modern battlefield. Not content with observing from a distance, he moved to Tunisia and joined Mercy Corps’ humanitarian response in Libya.

Unlike many other analyst, the team accurately predicted the 2019 Tripoli War, and during the fighting Roland co-led the Access Working Group with UN OCHA, managing negotiations with warring parties so that aid could be delivered across frontlines. He joined Mercy Corps’ response in the Democratic Republic of Congo, then facing the second-deadliest Ebola outbreak in the world, where he worked to improve the speed and accuracy of rapid responses to displacement and help communities rebuild. Most recently, Roland managed security and humanitarian access for health and demining operations in Syria, where he handled complex relations with tribal leaders and led the evacuation of multiple organizations during an ISIS attack.

Roland seeks bridges between opposing sides and to elevate the voices of people living through conflict. Educated at a Quaker school but choosing to work alongside the military for much of his career, he believes that violence cannot be the solution, and that it is the duty of those with means to fight alongside those without to enable a better world.

Roland Gillah is a Master’s Candidate in SIPA at Columbia University. This past summer, he served as a Research Fellow on Protection of Civilians at U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, and prior to graduate school, he was a conflict analyst and humanitarian access negotiator. He worked for Mercy Corps’ Libya Analysis Team during the 2019-2020 Tripoli offensive and the Congo Humanitarian Analysis Team during the 2018-2020 Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Most recently, he served as Humanitarian Access & Security Manager with Humanity & Inclusion in North East Syria, working on demining and health activities. He started his career working on security sector reform in the U.S. Department of Defense and the Hacking for Defense program, based in Silicon Valley. He earned his B.A. in International Relations from Tufts University.


Roland is the quintessential avatar of the ALLIES program I designed with my students.

A courageous person of deep humane sensibility, he is a remarkable amalgam of boldness, self-sacrifice, and citizenship. He is a man of steeled determination and yet a very quiet, humble, reserved demeaner. His intellect and curiosity did not lead him to a life of reflection and criticism, attributes he surely possesses and will refine in academic pursuits, but he is clearly a man of action and determination. In an educational era of a desire for and promotion of "safe spaces" Roland's sensibilities and life are the antithesis. He served as ALLIES Treasurer and its FieldEx planning committee, he ran the media team in SIMULEX, a simulation for the Army War College for the Fletcher School, and journeyed to Turkey on a Joint Research Project trip. Here is one of his entries:

https://www.tuftsgloballeadership.org/blog/musings-after-one-week-gallipoli

Ayesha Jalal

I joined Tufts University as a tenured full professor in the fall of 1999. Since 2003, I have held a joint appointment at the History Department and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy and am currently the holder of the Mary Richardson chair. After double majoring in history and political science from Wellesley College in 1978, I went to the United Kingdom where I received my doctorate in history from the University of Cambridge in 1983. I was a Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge (1980-84), Leverhulme Fellow at the Centre of South Asian Studies, Cambridge (1984-87), Fellow of the Woodrow Wilson Center for International Scholars in Washington, DC (1985-86) and Academy Scholar at the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies (1988-90). Between 1998-2003, I was a MacArthur Fellow. I have taught at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, Tufts University, Columbia University, and Harvard University.

Among her books are:

Partisans of Allah: Jihad in South Asia, (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2008)

Self and Sovereignty: Individual and Community in South Asian Islam since c.1850s (London and New York, Routledge, 2000; Delhi: Oxford University Press and Lahore: Sang-e-Meel, 2001)

Modern South Asia: History, Culture, Political Economy, joint author with Sugata Bose second edition. (London: Routledge, 2004, Delhi: Oxford University Press, 2004)

Nationalism, Democracy and Development: State and Politics in India, joint editor with Sugata Bose, joint author of introduction and author of article Exploding Communalism (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1997)

Democracy and Authoritarianism in South Asia: a Comparative and Historical Perspective (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995 in hardcover and paperback; Indian edition by New Delhi: Foundation Books, 1995; and Pakistani edition by Lahore: Sang-e-Meel, 1995) The State of Martial Rule: the Origins of Pakistan's Political Economy of Defence (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990); Pakistani hardcover and paperback editions by Lahore: Vanguard Press, 1991; Indian hardcover edition by New Delhi: Foundation Books, 1992)

Ayesha has been a friend for all the three decades I directed the Institute. She has served wonderfully on our boards and revised processes, I am indebted to her for my ability to create the Colloquium on South Asia. We collaborated on a range of individual programs, ranging from the reaction to the Mumbai terror attack, the program of the Southeast Asia studies program and have shared a number of thesis students. She is among the people that I admire most in academia, for not only is she a remarkable scholar, but her diligence with her students is extraordinary. She is precise and demanding with a very soft, human touch and cares deeply about democracy and human rights. 

Jim Sloman

Jim Sloman has been in the US equity investment industry for too many years to count. Starting soon after college as a retail stockbroker in Vermont, his path included retail stock office management in Cambridge, MA and institutional trading positions in Boston, New York and London. His career culminated as a founding partner and board member of Numeric Investors, an institutional equity money manager that grew from $15mm AUM to over $2b when he left the firm after 9 years to manage his assets. He has done this since 1999.

Jim has a thirty year commitment to mentoring Boston youth at Squashbusters, Year-Up and at More Than Years, where he was an eleven year member of the board of directors. He is a member of the Harvard Institute for Learning in Retirement where he leads and takes courses and served on the admissions committee. Over the years, Jim was president of his university's student legislature, has led a successful not-for-profit's capital fund campaign and participated in two others, was a member of several professional organizations, has lived in one city and worked in another, twice, has been an advisor to a privately held financial management firm, has invested in several successful Boston restaurants, has evaluated lots of private investments and invested in several and finally, Jim is currently serving as a board member of a social club and is cultivating several gardens.

Fly fishing, swimming and walking trips, both in America and abroad are his avocations, being a husband, father and grandfather are his joys.

Jim is a deft, thoughtful, challenging character who keeps me ruminating and hones my arguments. A thoughtful, avid reader, he is a friend whose independent ideas and insights I value greatly, not least because he has experiences and perspectives that purposively destroy ideological cant. Finally i have someone who enjoys watching football, and many sports, as I do, with joy and appreciation, and not a twinge of remorse, a gardener and long distance swimming, he is a man who cares about people and equality.

Upcoming ISYP Events, Updates on Existing Projects, Opportunities, and More!

December 9th: Nobel Prize Event with Student-Young Pugwash-UK

December 10th will mark 27 years since Joseph Rotblat and Pugwash Conferences jointly won the Nobel Peace Prize "for their efforts to diminish the part played by nuclear arms in international politics and, in the longer run, to eliminate such arms." 

To commemorate their recognition 27 years ago, ISYP and Student-Young Pugwash UK will host an online event on December 9th. Three speakers who knew Rotblat personally will share their intimate stories of his life: from young scientist, to influential Pugwashite, to champion of student and young Pugwash voices. They will share rare videos and first-hand accounts from the ceremony and offer messages of hope about the future, particularly on the role of Pugwash, the need for dialogue across divides in times of international tension, and the importance of engaging a new generation of scientists and arms control advocates.

Please sign up for this event here.


ISYP (Re)-Launches South Asia Programming 🎉

 

On August 30th, 2022, International Student/Young Pugwash convened a two-hour virtual roundtable among early- and mid-career professionals on nuclear weapons issues in South Asia. The program was hosted in partnership with the Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies (IPCS), New Delhi and the Centre for Security, Strategy and Policy Research (CSSPR) at the University of Lahore. The roundtable took stock of participants’ perspectives on contemporary nuclear issues in South Asia, laying groundwork for future ISYP dialogues.

We hope to continue this work and host additional events in 2023. If you would like to get involved, please reach out to us at office@isyp.org.

For the full event report, please click here.


Recording: ISYP's Cuban Missile Crisis Webinar

On the anniversary of the Cuban Missile Crisis this October, ISYP hosted a webinar on “The Cuban Missile Crisis After Sixty Years” in partnership with the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.   

Watch the webinar recording, here! (Passcode: 2r7!F3kU)

During the program, nuclear experts Stephen Van Evera and Sharon K. Weiner considered what we can learn from the Cuban Missile Crisis. Professor Van Evera discussed how the history of that crisis should inform the U.S. government’s current policies, with respect to the war in Ukraine. Professor Weiner described her virtual reality project, Nuclear Biscuit, which explores the difficulties of decision-making when nuclear threats seem imminent.


Post-Event Information: Third Nuclear Age Conference

The ISYP Third Nuclear Age Conference entitled “New Age, New Thinking: Challenges of a Third Nuclear Age” took place between October 31 and November 2, 2022. The conference mobilized over 20 emerging leaders and leading experts from around the world. Each presentation session featured a vibrant array of participants’ areas of focus, and expert panels offered insight that set the stage for the conversation as well as dug into the nuanced challenges surrounding non-proliferation and arms control to carry forward. Participants wrapped up their conference week with a writing workshop with the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists, and an open invitation to pitch articles to the Bulletin based on their research presented this week. ISYP would like to extend our sincere thanks to our supporters and partners:  The Heinrich Böll Foundation, the German Foundation for Peace Research through the University of Duisburg-Essen, Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, Bulletin of Atomic Scientists and the Third Nuclear Age Project. 

If you are interested in participating and/or learning more, please email office@isyp.org


Student/Young Pugwash national group updates 🌐

Israel Student/Young Pugwash 🇮🇱

The Israel Young Pugwash program at Reichman University kicked off its 4th year of activity this week, with 20 new B.A. and M.A. students, excited to start engaging in Track II diplomacy. 

We were honored to host Ezra Friedman, the Director of ISYP, for our first meeting, who gave a fascinating introduction to the Pugwash organization and the role of students within it.

 
 

Opportunities for Young Professionals 🌟

Check out these amazing opportunities relevant for young professionals and students interested in nuclear weapons, climate change, and security!

The Center for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation welcomes submissions for blogs to their Next Up in Arms Control series.Changemakers for the Planet is accepting applications from "changemakers who tackle the 'planetary crisis' aged 18-35 and based / with impact in Europe or the Middle East and North Africa." (Deadline : January 15, 2023)IFSH Hamburg is looking to fill two vacancies:A researcher on (almost) all things #EmergingTech (BMD, space, AWS, AI, machine learning or new delivery systems) with a keen interest in their regulation through arms control. A researcher from the natural sciences with a keen interest in escalation dynamics caused by fast kinetic weapon systems, the effects of nuclear use, or the verification of the absence of nuclear weapons.

For details, get in touch with Dr. Ulrich Kühn (kuehn@ifsh.de) or Dr. Moritz Kütt (kuett@ifsh.de).

Note, some opportunities listed are limited by citizenship and in-person/virtual attendance.

If you have an opportunity that you would like shared on ISYP's newsletter, please contract 
office@isyp.org.

A Recap of the 2022 Oslo Freedom Forum in Taiwan

As we reflect on 2022, it’s evident how this year was a critical moment for human rights and democracy in Asia and globally. 

One month ago, the Human Rights Foundation (HRF) returned to Taipei to host the thirdOslo Freedom Forum in Taiwan — making Taiwan the most frequent host country for our Forum outside the United States and Norway. 

The 2022 #OFFinTaiwan was our long-awaited return after two years of pandemic-related postponements, during which Taiwan made international headlines as a model for its pandemic response and its ongoing resilience in the face of rising global authoritarianism.


The Program

We were humbled to receive a gracious welcome from the OFF community in Taiwan upon our return. Excited attendees, including many student delegations, local civil society organizations, activists, journalists, and government officials, filled the theater.

We heard first-hand stories from renowned global activists standing up to tyranny in Burma, China, Hong Kong, Thailand, Ukraine, the Gambia, Saudi Arabia, and Taiwan.

Political figures and government officials from the country, including Minister of Foreign Affairs Joseph Wu and Taiwanese Congressman Freddy Tshiong-Tso Lim, joined activists on stage to call for a united struggle against authoritarianism. We were also honored to be joined by Taiwan-based Australian singer Kimberley Chen, who performed at the event.

You can watch the theater program on oslofreedomforum.com and our YouTube page.


The Expo

The #OFFinTaiwan expo space featured many HRF programs, including Flash Drives for Freedom, the Ukraine Solidarity Fund’s Voices from Inside, Impact Litigation, Art in Protest, Responsible Finance’s Defund Dictators, and Wear Your Values’ Uncomfortable Truth. Visitors engaged with the interactive displays, wrote postcards to political prisoners, and viewed artworks by exiled Chinese Australian dissident artist Badiucao.

The space also featured interactive booths by HRF partner organizations: the Citizen Lab, Cofacts, Garden of Hope Foundation, Ghost Island Media, Hong Kong Outlanders, the Human Rights Network for Tibet and Taiwan, Open Culture Foundation, Snowball Community, Students for a Free Tibet - Taiwan, SyndAvant, Taiwan Association for Human Rights, the Taiwan Equality Campaign, Taiwan Foundation for Democracy, and the Taiwan NextGen Foundation. Representatives from these organizations were on-site to engage with visitors about their work.


Media Coverage

More than 100 journalists, photographers, and videographers attended the 2022 #OFFinTaiwan press conference and theater program. The Forum and our speakers have since received remarkable coverage in international and Taiwan-based outlets, including The Taipei Times, Focus Taiwan, Taiwan News, The Guardian, Taiwan Plus, and The Liberty Times, among others.


Local Meetings

For the first time in #OFFinTaiwan history, HRF coordinated closely with Taiwan’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MOFA) to spearhead a delegation of HRF staff members and international OFF speakers. The delegation schedule was action-packed, including: A meeting with the president of Taiwan’s Legislative Yuan, You Si-kun, attended by legislators across all political partiesA dinner banquet graciously hosted by MOFA’s Secretary General Lily Hsu, along with distinguished guests: commissioner from the National Human Rights Commission, Chi Hui-Jung, director general of MOFA’s Department of NGO International Affairs, Constance Wang, and representatives of international NGOs in Taiwan.A meeting with the inaugural chairperson of Taiwan’s National Human Rights Commission, Chen Chu, joined by six commissioners involved in Taiwan’s democratization process and human rights development.These meetings have been covered by Radio Taiwan International, Central News Agency, Taiwan News, and other major local news outlets.


What's Next

Despite the global backsliding of democracy, Taiwan continues to stand tall and strong — serving as an inspiration for the region and the world. As the first and currently only Oslo Freedom Forum in the Asia region, it’s incredibly valuable to continue bringing global activists to Taiwan to share strategies, exchange ideas, and strengthen the global movement for freedom. Now, more than ever, it’s important for us all to stand together.

HRF firmly believes Taiwan can become a capital for human rights. We hope to bring our Oslo Freedom Forum community back to Taipei for years to come and shine a spotlight on Taiwan as a global beacon for democracy. If you would like to support future Oslo Freedom Forums in Taiwan, please donate to our OFF in Taiwan fundraiser.

Julia Shufro

JULIA SHUFRO (2020-2021)
I am a Master of Arts in Law and Diplomacy (MALD) Candidate at The Fletcher School (Class of 2024), with concentrations in International Negotiation and Conflict Resolution, as well as International Law. Additionally, I was the Exchange Student Representative for Fletcher at Sciences Po - the Paris School of International Affairs, where I studied coercive diplomacy and humanitarian law for Fall 2022. During my graduate studies, I was selected for Harvard Law School's Program on Negotiation, in which I gained advanced diplomatic negotiation skills. I was an undergraduate at Tufts University (Class of 2022), majoring in French and in History. On campus, I was the President of La Société Française, on the board of the Tufts Tap Ensemble, and an active member of the Tufts History Society. I participated in the EPIIC Class of 2019-2020: Preventing Genocide and Mass Atrocities, in which I immersed myself into the theory and practice of genocide studies and learned about the complexities of preventing mass atrocity crimes.
Currently, I am a UNA-USA Fellow working in Political Affairs at the United Nations (UN). I worked in the Department of Global Communications as a Congressional Attache in Washington, DC and now focus on biological weapons, nonproliferation, preventing atrocity, and humanitarian law at the Office of Disarmament Affairs at the UN in Geneva, Switzerland. Previously, I worked for the Department of State, in foreign service, focusing on public diplomacy and transitions to diplomatic postings. Additionally, I was an Oslo Scholar for the Human Rights Foundation’s Oslo Freedom Forum. With this program, I interned for the Ufolo Studies Center for Good Governance in Angola. There, I worked with Rafael Marques de Morais on civic engagement and human rights and nonviolence education for police officers.

My current research is about the war on terror and conflict resolution in the Sahel. Upon completion of my Master's thesis about the limitations of international law on terrorism and conflict in the Sahel, I will have regional expertise in francophone Africa. My past research pertains to the creation of an international court of environmental justice, the failure to prevent the Rohingya genocide in Rakhine State, Myanmar, and how to alter international policy to allow for greater intervention without the Security Council Veto. I have always loved the study of history and human rights, and I am passionate about cultural immersions, travel, and foreign languages. My most recent publication was an Op-ed about the coup in Myanmar and about an idealistic end to mass atrocity crimes ensuing there.
I believe in the potency of personal anecdotes in teaching tolerance, respect, and the courage to care. My goal as a future educator and humanitarian is to teach and inspire altruism and to understand the world around me to the best of my ability.

During my sophomore year at Tufts, I enrolled in ‘Education for Public Inquiry and International Citizenship (EPIIC): Preventing Genocide and Mass Atrocity.’ As a French and history double major at Tufts, I studied the Holocaust and contemporary genocides. I was intrigued by the laws and human rights obligations that guided the international community, but I never explored these principles at Tufts. EPIIC was my favorite class that I took at Tufts, and Heather Barry encouraged me to pursue genocide policy, human rights, and conflict resolution. After our symposium, she asked if I’d like to be connected with Sherman. Sherman and I had an immediate, and almost serendipitous, connection, and I began to intern for him at his virtual institute, The Trebuchet. As it turned out, my mother (Tufts/Jackson College Class of 1986) had known of Sherman from her time at Tufts: her friends had taken classes with the infamous Professor Teichman who wore a leather jacket and rode his motorcycle to the Hill. It felt like Sherman and I were meant to be connected!

I worked at The Trebuchet for a year, and, during that time, I planned international webinars, met with activists, and began a People’s Tribunal for Environmental Justice with Sherman's support. With his unyielding confidence in my abilities, I became a LEAP Fellow at the Liechtenstein Institute for Strategic Development, and my passions for human rights and peacebuilding only escalated. Sherman taught me to follow my passions, to be excited about learning, and, ultimately, about the power of altruism. I know that Sherman is always thinking of me, and I feel so appreciative to have a friend and mentor such as him in my life.

New HRF Podcasts: November Recap

New HRF Podcasts: November Recap

Dissidents and Dictators is the Human Rights Foundation (HRF)'s podcast series that serves as a storytelling platform for some of the world's bravest activists, artists, policymakers, business leaders, and technologists. Throughout the month of November, we released a number of new episodes, including:


Episode #62 - The Flames of the Feminist Revolution Have Been Fanned in Iran

In this episode, recorded at the 2022 Oslo Freedom Forum in New York, we hear from Iranian journalist and activist Masih Alinejad, who spearheaded the “My Stealthy Freedom” campaign to protest Iran’s compulsory hijab laws for women and girls. Alinejad talks about the recent murder of Mahsa Amini and the reality of life for women living under the tyrannical Iranian regime.


Episode #63 - On the Frontlines of Freedom

In this episode, recorded at the 2022 Oslo Freedom Forum in New York, we hear from Oleksandra Matviichuk, the 2022 Nobel Peace Prize laureate and head of the Center for Civil Liberties. Matviichuk speaks about the horrors and atrocities of Putin’s war in Ukraine — she says, "You don't need to be Ukrainian to support Ukraine. You just need to be human."


Episode #64 - A Global Movement for Democracy

In this episode, recorded at the 2022 Oslo Freedom Forum in New York, Venezuelan Opposition leader Leopoldo Lópezdiscusses the fight for democracy in Venezuela and globally. “There is no one person, there is no one movement, there is no one country, there is no one company that can be successful in bringing about freedom. It’s only about the ‘We’.”


Episode #65 - All for the Land of Snow: Where is Home?

In this episode, recorded at the 2022 Oslo Freedom Forum in New York, we hear from Tibetan activist and community organizer Chemi Lhamo, who has dedicated her life to resisting the Chinese occupation of her homeland. Tune in to learn how we can rise above tyranny together and elevate the Tibetan cause.

FIRST TO STAND: The Cases and Causes of Irwin Cotler

Human Rights Day World Premiere: Cinéma du Musée

WITH FRENCH SUBTITLES

First to Stand will open on Human Rights Day, December 10 and 11 at 7:30.

The evening will be introduced by Jess Salomon (The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon), human rights lawyer turned stand-up comedian; and followed by a bilingual Q&A with Irwin Cotler, human rights champion; Shaparak Shajarizadeh, pioneer of the women’s right movement in Iran; and Ensaf Haidar, the wife and voice of Saudi blogger Raif Badawi.

Buy advance tickets online here to ensure availability: Cinéma du Musée
1379-A Sherbrooke St. West, Montréal

See you there!

“We spend a lot of energy dealing with the villains, but hardly any time celebrating the heroes. Irwin Cotler is one of the greatest heroes of our time. He’s taken on the most intractable dictators and saved the most unjustly imprisoned hostages. I hope everyone will watch First to Stand and become familiar his inspiring commitment to justice.”
Bill Browder

“How does it start? It’s precisely in the schoolyard. It starts with the exclusion of the “other.” How you create a difference until… until you kill.”
Esther Mujawayo

“It begs another question: Are all humans human? Or are some humans more human than others?”
Romeo Dallaire

“It is clear that the challenges to media freedom are urgent, and they are global. But my message to all the ministers who are here is that they must make sure that their laws respect media freedom and they impose targeted sanctions on states that try to silence critical speech by detaining or killing journalists.”
Amal Clooney

“Having nail polish is against the law, or having makeup. For them, everything is seductive. And it’s not the man who has to be healthy and control themself. It’s the women. The women should cover their bodies, so men don’t get tempted.”
Shaparak Shajarizadeh

“Never forget, as Elie Wiesel put it, that indifference always means coming down on the side of the oppressor, never on the side of the oppressed. Wherever people are persecuted, he put it, whether by reason of their race or religion or belief or sex, that must be your place to stand. Each of you here has a voice. You can speak and you can act. You can be the agents of change and bring about the change that you want to see!”
Irwin Cotler

Pictures from the event:

Irwin Cotler in conversation with Shaparak Shajarizadeh (former Iranian political prisoner and women’s rights activist) and Ensaf Haidar (activist and wife of imprisoned Saudi blogger Raif Badawi)

Robin Pendoley

Robin Pendoley is an educator and social impact inciter based in the San Francisco Bay Area. He has served as classroom teacher and administrator in public schools, founder and CEO of an educational nonprofit, and collective impact facilitator. In each of these roles, Robin has worked to develop leaders and institutions that create a more just, equitable, and sustainable society.
After 8 years in nonprofits and public schools serving under-resourced communities, Robin co-founded Thinking Beyond Borders (TBB), an international education institution. The intensive and highly rigorous study abroad programs challenged aspiring social impact leaders to critically examine "do-gooding" as a means of unlocking transformative approaches to contributing to change. Over 13 years, TBB became an industry leading gap year brand with programs spanning 14 countries.

Today, Robin serves in his home community to advance racial equity in the public education system. As a collective impact facilitator, his work supports educational, social service, and community leaders to overcome the barriers to effective collaboration and system change in the service of local youth and families. His work includes supporting the development of a comprehensive educator of color pipeline to diversify the local education workforce, and facilitating the development of Community Schools. Ultimately, this work aims to reshape how power is held and wielded in the community, most notably by ensuring BIPOC youth and families are essential decision makers in partnership with system leaders.

With a BA in International Development from UCLA and Master's in Education from Harvard Graduate School of Education, Robin has advanced expertise in social impact theory and practice, as well as how to develop high impact, values-centered leaders. He's a skilled executive leader, having ensured effective governance and oversight on boards, engaged in rigorous financial oversight, led data-informed strategic planning, and developed a culture of learning and development. Robin believes that meaningful value creation requires a commitment to critical engagement with our values and privilege at each step of the journey.

I have known Robin since 2007 when Harvard University's Ford Foundation Professor of the Practice of International Education Fernando Reimers asked me to advise him and his friends on the creation of Thinking Beyond Boundaries. This program created a vital gap year experience for graduating high school students and I became their first advisor. The program took students to destinations around the globe with service projects dedicated to addressing themes that ranged from environmental degradation to poverty, health, and malnutrition. He chose the name of their initiative, Thinking Beyond Borders, from the mantra that I had chosen for my Tufts Institute – Thinking Beyond Boundaries: Acting Across Borders. I have always been impressed by Robin's concern about not only the quality of education but also his emphasis on inclusion and the equality of access to education. He is a superb mentor.

Fernando Reimers

Fernando Reimers is the Ford Foundation Professor of the Practice of International Education and Director of the Global Education Innovation Initiative at Harvard University. An expert in the field of Global Education, his research and teaching focus on understanding how to educate children and youth so they can thrive in the 21st century. He was a member of UNESCOs Commission on the Futures of Education which wrote the report ‘Reimagining Our Futures Together. A New Social Contract for Education’. He was a member of the advisory committee of the UN Education Summit. He has developed curriculum aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals which is in use in many schools throughout the world. During the COVID-19 pandemic he led numerous comparative studies examining the educational consequences of the pandemic and identifying options to sustain educational opportunity and to build back better. 

He directs the Global Education Innovation Initiative, a cross-country research and practice collaborative focusing on education for the 21st century. He has written or edited 45 books and over 100 articles and chapters, including Education to Build Back Better, Primary and Secondary Education during COVID-19, and University and School collaborations during a pandemic. He has also authored several children’s books focused on inclusive values.

As part of his commitment to advancing educational opportunity, he serves on multiple advisory boards and committees at Harvard, particularly focused in advancing the global mission of the University and enhancing the effectiveness of the university’s programs to address climate change. He also serves on the boards of a range of education organizations focused on the improvement of education and the promotion of peace, inclusion and sustainability. He has served on the Harvard faculty since 1998. Previous to that he worked at the Universidad Central de Venezuela, the Harvard Institute for International Development and the World Bank.

Fernando has been a friend for several decades. I respect Fernando as my own mentor given the quality and scope of his activity regarding global education, particularly in the creation of Global Education Innovation Initiative. We both spoke at each other's conferences over the years, and we have also interacted on a variety of projects; the most noteworthy one led to the creation of a significant gap year beginning in 2007, Thinking Beyond Borders (TBB). This occurred when Fernando introduced me to Robin Pendoley and several of his peace corps volunteers, his students who had returned to pursue their master’s at The Harvard Graduate School of Education.  

They were seeking a way to create a vital experience for graduating high school students and I became their first advisor. The program took students to destinations around the globe with service projects dedicated to addressing themes that ranged from environmental degradation to poverty, health, and malnutrition.  

 From their mission statement -The global community faces complex challenges that require more than simple responses. 

Thinking Beyond Borders provided the skills and experience needed to help gap year students find sustainable solutions, living alongside local families and learning from local leaders, students joined communities where young people found their voices and prepared for lives of informed social action. 

They chose the name of their initiative, Thinking Beyond Borders, from the mantra that I had chosen for my Tufts Institute – Thinking Beyond Boundaries: Acting Across Borders.  

TBB closed down after the impact of several Covid years and I remained in contact with Robin, who is a member of Convisero mentors.  

I was pleased to see a number of my Tuft’s graduating seniors join his programs to secure their Masters.  

Cem Yilmaz

Cem Yilmaz is the Director, Strategy for Samsung Electronics America. Previously he was the Associate Principal for Samsung's Global Strategy Group in Seoul, South Korea. Prior to that he was a Senior Consultant at Booz & Company. He graduated the Columbia Business School with an MBA, and previously received a BA in economics from Koç University in Istanbul, Turkey, his home country. His expertise is in consumer technology and international business. While his core professional interest is in tech empowerment, he is fascinated by urban architecture, contemporary art and the history of commerce. He is an avid traveler and photographer and published this book, with images from 30 countries from my 10 years of travel.

I had the wonderful pleasure of meeting Cem, who was part of my son, Nathaniel's academic cluster at Columbia. I have learned to appreciate his intellect, warmth, incisiveness, and wit, and yes, his passion and remarkable skill at strategic board games, which he and my son and daughter-in-law Kelly insist sharpens their management and diplomatic skills. I have also witnessed his dancing prowess at my son's wedding where he was an honored groomsman.

Cem is an invaluable and wonderful intellectual companion. At the time I insert this description he and I are preparing for a Thanksgiving conversation on Originalism’s Charade on the Constitution and the Supreme Court. He defines for me the word cosmopolitan and is acutely aware of both the world’s goodness and cruelty. Our interactions are very varied and he recently has connected me with significant Ukrainian contacts.

We are both book omnivores and he has tasked me with helping him build his library. We are in a friendly competition to see what and who reads the most annually. At the time of this entry his most recent books include: The Science of Can and Can't by Chiara Market to and Fabric of Reality by David Deutsch.

I yield! Mine are: Spineless: The Science of Jellyfish and The Art of Growing a Backbone by Juli Berwald, This Is How They Tell You The World Ends: The Cyber-Weapons Arms Race by Nicole Perlroth, and The Sympathizer by Viet Thanh Nguyen.

Cem sent me this wonderful commentary:

https://fs.blog/the-antilibrary/

The Antilibrary: Why Unread Books Are The Most Important - Farnam Street

How can we navigate the unknown — the vast chasm between what we know and what we don’t know, and come to grips with what is unknowable?

***

This week, I caught myself feeling guilty as I walked into my office and looked at the ever-growing number of unread books. My bookshelf, which seems to reproduce on its own, is a constant source of ribbing from my friends.

“You’ll never read all of those,” they say. And they’re right. I won’t. That’s not really the point.

It is our knowledge — the things we are sure of — that makes the world go wrong and keeps us from seeing and learning.

— Lincoln Steffens

Some questions are only asked by people with a fundamental misunderstanding. The friends who walk into my office and ask, “have you read all of these” miss the point of books.

In his book, The Black Swan, Nassim Taleb describes our relationship between books and knowledge using the legendary Italian writer Umberto Eco (1932-2016).

The writer Umberto Eco belongs to that small class of scholars who are encyclopedic, insightful, and nondull. He is the owner of a large personal library (containing thirty thousand books), and separates visitors into two categories: those who react with “Wow! Signore professore dottore Eco, what a library you have. How many of these books have you read?” and the others—a very small minority—who get the point is that a private library is not an ego-boosting appendages but a research tool. The library should contain as much of what you do not know as your financial means … allow you to put there. You will accumulate more knowledge and more books as you grow older, and the growing number of unread books on the shelves will look at you menacingly. Indeed, the more you know, the larger the rows of unread books. Let us call this collection of unread books an antilibrary.

Taleb adds:

We tend to treat our knowledge as personal property to be protected and defended. It is an ornament that allows us to rise in the pecking order. So this tendency to offend Eco’s library sensibility by focusing on the known is a human bias that extends to our mental operations. People don’t walk around with anti-résumés telling you what they have not studied or experienced (it’s the job of their competitors to do that), but it would be nice if they did. Just as we need to stand library logic on its head, we will work on standing knowledge itself on its head.

A good library is filled with mostly unread books. That’s the point. Our relationship with the unknown causes the very problem Taleb is famous for contextualizing: the black swan. Because we underestimate the value of what we don’t know and overvalue what we do know, we fundamentally misunderstand the likelihood of surprises.

The antidote to this overconfidence boils down to our relationship with knowledge. The anti-scholar, as Taleb refers to it, is “someone who focuses on the unread books, and makes an attempt not to treat his knowledge as a treasure, or even a possession, or even a self-esteem enhancement device — a skeptical empiricist.”

My library serves as a visual reminder of what I don’t know.

Michael Maso

Michael Maso has served as the managing director of Boston’s Huntington Theatre Company since 1982. He has produced more than 200 plays in partnership with four artistic directors and is one of the most well-regarded managing directors in the theatre industry. Under his tenure, the Huntington has received over 160 Elliot Norton and IRNE awards, as well as the 2013 Tony Award for Outstanding Regional Theatre. Mr. Maso received the 2016 Massachusetts Nonprofit Network’s Lifetime Achievement Award, as well as TCG’s 2012 Theatre Practitioner Award, the Huntington’s 2012 Wimberly Award, StageSource’s 2010 Theatre Hero Award, the 2005 Commonwealth Award (the state’s highest arts honor), and the 2000 Norton Prize for Sustained Excellence. In 2004 the Boston Herald honored him as Theatre Man of the Year. Mr. Maso led the Huntington’s 10-year drive to build the Stanford Calderwood Pavilion at the Boston Center for the Arts, which opened in September 2004, and most recently led the redevelopment and renovation of the Huntington Avenue Theatre, which reopened in October, 2022. He previously served on the Boston Cultural Planning Steering Committee, and as a member of the board for ArtsBoston, Theatre Communications Group (TCG), and StageSource. From 1997 to 2005 Mr. Maso served as the president of the League of Resident Theatres (LORT). In 2005, he was named as one of a dozen members of the inaugural class of the Barr Fellows Program. Prior to the Huntington, he served as the managing director of Alabama Shakespeare Festival, general manager of New York’s Roundabout Theatre Company, business manager for PAF Playhouse on Long Island, and as an independent arts management consultant based in Taos, New Mexico.

Michael, while being an extraordinarily accomplished professional, is modest to a fault. He has a wonderful, quirky, and fun side to him. We are comrades in slipping off to see movies that our spouses would cringe at going to (i.e. the Marvel Universe films). And, apparently, he cried at Top Gun: Maverick. We are traveling buddies; recently to pre-COVID Cuba, and soon, Israel/Palestine. In retrospect, it appears we are attracted to dictatorial and seriously flawed democratic countries.

Wonderfully guileless, this is as genuine and sincere a friend as one could have. And thoroughly erudite, I have met my match in terms of somebody who loves to read and devour books. He joyously introduced me to the cartoon, Mr. Peabody & Sherman, and is appropriate, I am hardly the genius, and had I known, I might have named our pup Remi Mr. Peabody. We live five minutes from one another in both Brookline and Truro. Michael has promised to play pool with me - if the advocacy of his wonderful, ebullient wife Lisa prevails on my wife Iris - and I will finally get one in our home. How wonderful it will be to celebrate my 80th birthday in the Maso Studio at the Huntington Theater that he has magnificently led the campaign to renovate.

Kristina Hare Lyons

Kristina Hare Lyons, MPH, MALD,

Kristina is a humanitarian, filmmaker, consultant, entrepreneur, writer and mother with a particular interest in impact media and global public health. She currently sits on the governing boards of 3 public health-oriented non-profits: The Population Media Center, The Population Institute and Rehearsal for Life.  She started her own business in 2007, Portobello Road, a retail concept that emphasized local, ethical and sustainable products. Previously, she worked at Physicians for Human Rights on a landmark study on war-related sexual violence in Sierra Leone and to eliminate conflict diamonds from the marketplace through the Kimberley Process, at Elle Magazine as West Coast Editor, as an Associate Producer at Frontline, and with filmmaker Oliver Stone on numerous projects. More recently, she consulted with the Ministry of Health in Liberia through the Harvard Ministerial Leadership program on efforts to address tragically high rates of maternal mortality and is developing content at her film company, Lyonshare Pictures. Kristina holds a Masters in Public Health and Population from Harvard, a Masters in Law and Diplomacy from the Fletcher School, and a BA from Tufts. Her passions include travel, tennis, nature, reading, social justice, photography, art and design.

Kristina, a friend for decades, ranks in the top tier of my delightful alumni. She was my student as a senior at Tufts in 1986/87. In my EPIIC colloquium/symposium: The West Bank and Gaza. I almost lost her then. She came to my office to drop the colloquium, seemingly frustrated at her lack of precursor knowledge compared to her fellow students, some of whom were from the region or religiously and culturally related to the region. I knew she was fascinated by and cared about the topic and I refused to let her leave. Instead, I think she will well remember a several-hour private tutorial where I obliged her to sit and take notes as I covered a huge series of blackboards surrounding the second-floor classroom of Miner Hall. Luckily for me, I convinced her to remain and she thoroughly captured the subject and subsequently visited the region.

At the symposium, Kristina helped introduce Palestinian resistance activist and University President, Gabi Barambki, and the Palestinian student who he brought from Beirzeit. Most noteworthy, she helped convene the private Friday evening session of the symposium, when my students met with the remarkable women they had attracted to the forum: Palestinian lawyer Mona Rashmawi, now Chief of the Rule of Law, Equality, and Non-Discrimination Branch Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Naomi Chazan, Knesset member and Professor Emeritus at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and Professor Galia Golan, now a leading figure for Combatants for Peace (on whose academic advisory board I serve). The students wondered what they, as young women themselves and these prominent women, could create to protest the occupation and enhance the possibilities of peace. It incubated what a year later, in the context of the first Intifada became Israel's Women in Black. Now part of a global movement.

Impressed by Kristina's determination and intelligence, I introduced her to my friend Susannah Sirkin, now a Director Emeritus of Physicians for Human Rights who supervised her research and interviewing PHR work in Sierra Leone and Kristina's subsequent contributions to a PHR Report "War-related Sexual Violence in Sierra Leone". Over the years, she participated in a variety of Institute activities, including creating a long mural, documenting the Institute's first ten years of activities, participating in EPIIC Outward Bound weekends. In 1995, having been a Representative to the U.N. Conference on Population and Development in Cairo and leading the Women’s Forum at Fletcher, including the creation of a conference on FGM, she co-led a workshop, "Beyond Beijing: The Global Empowerment of Women" as part of the Institute's 10th anniversary symposium, "2020 Visions of the Future."

We have sustained a warm friendship. I had the privilege recently of recommending her to Harvard University's Public Health and Population Master's program. Most recently, Kristina and her husband Patrick helped convene a fundraiser at Patrick's restaurant in the Charles Hotel, Bar Enza, for a fellow EPIIC alum, Patrick Schmidt, running for the 2022 House of Representatives from Kansas.

Khuyen Bui

Khuyen (Kasper) is the author of the book “Not Being - the Art of Self-Transformation”, published Jan 2022. It is about the human’s journey from being an atomized, isolated, separate self to a wider, bolder, more intimately connected way of being in the world.

He is currently pursuing his PhD in Management at Bayes Business School in London. He researches and works with 1) founders who care about developing themselves and their teams and wholesome human beings, 2) social impact leaders in transition phase and 3) community builders who are bringing together the many worlds they are in. 

Graduated cum laude from Tufts University studying Computer Science and Philosophy, he thrives in bringing analytical rigor into his fascination with human messiness. 

After Tufts, he lived in Vietnam, building communities of change-agents,
organizing festivals, teaching Movement Improvisation as a way to bring people more aligned with themselves, going beyond the rational intellect, into the passion of the heart and the aliveness of the body.
Khuyen enjoys writing & storytelling and has won several awards, notably Peter Drucker Challenge and The Moth Boston. 

Khuyen was a Synaptic Scholar since 2013. He secretly wishes to have Sherman as his uncle.
His eyes lit up upon beautiful questions.
Here is one, embodying his lifelong pursuit:

“What is it like
to be together
and to work shoulder by shoulder
so that our fires
burn brighter,
our love 
keeps on changing lives, shaping worlds, 
and our self 
becomes quieter inside?“

Find him at khuyenbui.com

 

I met Khuyen in his freshman year in 2016. He was one of the most introspective, inquisitive and searching of my former students.

He was chosen as a 2017 Synaptic Scholar in 2016.

Here he describes the Scholars program, that I initiated in 2009 as "such a sexy name for the action-oriented nerds like him!"

Despite my leaving Tufts, we kept in contact, and I always enjoyed his restless spirit and eclecticism

He will make an exceptional giving mentor, something I witnessed when he was such for the Compass Fellowship (see page 95), a group aimed at helping freshmen get more exposure to social entrepreneurship begun by my Institute’s Empower students.

Alison Sanders

  Alison Sander serves as the Director of BCG’s Center for Sensing and Mining the Future (CSMF) and brings more than 25 years’ experience working with senior teams on complex challenges. The Center develops BCG’s global Megatrend databases and provides guidance to companies and organizations seeking to better understand trends that will shape their future.

 

Alison has designed significant growth strategies for clients across many sectors and has used Megatrends to help clients form powerful visions and to find the next areas of growth. The Center tracks more than 100 trends that cut across the latest technological developments, demographic shifts, industrial shifts, economic requirements, environmental shifts, and consumer shifts, among others. BCG's Megatrend knowledge has been used by more than 1,500 organizations.

 

Alison has an MBA from Harvard Business School, a JD from Harvard Law School, and a BA in political science with honors from the University of Chicago. Prior to BCG Alison gained experience at Cambridge Transnational Associates (Founder & CEO), and Goldman Sachs. Alison served for 11 years on the Board of the World Resources Institute (www.wri.org) among other organizations.