2015 PROGRAM Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Foreword People and Power 2015 is packed with symbolic anniversaries and landmark events. Towering above them is the 800th anniversary of the Magna Carta, the cornerstone of efforts across the centuries and around the world to enshrine the rule of law and protection of individual rights at the heart of human society. These fundamental principles of freedom and justice underpin the mission of Salzburg Global Seminar, which has worked for nearly seventy years to challenge present and future leaders to solve issues of global concern. They will resonate worldwide with the seventieth anniversary of the United Nations, and for our regional partners as Indonesia celebrates seventy years of independence, Singapore marks fifty years since its creation, and thirty-five states commemorate signing the Helsinki Final Act of the Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe. Yet on a darker note, man’s persistent inhumanity to man will also be remembered upon the centenary of the Armenian genocide, the seventieth anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, the fortieth of the Cambodian genocide, and the twentieth since the Srebrenica massacres. Salzburg Global was founded by young optimists amidst post-war chaos and destruction. Looking forward, we believe that lessons from the past can and must inspire courage, commitment and vision for a better future. 2015 will be a test year for the international community, regional organizations and nation states if negotiations are to succeed for new Sustainable Development Goals and a binding agreement on climate change. Many Fellows in our Salzburg Global Network spanning 160 countries, and many of our partner institutions across the world, are playing pivotal roles to this end. Across sectors and scales, we are witnessing radical shake-ups in the relationships between individuals, systems and states. Salzburg Global’s programs on education and social investment, neuroscience, global finance, health and big data, amongst other topics, are designed to help key institutions and individuals understand these shifts, see the art of the possible and accelerate change. For more info. on our 2015 programs, see: www.SalzburgGlobal.org/go/2015 3 Salzburg Global Program Framework Information on Registration 6 Sessions Under Consideration for 2015 and 2016 7 8 Neuroscience of Art: What are the Sources of Creativity and Innovation The Promise of Data: Will this Bring a Revolution in Health Care? 201 5 Early Childhood Development and Education Strategic Planning Meeting Feb 21 to 26 mar 22 to 27 APR 15 TO 18 Youth, Economics and Violence: Implications for Future Conflict Strengthening Communities: LGBT Rights and Social Cohesion The Future of Financial Intermediation: Banking, Securities Markets or Something New? Developing a Shared Culture of Health: Enriching and Charting the Patient-Clinician Relationship Future of Public and Private International Law APR 26 TO May 1 Jun 14 to 19 Jun 30 to Jul 2 Sep 13 to 19 Feb 20 to 21 >> S e ss i o n PROGRAM 10 13 14 The Search for a New Global Balance: America’s Changing Role in the World Salzburg Global Forum for Young Cultural Innovators II 11 15 Aging Societies: Advancing Innovation and Equity >> A C A D E M IE S PROGRAM 12 2015 Global Citizenship: Ethics and Engagement Pathways to Global Citizenship: Roots and Routes Global Citizenship and Universal Human Rights Feb 26 to Mar 5 Apr 4 to 11 May 23 to 30 Washington, DC 22 16 Special Session: Molloy College 23 Education for Global Citizenship: What, Why, and How 23 Salzburg Academy on Media & Global Change 23 Salzburg Global Fellowship Jul 6 to 13 and Sep 24 to 29 OCT 17 TO 22 17 nov 1 to 6 18 Jun 7 to 10 19 Jul 20 to Aug 9 jul 13 to 20, 2015 23 24 25 26 6 Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Salzburg Global Program Framework Information on Registration Salzburg Global’s Program is designed around three cross-cutting clusters that reflect Each Salzburg Global session brings together up to 60 distinguished international the values underpinning everything we do. We use these clusters – faculty members and emerging leaders, known as “Fellows,” from government, Imagination Sustainability Justice business, academia, and non-governmental organizations. Particular emphasis is placed on generating cutting-edge ideas and on developing proposals for action. Our sessions are structured around talks, panels and discussions led by renowned experts on the topic. Working groups are facilitated by faculty members who lead – to support triple-lens thinking to shift societies and lay the foundations for global each group in developing strategies for change, policy proposals or projects for citizenship. From the start, Salzburg Global Seminar has broken down barriers cooperative action. separating people and ideas. Today, we span the world’s regions and we challenge Follow-on activities mediated by staff, faculty, and Fellows extend the work countries at all stages of development and institutions across all sectors to rethink and value of the sessions. All participants are invited to join the Salzburg Global their relationships and identify shared interests and goals. Fellowship, founded in 2009, for which a program of regional meetings is underway Imagination lies at the heart of human development, opportunity and capacity for resilience, and will inspire the global transition to a knowledge economy. Through our around the world and develops on a rolling basis. For details, please see page 26. Session fees vary depending on the financial circumstances of an individual Imagination cluster programs, we ask how societies can renew and reconfigure their applicant. For a limited number of outstanding early to mid-career applicants from education, culture and media practices, and foster science and entrepreneurship to developing countries, Salzburg Global Seminar and its partners cover travel costs create inclusive, knowledge-based communities of the future. as well as session fees. Our aim is to bring together a unique mix of people and we The most basic necessity in any society is human safety and wellbeing. Through strongly encourage individuals from all parts of the world to apply. The fees are our Sustainability cluster programs, together with our partners, we aim to improve published on each session web page and include the cost of the program, meals, and life chances for present and future generations in a holistic way, connecting health, accommodation. environment, jobs and finance. We ask how societies can move beyond short-termism and target research, investment and policies to promote equity and prosperity within To register online for sessions, visit: www.SalzburgGlobal.org/register planetary boundaries. As power is dispersed in a multipolar world, changes in allegiance and identity are triggering radical shifts in relationships between individuals and institutions. Through Alternatively, a printed registration form can be downloaded from the website and faxed to Salzburg Global’s office in Salzburg at +43 (662) 839837. our Justice cluster programs, we examine how societies can reframe responsibilities, rights and cooperation between citizens, business, governments and regions to foster For questions regarding registration , contact our registration office: conditions for peace and prosperity. [email protected] The Salzburg Academies – covering Global Citizenship, Media and Global Change, and the Future of International Law – prepare outstanding young people for lives of innovation and reinvention with the skills to drive change. for more info. on our programs, see: www.SalzburgGlobal.org/issues-programs 7 8 Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Sessions Under Consideration for 2015 and 2016 for More info . on Salzburg Global Seminar is currently in the process of developing concepts and programs under cultivating partners for the following programs: development contact: Clare Shine Vice President & New Dynamics in Global Trade and Development II: Focus on Asia and the Pacific Chief Program Office cshine@ SalzburgGlobal.org for More info . on our mutli-year programs, Yalta Then and Now: Legacy and Future for International Stability? Film for Change June Board Meeting special topic visit: culture.SalzburgGlobal.org finance.SalzburgGlobal.org Climate Migration: Legal Protections, Resilience and Eco-Security health.SalzburgGlobal.org holocaust.SalzburgGlobal.org lgbt.SalzburgGlobal.org International Responses to Crimes Against Humanity: The Challenge of North Korea mena.SalzburgGlobal.org ssasa.SalzburgGlobal.org yci.SalzburgGlobal.org Relearning Learning: New Models of Teaching and Education for the 21st Century Parks for the Planet: Global Leadership Forum for Protected Areas Salzburg Global Holocaust Education and Genocide Prevention Program: Strategic Planning Meeting >> S e ss i o n PROGRAM 201 5 10 Cluster: Imagination Multi-Year Program: Intersection of Art and Science Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 11 The Neuroscience of Art: The Promise of Data: Cluster: What are the Sources of Creativity and Innovation? Will this Bring a Revolution in Health Care? Multi-Year Program: Salzburg, February 21 to 26, 2015 Program Partner Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Sustainability Big Data and Social Change Salzburg, March 22 to 27, 2015 Program Partners In recent years, there have been an increasing number of scientific investigations into It has now become an orthodoxy that we are moving into the age of “Big Data.” This art, exploring what actually happens in the brain during the creative process. Most of derives from ever increasing processing power and the vast surge in connectedness The Edward T. Cone these collaborations have been based in neuroscience and psychological approaches – with mobile technologies at the forefront and sensors in nearly all appliances, Foundation to how art is perceived, produced and created, with music the main focus of studies we are set to have 50 billion devices by 2020 connected in the cloud. It is argued carried out to date. These studies have yielded important new information that relates that medical decisions can be truly evidence based, combining the most complete the Dartmouth center For more info. contact: to a very basic fact of human biology: all behavior, even that as complex as creativity, medical science with personal data, drawing where appropriate on 24/7 monitoring for health care Susanna Seidl-Fox can be linked to brain function. through mobile devices and patient reported outcome measures. Lifestyle advice and delivery science Program Director – Building on this fundamental linkage, the neurobiology of art promises to yield Mayo Clinic preventive action can be honed with ever greater accuracy. Benefits from treatment, Culture and the Arts exciting new insights as this research field evolves. Creative behavioral patterns its best timing, lowest cost, better understood risk, and more predictable side-effects for more info. contact: sfox@ are likely to be a critical component for developing the neurological capacity for should all flow from this data transition, bringing lower costs and higher value. John Lotherington SalzburgGlobal.org innovation. Or Visit: This Salzburg Global program – bringing together an international cohort of Corporations are competing in both investment and rhetoric. In 2013 Google Program Director launched a new subsidiary, Calico, which Larry Page claimed would represent jlotherington@ www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ artists, scientists, researchers, public and private sector representatives – represents “moonshot thinking around health care,” and there have been many similar claims. SalzburgGlobal.org go/547 a pioneering step to establish a neutral international forum to discuss state-of-the- But how is all this justified? And how can we ensure that those advances which do Or Visit: art findings from a cross-disciplinary perspective, prioritize future research, and arise from this new control of data truly benefit patients, rather than just the provider www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ expand creative opportunities for learning, innovation and collaboration. While much – and that this will be a benefit distributed across the social gradient and globally? go/548 research is taking place in various national and regional settings, more global dialogue What are the risks on the horizon? Data is often siloed and used for competitive is needed between specialist silos in order to catalyze knowledge exchange around the advantage. Protocols around privacy could be tested to destruction; for instance, it is results, implications and potential practical applications of new cutting-edge research. possible to reverse engineer anonymized data to identify individuals. Forbes magazine even reports a case of medical data being sold on eBay. How might these risks be best mitigated? This session will review the claims for Big Data and its true potential, and seek to identify the conditions under which it should yield the greatest benefits to patients and populations. 12 Cluster: Imagination Multi-Year Program: Designing a Social Compact for the 21st Century Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Early Childhood Development and Education: Strategic Planning Meeting Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 13 Youth, Economics and Violence: Cluster: Implications for Future Conflict Multi-Year Program: Justice Designing a Social Compact for the 21st Century SALZBURG, APRIL 15 TO 18, 2015 SALZBURG, APRIL 26 TO may 1, 2015 In early childhood, society places high value on parental responsibility and rarely Today’s youth face an identity crisis. Youth should symbolize rising hopes, endless considers this time of development a mainstream economic and budgetary matter. possibilities and the energy to reach personal goals. Yet societal systems in many Educational This is counterintuitive. For decades, Nobel prizewinner James Heckman and others countries are failing young people, as reflected in poor educational, professional and Harry Frank Testing have made the economic case for investments in Early Childhood Development and health forecasts – especially for youth on the margins. Too often, economic and policy Guggenheim Service Education (ECDE) as a critical component for national prosperity. Despite evidence frameworks struggle to promote social and educational mobility at scale, despite the foundation demonstrating lasting benefits of supporting young children, research has not opportunities supposedly opened up by globalization. What does this mean for our for more info. contact: translated into sustained financial commitments and practice. ECDE lies at the nexus future social infrastructure? Diasmer Bloe of social, health and education policy, but decision makers lack holistic baselines to Program Director link family support, economic productivity and social justice from the start of life. Program Partner dbloe@ 21st century societies – with aging populations, reduced birthrates, mobile Historically, marginalized youth have played a prominent role in revolution, political Program Partner for more info. contact: Diasmer Bloe unrest, and social disorder, with young men – often those with limited education Program Director and/or restricted economic security – at the fore. In countries with youth experiencing dbloe@ SalzburgGlobal.org workforces and interconnected economic and environmental challenges – require rising inequality and unreliable job prospects, there has been a notable increase in SalzburgGlobal.org Or Visit: more active, collaborative and productive participation from every citizen. As modern internal conflict, crime, and other markers of instability, including the rise of extremist Or Visit: www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ neuroscience reinforces the importance of human brain development between 0-5 networks. Recent studies on high youth populations and political violence show a www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ go/542 years, it makes sense to invest in our youngest citizens to help them become future statistical relationship between the two. However, there are conflicting opinions on go/549 net contributors to society. Such investments are estimated to generate an 18 percent the relative impact of other factors, including the urban/rural distribution of youth annual rate of return due to cost-savings in remedial education and social services and populations, access to employment and education, and the scale of political discontent. an increased tax base. Lack of quality ECDE reflects and contributes to rising inequality. Those who most As the percentage of under-25s in developing countries rises above 50% and urbanization accelerates, there will be interconnected problems of high youth need a fair start – the poor, immigrants and racial/ethnic minorities – are often at populations in urban areas without access to jobs, livelihoods and pathways to the periphery of social and political power and can seldom afford or garner sufficient economic security. Without holistic strategies, these will have major implications for support for quality programs. Under-investing in ECDE also has a disproportionate social cohesion and broader security issues, particularly in failing social systems. effect on women, as mothers, unpaid caregivers and underpaid early-childhood Youth in stressed contexts are torn between being “the future” (with no clear pathway educators. Moreover, neglecting ECDE has costly symptoms that only appear years to get there) and being kept at arms’ length (as potential instigators of civil discord). Too later, making them easy to ignore in short-term policymaking. Families cannot bridge often, policy makers give lip service to youth support but focus their efforts on cracking this gap on their own, especially as more mothers re-enter the workforce out of down on delinquency, protests, and crime. Whilst public safety demands an effective necessity or choice. response to crime and disorder, 21st century strategies need to get beyond fragmented In collaboration with Educational Testing Service, Salzburg Global Seminar is and reactive interventions to fully leverage next-generation human and social capital. implementing a multi-year intervention to catalyze and leverage the early childhood Looking forward, policy makers must develop a more sophisticated understanding research and policy agenda at domestic and international levels, particularly for of their disparate youth populations in order to design and implement preemptive and disadvantaged populations. responsive systems to nurture youth potential in constructive ways. In partnership with the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation, Salzburg Global Seminar is convening a strategic program to address the interconnected problems and opportunities of burgeoning youth populations and marginalized youth in key regions around the world. 14 Cluster: Justice Multi-Year Program: Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 15 Strengthening Communities: The Future of Financial Intermediation: Cluster: LGBT Rights and Social Cohesion Banking, Securities Markets or Something New? Multi-Year Program: Salzburg Global LGBT Forum Sustainability Salzburg Global Forum on Finance in a Changing World SALZBURG, June 14 to 19, 2015 Salzburg, June 30 to July 2, 2015 for more info. contact: The free expression of sexuality and gender identity has become a defining The accelerating transformation of the financial services industry, and the for more info. contact: Klaus Mueller characteristic of tolerant, pluralistic, and democratic societies in the 21st century. In emergence of alternative financial intermediaries, have profound medium- and Tatsiana Lintouskaya Chair – the context of the continuing globalization of the LGBT* human rights movement, long-term implications for global financial markets and their supervision. Financial Program Director Salzburg Global LGBT Forum both the positive advances of LGBT rights and the backlashes against LGBT rights are intermediaries who channel funds from investors to people and institutions who tlintouskaya@ [email protected] now interconnected at a previously unseen scale. The challenges confronting the LGBT require capital have expanded far beyond the traditional banking sector in recent SalzburgGlobal.org Or Visit: and human rights movement are no longer only national or regional, but influenced years and now exert growing influence on global financial markets. Such entities Or Visit: www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ by a multitude of factors at the global level. encompass investment banks, broker-dealers, life insurance companies, mutual and www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ pension funds, mortgage finance, credit card companies, and other types of shadow go/552 go/551 The Salzburg Global LGBT Forum is therefore working to advance civil dialogue where these challenges can be negotiated, where peaceful and constructive voices can banks, all of which operate in different ways and at different scales, often with strong meaningfully contribute to the global discourse on LGBT rights, and where an active regional variations. Alternative channels to traditional market- and bank-financing network of global LGBT and human rights actors can work together to negotiate these are now major sources of funds in both developing and developed economies. This interconnected global challenges and advance the free and equal rights of all LGBT people. increasingly diverse global marketplace for financial intermediation – coupled with In 2015 the Salzburg Global LGBT Forum will focus on critical issues of social ongoing reexamination of the role of traditional intermediaries in the wake of the cohesion, including the way in which issues of social justice and fundamental financial crisis – raises important societal issues. These include the duties financial freedoms are addressed in different contexts for LGBT communities. At a time when intermediaries owe to those with whom they transact business; whether banks can the global LGBT movement and discourse is facing significant and interconnected meet the rapidly developing needs of their traditional customers; the future of fair and challenges, establishing, protecting and sustaining socially cohesive societies requires effective markets; the continuing challenge of shadow banking and securitization; and targeted investments to support democratic institutions, families and communities the tension between societal notions of fairness and economic notions of efficiency. (including alternative families), social justice and human rights activists, education and From a regulatory and supervisory standpoint, as financial markets struggle to fully employment, housing, and protection from hate crimes and bullying. recover from the 2008 crisis, the imperative to strengthen the safety and soundness The 2015 Global LGBT Forum will focus on social cohesion as a central issue of intermediaries by tightening international and domestic prudential standards (as for LGBT communities across the world, whether in societies still fighting for embodied in Basel III, the Dodd Frank Act and various European Union and other equal treatment under family policy or those struggling against exclusion and initiatives) may increasingly conflict with the macroeconomic priority to restore marginalization. The Forum will maintain its open and holistic framing, ensuring growth. As a result, understanding the new dynamics of financial intermediation, and broad background and perspectives as well as participation of artists; critical thinkers; how they influence global markets, will be critical for future resilience, credit flows and spiritual leaders. and the sustainability of the financial services industry. From a technological point of view, new and potentially disruptive innovations, cyber-security risks, privacy concerns about data protection and data theft, and new types of financial crime, present difficult challenges for future regulatory action in an interconnected and borderless financial services marketplace. Assessing the potential impact of these trends on market *LGBT: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender. We are using this term as it is currently widely used in human rights conversations on sexual orientation and gender identity in many parts of the world, but we would not wish it to be read as exclusive of other cultural concepts, contemporary or historical, to express sexuality and gender, intersex and gender-nonconforming identities. structure, secondary market trading, and raising funds in the capital markets, as well as the scale of investments required by banks to keep pace with new technologies and the constraints the latter will place on traditional intermediaries, are matters of increasingly strategic concern. 16 Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 17 Developing a Shared Culture of Health: The Search for a New Global Balance: Cluster: Enriching and Charting the Patient-Clinician Relationship America’s Changing Role in the World Multi-Year Program: Salzburg, September 13 to 19, 2015 Salzburg, September 24 to 29, 2015 for more info. contact: In 1998, in a Salzburg Seminar attended by 64 individuals from 29 countries, teams While a new sense of globalism is shared by all countries, it nevertheless still brings John Lotherington of health professionals, patient advocates, artists, storytellers, policy makers, with it conflicts and tensions between national groupings. Issues of world-wide Program Director representatives of the media, social scientists and other lay individuals created the concern, such as matters of climate change conflict with commercial imperatives and Roosevelt Study jlotherington@ country of PeoplePower, a nation whose health system was built “through the patients’ competition. Cross national groupings emerge even as countries increasingly fragment. Center, Middelburg, SalzburgGlobal.org eyes.” Central to the individual patient-clinician relationship projected for the future Old tensions between major powers re-emerge in spite of common global concerns. The Netherlands Or Visit: was an Internet-based patient record that “resides nowhere but is available everywhere. These international changes coincide with major internal demographic changes www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ Patients are offered complete access to their medical record and urged also to…write within the United States itself, including the dramatic rise in the Hispanic population for more info. contact: go/553 in it – elaborating, tracking and explicating problems, correcting mistakes, prioritizing and an accelerating polarization of United States’ internal politics. In the face of Marty Gecek needs, and at times suggesting both diagnoses and treatment plans.” contemporary shifting power relations, including changes in Brazil, Russia, India and Symposium Director China (BRIC nations) in Latin America, and in Asian nations, the power and influence mgecek@ at collaboration are gaining new currency and understanding. To support these of the United States, both in terms of world affairs and in terms of its relations with its SalzburgGlobal.org developments, medical records can chart an individual’s course through health and hemispheric neighbors in the Americas, is evolving. Or Visit: Cluster: Sustainability Multi-Year Program: Health and Health Care Innovation Self-care and self-regulation, mixed with team care and broad-based efforts illness. In the future, could a transformation of the traditional record become an Salzburg Seminar American Studies Association (SSASA) Conceptions of power and its appropriate use have also changed. In light of integral part of the patient-clinician relationship? Could transformed, fully transparent this, can the United States expect to pursue its national interests, using its powerful records become central to the evolution of a true culture of health? position in the world, feeling free to intervene in other countries, seizing terrorists in Full transparency may provide a foundation for the future patient-clinician relationship, but how may the practice evolve? Will patients primarily read their records, or will they also contribute to them? How and with whom will they share foreign cities, sending drones across national borders, tapping into communications by ordinary citizens and world leaders? This session, organized in partnership with the Roosevelt Study Center, Middelburg, them? Will open records increase patient safety? What will they contribute to The Netherlands, will examine the United States’ changing role in the world and the informal, family caregivers as they work to assist family members and loved ones implications of changes in global, regional and national power for the future of the increasingly dependent on their care? Will they help educate students in the health United States as a national state and as a global political, economic and cultural power professions? And above all, can a foundation of open communication based on full in the 21st century and beyond. transparency help create affordable, high-value, easy to access, and sustainable healthcare delivery networks – a truly global challenge? This session will work to envision a culture of health centered on health records that assist in moving patientclinician relationships beyond current boundaries. Imagination Program Partner www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ go/ssasa13 18 Cluster: Imagination Multi-Year Program: Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Salzburg Global Forum for Young Cultural Innovators II Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 19 Aging Societies: Cluster: Advancing Innovation and Equity Multi-Year Program: Salzburg Global Forum for Young Cultural Innovators Justice Designing a Social Compact for the 21st Century SALZBURG, OCTOBER 17 TO 22, 2015 Salzburg, November 1 to 6, 2015 for more info. contact: The Salzburg Global Forum for Young Cultural Innovators (YCI) is an annual series of Across much of the world, shifting demographics and economic constraints are Susanna Seidl-Fox Salzburg Global Seminar that brings 50 of the world’s most talented young innovators calling into question the affordability of social protection systems – where they exist. Program Director – from the culture and arts sector together at Schloss Leopoldskron to help them develop Expanding older populations drive demand for greater coverage and better benefits, AUSTRIAN FEDERAL Culture and the Arts the dynamic vision, entrepreneurial skills, and global networks needed to allow them, alongside weakening public and family infrastructure to deliver such care. These ECONOMIC CHAMBER sfox@ their organizations, their causes and their communities to thrive in new ways. The trends disproportionately affect vulnerable groups in society and the very future of SalzburgGlobal.org artistic disciplines represented by the young innovators range from the visual and households. Or Visit: performing arts, literature, and cultural heritage, to foods, fashion, architecture, and www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ design. The YCI Forum represents a major commitment by Salzburg Global Seminar pressure due to aging populations and changing urbanization and migration patterns. Program Director go/554 to fostering creative innovation and entrepreneurship worldwide with the intention Coupled with low growth rates, rising levels of debt, austerity, and global shifts of dbloe@ of building a more vibrant and resilient arts sector and of advancing sustainable wealth, there is widespread concern about increasing inequality and whether quality SalzburgGlobal.org economic development and positive social change agendas worldwide. social protection is still viable. Emerging economies and low-income countries are far Or Visit: from immune, with their current social systems ill-prepared to meet the burgeoning www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ growth in elders, especially when combined with other trends. go/540 Each annual YCI cohort will be comprised of ten expert facilitators and 50 young cultural innovators between the ages of 25 and 35 from around the world. The group will be balanced in terms of gender, genre, and geographic representation. Most of the In high- and middle-income countries, welfare systems are under enormous Aging societies present financial, societal and personal challenges – but also great participants will come from several “culture hubs” in various cities around the world potential to prototype technical and social innovation and expand new markets, that form the core of the YCI multi-year project, including Baltimore, Rotterdam, employment possibilities and knowledge exchange between regions. Following the Phnom Penh, Buenos Aires, Tokyo, and Salzburg. Participants are selected through a UN’s 2014 appointment of an Independent Expert on the Enjoyment of all Human highly competitive application and nomination process, to ensure outstanding quality Rights by Older Persons, social systems will need not only to be economically and diversity of professional knowledge and experience within the Forum. sustainable but also to uphold elders’ wellbeing and dignity. This calls for fresh Forum components include a one-week annual program in Salzburg combining thinking about personal welfare and responsibility, community infrastructure, and theory and praxis, with capacity-building sessions focusing on: intra and the role of states as providers. At the macro-level, governments will have to implement entrepreneurship, exposure to the latest digital resources, new business models, risk- changes to economic, workforce, and fiscal infrastructure to ensure the long-term taking and innovation, psychology of leadership and emotional intelligence, and cross- affordability and sustainability of pension systems. At the micro level, we must cultural communication and negotiating skills. understand how individuals and their communities will continue to manage aging and Outstanding participants from each year are invited back as facilitators and/ or resource specialists at future sessions to assure continuity, communication and its effect on long-term cohesive societies. How countries value and manage this macro-micro continuum and build affordable exchange of best practice across the multi-year series. The Forum also assists the YCIs social protection into the market economy model will be a critical part of 21st century in creating “culture hubs” in target cities to share the learning, foster a multiplier economic planning for developing, emerging, and developed countries alike. effect, and magnify the impact of the YCI network created in Salzburg. The “culture Salzburg Global Seminar’s multi-year series will catalyze a holistic approach to hubs” will convene mini-sessions, workshops and public events and become a local aging societies. Driven by research, facts and frontline realities, it advances new resource for emerging cultural innovators. thinking and action for elder care support within public systems and competitive markets. It aims to generate an international exchange on innovative policies and mechanisms to make welfare systems more adaptive, efficient, and effective in meeting regional and national productivity and growth priorities. Program Partner for more info. contact: Diasmer Bloe >> >> A C A D E M IE S D ERM PARCOA G A IE MS PROGRAM 201 5 2015 22 Cluster: salzburg academies Multi-Year Program: Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Future of Public and Private International Law Salzburg Cutler Law Fellows Program III Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 23 Global Citizenship: Ethics and Engagement Cluster: Pathways to Global Citizenship: Roots and Routes Multi-Year Program: Global Citizenship and Universal Human Rights Salzburg academies Global Citizenship Program 66–69 Special Session: Molloy College Washington, DC, February 20 to 21, 2015 Salzburg, February 26 to March 5, April 4 to 11, May 23 to 30 and June 7 to 10, 2015 for more info. contact: Salzburg Global Seminar, in partnership with ten of the leading US law schools, offers Charles E. Ehrlich the “Salzburg Cutler Law Fellows Program,” a one-of-a-kind program for students Tomorrow’s leaders must think and act as global citizens in order to address the for more info. contact: Program Director interested in international law and legal practice. Launched in the fall of 2012, the challenges facing humanity. Broadly defined, global citizens are people who are Astrid Schroeder cehrlich@ Salzburg Cutler Law Fellows Program was named in memory of Lloyd N. Cutler, former consciously prepared to live and work in the complex interdependent society of the Program Director – SalzburgGlobal.org White House Counsel for two presidents and Chairman of the Board of Salzburg 21st century and contribute to improving the common global welfare of our planet Global Citizenship Program Or Visit: Global Seminar. Cutler strongly believed that one of the keys to progress was the early and its inhabitants. The program aims to engage participating students as global aschroeder@ www.SalzburgGlobal.org/ identifying and mentoring of young leaders with a yearning to make the world a better citizens, helping them develop the knowledge, skills, values, and commitment to: SalzburgGlobal.org go/cutlerfellows3 place through law and the rule of law. The Salzburg Cutler Law Fellows Program convenes up to 50 students nominated by their law schools along with leading judges and practitioners for a highly interactive • Understand the nature of globalization, including its positive and negative impacts around the world, and realize how it is transforming human society; • Appreciate the diversity of humanity in all of its manifestations, from local exploration of leading edge issues in international law, covering international to global, and interact with different groups of people to address common human rights and humanitarian law; international courts; rule of law; and concerns; international finance, monetary, and trade law. Guided by lawyers from some of the • Recognize the critical global challenges that are compromising humanity’s top international law firms in the US, the Salzburg Cutler Law Fellows also receive future and see how their complexity and interconnections make solutions advice on how to determine career goals, manage career trajectories, identify the increasingly difficult; and jobs beyond the first horizon of job seeking post-law school, and how to expand and • Collaborate with different sets of stakeholders, by thinking globally and acting utilize professional networks. In addition to these high-level workshops, students locally, to resolve these critical challenges and build a more equitable and receive feedback on their own original research and writing on topics concerning the sustainable world. development of both public and private international law. Salzburg Cutler Fellows also The session format includes lectures and discussions with an international faculty as automatically become members of the Salzburg Global Fellowship and its international well as formal and informal work in small groups. Topics addressed in plenary lectures network. and discussions include globalization and global responsibility; the social, economic, The two-day seminar will be held in Washington, DC and allow participants and political aspects of migration; the historical legacy of the Holocaust, human rights, to present their own research and scholarship on leading edge topics, refine their humanitarian intervention; sustainable development; and the implications of the concepts based on criticism received from international experts, explore career options United States’ influence around the world. and build global networks with peers and practitioners alike. Faculty and discussants Participants will consider how these issues relate to their current situations and are drawn from the ten partner law schools, firms with leading international practice future personal, educational, and professional plans. They will also have the opportunity groups, domestic and international courts, and lawyers serving in public service roles. to develop projects and activities related to the session topic that can be implemented at Selected Cutler Fellows also receive scholarships to attend Salzburg seminars on topics their colleges and universities, in their local communities, and beyond. germane to their interests. Or Visit: gcp.SalzburgGlobal.org 24 Cluster: salzburg academies Multi-Year Program: Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Education for Global Citizenship: What, Why, and How Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Salzburg Academy on Media & Global Change Global Citizenship Program 70 & 71 25 Cluster: salzburg academies Multi-Year Program: Salzburg Academy on Media & Global Change IX Salzburg, July 6 to 13 and July 13 to 20, 2015 Salzburg, July 20 to August 9, 2015 for more info. contact: Colleges and universities are vital institutions for addressing political, social, and The Salzburg Academy on Media and Global Change is a multidimensional initiative for more info. contact: Astrid Schroeder economic concerns, be they at a local, national, or global level. While embedded in that provides learning materials, training and support for media schools, programs Paul Mihailidis Program Director – their communities, they contribute substantially to a nation’s competitiveness and and classrooms across the world. It is organized through a network of participating Program Director Global Citizenship Program operate within an increasingly international environment that links people and universities in Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Eastern Europe, the UK, Latin and North pmihailidis@ aschroeder@ institutions together across borders. Colleges and universities are arguably the most America and brings together expert Faculty, Visiting Scholars, and over 70 students, SalzburgGlobal.org SalzburgGlobal.org resilient and the most sustainable institutions not only for advancing modernization from undergraduate to Ph.D. level. Or Visit: Or Visit: and prosperity but also for ensuring the foundation and continuance of civil society. As gcp.SalzburgGlobal.org such, they are gateways to a future that is in our own hands. Globalization poses new educational challenges. Higher education institutions are The Academy’s objective is to lead the creation of media action plans, multimedia stories, and comparative research, and to become a leading hub for global media education and action in the 21st Century. The content developed over the past six years obliged by their missions to prepare people for life in the 21st century - people who has led to the publication of News Literacy: Global Perspectives for the Newsroom and are consciously prepared to live and work in the complex interdependent society and the Classroom by Academy Director, Dr. Paul Mihailidis, and Media Communities: contribute to improving the common global welfare of our planet and its inhabitants. Mediated Communities: Civic Voices, Empowerment, and Media Literacy in the Digital This session will convene professors, administrators, and staff from higher Era by Academy faculty member Dr. Moses Shumow. The Academy’s network works education institutions seeking to place global education at the core of student learning. across international teams and across disciplines to explore key emerging concerns for They will explore factors that support or restrain comprehensive approaches to global civic society today. Key questions to be address by participants include: education at colleges and universities. Key questions to be addressed include: • What role do colleges and universities have in preparing their students as leaders in the 21st century? • What knowledge, skills, and values do students need to be active global citizens? • What are the most effective ways of teaching and learning for global citizenship? • How can those committed to global education learn from and support one another? • How do news media affect our understanding of identity, culture, politics, and citizenship? • How can we use media to better cover global problems and better report on possible solutions? • How can media literacy make students more engaged and active participants in local and global communities, across cultures, across borders, and across divides? As they address these questions, participants will develop strategies and action plans Each year, participants build web-based and downloadable media action plans on how for projects to implement at their respective colleges and universities. The projects media cover issues of critical global importance. Past topics have included human are intended to strengthen existing institutional activities or to develop new and rights, terrorism, climate change, sustainability, youth employment, Civic Voice and innovative approaches to education for global citizenship. Resistance. In 2015 students will identify emerging challenges to civic rights and justice in their respective communities and analyze how digital culture and media supporting social progress in a more globally connected world. This work will emerge in the form of case studies of community change, and instances where civic activism helped bring forth the marginalized and oppressed voices around the world. This year, the Academy will be working Media for Change and the Engagement Lab. media-academy. SalzburgGlobal.org 26 Salzburg Global Seminar | Program 2015 Salzburg Global Fellowship for More info . on Salzburg Global Seminar programs offer participants a transformative experience that the Salzburg global can have a crucial impact on their professional and personal development. While the fellowship: “Schloss magic” provides the spark to start a unique exchange of knowledge and ideas, Jan Heinecke dialogues launched in Salzburg continue long after our Fellows have returned home. Fellowship Manager Each participant becomes part of the Salzburg Global Fellowship, our network of more jheinecke@ than 25,000 current and future leaders, change makers and imaginative thinkers from SalzburgGlobal.org more than 160 countries. We warmly invite you to share professional updates and success stories with the Network and engage with Fellows across the world on issues To keep in touch with of common concern. We are happy to facilitate this dialogue online and reconnect other salzburg global Fellows through events in Salzburg and around the world. Fellows and receive updates from salzburg Fellowship events for 2015 include: global seminar and McKnight Fellows Meeting the salzburg global Minneapolis, MN, USA, February 5, 2015 fellowship: SalzburgGlobal.org/go/ fellowship Hosted by the Humphrey School of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota, this event SalzburgGlobal.org/go/ subscribe offers an opportunity for Fellows who came to Salzburg on a McKnight Foundation scholarship to discuss their experiences and receive information on upcoming programs. The Second Annual Sir Michael Palliser Lecture London, UK, March, 2015 (Date to be confirmed) You can find us on In the spirit of long-serving Board Member and Senior Fellow Sir Michael Palliser, this social media: year’s lecture will address a current challenge for European integration. twitter.com/ SalzburgGlobal The Austrian/German Model of Vocational Education & Training facebook.com/ SalzburgGlobal youtube.com/ SalzburgSeminar Vienna, Austria, March 19, 2015 (Date to be confirmed) In an evening discussion, a panel of experts will make an assessment of lessons learnt from Austria and Germany, and how they can be applied internationally. Salzburg Congress on Urban Planning and Development (SCUPAD) flickr.com/ SalzburgGlobal SALZBURG, AUSTRIA, MAY 14 to 17, 2015 SalzburgGlobal.org/ go/linkedin SCUPAD’s founding in Schloss Leopoldskron. This landmark conference, Just Planning, will celebrate the 50th anniversary of The Sixth Annual Lloyd N. Cutler Lecture on the Rule of Law Washington, DC, USA, November 16, 2015 (Date to be confirmed) In memory of Lloyd N. Cutler, who served on the Board of Salzburg Global Seminar, the Cutler Lectureship is presented annually and will be delivered by a distinguished speaker on a crucial legal issue of global concern. Additional events will be added to the program throughout the year SALZBURG, AUSTRIA Schloss Leopoldskron Leopoldskronstrasse 56-58 5010 Salzburg, Austria T. +43 (662) 839830 F. +43 (662) 839837 WASHINGTON, DC, USA 1730 Pennsylvania Ave, NW Suite 250, Washington, DC 20006 T. +1 (202) 637-7683 F. +1 (202) 637-7699 SalzburgGlobal.org All dates and titles are correct at time of printing (november 2014)
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