Matthew Benson

Dr Matthew Sterling Benson is a social and economic historian of Africa in the Conflict & Civicness Research Group (CCRG) at the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE) researching changing global conflict and peace dynamics. Matthew is also the Sudans Research Director within the LSE CCRG.

Matthew’s forthcoming publications examine how revenue raising practices in Sudan and South Sudan from the start of British-led colonial occupation, into rebel-rule, through to the present contributed to states that work better for a minority in power rather than most people in either country. Dr Benson’s on-going research examines the moral economies of natural resources in South Sudan and how these could inform efforts to limit extractive politics in the country and separately examining changing narratives of civicness or 'medania' in Sudan's democratic and hoped for war to peace transition.

Dr Benson is currently combining his doctoral thesis entitled: ‘Taxation, Local Government and Social Control in Sudan and South Sudan, 1898-1956’, which is based on archival research conducted in Sudan, South Sudan, and UK colonial archives with 500 interviews undertaken throughout both Sudans into a book manuscript. The text will help rethink integral notions of state-society ties including the changing nature of war, state and armed group finance, and state formation in the 21st century.


Matthew’s research informs a range of academic, policy, and practice-oriented debates and is shaped by his professional background that has mixed research with operational roles. Over the past 15+ years, Matthew has held posts in South Sudan with Crown Agents and Sudan with Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) and researched how to provide public services more equitably in conflict-affected societies with the World Bank, the Rift Valley Institute (RVI), the Overseas Development Institute (ODI), the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) at the University of Sussex, the UN Refugee Agency (UNHCR), and Oxfam America.

Dr Benson has also taught MSc and BA courses on African Political Economy, African History, and the nature of states in different countries at LSE, Durham University, and the Institute of Development Studies at Sussex.

Matthew’s PhD in History (Economics & Social Research Council/ESRC-funded) and MA in Economic and Social History are both from Durham University. Dr Benson also earned an MA in Governance and Development from the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex, and a BA in International Relations from Tufts University.

Additionally, Matthew is the Editorial Director for Boy Brother Friend, a print publication and digital platform examining the Black Atlantic and other diasporas through contemporary art, fashion, and theory.

Brian Adams

Brian T. Abrams is the founder of B Ventures Group, an innovative new investment fund applying venture capital toward global peacebuilding and conflict resolution. Before that, he managed over $1 billion in assets, saw nearly 10,000 startups, sat on over 15 boards of directors, and generated top-tier returns. All of that taught him that a human-centric approach to investment is not only the right way but also the best way. Venture capital should be a financial means to a human end, not the other way around. 

Josh Reed-Diawuoh

Josh’s bio was first published in the winter 2022 issue of Edible Boston.

For Josh Reed-Diawuoh, GRIA Food Co. is a true labor of love, one that combines his appreciation for food, his business savvy, and his personal ties to West Africa. Just a few years since its inception, his thriving direct-to-consumer snack brand features six different flavors of roasted cashews, all using sustainable African crops. 

While traveling to Ghana annually for the past several years, Reed-Diawuoh established ties with business owners, farmers, friends, and family, which sparked his desire to create a symbiotic relationship with local farmers. At home in Boston, where he grew up, he had noticed the lack of African food products on the shelves and grew curious about how he could change that. He wanted to develop a delicious snack-worthy product while creating opportunities for local farmers that would ensure maximum profits would return to local communities. 

With rising support for small businesses, ethical farming, and fair trade products, Reed-Diawuoh knew there was a market for the type of brand he was envisioning. It was important to him to find farming operations with fair labor practices, where farmers were paid a premium and had autonomy over the distribution of their percentage of profit back into their farming and operations.

After careful research about possible products, cashews became the clear winner because of their shelf stability and consistent quality, and the opportunity to support food manufacturing in West Africa. He tested cashews from several suppliers and finally decided to partner with producers in Benin, Togo, and Burkina Faso.

Then, he took his time developing a variety of flavors in his own kitchen (including cinnamon sugar, salted rosemary, and spicy garlic), testing for quality and consistency. He enlisted the help of friends and family as he fine-tuned each flavor, perfecting his starting lineup, which he started selling in 2020. As the business grew, he began to outgrow his home test kitchen, so he applied for the CommonWealth Kitchen’s Ready to Launch 14-week incubation program in Dorchester, Mass., in spring 2022. There, he learned about licensing, permits, marketing, and food safety, and he had access to the test kitchen for production. He is now a member of the CommonWealth Kitchen community, operating out of its kitchen and benefiting from working alongside a diverse group of fellow business owners and entrepreneurs. 

Reed-Diawuoh attended Concord Academy as a day student, and he credits the school with sparking his interest in social justice. “CA was an opportunity to broaden my view of the world,” he says, “to delve into history, to explore creative writing, to take painting and drawing classes, to try and fail at a lot of things I would’ve never considered doing, to meet people from different places and build deep friendships. It was a time where I started really reflecting on and finding my identity as a Ghanaian American.” 

After CA he attended Tufts University and became fascinated by politics and government. That led him to graduate school at the MIT Sloan School of Management, where he learned about finance, accounting, operations, and sales, gaining the tools and resources he needed to found GRIA in 2019, while still a student. At MIT, he researched sustainably sourced and shelf-stable produce, ethical labor practices, and branding and marketing. By the time he graduated in 2020, he was ready to launch his business. After three years of running it part time, in September 2023 he was ready to quit his day job and go all in on GRIA. 

Reed-Diawuoh still runs all elements of GRIA himself, including recipe testing, development, distribution, branding, and sales. Over the summer, he began selling at a farmers market at Harvard University. “It was great to meet customers and start to see demand for the product pick up,” he says. “Getting immediate feedback from hundreds of people on a weekly basis really helped me refine some of my recipes and get the proportions and roasting conditions right.” 

He’s looking forward to increasing production and unit sales within the next year, but for now he wants to keep the business small. He’s focusing on quality control—GRIA recently became a Fairtrade America partner—and selling his product locally, with hopes of expanding his catalog to include new flavors, snacks, and products in the near future. You can find GRIA Food Co. products at select local markets, on the shelves at the new Dorchester Food Co-op, and at GRIAfoodco.com

Purpose-led Leadership Lessons for the 21st Century - Organized by Achilleas Stamatiadis

Purpose-led Leadership Lessons for the 21st Century

Premises: Kaireios Library premises (Andros), Andros Yacht Club

Organized by Convisero mentor Achilleas Stamatiadis

Dates: 23-25 August 2024

Mission Statement: Learning from the past - Reshaping our Future


Purpose-led leadership is a leadership approach that emphasizes the importance of aligning an organization’s mission and values with the personal values and goals of its leaders. It goes beyond traditional leadership models that primarily focus on achieving financial goals and instead places a strong emphasis on making a positive impact on society and the world.

Key characteristics of Purpose-led Leadership include:

  • Mission and Values Alignment

  • Inspiration and Motivation

  • Social Responsibility and Impact

  • Long-term Thinking

  • Stakeholder Responsibility and ESG

  • Adaptability and AI literacy

  • Ethical Leadership

  • Employee Well-being

  • Measuring Impact to Society

That is why it’s more important than ever, today. We live in an era in which there’s often a vacuum of role models. The aim of our conference is to bring about and inspire such models via a live contact with Purpose-led leaders which will stimulate a discussion and bring forth new models of Leadership and Societal Impact to help alter our future.

Conference Speakers/Participants

  1. Yannis Perrotis, Chairman CBRE Atria Group

  2. Emmanuel Vordonis, Former Chairman Thenamaris Ship Management Company

  3. Alexandra Mitsotakis, President of World Human Forum, Social Entrepreneur

  4. Andreas Andrianopoulos, Director of the International Institute of Diplomacy and

  5. Foreign Policy at New York College, Former Minister

  6. John Molfetas, Investor Relations Manager, Thenamaris

  7. Achilleas Stamatiadis, Founder and CEO Faros Co. Ltd. Educational Ventures

  8. Irene Papaligouras, Founder of Leaders Excellence Partners

  9. Faidon Tamvakakis, Chair and Co-Founder of Alpha Trust Mutual Fund

The Conference will take place under the auspices of: The Municipality of Andros, The Kaireios Library Foundation (and it’s director Academy of Athens Member Dr. Michalis Tiverios), The Yacht Club of Andros and will be further supported by the Andriot maritime and business community at large.

Achilleas Stamatiadis

Achilleas A. Stamatiadis holds a BA from Northeastern University in
Government and International Affairs. He is a Harvard GSAS program
alumnus having spent a research year in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and
holds an MA in Comparative literature, Classics and Leadership from the
University of Chicago. A section of his thesis has been published by
UPenn’s Classical studies journal and can be traced via The Library of Congress webpage. 


In addition to Achilleas’ academic work, he has been Expo Power
Systems’ CIO/Director full-time since 2019. In this role he has dealt with
several of his company's most pressing issues ranging from Strategic
Expansions, PPC Projects, HR Excellence Programs and CSR on Purpose led
Leadership. He has also served, for a term, as a Special Adviser of the
Alternate Minister at The Hellenic Republic's Foreign Affairs Office.

Achilleas is one of the most intriguing and accomplished young mentors,
noted for his eclecticism, excelling in both academic, scholarly pursuits
and in the arena of global business. In both divergent pursuits, 
the common denominator is intellect and integrity.

Physicians for Human Rights Israel - A Convisero Gathering

Pictured here are friends and allies who have come to a Trebuchet/Convisero meeting for Physicians for Human Rights Israel at my home, moderated by Convisero mentor Susannah Sirkin, former longtime policy director at Physicians for Human Rights (U.S.).

Here is the invitation from Susannah:

 

I'm very pleased to join Sherman Teichman and Iris Adler who are graciously hosting a discussion with Drs. Guy Shalev and Lina Qassem-Hassan of Physicians for Human Rights - Israel (PHRI). *

They will talk about their efforts to respond the humanitarian crisis unfolding in Gaza and the West Bank as well and PHR-I's longtstanding and ongoing work to promote dignity, equality and justice for all people living under Israel's responsibility control. 

These human rights leaders will be on a short visit to the Northeast U.S. to raise awareness and broaden their network for advocacy and support.

Sunday evening, March 31st, 7 pm, at Sherman's home

Dr. Guy Shalev—Guy is PHRI's Executive Director and a research fellow at the Minerva Center for the Rule of Law Under Extreme Conditions. He is a medical and political anthropologist specializing in the intersection of medical professionalism, ethnonational politics, and bioethics in Israel/Palestine. Guy received his Ph.D. from The University of North Carolina–Chapel Hill in 2018, and his publications have appeared in American Anthropologist, Israeli Sociology, and Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry

 Dr. Lina Qassem-Hassan—Lina is the Chairperson of PHRI's Board of Directors. She is a family medicine specialist with Clalit Health Services in the Haifa and Western Galilee District, specializing in end-of-life care. In addition to regularly volunteering with PHRI's West Bank mobile clinic and medical delegations to Gaza, Lina volunteers with their Prisoners and Detainees department, accompanying Palestinian hunger strikers. Recently, Lina volunteered with PHRI's emergency make-shift clinic for survivors of the October 7 massacre and has spoken out about her belief that all victims of this war deserve medical treatment.

Much appreciation,

Susannah (Sirkin), former longtime policy director at Physicians for Human Rights (U.S.)

The horrific events of October 7th in all its brutality and sadism, and the subsequent Israeli regime’s rampant operational reaction to destroy Hamas with its abhorrent loss of thousands of innocent lives have shaken me. Elsewhere I have addressed strategies attempting to restore deterrence but for me, the imperative has always remained how to struggle to secure a humane future for both Israeli and Palestinian peoples (NIMEP Insights). 

This meeting of PHRI is, among others I have hosted including the Abraham Initiatives, of organizations I believe have integrity in the midst of all this horrific chaos. 

I have defended the concept of self-determination for both Israel and Palestine for many decades. Immediately after the days after the ’67 war, influenced by Prof. Leibowitz who I had met at Givat Ram Hebrew University “warned against the state of Israel and Zionism becoming more sacred than Jewish humanist values”… and of the “dehumanizing effect of the occupation on the victims and the oppressors.”

We were privileged to have in our midst Prof. Liebowitz's grandson Akiva and his wife Hila. 

Rabbis for Human Rights - Dahlia Shaham

In the midst of the ongoing horror of the Hamas-Israeli conflict, I continue to struggle to find emotional equilibrium and answers to “The Day After” and beyond.  

 My dear friend, EPIIC TA, and Fletcher School alumna Dahlia Shaham, has written me:

 Sending love from the wounded land and her peoples. I believe there are islands of peace still, and good people to sail across the storms with.

 With this message, I hope you may also find some solace in this. 

Here is a link to her vocal rendition of Believe a poem by an Israeli poet laureate, and medical doctor, Shaul Tshernichovsky He wrote the poem 130 years ago in Hebrew in Odesa, during the period of the Russian pogrom massacres. (Translations are in Hebrew and English).

Dahlia is a member of Rabbis for Human Rights.  She has sent me this appeal:

You may recognize the voice, because it's me. I gladly added my voice to Rabbis for Human Rights (RHR) campaign, as I have gladly volunteered my time and energy to this organization for the past 4 years, in various capacities.

I volunteer and support RHR gratefully, as it has been for me a home for brave spiritual leadership and a light house of faith and action in these days of storm and despair.

We, over 150 rabbis from all of Israel, across all denominations, faced with the flames of religious extremism across the land, insist to continue to uphold the ancient legacy of our faith, the everlasting faith in peace among nations and protection of human dignity.

In the hands of RHR lean and super talented team, the organization supports dozens of communities of all faiths and nationalities, through solidarity action, human rights protection, advocacy and poverty alleviation through community building.

In the time it took me to get to send this email, my friends have gathered almost all the funds required.

Dahlia

https://youtu.be/3A79FzfLMBc?si=wbLvxNDdRGBTBLs8

 

Here is the link to support RHR.


Here are several recent articles worth reflecting on:


The War in Gaza Told through One Man’s Pain by Nicholas Kristof

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/09/opinion/gaza-israel-war.html

 

Israel is Falling Into an Abyss by David Grossman

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/01/opinion/israel-gaza-palestinians-hostages.html

In the Belly of the Beast - Mort Rosenblum


NEW YORK One World Trade Center gleams above the Manhattan skyline on the footprint of the twin towers a handful of Islamist zealots brought down with a sucker punch. The mast atop it reaches to 1,776 feet, symbolizing a year that matters far more than 2001.

Jeffrey Fagan, a world-savvy criminologist, took me through the warren of streets he was driving past when those planes struck. He had seen rescue crews brave the inferno as terrified people leapt to their death. In all, 3,000 died. Yet the lesson of that day went unlearned.

A stricken nation obsessed over that question why do they hate us? In fact, few did. But blind fury set the world ablaze. Today, lots of people hate America. And opposing factions at home hate each other. As Fagan says, too many Americans twist facts into their own preferred biases.

Voters need the “mainstream media” to provide firsthand reporting and informed comment so 1776 continues to signify more than what history will recall as the starting point of a once-noble democratic endeavor that ended in 2025.

————

For some perspective, I visited Cheryl Gould, an uncommonly wise news maven I met in 1977. She joined NBC as a radio reporter in Paris, later produced the Nightly News with Tom Brokaw, and left the network as senior vice president a decade ago, disgusted by internal politics.

She has since worked to uphold principles in journalism, a profession as old as prostitution, which it now often resembles. The Ronna McDaniel flap had just erupted, and Cheryl was livid. NBC hired McDaniel after she was fired as head of the Republican National Committee.

Rachel Maddow eviscerated McDaniel on MSNBC, detailing her role in sending fake elector tallies to Washington in 2020 and then trumpeting lies about a stolen election. Cheryl beavered away in the background to explain why one bad hire was so fraught with deeper meaning.

Cheryl rarely uses Facebook, but a series of posts went viral. They were toned down versions of letters she sent to Cesar Conde, chairman of NBCUniversal News Group, and top NBC bosses. She excoriated Conde, who is also on the boards of PepsiCo and Walmart.

She wrote:

“Ms. McDaniel SHOULD be on the air: as an interviewee, not as a commentator given how she openly bashed MSNBC and other mainstream media outlets she called ‘fake news.’ She helped promulgate the lies and vitriol of her leader.”

A revolt among NBC’s news staff soon forced McDaniel out. She is demanding her $300,000 annual salary along with a payout for the remainder of her contract.

Conde took over in 2020 and caused an uproar. Joe Biden and Donald Trump were to debate on ABC primetime. When Trump pulled out, ABC’s George Stephanopoulos grilled Biden alone in a town hall format. In the same time slot, Savannah Guthrie interviewed Trump, who evaded questions about his calamitous Covid-19 response and QAnon supporters. (Links below.)

“(NBC) went for a ratings grab rather than doing the right thing for democracy by letting the American people watch both candidates, forcing them to make a choice,” Cheryl wrote. “That told me all I needed to know about the insouciance or worse, cynicism of the leader who apparently has still not learned what it means to run a respected news division.”

She had an answer to the network’s feeble argument that McDaniel could shed light on the Trump-polluted Republican Party: “That’s like saying you would hire known terrorists to do commentary on terrorism because they know it from the inside.”

NBC is hardly alone. Les Moonves at CBS crowed unabashedly at the profits Trump coverage brought in. Jeff Zucker admitted a similar bump in CNN ratings. Now under new management, CNN cameras still linger on the MAGA circus that menaces America. Among others.

————

New York, where Trump has for decades brought rot to the Big Apple’s core, makes the global threat blindingly clear. Despite some hopeful signs, apathy and ignorance run deep, particularly among young people who must suffer the consequences.

I walked up Broadway to Cheryl’s place above 104th in what she calls So-Har: south of Harlem. That was my hood briefly in the 70s. As a Council on Foreign Relations fellow, I hobnobbed with heads of state and big thinkers with ideas about stability in a post-Vietnam world.

Broadway then was hometown America, alive with mom-and-pop shops, Jewish delis and such melting-pot mixes as Cuban-Chinese eateries. The only police incident I recall was the cop on a scooter who ticketed Odious Beast, my Belgian shepherd, for peeing on a tree in Riverside Park.

It is different now. At one point, my eyes suddenly burned, and I struggled to breathe. Some fool had tossed a teargas grenade. People panicked, yelling for help. This being America, I had neither mask nor wet rag. I ducked into an upwind doorway, then walked on faster.

Returning to midtown on an express train, I heard a speaker blare: “From the river to the sea, we’re gonna fight to be free.” It emanated from a young Chinese American’s boombox. I decided not to interview him.

It is never a great idea to confront strangers on the subway, and the mood was especially fraught. The New York Times had just front-paged a lengthy piece. Some lout told a stranger for no apparent reason, “I’m going to beat you up.” A knife emerged. Another passenger shot and wounded the aggressor.

Exiting, I paused to eye the guy with the speaker. He looked up and pronounced: “You’re ugly.” No argument there. When we both got off at the same stop, he whirled around and asked, “Why are you following me?” I kept walking, and he shouted, “Free Palestine!”

That was no small-bore episode if you think it through. Americans are prone toward simplistic reaction to complex situations. Trump’s demagogic gift is an animal instinct to exploit that to his advantage.

I’d bet a lot that guy had no idea which river or which sea. Nor did he realize that battle cry harks back to Arab armies in 1948 trying to dislodge Jews from a homeland they were meant to share with Palestinians after the Holocaust. It has since been used by extremes on “both sides.”

Simplistic generality only deepens rifts. Hamas’s vicious assault targeted “liberal” kibbutzniks who favor a separate Palestine. Benjamin Netanyahu, a corrupt hardliner who condones mass murder to stay in power, no more represents Jews than Trump does Christians.

Trump helped Netanyahu crack down on Palestinians, backing more West Bank settlements and incursions into East Jerusalem. Now Biden is doing more than any American president to push for workable solutions not only in the unholy land but also the Middle East beyond.

The irony is tragic. Trump helped Mohammed bin Salman escape condemnation for the grisly murder of Washington Post columnist Jamal Khashoggi. The Saudi crown prince later gave Jared Kushner $2 billion for his equity firm’s grand projects.

At the height of Israeli onslaught, Trump’s son-in-law told an interviewer the Gaza seafront was “very valuable” property. It could be cleaned up and developed after Palestinians were relocated, preferably in the Negev desert.

Still, many Palestinian sympathizers in America heap scorn on Biden and plan to abstain or cast a ballot for an alternative candidate. That, in effect, amounts to another vote for Trump.

————

It is pointless to rail against entrenched social media and propagandists. Some people want authoritarian rule. There is no cure for stupid. America’s best defense is “legacy media” that tries to get the story straight and independent reporters with proven credibility.

Old-style approaches are evolving fast in the “mainstream,” on air or in print. But democracy depends on bedrock principles. Staff journalists ask questions. Newsmakers answer if they choose, expecting tough follow-ups if they mangle facts. Paying them corrupts the process.

A better-informed America would have learned after 2001 that while domestic issues affect individuals, existential threats come from abroad. Wealth and weaponry can avert potential crises. Or they can create unstoppable conflict and yawning gaps between rich and desperate.

Trump’s reign defined his ignorant, self-focused worldview. Now he rants about gutting NATO, embracing tyrants, imposing tariffs, slamming shut borders, slashing foreign aid and much else. Imagine a new term with sycophantic incompetent ideologues replacing adults in the room.

Biden’s long life in politics and diplomacy is uniquely suited to the moment. He knows why Vladimir Putin must be stopped and Xi Jinping needs to see advantage in accommodation with the West. But good luck making the case to that clueless guy on the subway.

Josh Goldblum

Josh Goldblum is a renowned figure in the technological transformation of the cultural sector. He currently oversees the design and development of interactive experiences and strategies for a diverse range of clients at Bluecadet, a company with offices in Philadelphia and New York that blends revolutionary innovations with a human touch.

As Bluecadet’s Founder and CEO, Josh's work has garnered widespread recognition, with his projects for clients like MoMA, Google, Bloomberg, Doctors Without Borders, National Geographic, and the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation receiving top awards from industry organizations such as the Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, the American Alliance of Museums, and the International Academy of Digital Arts and Sciences.

Josh is a frequent speaker at industry conferences and symposia, and his work has been featured in high-profile publications such as The New Yorker, USA Today, HOW magazine, Communication Arts, and People magazine. He has also appeared on major news networks such as CNN, CBS News, and NPR.

Josh holds a B.A. from Tufts University and studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts. He resides in Philadelphia with his wife and their two (almost three) children, where he is an active member of the design and technology community.


Bring Them Home : A Special Women’s Day Message from Gila Cotler, CEO

Today, we mark International Women’s Day by inviting you to join us in reflecting on the courageous and world-changing work of women human rights defenders around the globe. The obstacles these leaders face are tremendous, but they don’t give up. And neither will we. We celebrate their accomplishments and their courage inspires us every day.

We also dedicate our thoughts and efforts to the women victims of Hamas’ October 7 attack.

Nineteen Israeli women and girls are still being held hostage by Hamas. We cannot and will not relent in our efforts to secure freedom, safety, and justice for them and their fellow hostages. Neither can we allow the sexualized violence that took place on October 7 to be ignored.

Women supporting women

On this International Women’s Day, RefugePoint celebrates the incredible achievements of refugee women everywhere, including Akach, a businesswoman and mother of four.

“Let me sing a song in my mother tongue,” Akach tells us when we visit. “My heart cannot keep silent without giving thanks or praising the Lord because He has done great things for my life,” she sings in her language, Anuak.

Progress and Pushbacks on Promoting the SDGs in the U.S. through Policy and Partnerships

Next Monday, March 11th at 10am EST, Convisero mentor and Trebuchet team member Rachel Svetanoff is speaking as part of the UNECE Regional Forum for Sustainable Development program. The side event is called "Progress and Pushbacks on Promoting the SDGs in the U.S. through Policy and Partnerships." 

Speakers include Caroline Kleinfox, Director of U.S. SDG Planning at the UN Foundation, John Havens, Founding Executive Director of IEEE's Global Initiative for Ethical Considerations in Artificial Intelligence and Autonomous Systems and professional actor, Scarlett Lanzas, Founder and CEO of Accountable Impact, and myself!

The link to register is here.

Joseph Rotblat, the Scientist Who Walked Away from Oppenheimer and the Atomic Bomb

Written by Amb. Tom Loftus, member of the Board of Directors of Outrider, this article speaks to Prof. Rotblat’s life and work dedicated to raising ethical concerns in the physical sciences. His efforts on the commitment to prove the dangers of using nuclear weapons have grown in the scientific community, later becoming known as the Pugwash Conferences on Science and World Affairs, a ‘95 Nobel Peace Prize winning effort, which has professional and student chapters alike across the world. I serve on the International Student/Young Pugwash Advisory Board where an increasingly number of Convisero members have come from. Read the article here.

Mara James

Mara was a student in the IGL’s EPIIC program from 2010 – 2011 which focused on South Asia: Conflict, Culture, Complexity and Change. The experience was one of the most formative of her time at Tufts. During the program, she led a team research trip to the National Security Archives in Washington DC to analyse US declassified documents from the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan to draw historical comparisons and lessons as President Obama announced his troop surge.

After graduation, Mara spent time interning for a member of parliament in the United Kingdom, working for the Amy Biehl Foundation Foundation in the Nyanga township of Cape Town, and teaching English to Buddhist monks in Laos.

Upon her return to the US, she worked in research and communications for a multi-strategy hedge fund in New York, where she focused on geopolitical risk for the commodities and portfolio protection teams.

She left to study for her MBA in global business from NYU, spending the summer between her first and second year at MassChallenge, the global non-profit accelerator, in Mexico City.

Following NYU, Mara spent three years managing the communications, impact and investor reporting for Small Enterprise Assistance Funds, an impact investing fund manager supporting SMEs in frontier and emerging markets.

She currently lives in London, where she works for Brunswick Group as a strategic advisor to clients ranging from social housing companies to large renewable energy companies. During the interview process for her current role, she stumbled upon a fellow EPIIC alum at the organization and reached out to her. The fellow alum replied within minutes, offering to jump on a call and commenting that their connection was “kismet” – a true testament to the power of Sherman and the IGL to bring people together.

Bruce Haymes

Bruce Haymes is founder and Managing Director of Stage18, Inc., a strategic consultancy and advisor to private equity and their portfolio companies, as well as to higher education administrators. He is also chairman of the board of directors of Toluna Corporation (Europe), a global digital insights company serving the tech, retail and food industry. He is also an executive-in-residence at Progress Partners, a venture capital fund and investment advisory firm based in Boston, Massachusetts. 

Bruce has had an eclectic career representative of his liberal arts education at Tufts University. 

After graduating Tufts in 1986 with a B.A. in economics, he directly enrolled in law school, graduating from George Washington University Law School in 1989 with honors. 

He started his career at the boutique Wall Street law firm of Emmet, Marvin and Martin, representing money-center banks on financial transactions. From there, he worked as an associate in several other New York City law firms including Shea & Gould and Morrison & Forester. He realized that private practice law was not energizing him so at his last rotation at Chadbourne & Parke, he requested to be placed on high technology client deals with a view towards moving in-house. He received his request and began representing PanAmSat Corporation. PanAmSat was the first privately owned satellite company in the world. Prior to PanAmSat, all satellites and related services were controlled by the ITU, Intelsat or a combination of NGOs. PanAmSat’s backstory was rich with entrepreneurial and groundbreaking actions. It was started by an Italian immigrant that was a tailgunner during World War II. His broadcasting company had been a customer of the NGOs that ran the satellite industry in the 1980s and he felt that they provided a non competitive and expensive service. After exiting his broadcasting business he teamed up with the wealthy Azcarraga family from Mexico, the owners of Televisa. With this backing, he had his own satellite constructed and launched. The ITU and the United States objected to its licensing, and a series of lawsuits and congressional hearings followed. PanAmSat’s founder even hired the author of the old Beetle Bailey cartoons to draw him his own mascot, Spot the Dog, a scrappy dog that is used to being kicked around but gets the job done. After taking out full page ads in the New York Times and a multitude of congressional hearings, PanAmSat was granted its license to occupy a geostationary orbit in space. It was the first private company to ever achieve this objective. Without PanAmSat there would be no SpaceX or Starlink or DirecTV. 

Bruce joined PanAmSat in 1997 as its corporate lawyer and quickly became its head of strategy and corporate development. He crafted numerous global partnerships and acquisitions including a sale of a damaged in-orbit satellite to Arabsat, the consortium of Arab nations jointly operating over the Middle East. He originated and managed an extensive partnership with Pegaso Communications, a Mexican wireless carrier started by other members of the Azcarraga family. He also negotiated a partnership with JSAT, the largest satellite company in Japan. He ended his career at PanAmSat by helping to lead a management buyout with private equity funds KKR, Carlye and Providence that was quickly followed by an IPO and a buyout by Intelsat, its recently privatized arch-enemy. PanAmSat had grown from that single satellite to more than 30 satellites covering 97% of the world’s population. It was the largest satellite company in the world. 

After PanAmSat, Bruce had a brief stint at Time Warner and then jumped to Nielsen in 2008, the TV ratings and retail measurement company now owned by KKR. His objective was to try to deliver similar growth to the giant of consumer behavior measurement. He was recruited to Nielsen to build and launch a new audience measurement system for an emerging segment of the internet economy - streaming video. This was during the early days of YouTube, before it was even purchased by Google. Unfortunately both streaming and the measurement system were not ready for scale, so he left this role within a year and moved into a newly created leadership role as senior vice president in corporate development and M&A. In this role, Bruce sourced, structured, negotiated and closed dozens of partnerships and acquisitions. These included the acquisitions of AGB (a 13-country audience measurement platform based in Europe), MEMRB (Middle East consumer behavior data) and Arbitron (the largest radio measurement platform in the United States). He completed dozens of deals and partnerships throughout the world including Mexico, Brazil, Israel, Japan, Singapore, China and across Europe. 

Midway through his tenure at Nielsen, observing the growing importance of data and data analytics, Bruce became interested in technology focused startups. He had recently been on a solidarity tour of Israel and remembered Israel’s reputation as “The Startup Nation.”  With his colleagues he secured funding for a new Israeli technology incubator and venture capital fund from Nielsen, Ronald Lauder (Estee Lauder), Richard Parsons (Time Warner and Citi) and several Israeli investors. With his Israeli partner, Esther Barak Landes (daughter of the well-known Chief Justice Aharon Barak of Israel’s supreme court), they secured the first foreign license to operate a technological incubator from Israel’s Office of the Chief Scientist. This license contained millions of dollars of financial benefits. The fund and innovation platform, Nielsen Innovate, invested in over 30 Israeli startups, created more than 200 new jobs and to date has achieved six exits (sales) of portfolio companies. Many other multinationals followed Nielsen Innovate’s playbook when launching innovation platforms in Israel, including Verizon, Pepsico and WPP.

Running Nielsen Innovate remotely required Bruce to travel significantly to Israel. He set up an office in Caesarea and traveled to Israel at least eight times per year. He held an apartment in the Kerem Hateimanim (the Yemenite Quarter) of Tel Aviv and tried to be as much a native as possible. 

In 2018 he was recruited to join the president’s office and senior leadership team (SLT) of Northeastern University as its first chief partnership officer. He had always been interested in teaching and education, and believed that Northeastern’s innovative co-op program would be a great place to be creative in higher education. Upon joining, he was greatly dismayed with the degree of rigidity and bureaucracy present at Northeastern. He spent three years at the university making several tech investments and partnerships but was otherwise dissatisfied. He left the university in 2021 with a plan to provide strategic advisory services to university presidents. 

He started Coleytown Advisors in 2021 as a higher education consulting firm. He gained several marquee clients. He also was recruited to be the chairman of the board of directors of Europe-based Toluna Holdings, one of the largest digital market research firms in the world. Bruce had negotiated a deal with Nielsen and the company’s CEO eight years earlier and they maintained a collegial relationship years after his exit from Nielsen. 

In 2023 his Coleytown business had gotten too large for one person so he joined with two former Nielsen colleagues to form Stage18 which offers the same services as Coleytown but expanding to work with private equity funds active in the data, media and advertising industry. 

Today, Bruce is managing director and founder of Stage18, Inc. and Chairman of Toluna Holdings, Ltd. 

He also served on the advisory board of Sweetwood Capital (Fund I - Europe/Israel) and served as an advisor to The Advertising Research Foundation (ARF). He is a mentor at Entrepreneurs Roundtable Accelerator (ERA) in New York and has been a guest lecturer of corporate finance and M&A at Cornell Tech’s MBA program in New York. He was named a Frost and Sullivan “Thought Leader,” and to the  Cablefax Publications “Digital Hot List.”

He has always enjoyed traveling, learning and reading - much of this stems from his four years at Tufts. He has traveled to most parts of the world; some of the more ambitious adventures have been Papua New Guinea (backpacking in 1989), Tanzania (1992), Cambodia (2003), Cyprus, Jordan, Israel, Central America, French Guiana (to witness a satellite launch on Arianespace from its Korou launchpad), etc. 

He lives in Westport, Connecticut with his wife Jill. He has three boys, all in their 20s and all University of Michigan students or graduates. One of his sons is with hedge fund giant Cerberus (but awaiting decisions from MBA programs), the other is a consultant with Oliver Wyman and his youngest son is a junior at The Ford School of Public Policy at Michigan. 

His hobbies include hiking, music, scuba diving, e-bikes and fiddling with technology. In the past he was a skier, marathon runner and tennis player.

Entering Bruce is a fun moment for me as I am meeting a Tufts undergraduate from 1885-86 who I had not been conscious of until our conversation. He remembered our first symposium at Tufts on International Terrorism. He bought a ticket and attended. It was the first time that the concept of a weekend symposium was ever entertained at Tufts. I once did a check of the archives at Tufts Daily to make this claim. I was the special advisor to ACOIL (Advisory Committee on Intellectual Life), created by the Experimental College when I created this symposium, and was subsequently named Special Advisor for Undergraduate Intellectual Life. After the symposium made all major networks, ABC, CBS, NBC, and the New York Times, Bruce was recommended by Amir Grinstein, for whom he was an advisor for Amir's 50:50 Initiative. I will be working with Bruce on an initiative with Joshua Weiss and Brian Abrahams of the Harvard Project on negotiation on the concept of a Marshall Plan for Gaza. 

Jim Walsh

Dr. Jim Walsh is a Senior Research Associate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology’s Security Studies Program (SSP). His research and writings focus on international security, and in particular, topics involving nuclear weapons. Dr. Walsh has testified before the United States Senate and the United States House of Representatives on topics relating to nuclear terrorism, Iran, and North Korea. He is one of the relatively small number of Americans who have travelled to both Iran and North Korea for talks with officials about nuclear issues. 

His recent writing includes “The Implications of the JCPOA for Future Verification Arrangements (including the DPRK),” “The Digital Communications Revolution: Lessons for the Nuclear Policy Community,” and “Laser Enrichment and Proliferation: Assessing Future Risks.” 

Dr. Walsh is the international security contributor to the National Public Radio's Here and Now, and his comments and analysis have appeared in the New York Times, the New York Review of Books, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal, ABC, CBS, NBC, Fox, and numerous other national and international news outlets. Before coming to MIT, Walsh was Executive Director of the Managing the Atom project at Harvard University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government and a visiting scholar at the Center for Global Security Research at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. He has taught at both Harvard University and MIT. Dr. Walsh received his Ph.D. from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

A Special Interview with IFC’s New Executive Director, Dr. Sousan Abadian


Because poetry conveys in a way that prose cannot, I’ll answer the questions with poems (or one quote from a previous professor), followed by some of my own words. 

1/ What initially drew you to interfaith work?

Come, come, whoever you are.

Wanderer, worshiper, lover of leaving.

It doesn’t matter

Ours is not a caravan of despair.

Come, even if you have broken your vows a thousand times.

Come, yet again, come, come.

― Jelaluddin Rumi

I don’t have to tell you that we live in especially polarized times: there are loud cries to stand for something and against something else, as if justice calls for taking sides. Interfaith work elevates our conversations by providing a more nuanced, integrative, “both, and” stance: for example, we are both for the flourishing of this community and for the flourishing of that community—for the flourishing of all peoples regardless of religion, nationality, color, race, gender. We endeavor to find ways to call people in and only call people out as a last resort. Interfaith work provides the reminder, that even with our differences, we are still one human family, no one more or less valuable than another. The idea of offering a big tent for the caravan of humanity to gather under and dialogue with dignity is what has always drawn me to interfaith work. 

2/ What are you most excited to start working on as the new director? 

Out
Of a great need
We are all holding hands

And climbing.
Not loving is a letting go.

Listen,
The terrain around here

Is
Far too

Dangerous
For
That.

Hafez (Daniel Ladinsky)

As a city, as a nation, as a planet, we are living in an epoch of heightened uncertainty, of great need. I’m most excited about going out and meeting faith leaders and lay people, building relationships and trust. I’m excited to imagine IFC convening conversations that allow them to share what is in their hearts and on their minds, to partner together to address real problems, and even to have fun together. I am most excited to provide opportunities for people to feel and know that we, as a collective, have one another’s backs, that we will hold hands and not let go. No one need ever feel alone with a problem, unsafe, or unwelcome. It is together that we dance this sacred dance of life, all the while knowing that we are deserving of joy. 

 

I sometimes forget

that I was created for Joy.

My mind is too busy.

My heart is too heavy

for me to remember

that I have been

Called to dance

the sacred dance of life.

I was created to smile.

To Love.

To be lifted up

and to lift up others.

O’ Sacred One

untangle my feet

from all that ensnares.

Free my soul

that we might

Dance

and that our dancing

might be contagious.

Hafez (Daniel Ladinsky)

 

3/ What are some goals you have for IFC in the coming year?

Critics say that America is a lie because its reality falls so far short of its ideals. They are wrong. America is not a lie; it is a disappointment. But it can be a disappointment only because it is also a hope.—Samuel Huntington

Many are increasingly disillusioned with religion, seeing it as a divisive force and a source of suffering. But the disenchantment actually reflects the profound hunger we have for meaning, healing, belonging, and inspiration that religions can also provide. The “interfaith enterprise” draws out some of what’s best in our religions—the recognition of our common humanity gloriously expressed in a myriad of ways, like the rainbow of colors that appear when light is shone through a single prism.

The initial goals I have for the IFC include supporting Symi and the Board in expanding our programs, enhancing our visibility and relevance so that we can become a unifying resource to the people of our nation’s capital and the metropolitan communities at this pivotal juncture—a Lighthouse calling people safely to shore when the fog of fear and darkness of misinformation threatens to overtake. I would also like to see us get on even sounder financial footing so that we can offer more, give more, celebrate more.

I want to bring in youthful voices and reach out to even greater numbers of faith communities, some of which are underrepresented. I’d also like to invite members of our First Nations or Native American communities into the IFC community. Their spiritual traditions are profound, and I never forget that we are but guests on these precious lands.

 

When you are inspired by some great purpose, some extraordinary project, all your thoughts break their bonds: Your mind transcends limitations, your consciousness expands in every direction, and you find yourself in a new, great and wonderful world. Dormant forces, faculties and talents become alive, and you discover yourself to be a greater person by far than you ever dreamed yourself to be.” ― Patanjali 

 

4/ What’s your favorite interfaith memory?

 


If you have friends who know your heart,

Distance cannot keep you apart.

― Wang Bo (王勃)

I have many favorite interfaith moments, but I’ll share one that happened fairly recently at the Parliament of World Religions that took place in Chicago this past August. I was one of 25 faith leaders who was honored to be invited to ceremonially sign the Global Ethics document during the Global Ethic General Assembly. Another of the signatories was Jianbao Wang, part of a small delegation and the only one coming from Mainland China.

We had an opportunity to speak together and found much common ground as a Zoroastrian and a Confucian, two of the world’s most ancient wisdom traditions. The next day, I was one of the keynote speakers in front of an assembly of over 6,500 people. As I was waiting to get on stage with the handful of other speakers and video techs in a large area behind the curtains, I saw Jianbao come in backstage with several people, one clearly a monk and seat themselves at a big table. Jianbao wanted to speak with me but I asked if he could wait till after my talk. I did not know they were all waiting for me.

After I finally got called on stage and returned, they stood and approached and Jianbao introduced me to the delegation including the Abbot of one of the oldest Shaolin Temples in China. The Venerable Abbot presented me with his book and a beautifully decorated plate in a red and golden case as a gift, and his assistant snapped photos. I felt moved and humbled, not just by the generosity of their gifts but by the humility and patience with which they had waited for me. I was struck by how little we truly understand about China beyond the political rhetoric and how ancient (and in some ways refined) their civilization is as compared to ours.

I am eager to learn more about Confucianism, Taoism, and Buddhism. Happy Lunar New Year of the Dragon!

 

Raise your words

not your voice.

It is rain that

grows flowers,

not thunder.

― Jelaluddin Rumi