Helen Zhang

Helen Zhang is currently a Master of Science candidate at the University of Oxford studying Clinical and Therapeutic Neuroscience. Her research focus is on utilising transcranial magnetic stimulation to probe the neurological underpinnings of theta-gamma tACS in the motor cortex. She received her Bachelors in Science from Brown University in 2022, studying Biology with a focus in Biotechnology and Physiology. Her Honors Thesis focused on developing monoclonal antibodies as a treatment for P. falciparum malaria.

Helen resonates with the iden=ty of a global citizen as she comes from a multicultural background. She was born in Vancouver, Canada to first-generation immigrants, moving back to her parents’ hometown of Shanghai, China at the age of six. She studied in Shanghai until her high school graduation, existing in a metropolitan world that blended her traditional Chinese family and heritage with values from her international school education. Helen was heavily involved in global leadership and international affairs in many different avenues of her life. She was part of the leadership team at Huge Grace Orphanage, starting a dental program that provided free fluoride treatments to the children that resided there. She was also involved in Model United Nations for 16 years of her life, culminating in her election as Secretary-General for Brown University Simulation of the United Nations, one of the largest and most prestigious conferences in the global high school circuit. At Brown, Helen was also involved in Global Brigades, volunteering over 600+ hours to spearhead medical brigades to Tegucigalpa, Honduras that provided free consultations and medication to local villages. Lastly, Helen held the Lead Coordinator role for Brown’s Women in Science and Engineering club, promoting female empowerment in male dominated fields and creating networks of mentorship and support for professional development in the scientific fields.

Working in Rhode Island Hospital’s Emergency Department during COVID solidified Helen’s desire to enter medicine. Her experiences interacting with a diverse patient population sparked a passion to emphasize the importance of intersectionality and the social determinants of health when interacting with patients. She hopes to eventually work within the public health system to create educational curriculums and residency trainings that specifically spotlight how social and cultural experiences impact one’s perception and interactions with the medical system, with a belief that re-emphasizing this human connection will strengthen physician- patient relationships and immensely improve quality of care.

Helen has plans to move back to the States in September 2023 and is eager to continue her educational journey to medical school. She is excited to create interdisciplinary connections at the Trebuchet that will strengthen her holistic outlooks to inform her role as a future physician.

Léo Stern

After a career as a saxophone soloist and orchestra conductor, I recently completed a master's degree in international business and diplomacy in Paris. Here’s a brief recap of how I connected the dots. 

I am extremely grateful for what music instilled in me. The value of mentorship, of trust and collaboration, the beauty of cultural inclusion and the pursuit of harmony are pillars I have carried within me ever since.

In this regard, Sherman’s work and community resonated deeply with me. I have the firm intention to push myself and others to do their best, and if I can touch one soul with half the warmth and care some people have had for me along the way, I’ll have much to be proud of.

I started playing the saxophone in a rock band when I was 8 years old and entered the conservatory aged 13. Music made me evolve early in diversity and showed me what it takes to bring heterogeneity into symbiosis. There, I gained a better grasp on the notion of differences – cultural, social, philosophical, physical. I also realized that harmony is a process, as opposed to a static state. It is a joint pursuit based on a shared intention. 

My time as an orchestra conductor was fundamental in my evolution. It was during my life in Vienna that I had my first contact with this profession. At that time, my professor and friend Theodor Guschlbauer challenged me in remarkable ways. Theodor was born in Austria in 1939 and absorbed the entire Viennese musical heritage and savoir-faire/know-how. One of the few students of Herbert von Karajan, Theodor showed me what true craftsmanship and dedication to art is. He played a fundamental role in pushing me to seek more accountability in everything I did. At that time, I created my own orchestra, which convinced me even further of how powerful human bonds can be. While music developed me in the ways described above, I also gradually realized that I had undernourished/neglected certain aspects of myself. 

While still being a conductor, I educated myself on subjects that always fascinated me. I took online classes and in person courses – while making my way into schools I was not officially affiliated with – and devoured books. This adventure led me to enter a master’s degree in international business and diplomacy in Paris. 

The program was excellent at combining finance and economics with international relations, topics I am equally fascinated by. It was an ideal blend of my aspiration to seek cultural diversity and my desire to create, be it a business, an institution, etc. 

Since the beginning of my master’s degree, I have been working for the France committee of the Pacific Economic Cooperation Council (PECC), chaired by Pascal Lamy, former director of the World Trade Organization. The PECC aims to bring together diplomats, entrepreneurs and researchers to foster economic cooperation in the Asia-Pacific region. I assist the Secretary General in defining the overall committee’s strategy. I also organize conferences - e.g., on the blue economy, sustainable tourism, IT supply chain restructuring, deep-sea mining - and provide financial and geopolitical analysis that feed into high stake negotiations.

More recently, I have started work as a consultant at Volentia, a strategy consulting firm that tackles topics as diverse as geopolitics, business, and public affairs. Shifting between these subjects is a challenge I enjoy a lot.

Personally and professionally, I am intrigued to understand how things and people work, and why. Juggling multiple perspectives simultaneously, I like to imagine how to enhance structures and systems.        

I want to thank Sandenna McMaster, my fiancée, for introducing me to Sherman. Her insights as to how naturally we would bond proved to be true beyond any expectations.




As noted, I met Léo via his wonderful fiancé, Sandenna, who has been a wonderful Trebuchet team member. My initial conversation with Léo extended for nearly three hours. He is intelligent, intriguing, talented, and as thoughtful and compelling a young man I have met in many years. An original composition by Léo, Japanese Wind, can be found here.  His video is accompanied by photos taken by Léo on his ascent of Mount Fuji. 

Mauricio Artiñano

Mauricio Artiñano graduated summa cum laude from Tufts University in 2006, with a major in International Relations, and has a Masters in Public Policy from the Princeton School of Public and International Affairs.  At Tufts, he was actively involved with the Institute for Global Leadership, the Tisch College of Civic Life, the International Club, and the International Relations Program (as co-founder of the Director's Leadership Council). 

As recipient of the Wendell Phillips Memorial Award, he was the Class of 2006 Baccalaureate speaker at graduation, when he spoke about the various levels of impact that one can have when trying to change the world, and about how love is the most revolutionary and impactful force to do so. 

Mauricio has spent most of his career with the United Nations. From 2008 to 2009, he served as a diplomat for Costa Rica during the country's two-year term on the UN Security Council. Following his Masters degree in public policy from Princeton University, he was served in the UN peace operations in South Sudan (UNMISS), Somalia (UNSOM) and for seven years with the special political mission in Colombia supporting the peace process between the former FARC-EP guerrilla group and the Colombian state. Among his various accomplishments with the Mission in Colombia, Mauricio designed the mission's first youth engagement strategy, created a network to support former combatants' reintegration projects related to tourism, and led an innovative project to train former combatants and community members as whitewater rafting guides (Rafting for Peace).

 Following his HIV+ diagnosis in 2015, Mauricio has also been active in HIV/AIDS activism, including founding two initiatives for HIV awareness and anti-discrimination, in Colombia and Costa Rica.

Mau was one of the more significant human and intellectual members of  my EPIIC and Institute years - and subsequently, unsurprisingly, one of the most caring, empathetic and beloved alumni of our many ensuing years.

While enrolled in the EPIIC 2003-04 colloquium, then sophomore Mauricio Artinano explored  the idea of bringing together the people who had been involved in the Central American peace process to look at lessons learned 20 years later. They were advised by INSPIRE practitioner-in-residence and IGL Executive Advisory Board Member, Timothy Philips the cofounder of the Project on Justice in Times of Transition (the founding of which was inspired by the Institute’s EPIIC program in 1991), 

Two years later, then a senior, with Mau's and others, including Sebatian Chaskel, Pedro Echavarria, Cynthia Medina, Andrea Petersen, and Molly Runyon, unstinting effort, that idea came to amazing fruition. The conference, “Lessons Learned from Regional Peace-Building: The Experience of the Central American Peace Process,” was held in March at Spain's Toledo Center for Peace 

The students had traveled through Central America over a summer to interview some of the main protagonists in the Central American peace process of the late 80s and early 90s in preparation for the conference. The students used their research, both bibliographical and interviews, to craft and structure the agenda and discussion questions for the conference. The student group also worked on the logistics, planning and organization of the summit. More than 40 distinguished individuals who participated in the peace process -- including three former heads of state, formers guerillas, and former ministers of defense -- were in attendance at the conference, which generated thoughtful and productive discussions on the future of Central America and on the lessons that Central America’s peace-building experience can provide for the international community. 




The remarkable participants included: 

Vinicio Cerezo Arévalo, former President of Guatemala (1986 – 1991); 

Rodrigo Madrigal Nieto, former Foreign Minister of Costa Rica under former President Arias; 

General Joaquín Cuadra Lacayo, former Commander in Chief of the Nicaraguan Army; 

Joaquín Villalobos, former El Salvadoran FMLN comandante; 

José María Figueres, former President of Costa Rica; 

Pierre Schori, member of the Sanford Commission on Central America; 

Sir Marrack Goulding, former UN Under Secretary-general for Peacekeeping (1986 – 1993) and Under Secretary-General for Political Affairs (1993 – 1997); 

Javier Pérez de Cuellar, former Secretary-General of the United Nations; 

Oscar Santamaría, former El Salvadoran government negotiator and former 28 Secretary-General of the Central American Integration System (SICA)



Of his experience with EPIIC, Mauricio told the Tufts Journal that it was “the most challenging and rewarding academic experience of my life.” Recognized for this conference, along with his overall excellence in academics, Mauricio was named to the USA Today All-Academic First Team.

But far beyond his academic prowess, whether taking on Michael Hardt's challenging work, or challenging his EPIIC symposium program committee, what remains with me most, is Mau's deep passionate concern for humanity, his emotional intelligence and maturity, demonstrated in his galvanizing reaction to one of the most tragic incidents of my life at director of the Institute, the passing of a beloved student, his classmate Bory Damyanova.  LINK

Mau, a young man of personal courage and conviction, had early on understood that EPIIC's incontrovertible strength and value was as a deep connective intellectual and caring human community. He summoned his peers even prior to Bory's accident, to mount a supporting  'Revolution of Love." 

It stimulated a powerful rush to excel, to challenge one another to be the best each of us, and collectively we could be, and to support one another in meeting the rigors we demanded of a leadership challenge, that often mystified and perplexed other faculty and students,  who at times cynically understood us a cult. 

Together his classmates created the Bory Damyanova Award.  I have tried to honor Bory, and assuredly Mau, and Bory's other friends, this way within Trebuchet. https://www.the-trebuchet.org/ibo

Anya Parks

Anya Parks is a Ph.D. student studying the evolution of social communication in dogs and humans at George Washington University. She has a specific interest in the cognitive requirements for language, joint attention, teaching, and imitation learning. Anya explores these questions using interdisciplinary approaches that combine ecology and developmental, comparative psychology. 

Her favorite part of her work is helping her students. As an early career researcher, she is currently developing skills in R and Python coding languages, in addition to her extensive background in evolutionary, and behavioral ecology. She also has experience in website design and copywriting. In her free time, you’ll find her running, drawing, reading, or working with her furry friend, Stella.

I actually owe this new friendship to Remi, who first encountered Stella, Anya’s pup, in our Coolidge Park dog run. Remi is responsible for many lovely conversations with Anya, whose intelligence, warmth, and always fascinating conversations about human-dog relationships and dog-dog relationships reminded me of my encounters decades ago with Professor Michael Fox at Washington University St. Louis, an expert in behavioral and developmental animal studies. I reached out to him as the author of Understanding Your Dog, when I spent several wonderful years working with Bianca, my Samoyed rescue dog. 

Daniel Sonder

Daniel is married to Fabiana Sonder, an entrepreneur in the healthy food industry in Brazil. They live in HK with their 3 kids, Gabriela (15, volleyball), Andre (13, basketball) and Alice (9, gymnastics). The family moved to Hong Kong in 2022, when Daniel joined the Hong Kong Exchange as Chief Strategy Officer. This followed a nine year period at B3 (Brazilian Stock and Futures Exchange), where he was CFO and Investor Relations Officer. He joined B3 in 2013, and, in addition to his role as CFO, Daniel was responsible for overseeing its corporate philanthropy efforts. Previously, Daniel worked for seven years at Credit Suisse in Brazil, where his last position was as managing director in their asset management division. He has also worked for the Brazilian Development Bank and the Brazilian government in infrastructure finance and state-owned companies management. Daniel started his career at J.P.Morgan in 1999. He holds a bachelor's degree in Economics and International Relations from Tufts University as well as a master's degree in International Relations from Tufts University's Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. As a sophomore at Tufts, Daniel was part of EPIIC 95/96 (Religion, Politics and Society), and later (2021) joined the IGL Advisory Board.

Daniel was a superb student in EPIIC. His clarity of thinking and intelligence was self-evident. Obviously not only in my class, but across the board in his academic career, to enter the Fletcher 5 year program was a distinct honor afforded to only two students a year. 

What was particularly delightful about him was his affect, which was at once modest and confident. Daniel’s initiative and competence was evident in his taking on one of the more responsible committees in our efforts, the Inquiry Secondary School Simulation Program, which hosted hundreds of highschool students who were prepared for a dynamic interaction over the course of three days.

His characteristic smile was always a reassuring one to his peers, from whom he easily won great respect. I gave Daniel the assignment to liaison with a very controversial speaker of that year, Leonardo Boff, the Brazilian liberation theologian who had been silenced by the Vatican for his criticism of the Catholic church. It was an obvious choice given both their Brazilian backgrounds, but really because I knew I could trust Daniel thoroughly. The campus was embroiled in the decision to bring Leonardo, which was endorsed by the University Chaplain Scotty McLennan

Daniel sat on the board of advisors at IGL and in April 2023 was invited to join the board of trustees of the Fletcher School by its chair and good friend, Leslie Puth.

Mahmood Attal

I am a twenty-eight-year-old Jordanian who has dedicated and invested the last 10 years of my life to become a successful licensed Tour and Adventure Guide in Jordan.   It all started when I was inspired to better my circumstances by a stranger who befriended me when I was working in a restaurant in Amman. It was Mike Niconchuk, your former student, something we learned in casual conversation. Sherman, you described this as Serendipity. 

I decided to study Tourism Management at The Hashemite University and graduated with a 3.33 GPA, placing me among the top 10 highest GPAs that year. 

To date, my academic background has concentrated on history, geology, politics, tourism development, sustainable tourism, and the natural world. A little bit about everything! But I’m very proud to say that I am the person today that I am because of all the self-education I’ve done to gain the proper knowledge and skills so I can prosper in my career, especially when it comes to my English language. It’s all self-taught.  

My passion for the natural world and the outdoors pushed me to take the extra mile, So I started to deepen my knowledge about the environment and geology, which led me eventually to have the urge and the motivation to join the forces mobilized against the negative impact of climate change.  

I am particularly very concerned about the critical water crisis in my country, Jordan. We have to be part of regional and global sustainability.  

I might not yet be a formally educated environmentalist, but I have the will and the motivation to commit to taking that curve in my career. 

I’ve begun by doing research about the academic organizations and experts in Jordan who are trying to make a change related to hydrology, sustainable development or climate change. 

Dr. Hussam Hussein is” Executive Director of partnerships for development at the Royal Scientific Society; a researcher and lecturer in water diplomacy, hydroponics, and management of water resources. The Royal Scientific Society works on many projects that are associated with renewable energy, climate change, and water sustainability in Jordan. 

WANA Institute is one of RSS's partners, they do excellent workshops and training in social justice, sustainable development, and human security. 

 Safa’ Al Jayoussi: She is a climate change expert, campaign adviser and Environmental Advocate, she also does some workshops and training for the public about climate change in the Arab World.  

I met Mahmood in Jordan. He was my assigned guide to explore Petra and Wadi Rum. He impressed me with his thorough knowledge of the region and the politics and society of Jordan. I had just crossed over from Israel, and it occasioned a number of candid conversations with him about the region and existing conflicts. When serendipity works, it really works. In one of my dinner conversations with him, I learned that he had been inspired, as he has written, by one of my wonderful former students to enroll in university as he did. That student was Mike Nikonchuk. Both of us in different periods of Mahmoods life were impressed by this young man, and what I learned of his real passion was to help his country solve its critical water dilemma, in pursuit of a sustainable future for his country, I checked with Peter Droege to confirm my desire to have him enter as a LEAP fellow to begin to pursue his investigations and further education on the matter. 

He is a thoughtful, non-polemical thinker whoI have agreed to directly mentor and will be introducing him to other members of Convisero’s network, including Boaz Wachtel, they both have common passions and interests about the future of the dead sea and regional water collaboration. I informed him of the work we have done previously with LISD and the Arava institute on alternative energy. 

Ron Rubin

Ron Rubin, Ph.D., has two driving philosophies that underlie his social and business efforts: first, to  help those underserved and “left-behind” by local and global governments and economies second to utilize technology to benefit as many people as possible. Dr. Rubin has founded or co-founded several companies and organizations, including the University of the Middle East Project, Rubin Anders Scientific, Boston Manufacturing Group, Therapy Gardens, and SeniorU. When he has time, he adjunct teaches graduate physics and math courses at universities in the Boston area. Formerly full-time on the mathematics faculty at MIT, Dr. Rubin received his PhD in physics from Harvard and his BA with highest honors in physics from Princeton. His work in science and education has been published in leading science journals and covered in The New York Times, the Boston Globe, Die Zeit, and El Pais. He is former Massachusetts State Squash Champion, and is now head coach of the Brookline High School Varsity Boys Squash Team, which won its division national championship in 2023.

I have begun a unique relationship with Ron. I had met him decades ago when he was a graduate student in physics at Harvard, when he was a founding member of the University of the Middle East- a truly innovative and unique concept of education that was disturbed by 9/11. 

Decades later, I have the privilege of working with one of his wonderful sons, David Rubin, and have begun to create a familiar familial relationship with the Rubins- fun interactions ranging from Shabbat dinner to watching David and Ron compete in the Parent-Child Massachusetts squash state championships. Ron played at Princeton. David now captains the squash team at Dartmouth. It is a nascent, intellectually stimulating conversation that has begun, ranging from middle eastern politics to an invitation to review Ron’s work of fiction, Unification, an epistolary correspondence between Einstein and his long-lost daughter. Ron has intriguingly offered the possibility to co-author a doomed romance embedded in contemporary Israeli and Iranian nuclear history intrigue. 

In Convisero fashion, I have asked Ron to potentially collaborate with Amir Grinstein on his 50:50 project given Ron’s entrepreneurial instinct and his prior initiatives.

The more we talk, the more we have found common ground. We both knew, admired, and cared deeply about Henry Rosovsky, and I have asked Ron to help me write his memoriam in the Trebuchet.

JJ Zhou

Zhuangchen Zhou, better known as "JJ", is a Community Manager at Ledger, a French cryptocurrency hardware wallet company. Prior to his venture into the world of technology, JJ was a rowing coach at the Chinese Olympic Rowing team, working with Western coaches such as Steve Redgrave and Paul Thompson to help Chinese rowers win Olympic gold medals.

JJ received his Certificate of Rowing Leadership from Community Rowing Inc. in 2017 after receiving his BA in International Relations from Tufts University in 2013. At Tufts, JJ was part of the Tufts University Rowing Team and joked that his full-time degree was in rowing, and his university major was his minor. 

JJ's intellectual interest is twofold - to connect with people and understand how the world works. His first curiosity brought him around the world - Russia, Kenya, Brazil, and Northwestern China to work on documentary photography projects under the guidance of Gary Knight,

 Samuel James, Heather Barry, and Sherman Teichman from the Institute of Global Leadership at Tufts University. His second curiosity pushed him to dive nose deep into political philosophy and studied the traditions of western political philosophy under professor

 Robert Devine. It was in this intense period that JJ sharpened his skill to understand complex ideas, see the world in thousand shades of gray, and formed a post-Christian, anti-nihilistic worldview heavily influenced by Friedrich Nietzsche. 

The combination of his interest and skills in storytelling and philosophy (and political economy to a certain extent) led JJ to Bitcoin, which he considers to be the soundest money in the world and could be part of the solution to economic issues caused by the domination of Keynesian Economics of the 20th century. 

I met JJ as a freshman who wanted to do a video documentary on the veterans of the Great March, uniquely both the Communists and the Nationalists.  I was struck by his intelligence, determination, and began a four year mentorship which culminated in his strong collaborations with the programs of The Program on Narrative Documentary Practice.  My last encounter with him at Tufts was a fun one, as we had many conversations as he helped me pack up the greater portion of the 10,000 volumes of my “Labyrinth,” dominantly my collection of personal books within the Institute Library. 

Then I came across this stunning and unusual accomplishment of endurance, which shocked me, but given his tenacity and powerful persona, did not surprise me. It's been my pleasure to introduce him to Convisero member, Alex Gladstein, who given his interest in Bitcoin, Alex had sent on this provoking article


Tamar Miller

Tamar Miller holds the distinction of creating and operating Out-of-the-Box portfolios for  social benefit organizations and institutions of higher learning. She is Project Lead for curriculum development for the Abdelkader Education Project and Project Lead for the Goldziher Prize for Journalists.. She teaches civic engagement and the politics of diversity. Her consulting practice ranges from working with the Center for Contemplative Mind in Society, introducing Harvard and MIT faculty to meditation as a pedagogic practice; to crafting a parliamentary campaign in Kuwait; to strategic evaluations for the Fetzer Institute’s science and spirituality unit. Tamar was VP Education and one of three founders of American Higher Education, Inc. based in Cambridge, MA. She was also a Partner in Middle East Holdings, a business development firm in Boston and Dubai.

Beginning as Director of Leadership Development at Harvard’s Kennedy School, she then held the position of Executive Director of the Institute for Social and Economic Policy in the Middle East.  Tamar is advisor to Track Two: An Institute for Citizen Diplomacy; on the board of directors of Combatants for Peace, the Parents’ Circle for Bereaved Israeli and Palestinian Families;  President of an organization dedicated to public art campaigns called “I Am Your Protector” and was on the founding board of the Alliance for Middle East Peace.  Tamar holds a B.A. in Philosophy and Judaic Studies, Master of Social Work from Yeshiva University, and a Master of Public Administration from Harvard University.  Just today, she found  inspiration from activists, academics, and peacemakers, thanks to Tova Hartman, Marshall Ganz, Malcolm Sparrow, Louise and Yahya Michot, Ari Goldman, Amitai Abouzaglo, Huda Abu Arqoub, Dulce and Michael Murphy, Baker Roshi, Dani Varadi, Aziz Abu Sarah, her three daughters and of course, Sherman Teichman.  

Mladen Mrdalj

Mladen Mrdalj received his PhD in Political Science at Northeastern University in 2015. He

taught Comparative Politics, International Relations, and Research Methods. His dissertation investigated significance of external factors in the dynamics of domestic political violence in the Yugoslav civil wars. The dissertation also attempted to deal with more theoretical questions, such as: how domestic actors differentiate between the official and actual positions of international actors, how are they trying to manipulate international actors, and what can we learn about conflict management by answering these questions.

Mladen earned his LLB and MA in Security Studies from the University of Belgrade, Serbia. He is an alumnus of The Fund for American Studies and Georgetown University’s summer programs in Prague as well as in Washington D.C., where he also interned at the Institute of World Politics.

Since 2010, Mladen has been actively involved in designing and leading the Dialogue of Civilizations program which introduces Northeastern students to the Western Balkans. In this Balkans Dialogue, students visit important institutions, sites, politicians and activists in the former Yugoslavia, and learn firsthand about ethno-nationalism, post-conflict reconstruction and EU accession. In addition to these activities, Mladen lectures on various aspects of conflict and politics in the post-Yugoslav space. In 2022, Mladen expanded his Dialogue of Civilizations work to Central Asia, taking Northeastern students to Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Upon returning to Serbia in 2016, he worked at the Center for International Relations and Sustainable Development, a think-tank ran by the former Serbian foreign affairs minister who

also served as the president of the UN General Assembly. In this capacity Mladen worked on studying Syrian migrants to Europe along the Balkan Route. Later on, he also worked on campaigns for the UN Secretary General and in presidential elections in Serbia.

Mladen returned to full time teaching in 2019, when he joined the International Burch University in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina, but already in the fall of 2020 he moved to Tashkent, Uzbekistan, where he joined Webster University. In parallel, Mladen is developing a full year study abroad opportunity in Belgrade (Serbia) for international students interested in Balkan politics and societies (www.balkansemester.org).

Since 2020 Mladen has regularly appeared in Serbian and regional TV and printed media, commenting on Serbian, regional, and international politics. You can find him on twitter @mladen_mrdalj

Join RefugePoint in celebrating World Refugee Day 2023 with a virtual 5K fundraiser!

Join RefugePoint in celebrating World Refugee Day 2023 with a virtual 5K fundraiser! Walk, run, swim, row, or bike—you can choose your own adventure while supporting refugees.

This event will take place between June 19 - 25, 2023, and you can participate from anywhere. By signing up today and starting a personal fundraiser, you can help us expand access to resettlement and self-reliance for refugees around the world.

Since 2005, RefugePoint has assisted over 120,000 refugees with a focus on those that are chronically underserved by traditional humanitarian responses. In the last year alone, we've advanced programs for unaccompanied children, those stuck indefinitely in limbo, and launched a Traineeship Program to train new experts in refugee resettlement casework around the world. 

Register for our virtual 5K today to support the necessary programs that assist refugees facing extreme vulnerabilities and amplify their stories. Want to donate instead? You can still do so by clicking below!

Register Today

Are you interested in gaining complimentary entry? Donate or fundraise $250 or more, and we'll waive your entrance fee! All U.S. participants who register by May 25th will also receive a RefugePoint T-shirt. Rock your awesome new gear and tag us on social media while doing so.

Sincerely,
Sarah Hidey
Chief Development Officer

The VII Foundation has acquired VII Photo Agency

The VII Foundation has acquired VII Photo Agency, making it one of the pillars of the foundation instead of being a separate entity. In addition to VII Photo, The VII Foundation comprises VII Academy, VII Insider, and VII Community. Our new website now hosts the entire non-profit VII ecosystem.
 
With The VII Foundation becoming the guardian of VII Photo’s rich legacy, the veracity and authenticity inherent in the work of the VII photographers will have broader reach, accessibility, and impact through the foundation’s advocacy and educational programming. As we confront a new age of image artifice when the line between fiction and non-fiction is being eroded, this need has never been greater. 
 
The VII Foundation’s mission is to transform visual journalism by empowering new voices and creating stories that advocate change. In a world where beliefs and actions are increasingly out-of-sync with facts and realities, transforming visual journalism is an urgent task. Our work begins with the programs of VII Academy, the educational wing of the foundation that provides tuition-free courses in visual journalism to practitioners in the Majority World and underrepresented communities in G20 countries. VII Academy aims to democratize the information narrative and give communities the tools to narrate their own stories in regions where media education is poorly resourced.
 
Complementing our core educational programs are two platforms: VII Insider, a free online space for public debate and discussion of visual journalism, and VII Community, designed to further tuition-free media education and foster exciting opportunities for our VII Academy alumni. 
 
The VII name is synonymous with courageous and impactful photojournalism. In 2001 the dawn of the digital era enabled the creation of VII. It allowed it to innovate and thrive during the aftermath of 9/11, the war in Afghanistan, the invasion of Iraq, and the chaos that followed as the narrative of a new century was written.
 
VII was created to enhance the careers of its members, to allow them to work on stories that mattered, have an impact in partnership with the world’s leading press, and create new opportunities they could not imagine alone. 
 
The digital revolution that enabled the photographers to build VII Photo also precipitated an undeniable loss in revenue for their media clients. Out of this anticipation, the VII Foundation was created at the same time to innovate and lead in the non-profit space. With its inception came more opportunities for the VII Photo photographers to work on ambitious stories in partnership with writers, filmmakers, and other leading practitioners and advance their efforts to mentor and educate younger photographers. 

Photo agencies and the press have less impact and influence on the production of visual journalism and a decreasing capacity to support the ambition of photographers than they used to. Photojournalism means taking risks; it requires initiative, resourcefulness, empathy, and courage. It also requires collaboration, trust, imagination, and partnership. Independent photo agencies and editors in the leading press were once essential to the life of a photojournalist. Today, the press has fewer resources to deploy independent photographers, and photo agencies survive by selling photographs by the kilogram.  

Through this acquisition, The VII Foundation will preserve the values the VII Photo founders laid out twenty years ago. Collectively and unanimously, the VII photographers believe the work of The VII Foundation and its ecosystem embodies what VII Photo set out to achieve – focusing on stories that matter and training and mentoring the next generation - and is now the appropriate structure for the future. We will continue to innovate, educate, and transform visual journalism as we embrace the next chapter in our development. 
 
Arles, France,
3rd May, 2023


The VII Foundation

Refugee Point Bulletin - April

A monthly bulletin featuring RefugePoint news, client and staff updates, and events.

New Look: Same RefugePoint

You might have noticed that RefugePoint looks a little different. While there were a variety of reasons that we wanted to update our logo and branding, the driving force was that our previous logo featured an image shaped like a life preserver, which aligned with our former tagline, “A Lifeline For Forgotten Refugees.”

RefugePoint recognizes that colonialism and systemic racism are embedded in the field of refugee response, and in recent years we have recommitted to active anti-racist and anti-colonialist practices and efforts. Over time, it became clear that this tagline no longer accurately represented RefugePoint. In an effort to fully respect the dignity, autonomy, and agency of the refugees we serve, we phased out the old tagline in 2021. With our updated logo, we have now eliminated that visual representation of the former tagline. Visit our website to see more.

Client Story: Mohamed

At the age of two, Mohamed’s family was forced to flee their home in Somalia due to political instability and famine. Mohamed grew up in Dadaab Ifo Refugee Camp in Kenya, where he went to school and began dreaming of a career in health care. After years of studying, he became a Clinical Officer, working in private hospitals throughout Kenya. 

In 2019, Mohamed learned about the Economic Mobility Pathways Project through RefugePoint, which connects refugees with the right skills, education, and language abilities with employers looking to fill job vacancies in Canada. Last year, he was offered a job through the program, and in September, Mohamed traveled to Canada to begin working in a long-term care facility in Nova Scotia. Read the rest of Mohamed’s story here.

Mohamed at RefugePoint’s Nairobi office before departing for Canada.

Conversations: Discussing Refugee Issues with Senator Cory Booker

From Sasha Chanoff, RefugePoint CEO: It was great to spend time with Senator Cory Booker on Friday and his Chief of Staff Veronica Duron and State Director Hanna Mori and talk to them about refugee issues. I appreciated hearing Senator Booker's thoughts on how to build bridges in America.

He has visited Afghan evacuees on military bases in the U.S., and also called on President Biden to increase the refugee resettlement ceiling from 15K during the Trump administration to 125K. He was interested in hearing about refugee issues broadly, including the new Welcome Corps private sponsorship program that enables Americans to form groups and sponsor refugees from overseas to resettle in the U.S.

I shared that private sponsorship of refugees increases Democratic and Republican interest in refugee resettlement significantly and helps to reaffirm a badly eroded sense of common purpose in America. I came away from the meeting feeling grateful for Senator Booker's support for refugees and inspired by his ideas around unifying messages.

Senator Cory Booker (left) with RefugePoint CEO Sasha Chanoff (right).

Spin the Globe: RP Staff in Bangladesh 

Last month, RefugePoint staff visited Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh with ICMC and Danish Refugee Council to learn more about the work our Experts are doing to support Rohingya refugees.

There are about one million Rohingya refugees and persons of concern living in Cox’s Bazar, many of whom have been there for decades. As Myanmar’s political situation remains tumultuous, and Rohingyas continue to be persecuted in Myanmar, there continues to be a need for long-term solutions. Our staff there are working to identify refugees and submit their cases for resettlement. See where else we're working across the globe.

Staff from RefugePoint, Danish Refugee Council, and ICMC in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh.

Recommended Reading: The roots of the refugee protection system are colonial and racist

“We need a movement where refugees lead the way, while true allies ensure that they are not taking power and agency away from people in the name of empowering them.”

Sana Mustafa, CEO of Asylum Access, has experienced colonialism and white supremacy firrst-hand, both as a displaced person in the U.S. and as a leading executive in our field. In her powerful article, Sana explains how colonialism and white supremacy are deeply embedded in the global refugee protection system and steps those working in the system must take to move forward. Read Sana's piece here.

Graphic: Ramiro Zardoya / Cartoon Movement

Recent Events: Skoll World Forum

Over $30 billion/year is spent on humanitarian aid, yet recipients have virtually no say in its use— a fact that perpetuates inequality. Last week, RefugePoint’s CEO Sasha Chanoff led a conversation at the Skoll World Forum, which explored how we can build systems of support that are more equitable, informed and led by people with lived experience. 

Each year, the Forum brings together thought leaders, development practitioners, and philanthropists to address major challenges confronting the world. As forced displacement increases globally, centering refugee and community voices is vital, and we must ensure these conversations lead to action.

We’re Hiring!

RefugePoint is seeking experienced and passionate individuals for a number of positions across the globe. Take a look at our open positions:

Deputy Country Director, Kenya

Locum Community Navigator, Kenya

Technical Consultant - Market Systems Development Task Team, Boston

See our full list of open positions here.

Vincent Manno

Vincent P. Manno is an engineer, engineering educator and academic leader. Currently a  full-time grandfather and a part-time consultant, Vin dedicates his time to family and to assisting institutions developing programs to enhance student success and advance human-centered engineering. 

Vin received a BS from Columbia University and MS and Sc.D. degrees from M.I.T. in nuclear/mechanical engineering. His fields of interest are engineering education, power generation, electronics thermal management and semiconductor manufacturing processes. His research has been supported by the government agencies and industry including the DOE, NSF, and U.S. Navy. He has authored numerous journal articles, conference papers, book chapters and technical reports. He is a frequent keynote speaker and has served on several advisory boards including the that of the Tufts University Institute for Global Leadership. 

Vin worked in the private sector, served as a U.S. Navy Senior Summer Faculty Fellow, and holds a US patent. He is a Fellow of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) and the recipient of Ralph R. Teetor Educational Award, the Harvey Rosten Award for Excellence in the Thermal Analysis of Electronic Equipment, the ASME Curriculum Innovation Award, the Tufts University Engineering Teacher of the Year, and the Seymour Simches Award for Distinguished Teaching and Advising.

From 1984 through 2011, Vin was on the faculty of Tufts University and held the rank of Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the time of his departure. At Tufts, he also held a number of leadership positions including Department Chair, Associate Dean of Engineering for Graduate Education, Dean of Engineering ad interim, and Associate Provost. In the latter role, he was responsible for cross-disciplinary initiatives at Tufts including the Institute for Global Leadership during Sherman Techiman’s directorship. From 2004-2011,  Sherman and Vin worked together to advance IGL’s role as a cross campus catalyst for student growth and interdisciplinarity, as well as enhance the resilience of the Institute’s infrastructure. Among their numerous collaborations, co-organization of the symposium The Genie Travels On: The Challenge on Emerging Nuclear States, stands out as prescient of the evolving world order. 

From 2011-2019, Vin was Provost and Dean of Faculty as well as Professor of Engineering at the Olin College of Engineering in Needham, MA. At Olin, he led efforts to redefine faculty assessment and development, encourage systemic curricular innovation, and develop sustainable collaboration partnerships with other institutions. In 2020, he was named Provost Emeritus and Professor of Engineering Emeritus by the Olin Board of Trustees.


Truly, without Vin as our adviser and guide, we would not have been able to drive the Institute forward wisely. We were grateful for his astute questions, for his advice on governance, and for his sagacious sense of interactions with our faculty and the Tufts administration. I am ever thankful for his trust and extensive consultative time. 

Vin found a unique formula for management and human oversight, one of equanimity, co-joined with passion. As one of the most open-minded and fairest of people I have ever had the pleasure of working with, Vin created an atmosphere of trust. He understood our role as an innovative center and encouraged the Institute’s development, specifically helping us to develop Engineers Without Borders, nurturing the Tufts Energy Initiative into the far broader onging Tufts Fletcher Energy Forum, supporting my creating Tufts's first formal adoption of Scholars at Risk, and the Institute's Synaptic Scholars program that I tasked with invigorating intellectual life at Tufts, with now such enduring campus programs as Tufts TED-X.

My introduction to this NIMEP "Beyond the Politics of Fear" Insight journal, speaks to the controversies Vin helped the Institute manage, especially regarding the sensitive security and political concerns of our NIMEP research groups' visit to Lebanon  

I sincerely doubt that such efforts would be supported in this educational era, as they were then by Vin, and then Tufts President Larry Bacow, who praised our efforts as "prudent risk-taking."

Together with the professional nuclear workshop that Vin mentions, he and I created the Vannevar Bush Award recognizing Bush’s accomplishments, as science adviser to presidents and the Director of the US Office of Scientific Research and Development, which we brought forward to the School of Engineering. Vin reminded me at the time of the value of allowing its cautious Dean to think of it as her own idea.  

Its first recipient was Dick Meserve, the brother of Bill Meserve, a long-standing wonderful member of the Institute's External Advisory Board. We also co-sponsored the Vannevar Bush Forum on Science, Ethics and Public Policy. Bush was a brilliant and fascinating man and It was part of my desire to create programming in the spirit of the Nobel Prize for Peace-winning Pugwash initiatives, as an exploration of science as morally neutral, with such questions as what were the ethical issues that confronted scientists in successfully completing the atomic bomb? What are the ongoing ethical dilemmas and social responsibilities scientists face in the nuclear arena and beyond?

 At his formal Tufts University goodby party Vin spoke of his involvement overseeing the Institute as encouraging and reinforcing his desire to enter Olin Engineering as its Provost for as he described it,  "being engaged in the programmatic and personal dimensions of IGL afforded me the opportunity to navigate the colliding constraints of student safety, education in the broadest terms, and prudent institutional risk-taking. The role of Provost, especially at an idiosyncratic and mission-driven place like Olin, required an analogous set of navigation skills.

Vin surprised me when he spoke at the gathering of Tufts faculty and administration with a reference to myself as a "Six Sigma". It is a lovely moment to think that I had any impact on his life, as surely, he did on mine.

When I spoke I found the word that I think characterizes Vin best, “Decency.” Such a rare quality in an all too often indecent world. A superb teacher and mentor, greatly respected by all, I am proud that he will remain involved with the Trebuchet into the future. 

Richard (Dick) Lanza 

On New Year's Day, 2023, Richard Lanza had an extra reason to celebrate. Lanza, a Senior Research Scientist in the MIT Department of Nuclear Science and Engineering, had just become an IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Fellow - an honor annually bestowed on just one-tenth of one percent of the members of what's called "the world's largest technical professional organization." His fellowship appointment was "for developing novel imagers and radiation detectors applied to medicine and security problems." That, however, is an abbreviated version of a much longer, and more involved, story.

Lanza earned a PhD in Physics from the University of Pennsylvania in 1966 and came to MIT later that year as a postdoctoral fellow. He soon took part in investigations into the structure of the proton-work that ultimately validated the quark model of particle physics. Lanza's primary role was in designing and building the radiation detectors used in experiments carried out in the late-60s and 70s at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC).

About 15 scientists collaborated in the last experiment Lanza worked on at SLAC, which took place around 1975. But the trends in particle physics were clear to him: the next experiment would likely have more than 100 scientists, and before long there'd be thousands. It would become harder to try out new ideas, and the enterprise would allow less room for creativity — a prospect he was not enthused about.

Upon returning to MIT from Stanford, he spoke with a friend, a radiologist at the Massachusetts General Hospital (MGH), who asked him what he'd been up to. When Lanza mentioned the proton's structure, his friend quickly changed subjects. "With all your cleverness in detectors," he asked, "why not help us out in medicine and radiology?"

An unexpected tilt from quarks to medicine

Intrigued by that proposition, Lanza soon joined a group, based jointly at MIT and MGH, which was building one of the first computed tomography (CT) scanners that could rotate fully around a patient. He got started in this work in 1975 and spent more than 20 years as a radiology associate at the Harvard Medical School, though his primary affiliation has always been with MIT.

Lanza and colleagues set out to improve single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), an imaging technique that used gamma rays. One challenge is that gamma rays can't be focused with lenses or mirrors. "You could use a pinhole, but then you'd end up throwing away almost the entire signal," Lanza explains. One way around that was to utilize a so-called coded aperture-a sheet of tungsten with dozens, hundreds, or thousands of holes-and then rely on a computer to combine the separate, overlapping images into a single composite view. Coded apertures had been important in x-ray astronomy since 1965, and Lanza felt that medical imaging could benefit from them as well. "A big advantage is that you can get 3D images with no moving parts," he says.His career took a dramatic turn in December 1988, when a bomb that had been concealed aboard a Pan Am aircraft exploded over Lockerbie, Scotland, destroying the plane and killing everyone in it — all 259 passengers and crew members - plus 11 people on the ground. "A complete panic set in after that plane blew up," Lanza says. He was immediately approached by his colleague, MIT physicist Lee Grodzins, who asked, "Do you have any idea how we can detect explosives in luggage?"

Security concerns come blazing to the fore

Lanza turned his attention to that problem. Conventional explosives (like TNT), he reasoned, contain dense clusters of nitrogen, in particular, as well as oxygen and carbon. One could send a beam of neutrons through the materials inside a suitcase. If gamma rays of a particular energy were produced through this interaction, he says, "that would tell you if large quantities of nitrogen were concentrated." The detection system he devised again incorporated coded apertures.

There was a catch: Although military explosives contained a lot of nitrogen, he says, "we discovered that there is a whole world of homemade explosives that terrorists might use that don't have any nitrogen at all, making it a very complicated business." Lanza also explored ways of finding improvised explosive devices (IEDs), such as those planted in cars during the Iraq war, which posed similar imaging and detection challenges.

In the late-1990s, Lanza got involved in humanitarian demining. Landmines can be made for less than $2 apiece - one reason why millions of them are still left in former or current war zones, waiting to go off if anyone ventures close enough. He designed a simple device, consisting of portable neutron sources and gamma ray detectors, which could effectively survey small areas. He determined that additional approaches - including magnetic detectors and ground-penetrating radar - could be helpful in clearing larger regions, such as the border zones between nations.

Lanza also applied his expertise to the matter of nuclear materials proliferation, finding ways to detect faint radioactivity signals from uranium and plutonium that terrorists might try to smuggle into the country. In a project with Raytheon, he developed a system that could detect radioactive materials at a distance while carried in a moving vehicle.

"Just about everything I've done involves imaging of some sort, which is basically a tool that enables you to pick out objects in a background," Lanza says. He even figured out a method, utilizing neutron imaging, that enabled the De Beers company to find diamonds more efficiently in rock.

In his lengthy career, Lanza has contributed to many other areas (one could almost fill an article just listing them), and he still has a few projects underway, even though he's now in his 80s and semi-retired. He credits the wide range of work he's undertaken to MIT itself, "which makes it very easy for people to cross borders. It really is a remarkable place" - remarkable enough that he extended his original two-year appointment into one that's going on six decades, and still going strong.

I am tremendously grateful for my adopted Brookline neighborhood of my last five years, located off Harvard Street, significantly marked and centered by Coolidge Park, its Sumner children's playground, and its designation as an off-leash dog park which my goldendoodle Remi, considers her domain and front yard.

It is inhabited by an extraordinary, eclectic and accomplished set of folks. Dick is assuredly one of its most remarkable characters, a very thoughtful,  never querulous, and independent thinker, with whom I enjoy many wonderful and fun conversations, always sharing anecdotes with a twinkle in his eye.

We share book reviews, banter across a full spectrum of issues and topics, be it U.S. politics, Israel/Palestine, climate change, risk analysis, the future of hypersonic weapons, arms control, inequality, university politics, wokedom, race relations, our families, even the architectural future of our community

I always look forward to encountering him as I wander our park with Remi, as I do his wife Sylvia.  He is unfailingly a gentleman.

I think our first conversations began when we both knew we had enjoyed conferences on nuclear concerns in Erice, Sicily, that we had old common friends at MIT, including Kosta Tsipis, and Phil Morrison, and that we both admired the work of his friend and colleague, Dick Garwin, and others of our generation,

A warm-hearted and humble man, he has generously allowed me to nudge him to consult with the graduate students of MIT, and the undergraduate students starting Pugwash chapters at Dartmouth. Sharing his depth of extraordinary experiences, and those of his formidable generation of scientists, is so invaluable to our younger generation of citizens.

Shoshana Grossman

Shoshana Grossman-Crist is a consultant helping impact champions move the world forward. What does that actually look like? It looks like helping NGOs fundraise without headaches and helping companies achieve profit + purpose without spending their entire budget on a consultant. Find out the details here.  

With 15 years of experience, her superpowers are in project design, communications and fundraising, and she is obsessed with figuring out how to ensure impact for communities. As someone who has worked with the Inter-American Development Bank, the Danone Ecosystem Fund, Chemonics, TechnoServe, and local NGOs across the world, though particularly in Latin America, Shoshana brings a unique set of tools to the table, as well as a ton of respect for the challenges of implementing projects with impact. Recently, she has been building a gender inclusion lens into her work more and more.   

When Shoshana is not chugging away with her clients, you can find her volunteering in the fields harvesting for the Vermont food bank. She holds a Bachelor's in Community Health and Latin American studies from Tufts University, she got a Master’s in Public Policy and Management from Carnegie Mellon University. 

 

Shoshanna was one of the more mature and engaged of the students I had the privilege to attract to the Institute and its intellectual and activist pursuits. She exuded a strong, independent, yet sensitive leadership sensibility. and powerful determination. She was exuberant and infectious. Her smile radiated. 

As one of the student founders and co chairs of Pangea whose mantra was "global awareness, advocacy, and action,” it was not surprising to learn of her leadership role in inspiring scores of students to engage in a three-day “sleep -out,” staying overnight in small tents on the main quadrangle of the University to simulate a symbolic refugee camp.    

They programmed to promote consciousness of the plight of refugees, not only those who migrated beyond their country’s borders, protected by international law, however fragile, but the even more severe reality of IDPs. internally displaced peoples, fleeing violence, ethnic cleansing, and severe discrimination.  

They also raised thousands of dollars to support Mapendo International, the first organization created by Convisero's Sasha Chanoff, who then founded RefugePoint.   

Another of the Pangea organizations Shoshana supported was STAND, originally Students Taking Action Now: Dafur, an anti-genocide initiative then also concerned with violence in the Congo.   

“Shosh,” had already come to Tufts with a finely honed sensibility about the struggles of marginalized peoples, but also their determination and agency.    

In January 2007, under Institute sponsorship she returned to Herradura, Costa Rica where she had lived and taught English before studying at Tufts, this time to study the high levels of out-migration to the United States and the effects this migration was having on the town.   

She learned about the confluence of international coffee prices, socio-economic levels of residents in the canton, interpersonal relationships, and the immigration laws of the United States that create the high level of out-migration that distinguishes the region from most other cantons in Costa Rica. 

Not surprising for me to see what she is currently doing.