BRAC net, world youth community and Open Learning Campus

Sir Fazle Abed -top 70 alumni networks & 5 scots curious about hi-trust hi-tech

he Blum Center for Developing Economies is UC Berkeley’s interdisciplinary hub for students, researchers, and scholars focusing on global poverty and inequality.

The Center enables interdisciplinary problem-solving in key areas such as energy, health, education, financial services, food, water, and sanitation — operating on the notion that a world-class public university must be a force for tackling society’s most urgent and important problems. Since its founding in 2006, the Blum Center’s mission has been to train people, source and support innovations, and develop scalable solutions.

The Blum Center has five initiatives:

Big Ideas@Berkeley
  
BigIdeas@Berkeley: BigIdeas@Berkeley is one of the oldest and most international university-based student idea contests. In a rigorous, yearlong process, the contest provides funding, support, and mentoring to students seeking to have real-world impact in the areas of clean energy, global health, and food security, among other global challenges. Since 2005, Big Ideas has attracted over 5,000 student participants from more than 18 universities, and has launched dozens of companies, nonprofits, and social enterprises. Winning Big Ideas teams have gone on to secure more than $55 million in additional funding to support a wide variety of ventures with impact all over the world.
Social Innovator OnRamp Resources
  
Social Innovator OnRamp Resources: The Social Innovator OnRamp helps students grow their ideas for social impact while they are still in school. The OnRamp course and its online resource guide are designed to bridge the gap between early stage ideation (from design classes, research, or competitions like Big Ideas) and off-campus implementation. The program supports graduate and undergraduate students from across campus with best practices, tools, and networks as they plan, grow, and evaluate their own social change projects and social startups.
Global Poverty & Practice Minor
  
Global Poverty & Practice Minor: Global Poverty & Practice (GPP) is one of the most popular academic minors at UC Berkeley. GPP trains undergraduates to critically analyze the history and sources of poverty and inequality, and prepares them to engage with poverty alleviation in communities all over the world. To date, more than 13,500 UC Berkeley students have taken GPP classes and have worked across the United States and in over 50 countries, graduating to join a new generation of innovators, social entrepreneurs, activists, and scholars.
Development Impact Lab
  
Development Impact Lab: Founded in 2012 with a $20 million investment from USAID, the Blum Center’s Development Impact Lab (DIL) is a global consortium of researchers, nongovernmental organizations, and industry partners committed to advancing international development through science and technology. Today, more than 90 DIL innovations are being tested and scaled in 30 countries with partners in the private and nonprofit sectors.
Development Engineering
  
Development Engineering: Development Engineering is an interdisciplinary training program launched in 2014 for UC Berkeley graduate students who aim to use technology to address the needs of people living in poverty. Development Engineering coursework prepares students in engineering, business, and the social sciences to create, pilot, and evaluate technological interventions and solutions for low-resource settings. The program is the first of its kind in the country.

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Agenda

* All times listed are Pacific Time

 Printable View
 
BREAKFAST

8:00 AM -

 8:45 AM


 
PLENARY SESSION

9:00 AM -

 10:00 AM


Stronger Together: Moving from Conflict to Cooperation

From the Charleston shootings and the spread of ISIL, to the ongoing discrimination against vulnerable groups, there is no shortage of reminders that the world must continue to address the ongoing risks of intolerance and extremism. While access to information is a powerful tool for combatting these threats, a true culture of inclusion requires more than information alone—even in our tech-focused, increasingly interconnected world. To truly achieve equality of opportunity for all individuals, it is critical that students also expose and speak out against discrimination and violence, and go beyond this by taking part in the challenging work of building networks of cooperation and trust. This session will explore how students, universities, and civil society can:

• Move beyond tolerance alone and begin the hard work of building cross-cultural alliances.
• Create proactive dialogue with historically underrepresented, marginalized, or insecure sectors of society.
• Launch effective and inclusive social movements that can harness online tools for tangible, offline impact.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Gianna Toboni, Correspondent and Producer, VICE on HBO 

PARTICIPANTS:

Obiageli Ezekwesili, Senior Economic Advisor, Africa Economic Development & Policy Initiative (AEDPI), Co-Convener, #BringBackOurGirls Movement 
John Lewis, Congressman, Georgia's 5th Congressional District Representative 
Abuzar Royesh, Founder, One Two Three Organization 
Maysoon Zayid, Comedian, Writer, Disability Advocate, New York Arab American Comedy Festival 

 
SKILL SESSIONS

10:30 AM -

 11:45 AM


Design Swarm: Session I

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

“Design swarming” is a collaborative problem-solving process during which small teams of CGI U students will address a relevant design challenge selected from one of CGI U’s five focus areas. In this session, students will work with experts in order to generate an innovative, compelling, and realistic set of tangible solutions. Participants will have an opportunity to address a design problem relevant to environment, health, and human rights issues.

No previous design experience is required, but attendance at both the morning and afternoon sessions is mandatory for all participants.

 

Monitoring and Evaluating Your Results

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

How can CGI U participants ensure that their commitments are achieving tangible progress and fulfilling their mission? Discussions will explore measurement and evaluation methods that can enhance the quality and effectiveness of commitments, enable attendees to identify potential design flaws, and build upon existing strategies to maximize outcomes and inform future efforts. This session is intended for students looking to use data to inform strategy and improve impact.

PARTICIPANTS:

Allison Duncan, Founder and CEO, Amplifier Strategies 
Jason Rissman, Managing Director, OpenIDEO, IDEO 

 

Raising Money for Your Commitment

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

How can CGI U students best access and leverage the funding opportunities and resources available to them? Participants will learn to navigate traditional, grant-based funding streams as well as maximize the benefits of online fundraising tools, social media, and other digital marketing platforms. This session is intended for students who want to hone their skills in pitch-making and establish enduring connections with potential funders.

PARTICIPANTS:

Breanna DiGiammarino, Senior Director Social Innovation, Indiegogo 
Kim Meredith, Executive Director, Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society 

 

Strengthening Organizational Capacity

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

Limited personnel and organizational capacity can significantly reduce the ability of CGI U participants to carry out their commitments and bring them to scale. This session will introduce strategies for managing and building a staff, as well as recruiting, organizing, and retaining an engaged volunteer team. In addition, students will learn how to expand their reach and impact by identifying and securing partnerships with a wide range of campus and community partners.

PARTICIPANTS:

Eric Nonacs, Principal, Golden State 
Eliza Pesuit, Executive Director, Global Glimpse 

 
WORKING SESSIONS

10:30 AM -

 11:45 AM


Beyond Diversity: Inclusion and Empowerment on Campus

Peace and Human Rights

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

Recent campus protests have highlighted the urgent need to address racial inequality and injustice across American society. It is critical that universities move beyond a focus on diversity alone in order to build truly open and inclusive campuses. This requires a willingness to engage in honest, challenging discussions about race, privilege and identity, and a willingness to build tangible programs and enterprises as a result of those conversations. A growing social movement on campus and beyond is calling for urgent reforms and meaningful opportunities for marginalized communities in order to create an environment that is more inclusive and equitable. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Build an inclusive classroom environment that reflects a diversity of voices and opinions in its curriculum, faculty, and student body. 
• Develop effective recruitment and retention programs for African-American, Hispanic-American, and indigenous populations, both on campus and in the workforce.
• Address racial discrimination and inequities in schools, the workplace, and the criminal justice system. 

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Vanessa Camones, Chief Executive Officer, theMIX agency 

PARTICIPANTS:

Mike de la Rocha, Founder and CEO, Revolve Impact 
Reggie Harris, Director of Organizing , The Black Organizing Project 
Brittany Packnett, Executive Director, Teach for America, St. Louis 
Nick Tilsen, Executive Director, Thunder Valley Community Development Corporation 

 

Educating Refugees and Children in Crisis

Education

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

More than 40 million young people do not have access to formal education as a result of armed conflict and humanitarian crises around the world, and over 2 million children are currently out of school due to the Syrian refugee crisis alone. Education during these times is critical, not only to provide a sense of safety and normalcy to young people, but also to ensure that individuals in displaced communities are equipped with the tools and long-term solutions necessary to rebuild their lives. Concerted cooperation across sectors can prevent millions of children from becoming a lost generation. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Ensure that education is a fundamental part of effective humanitarian policy and response, with a focus on training high-quality teachers. 
• Establish a global emergency education financing mechanism. 
• Support refugee children through skilled volunteering, online distance learning programs, and the distribution of essential school materials.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Kate Jastram, Lecturer, Blum Center for Developing Economies, University of California at Berkeley 

PARTICIPANTS:

Maya Alkateb-Chami, Director, Jusoor 
Elias N. Bou Saab, Minister of Education and Higher Education, Lebanon 
Yad Faeq, Founder and Research Software Engineer, 4th n Town Engineering 

 

Expanding the Circular Economy

Environment and Climate Change

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

A circular economy offers the opportunity to disrupt the way we produce, consume, and reuse products, reducing both the extraction of raw materials and the waste that goes to landfill. These circular models are increasingly attractive to companies around the world and have the potential to generate a total of $1 trillion a year for the global economy by 2025. Furthermore, the departure from individual ownership models to shared economy solutions, such as carpooling and co-working spaces, can support a broader shift in consumption behaviors. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Leverage innovation in recycling technologies to enable production of high-quality, affordable, and sustainable products.
• Reduce our ecological footprint by sourcing materials in regenerative loops rather than linear flows.
• Maximize impact through sustainable design and biomimicry—studying nature’s models to address human-made challenges.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Adva Saldinger, Associate Editor, Devex 

PARTICIPANTS:

  
Kate Brandt, Lead for Sustainability, Google 
Lynelle Cameron, President and CEO, Autodesk Foundation and Senior Director, Autodesk Sustainability, Autodesk, Inc. 
Davida Herzl, Co-Founder and CEO, Aclima 
Beth Rattner, Executive Director, Biomimicry Institute 

 

From Mobiles to Drones: The Next Leapfrog Technologies

Poverty Alleviation

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

Over 1 billion people worldwide live more than two kilometers from a passable road. Without reliable transportation, many of the world’s poor lack a basic foundation for economic growth. However, just as mobile phones leapfrogged landlines, drones and other new technologies may allow us to overcome geographical barriers such as impassable roads, mountains, and rivers, and bring the tools for economic development to those living at the last mile. While the increased use of drones has raised public safety and security concerns, drones also have the potential to transport supplies and services—such as medicines, market goods, and broadband Internet—to some of the world’s hardest-to-reach regions. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Engineer safe and low-cost drones that can be built and repaired in the regions where they are needed most.
• Build off of successful mobile phone platforms and efforts to utilize drones, satellites, and lasers to deliver affordable internet services and ensure access to opportunity in remote parts of the world.
• Support and advance other new technologies that enable online learning and market expansion to last mile communities.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Dan Costa, Editor in Chief, PCMag.com, Ziff Davis 

PARTICIPANTS:

Alice Agogino, Roscoe and Elizabeth Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering, University of California at Berkeley 
Lauren Fletcher, Chief Executive Officer, BioCarbon Engineering 
Dava Newman, Deputy Administrator, NASA 
Paola Santana, Co-Founder, Matternet 

 

Mental Health Care: Fighting Stigma with Social Support

Public Health

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

CGI is partnering with Refinery29 to address the topic of mental health.

The number of young Americans affected by mental illness has increased 35-fold since 1990. Despite progress in the diagnosis and drug-based treatment of mental health disorders, more needs to be done to reduce the stigma of mental illness and strengthen the social support systems that are critical for effective treatment. While individuals in some cultures believe that mental illness is caused by supernatural forces, for others the subject is simply taboo, and these beliefs increase prejudice against those suffering with mental health problems. However, young people are leading the way in combating this stigma through self-expression and by strengthening support systems, and they are harnessing both social media and offline networks as powerful tools to share their own struggles and destigmatize mental health issues. In this session moderated by Refinery29 Health and Wellness Director, Anna Maltby, panelists, students, and civil society stakeholders will explore how to:

• Understand and reduce stigma associated with mental illnesses around the world. 
• Develop programs to increase access to mental health care on college campuses.
• Expand effective social media platforms and social support systems for mental health challenges.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Anna Maltby, Director of Health and Wellness, Refinery29 

PARTICIPANTS:

Khaliya, Co-Founder, Falkora 
Lauren Carson, Founder and Executive Director, Black Girls Smile Inc. 
Kimberly Wayne, Director of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, Seneca Family of Agencies 

 
OFFICE HOURS

12:15 PM -

 1:00 PM


Office Hours with Select Program Participants

Office hours allow attendees to directly connect with program participants and special guests, who share their personal stories or elaborate on comments made during the panel discussions. Attendees can also share their own questions and thoughts, and seek specific advice on commitments.

PARTICIPANTS:

Breanna DiGiammarino, Senior Director Social Innovation, Indiegogo 
Kim Meredith, Executive Director, Stanford Center on Philanthropy and Civil Society 
Craig Minassian, Chief Communications Officer, The Clinton Foundation 
Eric Nonacs, Principal, Golden State 
Dan Osheyack, Chief Marketing Officer, Clinton Global Initiative 
Beverly Watson, Chief Operating Officer, XQ Institute 
Maysoon Zayid, Comedian, Writer, Disability Advocate, New York Arab American Comedy Festival 

 
NETWORKING EVENT

12:15 PM -

 1:30 PM


Lunch

 
OFFICE HOURS

1:00 PM -

 1:45 PM


Office Hours with Select Program Participants

Office hours allow attendees to directly connect with program participants and special guests, who share their personal stories or elaborate on comments made during the panel discussions. Attendees can also share their own questions and thoughts, and seek specific advice on commitments.

PARTICIPANTS:

Alice Agogino, Roscoe and Elizabeth Hughes Professor of Mechanical Engineering, University of California at Berkeley 
Kate Brandt, Lead for Sustainability, Google 
Cady Coleman, NASA Astronaut, NASA Office of the Chief Technologist 
Ashley Collier, Community Manager, MasterCard Foundation 
Haben Girma, Staff Attorney, Disability Rights Advocates 
Jenny Norton, Social Justice Minister, Ramsey Social Justice Foundation 
Adam Smith, Executive Director, Global Communications, Public Affairs & Social Impact , Laureate International Universities 

 
PLENARY SESSION

2:00 PM -

 3:15 PM


Beyond Good Intentions: Designing for Unintended Consequences

Even the most seemingly well-designed initiatives can have unforeseen outcomes, despite experts in nearly every sector working to identify these scenarios in their own work. A campus ban of bottled water can result in increased soda sales on campus. Anti-malaria nets that are used for fishing can deplete regional fish stocks. These examples illustrate that any new project is entered into a system of highly complex processes that encompass intricate social and economic dynamics. By taking into account some of the intended—and unintended—consequences of a proposed solution, the opportunity to create greater sustainable, long-term impact can emerge. This session will explore how student innovators and advocates can:

• Gain extensive knowledge of projects’ target populations and local economies before developing solutions in close collaboration with them. 
• Address the root causes of issues rather than immediate symptoms.
• Ensure solutions have the necessary infrastructure and buy-in to be effectively adopted.
• Invest early in evidence-based methodologies while having the humility to change course if unintended consequences emerge.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Chelsea Clinton, Vice Chair, Clinton Foundation 

PARTICIPANTS:

Mohamed Barrie, Co-founder and Chief Strategic Officer, Wellbody Alliance 
Catlin Powers, Co-Founder and CEO , One Earth Designs 
Premal Shah, Co-Founder and President, Kiva.org 
Rajiv Shah, Distinguished Fellow, Georgetown University School of Foreign Service 
Laura Tyson, Professor, UC Berkeley - Haas School of Business & Blum Center for Developing Economies 

 
SKILL SESSIONS

3:45 PM -

 5:00 PM


Design Swarm: Session II

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

“Design swarming” is a collaborative problem-solving process during which small teams of CGI U students will address a relevant design challenge selected from one of CGI U’s five focus areas. In this session, students will work with experts in order to generate an innovative, compelling, and realistic set of tangible solutions. Participants will have an opportunity to address a design problem relevant to environment, health, and human rights issues.

No previous design experience is required, but attendance at both the morning and afternoon sessions is mandatory for all participants.

 

Monitoring and Evaluating Your Results

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

How can CGI U participants ensure that their commitments are achieving tangible progress and fulfilling their mission? Discussions will explore measurement and evaluation methods that can enhance the quality and effectiveness of commitments, enable attendees to identify potential design flaws, and build upon existing strategies to maximize outcomes and inform future efforts. This session is intended for students looking to use data to inform strategy and improve impact.

PARTICIPANTS:

Ruchira Gupta, Founder, Apne Aap Women Worldwide 
Heather Lofthouse, Director of Special Projects, Blum Center for Developing Economies, UC Berkeley 

 

Raising Money for Your Commitment

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

How can CGI U students best access and leverage the funding opportunities and resources available to them? Participants will learn to navigate traditional, grant-based funding streams as well as maximize the benefits of online fundraising tools, social media, and other digital marketing platforms. This session is intended for students who want to hone their skills in pitch-making and establish enduring connections with potential funders.

PARTICIPANTS:

Christopher Ategeka, Founder and CEO, Rides for Lives 
Jim Bildner, Chief Executive Officer, Draper Richards Kaplan Foundation 
Steph Cordes, Vice Chair, Cordes Foundation 
Eric Stephenson, Portfolio Director, Cordes Foundation 

 

Strengthening Organizational Capacity

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

Limited personnel and organizational capacity can significantly reduce the ability of CGI U participants to carry out their commitments and bring them to scale. This session will introduce strategies for managing and building a staff, as well as recruiting, organizing, and retaining an engaged volunteer team. In addition, students will learn how to expand their reach and impact by identifying and securing partnerships with a wide range of campus and community partners.

PARTICIPANTS:

Ann Marie Burgoyne, Managing Director, Social Innovation, Emerson Collective 
Premal Shah, Co-Founder and President, Kiva.org 

 
WORKING SESSIONS

3:45 PM -

 5:00 PM


Big Data and Human Rights in the Digital Age

Peace and Human Rights

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

Ninety percent of the world’s data has been created in the last two years alone, and by 2020, this data is expected to grow to 44 trillion gigabytes. While big data is often used for e-commerce, search engines, and marketing campaigns, large data sets can also serve as powerful tools for social impact. Human rights activists can use mobile devices, cameras, and a wide range of technologies to gather critical data to monitor human trafficking, reduce electoral fraud, and even anticipate conflict. Yet these campaigns can require significant resources and infrastructure. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Harness affordable, user-friendly data-gathering and analysis tools to democratize the growing field of information activism.
• Utilize artificial intelligence, drones, and sentiment analysis to verify data, detect early warning signs, and prevent and respond to a wide range of humanitarian crises.
• Analyze data from social media, text messages, and satellite imagery to create digital crisis maps that reflect real-time situations on the ground.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Laura Ling, Director of Development & Host, Discovery Digital Networks’ Seeker 

PARTICIPANTS:

Betsy Beaumon, President, Benetech 
Ann Mei Chang, Chief Innovation Officer and Executive Director, U.S. Global Development Lab, USAID 
Emily Jacobi, Founder and Executive Director, Digital Democracy 
Jennifer Lynch, Senior Staff Attorney, Electronic Fronteir Foundation 

 

Investing in a Food Secure Future

Environment and Climate Change

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

More than 800 million people around the world suffer from chronic hunger, and billions more suffer from malnutrition. At the same time, one-third of all food produced worldwide, worth approximately $1 trillion per year, is lost or wasted. The global food system is increasingly vulnerable to climate change, as instability in soil temperature and moisture levels adversely affect crops. Empowering farmers to increase yields on nutrient-rich foods and decrease their ecological footprint will not only reduce hunger, but alleviate poverty by creating new jobs and long-term economic growth. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Develop innovative financing models for small agribusinesses that can mitigate risk for local banks, investors, and smallholder farmers.
• Reduce raw material, water, and energy inputs in the production process and food waste in the consumption cycle.
• Equip women with the tools and resources necessary to become active financial stakeholders and ecological stewards within the agricultural economy.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Tom Kalil, Deputy Director for Technology and Innovation, The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy 

PARTICIPANTS:

Kanchan Amatya, Founder, Sustainable Aquaculture and Microfinance Initiative 
Carl Anthony, Co-Founder, Breakthrough Communities 
Paloma Pavel, Co-Founder, Breakthrough Communities 
Alejandro Velez, Co-Founder and Co-CEO, Back to the Roots 

 

Lessons from Ebola: Investing in Responsive Health Systems

Public Health

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

West Africa is recovering from the worst Ebola epidemic ever recorded, with nearly 30,000 confirmed cases and more than 11,500 deaths. Women were particularly affected by the outbreak, with United Nations sources in Liberia estimating that 75 percent of the Ebola fatalities there were women. While largely contained to Guinea, Liberia, and Sierra Leone, Ebola sparked a widespread public health emergency and exposed dangerous gaps in global health priorities, systems, and governance. In particular, the epidemic highlighted the need for more substantial investment in the foundations of health systems, including human resources, surveillance, infrastructure, and community outreach. The hardest hit countries are now focused on rebuilding health systems to be nimble and accountable, and are sharing lessons that can help prevent future epidemics. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Support the restoration of the health systems and economies of Ebola-affected countries through the work of non-governmental organizations, the private sector, academia, and social justice advocates. 
• Strengthen the essential role of women in rebuilding, sharing knowledge, and enhancing care in the aftermath of epidemics.
• Influence the priorities of humanitarian and global health communities to invest more in prevention systems and be more responsive to the needs of vulnerable countries.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Amy Lockwood, Chief of Staff, University of California, San Francisco, Global Health Sciences 

PARTICIPANTS:

Mohamed Barrie, Co-founder and Chief Strategic Officer, Wellbody Alliance 
Kassia Echavarri-Queen, Board of Directors, Doctors Without Borders 
Dan Hymowitz, Acting Director of Development and External Relations, Africa Governance Initiative 

 

Reinventing High School: How Young People Can Transform Public Education

Education

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

A Michigan State University study found that the skills employers seek most in their future workforce are leadership, communication, and creative problem solving; yet the current high school and college education systems are rooted in the workforce needs of the Industrial Revolution. Students themselves recognize this skills gap, and they are pushing the boundaries of an outdated public school system through youth-driven campaigns and organizing efforts. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Support student and youth-led education reform through organizing forward-looking strategies and action. 
• Engage students and youth to become active and direct participants who design and have agency over their learning and skills development. 
• Brainstorm tangible and practical ideas for empowering students and improving high schools in order to close the skills gap so that students graduate prepared to succeed.

REMARKS:

Linda Murray, Strategic Advisor, XQ Institute 

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Marlene Castro, Manager of Student and Community Strategy and Relations, XQ Institute 

PARTICIPANTS:

Courtney Brousseau, Student, University of California, Berkeley 
Sarahi Espinoza Salamanca, Founder and CEO, DREAMers RoadMap 
Carin Watson, EVP of Learning and Innovation, Singularity University 

 

The Gentrification Debate

Poverty Alleviation

SESSION FEATURES:  SNACKS AVAILABLE

From Mexico City to Beijing, gentrification is transforming and often displacing low-income, vulnerable communities as wealthier residents and businesses move to “up-and-coming” neighborhoods. In the United States, gentrification has more than doubled in the past 15 years, with 1 in 5 lower-income neighborhoods now affected nationally. Median rents have tripled in the last 20 years in San Francisco, with evictions of low-income tenants increasing by 55 percent in the last 5 years. In Luanda, Angola—where more than two-thirds of the city’s residents live on less than $2 a day—luxury one-bedroom apartments rent for as much as $10,000 per month. Yet gentrification, which brings new capital and consumer demand to affected neighborhoods, can create job opportunities for low-income residents if they can remain participants in the local economy. In this session, panelists and CGI U commitment-makers will explore how to:

• Enable low-income residents to access emerging job and entrepreneurship opportunities.
• Advocate for diversity and inclusiveness in affected neighborhoods while increasing access to legal services surrounding tenants’ rights.
• Support grassroots organizations that are working to prevent evictions and preserve long-term affordable housing.

Panel Discussion:

MODERATOR:

Olis Simmons, President & CEO, Youth UpRising 

PARTICIPANTS:

Sebastian Albuja, Senior Program Manager, American Bar Association Rule of Law Initiative 
Abdirashid Hashi, Executive Director, Heritage Institute for Policy Studies (HIPS) 
Doniece Sandoval, Founder and CEO, Lava Mae 

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KERRY GLASGOWIS HUMANITY'S LAST BEST CHANCE - Join search for Sustainaabilty's Curricula

101ways-generation.docx 101 ways education can save the world WHAT IF WE DESIGNED LIFELONG LIVELIHOOD LOEARNING SO THAT so that teachers & students, parent & communities were empowered to be ahead of 100 times more tech rather than the remnants of a system that puts macihnes and their exhausts ahead of human life and nature's renewal 2016 is arguably the first time thet educatirs became front and centre to the question that Von neummn asked journalist to mediate back in 1951- what goods will peoples do with 100 times more tech per decade? It appears that while multilaterals like the Un got used in soundbite and twittering ages to claim they valued rifghts & inclusion, pubblic goods & safety, they fotgot theirUN tech twin in Genva has been practising global connectivity since 1865, that dellow Goats of V neumnn has chiared Intellectual Cooperation in the 1920s which pervesrely became the quasi trade union Unesco- it took Abedian inspired educations in 2016 ro reunite ed and tecah as well as health and trade ; 7 decades of the UN not valuing Numenn's question at its core is quite late, but if we dare graviate UN2 aeound this digital coperation question now we give the younger half if the world a chnace especially as a billion poorest women have been synchronised to deep community human development since 1970

Dear Robert - you kindly asked for a short email so that you could see if there is a CGTN anchor in east coast who might confidentially share views with my expectation of how only Asian young women cultural movements (parenting and community depth but amplified by transparent tech in life shaping markets eg health, food, nature..) can return sustainability to all of us
three of my father's main surveys in The Economist 1962-1977 explain imo where future history will take us (and so why younger half of world need friendship/sustainable adaptation with Chinese youth -both on mainland and diaspora)
 1962 consider japan approved by JF Kennedy: argued good news - 2 new economic models were emerging through japan korea south and taiwan relevant to all Asia Rising (nrxt to link the whole trading/supply chains of the far east coast down through hong kong and cross-seas at singapore)
1 rural keynsianism ie 100% productivity in village first of all food security- borlaug alumni ending starvation
2 supercity costal trade models which designed hi-tech borderless sme value chains- to build a 20 million person capital or an 8 million person superport you needed the same advances in engineering - partly why this second economic model was win-win for first time since engines begun Glasgow 1760 ; potentially able to leverage tech giant leaps 100 times ahead; the big opportunity von neumann had gifted us - knowhow action networking multiply value application unlike consuming up things
1976 entrepreneurial revolution -translated into italian by prodi - argued that future globalisation big politics big corporate would need to be triangularised by community scaled sme networks- this was both how innovation advancing human lot begins and also the only way to end poverty in the sense of 21st C being such that next girl born can thrive because every community taps in diversity/safety/ valuing child and health as conditions out of which intergenerational economic growth can spring
in 1977 fathers survey of china - argued that there was now great hope that china had found the system designs that would empower a billion people to escape from extreme poverty but ultimately education of the one child generation (its tech for human capabilities) would be pivotal ( parallel 1977 survey looked at the futures of half the world's people ie east of iran)
best chris macrae + 1 240 316 8157 washington DC
IN MORE DETAIL TECH HUMAN EXPONENTIALS LAST CHANCE DECADE? 
 - we are in midst of unprecedented exponential change (dad from 1960s called death of distance) the  tech legacy of von neumann (dad was his biographer due to luckily meeting him in his final years including neumann's scoping of brain science (ie ai and human i) research which he asked yale to continue in his last lecture series). Exponential risks of extinction track to  mainly western top-down errors at crossroads of tech  over last 60 years (as well as non transparent geonomic mapping of how to reconcile what mainly 10 white empires had monopoly done with machines 1760-1945 and embedded in finance - see eg keynes last chapter of general theory of money); so our 2020s destiny is conditioned by quite simple local time-stamped details but ones that have compounded so that root cause and consequence need exact opposite of academic silos- so I hope there are some simple mapping points we can agree sustainability and chinese anchors in particular are now urgently in the middle of
Both my father www.normanmacrae.net at the economist and I (eg co-authoring 1984 book 2025 report, retranslated to 1993 sweden's new vikings) have argued sustainability in early 21st c will depend mostly on how asians as 65% of humans advance and how von neumann (or moores law) 100 times more tech every decade from 1960s is valued by society and business.
My father (awarded Japan's Order of Rising Sun and one time scriptwriter for Prince Charles trips to Japan) had served as teen allied bomber command burma campaign - he therefore had google maps in his head 50 years ahead of most media people, and also believed the world needed peace (dad was only journalist at messina birth of EU ) ; from 1960 his Asian inclusion arguments were almost coincidental to Ezra Vogel who knew much more about Japan=China last 2000 years ( additionally  cultural consciousness of silk road's eastern dynamics not golden rule of Western Whites) and peter drucker's view of organisational systems
(none of the 10 people at the economist my father had mentored continued his work past 1993- 2 key friends died early; then the web turned against education-journalism when west coast ventures got taken over by advertising/commerce instead of permitting 2 webs - one hi-trust educational; the other blah blah. sell sell .sex sell. viral trivial and hate politicking)
although i had worked mainly in the far east eg with unilever because of family responsibilities I never got to china until i started bumping into chinese female graduates at un launch of sdgs in 2015- I got in 8 visits to beijing -guided by them around tsinghua, china centre of globalisation, a chinese elder Ying Lowrey who had worked on smes in usa for 25 years but was not jack ma's biographer in 2015 just as his fintech models (taobao not alibaba) were empowering villagers integration into supply chains; there was a fantastic global edutech conference dec 2016 in Tsinghua region (also 3 briefings by Romano Prodi to students) that I attended connected with  great womens education hero bangladesh's fazle abed;  Abed spent much of hs last decade hosting events with chinese and other asian ambassadors; unite university graduates around sdg projects the world needed in every community but which had first been massively demonstrated in asia - if you like a version of schwarzman scholars but inclusive of places linking all deepest sustainability goals challenges 
and i personally feel learnt a lot from 3 people broadcasting from cgtn you and the 2 ladies liu xin and  tian wei (they always seemed to do balanced interviews even in the middle of trump's hatred campaigns), through them I also became a fan of father and daughter Jin at AIIB ; i attended korea's annual general meet 2017 of aiib; it was fascinating watching bankers for 60 countries each coming up with excuses as to why they would not lead on infrastructure investments (even though the supercity economic model depends on that)
Being a diaspora scot and a mathematician borders (managers who maximise externalisation of risks) scare me; especially rise of nationalist ones ;   it is pretty clear historically that london trapped most of asia in colomisdation ; then bankrupted by world war 2 rushed to independence without the un or anyone helping redesign top-down systems ; this all crashed into bangladesh the first bottom up collaboration women lab ; ironically on health, food security, education bangladesh and chinese village women empowerment depended on sharing almost every village microfranchise between 1972 and 2000 especially on last mile health networking
in dads editing of 2025 from 1984 he had called for massive human awareness by 2001 of mans biggest risk being discrepancies in incomes and expectations of rich and poor nations; he suggested that eg public broadcast media could host a reality tv end poverty entrepreneur competition just as digital media was scaling to be as impactful as mass media
that didnt happen and pretty much every mess - reactions to 9/11, failure to do ai of epidemics as priority from 2005 instead of autonomous cars, failure to end long-term carbon investments, subprime has been rooted in the west not having either government nor big corporate systems necessary to collaboratively value Asian SDG innovations especially with 5g
I am not smart enough to understand how to thread all the politics now going on but in the event that any cgtn journalist wants to chat especially in dc where we could meet I do not see humans preventing extinction without maximising chinese youth (particularly womens dreams); due to covid we lost plans japan had to relaunch value of female athletes - so this and other ways japan and china and korea might have regained joint consciousness look as if they are being lost- in other words both cultural and education networks (not correctly valued by gdp news headlines) may still be our best chance at asian women empowerment saving us all from extinction but that needs off the record brainstorming as I have no idea what a cgtn journalist is free to cover now that trump has turned 75% of americans into seeing china as the enemy instead of looking at what asian policies of usa hurt humans (eg afghanistan is surely a human wrong caused mostly by usa); a; being a diaspora scot i have this naive idea that we need to celebrate happiness of all peoples an stop using media to spiral hatred across nations but I expect that isnt something an anchor can host generally but for example if an anchor really loves ending covid everywhere then at least in that market she needs to want to help united peoples, transparency of deep data etc

2021 afore ye go to glasgow cop26-

please map how and why - more than 3 in 4 scots earn their livelihoods worldwide not in our homeland- that requires hi-trust as well as hi-tech to try to love all cultures and nature's diversity- until mcdonalds you could use MAC OR MC TO identify our community engaging networks THAT SCALED ROUND STARTING UP THE AGE OF HUMANS AND MACHINES OF GKASGOW UNI 1760 1 2 3 - and the microfranchises they aimed to sustain  locally around each next child born - these days scots hall of fame started in 1760s around   adam smith and james watt and 195 years later glasgow engineering BA fazle abed - we hope biden unites his irish community building though cop26 -ditto we hope kamalA values gandhi- public service - but understand if he or she is too busy iN DC 2021 with covid or finding which democrats or republicans or american people speak bottom-up sustainable goals teachers and enrrepreneurs -zoom with chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk if you are curious - fanily foundation of the economist's norman macrae- explorer of whether 100 times more tehc every decade since 1945 would end poverty or prove orwell's-big brother trumps -fears correct 2025report.com est1984 or the economist's entreprenerialrevolutionstarted up 1976 with italy/franciscan romano prodi

help assemble worldrecordjobs.com card pack 1in time for games at cop26 glasgow nov 2021 - 260th year of machines and humans started up by smith and watt- chris.macrae@yahoo.co.uk- co-author 2025report.com, networker foundation of The Economist's Norman Macrae - 60s curricula telecommuting andjapan's capitalist belt roaders; 70s curricula entreprenurial revolution and poverty-ending rural keynesianism - library of 40 annual surveys loving win-wins between nations youth biographer john von neumann


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