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The Israel-Syria-Turkey Triangle: Where Do We Go From Here?

The Israel-Syria-Turkey triangle has long been shaped by a mix of historical grievances, shifting alliances, and pressing security concerns. Today, the region faces overlapping crises—from the Syrian conflict and its humanitarian toll, to Israel’s evolving regional posture, to Turkey’s delicate balancing between strategic interests and domestic imperatives. This seminar will examine the dynamics driving relations among the three states, focusing on how unresolved disputes intersect with new opportunities for dialogue and resolution. Particular attention will be given to the fault-lines, the influence of external powers, energy and water security, and the role of regional normalization efforts. The central question remains: can pragmatic cooperation overcome entrenched mistrust, or will the region remain locked in cycles of confrontation? The seminar will outline potential scenarios and policy pathways to navigate this volatile triangle toward greater stability.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Kerim Uras graduated from Ankara University, Political Science Faculty, International Relations Department in 1985 and completed his master's degree from Ankara University on Iraq and its Ethnic Structure in 1987. Starting his career in 1985 in the Cyprus Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Ankara, Uras carried out various diplomatic missions abroad, in Germany-Hannover, Cyprus, London, and New York UN, in addition to working at the Cyprus-Greece, Middle East, Europe, and NATO Departments in Capital. He served as Ambassador-designate to Israel while residing in Ankara (due to the Mavi Marmara incident) between 2010 and 2011. Kerim Uras served as Turkish Ambassador to Greece between 2011 and 2016. In Ankara, he served as Chief Foreign Policy Advisor to the Prime Minister of Türkiye and as a Member of the Foreign Policy Board from 2016 to 2018. He served as Turkish Ambassador to Canada between 2018 and 2023 and retired from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Kerim Uras has been working as Advisor to the Chairman at Çalık Holding and is Honorary Fellow at Carleton University, Ottawa, Canada, in NPSIA-MTS as of 2023. He is married with three children. 

Amichai Magen
Amichai Magen
Ali Yaycioglu

Registration required. Virtual to Public. If prompted for a password, use: 123456.
Only those with an active Stanford ID with access to Encina Hall C231 (William J. Perry Conference Room) may attend in person. 

Kerim Uras
Seminars
Israel Studies
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Historically, external threats have tended to unite Israelis and impose a measure of national cohesion on its fractured politics. Yet two years after the worst external attack in the country's history, and in the face of multiple external challenges, Israel is internally divided as never before. Indeed, the country can now be said to be in the midst of a constitutional crisis centered on competing interpretations of democracy and Jewish identity. Few scholars are better placed to analyze this crisis than Dr. Masua Sagiv, a leading analyst of Israeli political culture and constitutional order. Join Amichai Magen in conversation with Masua Sagiv.

Dr. Masua Sagiv is Senior Faculty at the Shalom Hartman Institute and Senior Fellow at the Helen Diller Institute for Jewish Law and Israel Studies at UC Berkeley School of Law. Masua’s scholarly work focuses on the development of contemporary Judaism in Israel, as a culture, religion, nationality, and as part of Israel’s identity as a Jewish and democratic state. Her research explores the role of law, state actors, and civil society organizations in promoting social change across diverse issues: shared society, religion and gender, religion and state, and Jewish peoplehood. Her recently published book Radical Conservatism (Carmel, 2024) examines the use of law in the Halachic Feminist struggle in Israel.

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Or Rabinowitz

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Masua Sagiv
Seminars
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The 2023-25 Hamas-Israel war proved to be not only the longest war in Israel's history but, remarkably, given that Hamas is a non-state terrorist organization, a war with profound regional consequences. As multiple regional and global actors seek to influence the "day after" in Gaza for their own strategic interests, questions about the broader meaning and implications of the Gaza-centered conflict assume greater international importance. The war has catalyzed a series of regional and global shifts, exposing the limits of external actors, testing the resilience of long-standing alliances, and reshaping the strategic landscape of the Middle East. In this timely conversation, moderated by Or Rabinowitz, Oded Ailam, former head of the Mossad’s Counterterrorism Division, will offer an in-depth analysis of how the Hamas-Israel war continues to reverberate across the region and beyond.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Oded Ailam is a seasoned security and intelligence expert with a career spanning over two decades in Israel’s elite intelligence agency the Mossad. Among his many high-ranking roles, he was the director of the Mossad’s Counter-Terrorism Center (CTC). After retiring from the Mossad, Ailam transitioned into the private sector, offering security and strategic consulting services. Ailam is frequently invited to lecture at international conferences. His insights are regularly featured on FOX News, CNN, Newsmax, The Washington Post, Newsweek, as well as most of the major European media. Ailam writes regularly in Israel Hayom newspaper and other international outlets and appears regularly on prime-time television in Israel.  Ailam is a senior researcher in the Jerusalem Center for Security and Foreign Affairs (JCFA), and an advising analyst to FDD, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies in Washington. Ailam is a graduate of Ben-Gurion University, where he earned a degree in Industrial Engineering and Management. He also founded a company specializing in industrial quality control solutions. He published his first short novel, a bestseller in Israel. He is a writer and contributor to scripts in Hollywood, France, and Israel, bringing his expertise in espionage and security to the world of storytelling.

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Or Rabinowitz

Virtual Only Event.

Oded Ailam
Seminars

Wednesday, February 25, 10:00 am PT. Click to register.

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THREE DECADES OF UNIVERSAL HEALTH COVERAGE IN TAIWAN: ACHIEVEMENTS AND CHALLENGES

Taiwan’s National Health Insurance (NHI), now in its 30th year, is internationally recognized for achieving universal coverage, providing comprehensive, low-cost, and accessible care to more than 99% of the population. Its strong digital infrastructure—most notably the smart card system—proved instrumental during the COVID-19 pandemic, significantly enhancing the program’s effectiveness.

Yet alongside these achievements, the NHI faces pressing challenges in financial sustainability and care delivery. Taiwan’s rapidly aging population, combined with the emergence of new medical technologies and therapeutics, has heightened public expectations and demand for better care, further straining the system’s finances. Over three decades, stringent expenditure controls have helped contain costs but at the expense of workforce adequacy, timely adoption of innovations, and quality management of chronic diseases.

Future reforms will inevitably need to focus on raising premiums, diversifying funding sources, and optimizing healthcare delivery to balance quality with sustainability. The core dilemma, however, lies in how public finance instruments can be leveraged to ensure adequate and sustainable funding to meet the population’s growing healthcare needs. Paradoxically, the NHI’s consistently high public approval rating—hovering around 90% in recent years—may make substantive reform politically more difficult if not impossible.

Taiwan’s experience offers important lessons for other countries. First, strong political commitment is essential for both the establishment and ongoing success of universal health coverage. Second, robust information technology infrastructure is critical to efficiency. Third, there is no “free lunch”: in a system like Taiwan’s, where health expenditure is kept at a relatively low at 7% of GDP, stringent cost controls inevitably carry serious adverse consequences. Finally, Taiwan demonstrates that even the most celebrated and popular systems face continual challenges, reforms are rarely straightforward, and long-term sustainability can never be taken for granted.

Dr. Hongjen Chang

Hongjen Chang is the current Chairman and CEO of YFY Biotech Management Co., in addition to serving as the Chairperson for several other private biotech firms. Before joining the YFY Group—which has grown from a paper mill into a conglomerate with interests in electronics, finance, biotech, and agriculture—Dr. Chang dedicated over 16 years to Taiwan’s Health Ministry. From 2005 to 2021, he also led Taiwan Global BioFund as its CEO. Widely recognized in Taiwan for his extensive public health administration experience, Dr. Chang is credited with implementing the smart card program during his time as President and CEO of BNHI, the country’s universal health care institution. This initiative was crucial to Taiwan's early success in containing the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. Dr. Chang holds a medical degree from National Yang-Ming Medical College, an M.S. in Public Health from National Taiwan University, and an M.S. in Health Policy and Management from Harvard School of Public Health.

Karen Eggleston
Karen Eggleston, Director of the Stanford Asia Health Policy Program

Webinar via Zoom

Dr. Hongjen Chang, Chairman and CEO of YFY Biotech Management Co.
Seminars
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SCCEI Seminar Series (Fall 2025)


Friday, November 21, 2025 | 12:00 pm -1:20 pm Pacific Time
Goldman Room E409, Encina Hall, 616 Jane Stanford Way



Public Displays of Alignment: Firm Speech in Autocratic Regimes

 

Political speech by firms is increasingly common around the world. The research examines the government as an important, yet understudied, audience for such speech, focusing on how Chinese firms rhetorically align with the state. We construct a new measure of firms’ rhetorical alignment with the ruling regime and implement it in China, where such behavior is widespread. To interpret the function of rhetorical alignment, we develop a model that nests three common explanations —cheap talk, benefit-seeking, and insurance commitment— and derive testable predictions. Using the new measure, we show that aligned firms’ stock returns fall more when regime reputation deteriorates; alignment rises after regulatory investigations that heighten expropriation risk; and alignment correlates negatively with profitability but positively with performance on political objectives. These patterns are difficult to reconcile with cheap talk or benefit-seeking alone and point to insurance-commitment as a central motive for this form of political speech.

Please register for the event to receive email updates and add it to your calendar. Lunch will be provided.



About the Speaker 
 

Jaya Wen headshot

Jaya Wen is an Assistant Professor in the Business, Government and the International Economy Unit at Harvard Business School. ​Her research focuses on issues in development economics, political economy, and firm behavior. 

She serves as the Director of Research for the China Econ Lab and a faculty co-chair of the China and the Global Economy Initiative. Wen is also an affiliate of the Center for International Development and the Weatherhead Research Cluster on Business and Government. 



Questions? Contact Xinmin Zhao at xinminzhao@stanford.edu
 


Goldman Room E409, Encina Hall

Jaya Wen, Assistant Professor, Harvard Business School
Seminars
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Subscription Models for High-Value, High-Cost Medicines: Lessons Learned from the US Experience

Government healthcare payors in Asia and globally may face financial incentives to restrict use of high-cost medications. Yet, restrictions on access to high-value medications may have deleterious effects on population health. Advance purchase commitments (APCs), wherein a payor commits to purchase a certain quantity of medications at lower prices, offer payors incentives to increase access to high-value medications and companies guaranteed revenue; a potential win-win-win for patients, business and society.

Dr. Conti will discuss the United States payor experience with subscription models, a type of APC, to support increased access to high-value medicines. She will focus on direct-acting antivirals (DAAs), available since 2013, that can cure chronic infection with Hepatitis C virus (HCV). With prices upwards of $90,000 for a treatment course, many payors struggle to ensure access to DAAs to populations in need of treatment. Since 2018, several U.S. states have implemented HCV subscription models, and a national HCV elimination strategy featuring a DAA subscription model has been announced.

Dr. Conti will review the empirical evidence on impacts and lessons learned from implementation to date, as well as provide a framework for payors interested in pursuing subscription models targeting DAAs and other high-value, high-cost medicines.

Dr. Rena Conti

Rena Conti is an associate professor of markets, public policy, and law at Questrom School of Business, Boston University. Professor Conti is the co-director of the Technology Policy and Research Initiative, a joint program between Questrom School of Business and the Law School, and the life sciences markets co-lead at the Ravi K. Mehrotra Institute for Business Markets and Society at Questrom School of Business.

Professor Conti holds a Ph.D. from Harvard University Graduate School of Arts and Sciences in health policy and economics. She was a faculty at the University of Chicago between 2006 and 2018. Professor Conti has published extensively on biopharmaceutical pricing, competition, and innovation. Professor Conti has testified on the economics of biopharmaceutical markets in hearings held by the U.S. Senate, the U.S. House of Representatives, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, the Federal Trade Commission, and numerous state legislative houses. Professor Conti served as Special Government Advisor to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) 2022-2023 and has held additional advisory roles at the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Professor Conti served as the lead economist on the establishment of the State of Louisiana’s landmark Subscription Model for Hepatitis C Virus Elimination (HepCfreeLa). Professor Conti currently serves as an appointed member of the New Jersey Drug Affordability Council and is an elected member of the Conference on Research in Income and Wealth. She currently serves as a board member of the Boston University Medical Group.

The research of Professor Conti has been featured in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the Washington Post, Bloomberg News, USA Today, the Chicago Tribune, the Boston Globe, the LA Times, 60 Minutes, the Daily Show, Vox, the Atlantic, Statnews, and the Colbert Report, among other print and media outlets. Grants and awards from the National Cancer Institute, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the National Science Foundation, the Sloan Foundation, the Commonwealth Fund, American Cancer Society, and Arnold Ventures, among other sources, support her research.     

Karen Eggleston
Karen Eggleston, Director of the Stanford Asia Health Policy Program
Rena M. Conti, Ph.D., Associate Professor, Markets, Public Policy and Law at Questrom School of Business, Boston University
Seminars
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Professor Karnit Flug served the the Governor of the Bank of Israel from 2013 to 2018, overseeing the stability of the country's financial system and advising the Israeli government on economic policy, taxation, and growth strategies. In a career spanning four decades, Professor Flug has gained an unparalled insider's view into the stucture, strengths, vulnerabilities, and possible trajectories of the Israeli economy. After two years of war and growing international challenges, where is the Israeli economy now and where might it be going? Join Amichai Magen in conversation with Karnit Flug. 

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Karnit Flug is the William Davidson Senior Fellow for Economic Policy at the Center for Governance and the Economy at the Israel Democracy Institute. After she completed her five-year term as Governor of the Bank of Israel in 2018, she joined the Department of Economics at Hebrew University. Prior to her appointment as Governor, Flug was the Bank of Israel’s Deputy Governor. Previously, Flug was Director of the Research Department and Chief Economist of the Bank of Israel. She published numerous papers on macroeconomic policies, the labor market, balance of payments and social policies. She was an economist at the International Monetary Fund, before returning to Israel to join the Research Department of the Bank of Israel. She also worked at the Inter-American Development Bank in Washington D.C. as a Senior Research Economist. She served on a number of public and government committees, including the Committee on Increasing Competitiveness in the Economy, the Committee for Social and Economic Change ("the Trajtenberg Committee"), the Defense Budget. Flug received her M.A. (cum laude) in Economics from The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, and her Ph.D. in Economics from Columbia University.

Virtual Event Only.

Amichai Magen
Amichai Magen

Virtual Only Event.

Karnit Flug
Seminars

Join us for our next webinar with Karnit Flug, the William Davidson Senior Fellow for Economic Policy at the Center for Governance and the Economy at the Israel Democracy Institute, on Wednesday, February 11, at 10:00 am PT.

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The 1979 Islamic Revolution in Iran turned what were formerly close allies into mortal enemies. For decades after the revolution, Iran and Israel fought each other in the shadows - through clandestine operations and proxies - but avoided direct military confrontation. This changed dramatically over the past two years. With Iran on the verge of nuclear breakout, the Islamic Republic launched hundreds of ballistic missiles against Israel in April and October of 2024. Having coordinated its response closely with the United States, Israel struck back in June 2025, aiming to destroy Iran’s ballistic missile stockpiles and set back its nuclear program. What were the actual outcomes of the 12-day Iran-Israel war? Is Iran more motivated than ever to acquire nuclear weapons? And what comes next in the Iran-Israel conflict? Join Or Rabinowitz in conversation with Sima Shine and Raz Zimmt. 

ABOUT THE SPEAKERS

Sima Shine is a Senior Researcher and former Director of the research program "Iran and the Shiite Axis" at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS). For most of her career, Ms. Shine served in the Israeli Intelligence Community. Her last position was Head of the Research & Evaluation Division of the Mossad (2003-2007).  After her retirement from the Mossad, Shine served as Deputy Head of Strategic Affairs in Israel's National Security Council (2008-2009) and then (2009 -2016) served in the Ministry of Strategic Affairs, where she was responsible, inter alia, for the Iranian file and was deputy Director General.

Dr. Raz Zimmt is the Director of the Iran and the Shiite Axis research program at the Institute for National Security Studies (INSS). He is also the co-editor of the institute’s journal, Strategic Assessment. He holds a master's degree and a Ph.D. in Middle Eastern history from Tel Aviv University. His Ph.D. dissertation focused on Iranian policy towards Nasserism and Arab radicalism between 1954 and 1967. Additionally, he is a research fellow at the Alliance Center for Iranian Studies at Tel-Aviv University. He is the author of the book “Iran From Within: State and Society in the Islamic Republic," published (in Hebrew) in 2022, and has published extensively on Iranian politics, society, and foreign policy. He has also regularly provided expert commentary to Israeli and international media. Dr. Zimmt is a veteran Iran watcher in the Israeli Defense Forces, where he served for more than two decades.

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Or Rabinowitz

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Sima Shine
Raz Zimmt
Seminars
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Emmanuel Navon webinar

French-born Israeli political scientist, author, and foreign policy expert, Emmanuel Navon is the author of several books, including The Star and the Scepter: A Diplomatic History of Israel, published in 2020 and which has since been translated into French, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, and Mandarin. A comprehensive, historically informed survey of Israel's external relations, The Star and the Scepter provides a unique vantage point from which to explore the past, present, and possible futures of Israel's place in the world. Join Amichai Magen in conversation with Emmanuel Navon.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Dr. Emmanuel Navon lectures in International Relations at Tel Aviv University, is a Senior Fellow at the Jerusalem Institute for Strategy and Security (JISS) and is a foreign affairs analyst for i24news. The author of four books, he has published in leading IR journals, and his commentary has appeared in outlets such as Le Monde and Newsweek. Previously, Navon served as CEO of ELNET-Israel, a public-policy think tank. Dr. Navon was born in Paris, France, and was educated in a bilingual (French/English) school. He graduated in public administration from Sciences-Po. In 1993 he moved to Israel and earned a Ph.D. in international relations from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

Virtual Event Only.

Amichai Magen
Amichai Magen

Virtual Only Event.

Emmanuel Navon
Seminars
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Ksenia Svetlova webinar

What has been Israel’s understanding and response to Russia’s assault on Ukraine? How did the Russia-Ukraine war impact Israeli national security and foreign policy? And what strategic lessons should Israel derive from the Russia-Ukraine war for its own national security? Join former Member of Knesset, Ksenia Svetlova, in conversation with Or Rabinowitz.

ABOUT THE SPEAKER

Ksenia Svetlova is an Executive Director of ROPES – The Regional Organization for Peace, Economics and Security, an associate fellow at Chatham House, London and a former member of the Israeli Knesset. She focuses on issues of Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Israeli-Arab relations, Russian influence in the Middle East, as well as the regional and international relations of the Middle East. Svetlova has covered the Middle East for fifteen years for Israeli and International media. She reported from Gaza, West Bank, Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Jordan, Tunisia and Libya. 

Virtual Event Only.

Or Rabinowitz

Virtual Only Event.

Ksenia Svetlova
Seminars
Israel Studies
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