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April 30, 2008

ANNOUNCEMENT: 5/9 Immigration Conference at University of Pennsylvania

From H-CITIZENSHIP:

On Friday, May 9th, 2008, the Penn Program on Democracy, Citizenship, and Constitutionalism will host its first annual International Interdisciplinary Conference, devoted to the program's 2007-2008 theme, "Citizenship, Borders, and Human Needs."  The conference takes place from 9 am to 6 pm in the Bodek Lounge on the first floor of Penn's Houston Hall, 3417 Spruce Street, Philadelphia, followed by a reception at the University Museum.

Four panels will address immigration and economic needs; immigration and political needs; immigration and cultural needs; and the legitimacy of immigration restrictions, seen from perspectives in receiving and sending nations.  Panelists include Antonio Yunez-Naude; Karolina Smzagalska-Follis, and Michael Katz; Christian Joppke, Kamal Sadiq, and Aristide Zolberg; Veit Bader, Leti Volpp, and Julie Mostov; Rainer Baubock, Chandran Kukathas, and Linda Bosniak.  Full details can be found at the DCC Program website, http://www.sas.upenn.edu/dcc/; click on "2007-2008 Events."  For more information, contact Professor Rogers M. Smith, Chair, Penn Program on Democracy, Citizenship, and Constitutionalism, rogerss@sas.upenn.edu.

April 29, 2008

Announcement: Institute for Constitutional Studies

From H-Citizenship:

The Institute for Constitutional Studies is pleased to announce its ninth annual residential summer research seminar, to be held June 8-14, 2008, in Washington, D.C. This year's topic is "The Influence of Religion on Constitutional Thought."  Judge Michael McConnell (Tenth Circuit United States Court of Appeals) and Professor Mark Noll (University of Notre Dame) will teach the seminar.  The application deadline has been extended to May 5.

Description: Religious thinking has influenced many of the most fundamental features of American constitutional thought.  This seminar will explore some of those developments, with focused discussion of selected readings in the morning sessions and paper presentations in the afternoon.  Among the topics that may be considered are: (1) Puritan and Reformed Protestant contributions to constitutionalism, republicanism, and revolution; (2) the colonial Great Awakening (Jonathan Edwards) and ideals of society; (3) William Penn and Quaker ideas of political order; (4) Anglicanism, constitutional monarchy, and Loyalist protest; (5) Presbyterian ecclesiology (e.g., John Witherspoon) and ideas of federalism and representation; (6) Baptist theology (including the rejection of infant baptism, e.g., Isaac Backus) and rising individualism and rejection of religious establishment; (7) Masonic ideas (and opposition to them) in the formation of early republican ideology; (8) varying religious appropriations of the Enlightenment; (9) the Second Great Awakening and the rise of voluntarism and civil society; (10) the religious roots of abolitionism and proslavery thought; (11) Lincoln’s theology; (12) women as leaders in church and state; and (13) the 19th-century Roman Catholic critique (e.g., Orestes Brownson) of liberalism.

Participants are not limited to these topics, but may prepare and present papers ranging across the modern history of constitutional democracy, based on any significant connection between religious and constitutional thought, broadly construed. For more information please visit our website, http://docs.law.gwu.edu/ics/ or email us at icsgw@law.gwu.edu.

April 28, 2008

Call for Papers - International Interfaith Conference: 'Interfaith Dialogue in Modernity and Post-Modernity'

INTERFAITH ENCOUNTER IN
MODERNITY AND POST-MODERNITY

The University of Winchester, UK: 9-11 September 2008

THE CONFERENCE
Today, when the cultures of the world are coming closer yet also seem to be drawing further apart, there is an increasing need for the representative faith traditions to engage in dialogue and encounter.  However, questions are asked as to the basis and impact of Interfaith Dialogue and Encounter.

‘Interfaith Encounter in Modernity and Post-modernity’ will bring together a group of around ten leading international scholars from Judaism, Islam and Christianity to form a central colloquium of intensive discussion.  Around this, a wider conference on Interfaith Encounter will occur. Attendees will be able to deliver papers, observe colloquium sessions, and engage in Q&A sessions with the scholars involved. Each day of the conference will be themed:

DAY 1: the implications of modernity/ post-modernity for interfaith encounter
DAY 2: how scholarly debate about dialogue impacts on religious institutions
DAY 3: dialogue and public life, the role of religion in peacemaking and conflict resolution, business ethics, and debates about ‘multiculturalism’

Confirmed colloquium scholars: Khaleel Muhammad; Alwi Shihab; Riffat Hassan; Racelle Weiman; Reuven Firestone; Maurice-Ruben Hayoun; Ursula King; Perry Schmidt-Leukel; Rosemary Radford Ruether.

REGISTRATION AND SUBMISSION OF PAPERS:
Papers are called for (40 minutes: 30 talk, 10 questions) that explore the issues of Interfaith Encounter from a variety of perspectives and traditions (these may explore the main conference themes or other areas of Interfaith Encounter, Inter-religious Dialogue, theologies of religions and related studies).

Both delegates and observers are welcome.

ABSTRACTS of proposed papers to be submitted by 1ST JUNE 2008.
REGISTRATION and CONFERENCE FEES to be paid by 1ST JULY 2008.
Those wishing to attend should submit a registration request with the following data: family and personal name(s), address, institutional affiliation (if any), email, abstract and paper title (if any), attendance pattern (i.e. whole conference or specific day).

ADDRESS FOR CORRESPONDENCE:
Dr Paul Hedges, Department of Theology and Religious Studies,
University of Winchester, Winchester, SO22 4NR
Tel: 0044 (0)1962 827451
Email: paul.hedges@winchester.ac.uk

CONFERENCE COSTS:
£250 (developed countries), £175 (developing countries and students) to include two nights single accommodation (9th, 10th), the conference dinner, and meals during the conference (dinner 9th to lunch 11th). Daily rate: £50 (lunch only 10th & 11th).

THE CONFERENCE ORGANIZERS:
Dr Paul Hedges; Professor Leonard Swidler; Revd Dr Alan Race

ORGANIZED IN CONJUNCTION WITH:
The Journal of Ecumenical Studies; Interreligious Insight; The Centre for Global Ethics; St. Philip’s Centre for Study and Engagement (Leicester); World Council of Faiths

In Vienna, Secretary-General Opens New Modern, Climate-Friendly UN Complex

[Courtesy of the UN News Service]

Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon began an official visit to Vienna Friday by inaugurating a new environmentally-friendly, state-of-the-art facility which will support discussions between countries on a range of critical issues, from nuclear weapons to drugs and crime.

Donated by Austria, the “M Building” – as the new complex is known – encompasses dozens of meeting rooms and has the capacity to service up to 1,500 people. “The United Nations and other Vienna-based organizations are very grateful for this meaningful contribution, which will facilitate our work here immeasurably,” Mr. Ban said at the inauguration ceremony.

The Secretary-General highlighted the fact that the new facility is environmentally friendly and hailed its many energy-saving features, such as re-circulating heat and sensors to optimize cooling and heating efficiency and minimize waste.

“For the past year and a half I’ve been pushing the environmental agenda, and it’s encouraging to see that in this building has been designed with the best interests of the planet at heart,” he stated.

April 25, 2008

Call for Papers - World Summit on Public Management Education

From the International Public Management Network Listserv:

World Summit on Public Management Education and Training
18-19 June 2009
Corvinus University, Budapest
(Jointly organised by IRSPM, the Public and Nonprofit Group of the AOM and the EFMD)

The Call for Papers for this event is now live on the summit website -

http://worldsummit2009.uni-corvinus.hu

submissions are encouraged from academics, practitioners and policy makers for the important event.

Stephen P Osborne
President
IRSPM

NCDD 2008 - October 3-5, 2008 in Austin, Texas

From NCDD:

Are you dedicated to solving tough problems through honest talk, quality thinking and collaborative action? Come join hundreds of others who believe that better communication is the key to solving many of the biggest problems facing our organizations, communities, and societies.

Join us October 3-5, 2008 in Austin, Texas for the fourth National Conference on Dialogue & Deliberation: Creating Cultures of Collaboration.

NCDD’s dynamic conferences bring together leaders and future leaders in public engagement, conflict resolution and related fields to share resources and strategies, build lasting relationships, increase the visibility and effectiveness of their work, tackle challenges we face, and initiate collaborative projects. Many people who have attended NCDD conferences say they’re the best conferences they’ve ever attended.

For more details, go to www.thataway.org/events/?page_id=6 or email ncdd@thataway.org. You can also…

- Learn more about registration (the early rate is only $300 until May 16!) at www.thataway.org/events/?page_id=136
- Propose a workshop, an “innovation,” or a networking topic at www.thataway.org/events/?page_id=119
- Read about the fabulous pre-conference workshops on October 2nd at www.thataway.org/events/?page_id=87
- Look over dozens of quotes from conference participants at www.thataway.org/events/?page_id=13
- Learn more about dialogue & deliberation in general, or what NCDD has to offer, at www.thataway.org/?page_id=491

April 24, 2008

IBM Online Forum on Global Leadership - April 23-29, 2008

I received a copy of this announcement from Kansas City's International Relations Council earlier today:

IBM Online Forum on Global Leadership

April 23-29, 2008 Only!

Please alert your members to a limited-time opportunity to explore ideas for leveraging U.S. leadership in a globally integrated economy through an online discussion forum. This is a special chance to engage your members in a national discourse of leaders looking to the future.

The forum, which is an extension of a two-day forum on this topic held in July 2007 in Washington, DC, will feature leaders from the business, government, economic development, and academic communities. The goal is to circulate ideas to shape the future of government, academia, business and society amongst leaders best-positioned to affect change. For more information, visit the Forum on Global Leadership's website at www.ibm.com/ibm/globalleadership.

The online discussion will focus on "actionable ideas" in these four key areas:

  • Understanding the Role of the Globally Integrated Enterprise
  • Promoting Innovation and Entrepreneurship
  • Creating an Attractive Business Environment: State and Regional Strategies
  • Developing a Skilled, Flexible and Competitive Workforce for the 21st Century

Individuals can register by sending an email to usforum@us.ibm.com. Once they have registered, they can participate in the online forum at any time of day. Participants will be informed of the times when featured guests will be participating online.

April 23, 2008

Bob O'Neill on Sustainability

This morning, Bob O’Neill, executive director of the International City/County Management Association (ICMA), spoke about sustainable practices at a public administration forum here in Kansas City.

O’Neill defined sustainability in terms of:
a) meeting the needs of the present without compromising future generations and
b) improving quality of life within the caring capacity of the surrounding environment

According to O’Neill, public administrators must concern themselves with four dimensions of sustainability:
a) environmental
b) economic vitality
c) social equity
d) institutional

Building on the works of Peter Drucker and Jim Collins, O’Neill equated a public manager focused on sustainability as the “conductor of the symphony.”  This individual must be an advocate, convener, translator, facilitator and honest broker.

Managers, according to O’Neill, must simultaneously focus on values discussions, leadership advocacy and appropriate programs/practices when addressing issues of sustainability.

April 22, 2008

Creative Economy Report 2008

From UNCTAD:

The so called "Creative economy" is an evolving concept based on the potential of "creative assets" to generate socio-economic growth and development, in a globalized world increasingly dominated by images, sounds, texts and symbols.

At the heart of the creative economy lie the creative industries. Loosely defined, the creative industries are at the crossroads of arts, culture, business and technology and use intellectual capital as their primary input. Today's creative industries range from folk art, festivals, music, books, newspapers, paintings, sculptures and performing arts to more technology-intensive subsectors such as the film industry, TV and radio broadcasting, digital animation and video games, and more service-oriented fields such as architectural and advertising services.

The Creative Economy Report 2008 - The challenge of assessing the creative economy towards informed policy-making is the first comprehensive study to present the United Nations perspective on this emerging topic. This policy-oriented analysis is intended to facilitate a better understanding of the key issues underlying the emerging creative economy at national and international levels. It brings together contributions from five United Nations organizations, namely UNCTAD, UNDP UNESCO, WIPO and the International Trade Center (ITC), in a joint endeavor to enhance policy coherence and international action in this area.

The development dimension is the guiding principle of this Report which aims to assist developing countries to harness their creative economies and to maximize trade and development gains by recognizing the creative economy as a feasible development option for linking economic, technological, social and cultural development objectives of our contemporary society.

Trade and Investment Keys to Spurring Africa's Growth, Says Ban Ki-moon

[Courtesy of UN News Service]

Increased trade and investment, particularly in agriculture, are crucial if Africa is to achieve the kind of growth needed to meeting its development targets, as well as to address the current global food crisis, which threatens to undo the gains made so far, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said yesterday.

“We face a development emergency,” Mr. Ban told the high-level segment of the twelfth UN Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD), taking place in Accra, Ghana.

He noted that well past the mid-point of the race to achieve the set of internationally agreed anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), many countries are falling behind.

Sub-Saharan Africa, in particular, “is most at risk – here, not a single country is on track to meet all of the MDGs by 2015,” he told the gathering of trade and development officials from around the world.

At the same time, advances on specific goals in individual African countries such as Ghana, Kenya and Uganda suggest that rapid progress is certainly possible, Mr. Ban stated, adding that the successes in these countries need to be replicated and expanded across Africa with effective support from the international community. “This scaling-up of our development activities requires unprecedented effort, but it is achievable.”

The Secretary-General pointed out that Africa has yet to fully benefit from globalization, especially increased trade and investment, noting that the continent’s share of global trade and foreign investment languishes at a mere 3 per cent.

Critical to spurring Africa’s growth is to ensure a breakthrough in the Doha Round of trade talks, as well as more South-South exchanges and greater foreign direct investment, he said.

Mr. Ban also drew attention to the “alarming” rise in global food prices, which he said threatens to undo the gains achieved so far in fighting hunger and malnutrition.

The situation calls for a substantial increase in investment and expenditure in agriculture, and underscores the importance of pushing for an open trading system in agricultural commodities – which would benefit countries around the world, the Secretary-General said.

Stating he was “especially troubled” by incidents of food riots in Africa and around the world, Mr. Ban urged countries to consider “bold measures to guarantee affordable food to even the poorest of the poor.”

In particular, he urged donors to support the appeal for $755 million by the UN World Food Programme (WFP) to sustain food aid to some of the world’s most vulnerable people.

In addition, he called for a substantial increase in expenditures on agriculture, adding that trade and investment should be used to bring about a ‘Green revolution’ of improved agricultural productivity across Africa.

The Secretary-General’s visit to Ghana is the first stop on a four-nation tour of West Africa that will also take him to Liberia, Burkina Faso and Côte d’Ivoire.

“We all know what needs to be done,” Mr. Ban said later in his closing remarks to the high-level session. “But the window for decisive action is closing, and it is closing fast. So let us seize this moment. Let us take bold steps. And let us deliver for the people of Africa.”

While at the conference, Mr. Ban met with a number of leaders, including Presidents Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil, Tarja Halonen of Finland and John Agyekum Kufuor of Ghana and Vice President Ana Vilma Albanez de Escobar of El Salvador, and discussed the issue of rising food costs with all of them.