Fad-Loving Japan May Derail a Sony Smartphone
FSI researchers strive to understand how countries relate to one another, and what policies are needed to achieve global stability and prosperity. International relations experts focus on the challenging U.S.-Russian relationship, the alliance between the U.S. and Japan and the limitations of America’s counterinsurgency strategy in Afghanistan.
Foreign aid is also examined by scholars trying to understand whether money earmarked for health improvements reaches those who need it most. And FSI’s Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center has published on the need for strong South Korean leadership in dealing with its northern neighbor.
FSI researchers also look at the citizens who drive international relations, studying the effects of migration and how borders shape people’s lives. Meanwhile FSI students are very much involved in this area, working with the United Nations in Ethiopia to rethink refugee communities.
Trade is also a key component of international relations, with FSI approaching the topic from a slew of angles and states. The economy of trade is rife for study, with an APARC event on the implications of more open trade policies in Japan, and FSI researchers making sense of who would benefit from a free trade zone between the European Union and the United States.
Docudrama based on real events about a nearly illiterate woman who becomes one of the founders of Poland's Solidarity union. Directed by Volker Schlöndorff and filmed in the Lenin shipyard in Gdansk.
Dr. Robert Rakove, Stanford University lecturer in the Program in International Relations, will introduce the film and lead a post-screening discussion.
Part of the 2013 ICA Summer Film Festival, "Enacting Change: Stories of Courage and Resistance" offering films from around the world depicting stories of individuals who challenge the status quo, facing adversity with bravery.
Sponsored by the Program in International Relations and The Europe Center
Cubberley Auditorium
CISAC Co-Director Tino Cuéllar talks about how borders shape our society and how they impacted a young boy who was born just a few blocks from the U.S. border-- himself.
The Europe Center's 2-day multidisciplinary dialogue on migration -- the subject of great and growing consequence in the contemporary world. Conference participants from a wide range of theoretical, case-study, and comparative approaches will address the phenomenon of population movement and the experience of migration in its various qualities.
The agenda for this conference is below.
Co-sponsored by the University of Vienna, the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center, and the Center for International Security and Cooperation
Bechtel Conference Center
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8:30 – 8:45 |
Registration | |
| 8:45 – 9:00 | Welcome & Opening Remarks | |
| 9:00 – 10:15 | “The Right Talent, Essentially” Evan Wittenberg, Senior Vice President, People, Box Kyung H. Yoon, CEO, Talent Age Associates Moderator: Greg McKeown (MBA '08), CEO, THIS, Inc. |
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| 10:15 – 11:10 | “The Rx for Innovation” Baba Shiv, Sanwa Bank, Limited, Professor of Marketing, Stanford Graduate School of Business |
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| 11:10 – 11:30 | Break | |
| 11:30 – 12:30 | “Innovation Talent Spanning Boundaries” Chunyan Zhou, Director, International Institute of Triple Helix (IITH) Morten Petersen, Assistant Professor, Aalborg University Kung Wang, Chair Professor, China University of Technology Moderator: Henry Etzkowitz, Senior Researcher, H-STAR Institute, Stanford University |
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| 12:30 – 1:30 | Lunch | |
| 1:30 – 2:10 | “Accelerating the Next Generation of Innovation Talent” Cameron Teitelman (BS '10), Founder & CEO, StartX Divya Nag, Founder, StartX Med |
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| 2:10 – 2:40 | “Silicon Valley Perspective” Russell Hancock, President & CEO, Joint Venture Silicon Valley |
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| 2:40 – 3:00 | Break | |
| 3:00 – 4:30 | “Global Policy Perspectives” Sigal Admony-Ravid, Consul for Economic Affairs to the West Coast, State Of Israel Chao-Han Liu, Vice President, Academia Sinica Priya Guha, British Consul General in San Francisco Angus Lapsley, Director European & Global Issues, Cabinet Office, United Kingdom |
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| 4:30 - 5:15 | Closing Remarks & Networking Reception |
Seawell Family Boardroom
(Bass Center Room B400)
Knight Management Center
Stanford Graduate School of Business
Shorenstein APARC
Stanford University
Encina Hall, Room E301
Stanford, CA 94305-6055
Dong Sung Kim, a lawyer, is a 2013 visiting scholar in the Korean Studies Program. Mr. Kim, former member of the National Assembly in South Korea, served in the national defense committee of the Assembly.
Mr. Kim was an adjunct professor at the Graduate School of Public Administration and Local Autonomy, Hanyang University, 2010–2011. He began his career in law as judge in the district of Incheon in 2000.
Mr. Kim holds a BA in Law from Seoul National University and an MA in Business Administration from Yonsei University, Korea.
SPRIE's Silicon Valley Project is focused on innovation talent, and more specifically on the development and management of innovation talent, as well as the policies that affect innovation talent. This brown bag seminar will feature two perspectives about innovation talent, giving attendees an idea of the situation in Korea and Sweden.
The brown bag seminar will begin with "Innovation Talent in Korea: Challenges and Responses" by Sunyang Chung, Ph.D., Professor of Technology Management; Dean of the William F. Miller School of MOT at Konkuk University; and Visiting Scholar at SPRIE. Dr. Chung will discuss the situation of innovation talent in Korea and the responses of the Korean government and Samsung.
Dr. Anne Lidgard, Director of the VINNOVA Silicon Valley Office, will then speak on "Swedish Policy for Attracting Innovation Talent." Sweden is a country with only 9 million people at the northern edge of Europe. There is a very high risk that global flows of talent will bypass Sweden in the future. Dr. Lidgard's talk will cover some policy actions taken over the past years to facilitate the attraction of foreign talent and also look at some of the effects.
After the presentations, attendees will have the opportunity to ask questions in a Q&A session.
Lunch will not be provided, but there will be sweet snacks for those attending.
Dr. Chung
Dr Sunyang Chung, Dean at Miller School of MOT, Konkuk University
In 2004, on the basis of his research work, Dr. Chung was selected as the youngest lifetime fellow of the Korean Academy of Science and Technology (KAST - Korea's equivalent of the National Academy of Sciences). Since March 1, 2008, he has worked as Director of KAST's Policy Research Center.
In 2008 he established the William F. Miller School of MOT (Management of Technology) at Seoul's Konkuk University. Dr. Chung currently serves as Dean of the Miller MOT School.
She joined VINNOVA, the Swedish Governmental Innovation Agency in January 2006, and has been part of the management team since May 2009. As of June 2012, she is Director of VINNOVA's Silicon Valley Office and a Visiting Scholar at Stanford University.
Oberndorf Event Center, 3rd Floor North Building, Stanford Graduate School of Business
Encina Hall
616 Serra Street
Stanford, CA 94305-6055
Following her undergraduate studies in journalism and Spanish at U.C. Berkeley, Brunner spent six years in the professional arena, first as a reporter for the Los Angeles Times and then in public relations/marketing for two nonprofit organizations. She came to Stanford University this fall to undertake her master’s degree in international policy studies, concentrating in global justice. Her professional pursuits have long been coupled with passionate activism in the arenas of human rights advocacy, conflict resolution in Israel, and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, and poverty reduction. Brunner was an active participant in the winter quarter’s Sanela Diana Jenkins Human Rights Speaker Series: The International Criminal Court: The Next Decade. Brunner recently returned from a study trip to Rwanda where she delved into issues of human rights, governance, and economic development through meetings with government officials, NGOs, and the business community.
China’s impressive economic growth over the last three decades and increasing political influence and military capabilities have caused people around the world to wonder or worry about how China will use its new-found power. More specifically, they wonder whether, and how, China might attempt to transform the international system that has enabled it to become the world’s second largest economy and potential contender for global leadership.
Thomas Fingar, the Oksenberg-Rohlen Distinguished Fellow at Stanford’s Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, addressed these and related questions during the Walter H. Shorenstein Asia-Pacific Research Center’s annual Oksenberg Lecture on May 22.
After describing how China has benefitted from participation in the liberal order led and maintained by the United States, Fingar argued that China has neither the will nor the ability to lead or transform the existing system, and that its continued “rise” will increase its stake in the system and make it even less willing to seek changes that could jeopardize its own success. He also suggested that other nations benefitting from the existing order would constrain China from attempting radical change even if it wanted to.
Following Fingar’s remarks, Jia Qingguo, associate dean of the School of International Studies at Peking University, said it is important to recognize that China is in the midst of a major transition. It is both a developed and a developing country, he said.
Thomas Christensen, director of Princeton University’s China and the World Program, added that due to China’s weight in the world, it will be called on more and more to collaborate on critical global issues, such as climate change and disease.
Fingar’s keynote remarks drew on “China's Vision of World Order,” a chapter published in Strategic Asia 2012–13: China's Military Challenge (National Bureau for Asian Research), as well as Shorenstein APARC’s research initiative on China’s interactions with its neighbors.
Since 2002, Shorenstein APARC has held the Oksenberg Lecture Series as a tribute to the legacy of Michel Oksenberg, a pioneer in the field of Chinese politics and an important force in shaping American attitudes toward China.
An audio podcast of the May 22 event is available on the Shorenstein APARC website.