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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201118T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201118T200000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20201117T173711Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T185957Z
UID:42832-1605726000-1605729600@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Nov 18
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – November 18\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\n\nREGISTER BELOW \n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\n  \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-nov-18-2/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201111T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201111T200000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204130Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190007Z
UID:24641-1605121200-1605124800@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Nov 11
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – November 11\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\nREGISTER BELOW \nNovember 11th guest panelist Tim Douglas \nTopics: \n\nThe World Reacts to President-Elect Biden\nBolivia: A New President After a Tumultuous Year\nEthiopia: Looming Civil War in the Horn of Africa\n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n \nGuest Panelist: Tim Douglas \nTimothy J. Douglas (Tim) is a native Nashvillian who received a B.S in Engineering Economics from Tulane University\, an M.A. in International Economics from the Patterson School of Diplomacy and International Commerce at the University of Kentucky and an Accounting Certificate from the Stern School of Business at New York University.  He lived in New York City from 1979 – 1985 and was an interbank Eurodollar broker at Euro Brokers Harlow and worked in the bond department at Bankers Trust Company. \nTim then joined Nelson Capital Corporation\, a Nashville based merchant banking firm\, and partnered with Edward G. Nelson\, former Chairman and CEO of Commerce Union Bank.  Ed was Honorary Consul General to Japan for the State of Tennessee\, and Tim was fortunate to spend time in Japan while in an advisory capacity to the Industrial Bank of Japan with Mr. Nelson.  In 1995\, he purchased an adhesive tape distribution company and travelled to the Far East where he sourced material from China and Taiwan.  His company fabricated parts for the automotive and appliance industries\, and Tim sold the business in 2008.  He transitioned to healthcare where he managed surgery centers for four years and later operated the company’s pain management subsidiary before moving back into financial services.  He became Nashville City President for FirstBank in 2016 just prior to its becoming a publicly traded company\, and he now serves as Regional Director of Private Banking for FirstBank. \nTim has been married for over forty years and has three married children (and two grandchildren with one on the way) who live in Seattle\, Los Angeles and Nashville. \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-nov-11/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201111T010000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201111T020000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204118Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190011Z
UID:24637-1605056400-1605060000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global Nashville with Karl Dean | "Little Kurdistan" | Nov 10
DESCRIPTION:In Association with Belmont University and the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce present\nNashville’s Little Kurdistan\n \nGlobal Nashville with Karl Dean\n \n\n\nTuesday\, November 10 @ 7pm\n\nKarl Dean\, former Nashville Mayor talks with community leaders about the things that make\nNashville a global city.\nJoin Mayor Dean for a conversation with members of the Kurdish community in Nashville. \n\n \nTuesday\, November 10 @ 7pm\nRegister Below \nNashville is home to the largest Kurdish community in the United States. Join us for this conversation examining the fabric of our neighbors in this community. \nNawzad Hawrami is Vice President and a founding Board Member of the Salahadeen Center in Nashville. He serves as the Center’s office manager. Hawrami emigrated from Iraqi Kurdistan to Tennessee in March 1998.  Among his civic activities are: member of Nashville Mayor’s New American Advisory Council since 2014; Member of the Board of Nashville International Center for Empowerment (NICE); member of the Mayor’s Policing Policy Commission (PPC) and member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. Hawrami previously served on the New Americans Parent Association and the Mayor’s Transit and Affordability Task Force. He holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Mechanical Engineering. Hawrami is married with four children and he enjoys travel and volunteering. \nMohammad Kolkoy is head of the Executive Board of the Salahadeen Center of Nashville. He is a frequent speaker at the center during Friday religious services and for other major events.  He was educated in engineering and healthcare related computer technology. \nDilman Yasin is the Director of Community Outreach for the Kurdish Professionals\, based in Nashville\, TN. She works to amplify the voices of her community while working as a Performance Manager in the Nashville Mayor’s office. She is a graduate of Tennessee State University and received her Master’s of Science from Lipscomb University while being a mother of two. That is why she works to relay the importance of education and help people\, and especially the youth\, reach their full potential. \nAbdulsattar Recany was born and raised in Iraq in the northern city of Mosul. He moved to Duhok in Kurdistan Region of Iraq in 2005. He has  a bachelor’s degree in Translation from University of Mosul. He worked for a few non-governmental organizations\, including Research Triangle Institute\, Medical Committee Aid\, and Kurdistan Human Rights Organization. Recany also taught English to middle school students in Duhok\, Kurdistan Region. He moved to the United States of America in December 2010. He has been working for Metro Nashville Public Schools as a translation specialist since December 2012. In his free time he likes to go on walks\, spend time with his wife and four kids\, and be with his friends. \nHalmat Qazi is the Creator & Founder of Peshmerga LLC located in Nashville\, Tennessee\, where he operates the small business clothing brand. He graduated from Tennessee State University\, with a Bachelor’s degree in Speech Communication & Theatre and also holds a Master’s degree in Administration & Supervision. After graduation he worked as a Legislative Performance Auditor for the State of Tennessee for nearly seven years before leaving to start his own business. The clothing brands primary focus is to the past\, present and future of the Peshmerga through art & design. For further information please visit peshmerga.com \n \nThe Mission of the Salahadeen Center: Provide religious\, educational\, social and cultural services\, as well as community activities\, Eid Services\, and comprehensive programs for the younger generation. \nSalahadeen Center of Nashville (SCN) was established in 1998 in Nashville\, TN. SCN is a membership organization registered in the State of Tennessee as a non-profit\, tax-exempt organization.  SCN’s main objectives are the upbringing of Muslim children and serving the community. What was once a small community center\, it is now one of the largest Muslim community centers in Nashville area\, it serves South Nashville\, and towns to the south of Nashville\, such as  Antioch\, Smyrna\, La Vergne\, and Nolensville. \nSince its establishment\, the center members have grown significantly. The center now owns three buildings: the main prayer building is located in 364 Elysian Fields Court\, and it serves as the main prayer and activity building. The second building is used for the Center’s Sunday School Program\, Children Library and Youth Programs. The third building is rented out and is a grocery story. The Sunday school was established a few months after the opening of the Center with the purpose of building a strong Muslim character\, strong faith and knowledge. \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-nashville-with-karl-dean-nov-10/
CATEGORIES:Global Nashville
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.tnwac.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/450d581f2607a20b70d9f805c4ab3284.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201104T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201104T200000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204111Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190014Z
UID:24635-1604516400-1604520000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Nov 4
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – November 4\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-nov-4/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.tnwac.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/21d540ad3aa511af9db1b7c4203bf320.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201029T223000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201030T000000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204053Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190020Z
UID:24631-1604010600-1604016000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:ELECTION 2020: America's Place in the World | Pt Two
DESCRIPTION:.\n.\n\nIn Association with the World Affairs Council of Harrisburg\, Belmont University’s Center for International Business and the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce\n.\n.\n\n.\n.\n\n\n\n.\n\n\n\nChair: Professor Thomas Schwartz\, Distinguished Professor of History\, Vanderbilt University\nAmbassador John Kornblum\, U.S. Foreign Service (Ret)\,  Former U.S. Ambassador to Germany (Confirmed)\nAmbassador Thomas Pickering\, Distinguished Fellow\, U.S. Foreign Service (Ret)\,  Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations\, to Russia\, to India\, to Israel\, to El Salvador\, to Nigeria\, and to Jordan (Confirmed)\n\nOctober 29\, 2020\n6:30-8:00 pm Eastern Time / 5:30-7:00 pm Central Time\n\nTNWAC is launching our Election 2020 global awareness series as we prepare for the Presidential Debate hosted by our partner Belmont University on October 22nd. \nTNWAC presents interviews and panels with distinguished specialists in international affairs to prepare voters with background and context on the critical issues they should know about the world. \nTNWAC is a nonpartisan educational organization that seeks to educate the community on global affairs. \nThomas Schwartz \nThomas Alan Schwartz is a historian of the foreign relations of the United States\, with related interests in American politics\, the history of international relations\, Modern European history\, and biography. His most recent book is “Henry Kissinger and American Power: A Political Biography” (Hill and Wang\, 2020). The book has received considerable notice and acclaim. Harvard’s University’s Charles Maier has written: “Thomas Schwartz’s superbly researched political biography reveals the brilliance\, self-serving ego\, and vulnerability of America’s most remarkable diplomat in the twentieth century\, even as it provides a history of U.S. engagement in global politics as it moved beyond bipolarity.” Earlier in his career\, Schwartz was the author of America’s Germany: John J. McCloy and the Federal Republic of Germany (Harvard\, 1991)\, which was translated into German\, Die Atlantik Brücke (Ullstein\, 1992). This book received the Stuart Bernath Book Prize of the Society of American Foreign Relations\, and the Harry S. Truman Book Award\, given by the Truman Presidential Library. He is also the author of Lyndon Johnson and Europe: In the Shadow of Vietnam (Harvard\, 2003)\, which examined the Johnson Administration’s policy toward Europe and assessed the impact of the war in Vietnam on its other foreign policy objectives. He is the co-editor with Matthias Schulz of The Strained Alliance: U.S.-European Relations from Nixon to Carter\, (Cambridge University Press\, 2009).  \nProfessor Schwartz has held fellowships from the Social Science Research Council\, the German Historical Society\, the Norwegian Nobel Institute\, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars\, and the Center for the Study of European Integration. He has served as President of the Society of Historians of American Foreign Relations. He served on the United States Department of State’s Historical Advisory Committee as the representative of the Organization of American Historians from 2005-2008. Professor Schwartz received The Madison Sarratt Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching on April 3\, 2013 at the Spring Faculty Assembly\, Vanderbilt University. In 2008 Professor Schwartz received the Annual Alumni Education Award from the Vanderbilt Alumni Association. Schwartz is the recipient of the 2008 Book Award by Chi Chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order. This award is given to a faculty member who has been particularly influential in the lives and education of members of KAO. Professor Schwartz presented\, “The Arab Spring: Revolution in the Middle East\,” on April 19\, 2011\, as part of the Samuel L. Shannon Distinguished Lecture Series at Tennessee State University. Professor Schwartz has also presented lectures for the OAH Distinguished Lecturers Program. \nJohn C. Kornblum \nJohn C. Kornblum has a long record of service in the United States and Europe both as a diplomat and as a businessman. He is recognized as an eminent expert on U.S.-European political and economic relations\, in particular in Central and Eastern Europe. He served as the U.S. ambassador to Germany from 1997 to 2001. Before that\, he occupied a number of high-level diplomatic posts\, including U.S. assistant secretary of state for European affairs\, special envoy for the Dayton Peace Process\, U.S. ambassador to the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (Helsinki Process)\, deputy U.S. ambassador to NATO\, and U.S. minister and deputy commandant of forces in divided Berlin. From 2001 to 2009\, he was chairman of Lazard Freres Germany. He currently serves as senior counsellor to the international law firm Noerr LLP and as a senior adviser to the worldwide consultancy Accenture. Mr. Kornblum has also served on a number of supervisory and advisory boards including those of Thyssen-Krupp\, Technologies AG\, Bayer AG\, Russell Reynolds\, and Motorola Europe. He is a member of the boards of the American Chamber of Commerce in Germany\, the American Academy in Berlin\, the Deutsche Oper in Berlin\, and of numerous nonprofit organizations on both sides of the Atlantic. He received a B.A. from Michigan State University in 1964\, and he has been the recipient of many awards\, including a Knights Cross of the Order of Merit from Germany and an Order of Merit from Austria. \nThomas R. Pickering \nAmbassador Thomas R. Pickering served as the U.S. Ambassador and Representative to the United Nations in New York under President George H.W. Bush. Tom led the U.S. effort to build a global coalition in the UN Security Council during and after the first Gulf War. He also served as the U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs under President Bill Clinton. \nTom holds the personal rank of Career Ambassador\, the highest in the U.S. Foreign Service. In a diplomatic career spanning five decades\, he was U.S. ambassador to the Russian Federation\, India\, Israel\, El Salvador\, Nigeria\, and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. He also served on assignments in Zanzibar and Dar es Salaam\, Tanzania. In Washington\, Tom was Assistant Secretary of State for the Bureau of Oceans\, Environmental and Scientific Affairs\, Executive Secretary of the Department of State\, and Special Assistant to Secretaries of State William P. Rogers and Henry A. Kissinger. \nAfter government\, he was the Senior Vice President\, International Relations\, of The Boeing Company. In this role\, Tom was responsible for Boeing’s relations with foreign governments and the company’s transition to a global organization. Prior to that\, he was briefly the president of the Eurasia Foundation\, a Washington-based organization that makes small grants and loans in the states of the former Soviet Union. \nIn 2012\, Tom chaired the Benghazi Accountability Review Board at the State Department. \nIn 1956\, Tom entered into active duty in the U.S. Navy\, and later served in the Naval Reserve to the grade of Lieutenant Commander. He was assigned to the Bureau of Intelligence and Research of the State Department\, later to the Arms Control and Disarmament Agency\, and served in Geneva as political adviser to the U.S. Delegation to the 18-Nation Disarmament Conference. \nTom serves as a Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution. He is active in a number of not-for-profit boards\, including the International Crisis Group\, where he was previously Chairman and Co-Chairman of the Board; the current Chairman of the Boards of the American Academy of Diplomacy\, the Washington Institute of Foreign Affairs\, and the Institute for the Study of Diplomacy at Georgetown University. He has been a Trustee at the Council on Foreign Relations and the Aspen Institute\, among other organizations. Tom maintains close\, high-level contacts in all the countries in which he has served\, as well as in Europe. \nHe received a bachelor’s degree\, cum laude\, with high honors in history\, from Bowdoin College. Tom received a master’s degree from the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University. He was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to the University of Melbourne in Australia\, and received a second master’s degree there. Tom received an honorary doctor-in-laws degree from Bowdoin College\, and has received similar honors from 12 other universities. \nHe received the Distinguished Presidential Award and the Department of State’s highest award\, the Distinguished Service Award. Tom is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the International Institute of Strategic Studies. He speaks French\, Spanish\, and Swahili and has some fluency in Arabic\, Hebrew\, and Russian. \n  \nMake sure to watch part one of our “America’s Place in the World” panels\, with General John Allen\, Dr. Jessica Matthew and chair\, Professor Thomas Schwartz. \n \n  \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \nOPEN TO ALL\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \n \n  \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/election-2020-americas-place-in-the-world-ii/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201028T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201028T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204046Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190032Z
UID:24629-1603908000-1603911600@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Oct 28
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – October 28\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-oct-28/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series,Global Nashville
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201028T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201028T010000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204045Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190106Z
UID:24628-1603843200-1603846800@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global Nashville with Karl Dean | Oct 27
DESCRIPTION:Karl Dean\, former Nashville Mayor talks with community leaders about the things that make Nashville a global city.\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-nashville-with-karl-dean-oct-27/
CATEGORIES:Global Nashville
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201023T003000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201023T030000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204038Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200830T204038Z
UID:24626-1603413000-1603422000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Presidential Debate Watch Party | Oct 22
DESCRIPTION:Attention: Due to the popular demand for spots at our Debate Watch Party we were about to exceed our Zoom meeting capacity. We’ve added extra space to accommodate everyone who wants to join us for this special evening.\nSo\, when you sign up for a spot please consider the option of registering with a donation to the TNWAC. \nWhat we do for you is not free to us. We try to make a lot of what we do free to you but in reality we need your help to pay the bills. \nMay we suggest a gift of $20.00 at registration. Or better yet\, visit TNWAC.org/donate and contribute $5.00 a month. \n\nWe appreciate you helping us pay for the seat you’re filling.\n\n\n\nJoin us on October 22nd before\, during and after the last \nTrump-Biden debate at Belmont University via Zoom meeting.\n\nDebate Watch Party\nOctober 22\, 2020\n7:30pm CT\nVia Zoom\nRegistration below\n \n\nPre-Debate Session\nJoin the conversation with specialists on campaign operations\, polling\, media\, global affairs and other relevant fields.\n\nOur panel includes:\n\nDavid Plazas\, Opinion Engagement Editor\, “The Tennessean” (moderator)\nMark Braden\, Senior VP\, Mercury LLC\, former campaign manager for Senator Lamar Alexander.\nRachael Dean Wilson\, Director of External Affairs\, Alliance for Securing Democracy\, former Senator John McCain staff member and press assistant in McCain 2008 campaign.\nBronte Prins\, Co-Chair Global Young Professionals\, TNWAC Board\nHolly McCall\, Editor\, “Tennessee Lookout” online news\nSarah Lingo\, Executive Director\, Sister Cities of Nashville\nAmanda Knarr\, Global Account Manager\, Forrester Research; TNWAC Board \nCampbell Lahman\, Academic WorldQuest Program Rep\nPatrick Ryan\, President\, Tennessee World Affairs Council\n\n \n\n#Bios below \nDebate Watch\nWe will host the televised debate inside our Zoom meeting so you can watch and actively share feedback with your the group.  Our guest speakers will contribute to the “chat room” conversation.\n\n\nDebate Topics:\n\nCOVID-19\nAmerican Families\nRace in America\nClimate Change\nNational Security\nLeadership\n\n\n\n\n\n\nWe will provide Debate Bingo cards to participants to make watching the debate more interesting.\n\nPost-Debate\n\nDebateWatch2020 Discussion Questions – Conversation led by our panel and your participation \nGeneral Questions \n\nWhat did you learn about the candidates or issues that you did not know prior to the debate?\nWhat topics or issues discussed in the debate were most useful or informative?\nWere there issues you were hoping would be discussed that were not?\nWhat issues would you like to see discussed in subsequent debates?\n\nKeep in Mind / Guiding Principles \n\nBe open to other points of view.\nShow respect. Listen respectfully as others comment.\nLook for areas of commonality: agree where you can.\nBe focused: keep your comments focused on the debate itself.\n\n \n\n\n\nABOUT OUR PANEL \nDavid Plazas is the Opinion and Engagement Director for the USA TODAY Network newsrooms in Tennessee and The Tennessean where he serves an editorial writer\, opinion columnist\, op-ed editor and an editorial board member. He has written award-winning columns on affordable housing\, government accountability and civic engagement. He leads the acclaimed Civility Tennessee campaign. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nMark Braden – Nashville-based Senior Vice President with Mercury Public Affairs\, an international bipartisan public strategy firm. Braden leads the States Practice at Mercury\, overseeing and managing public affairs campaigns from Alaska to Alabama to Albany and all points in between. Braden was the Campaign Manager for Senator Alexander’s 2014 re-election and Senator Bob Corker’s 2012 re-election. In 2008\, Braden served as the on-the-ground debate lead for Senator John McCain’s presidential campaign for all three presidential debates\, including the debate at Belmont. \nCampbell Lahman is a high school senior who dual enrolls at Columbia State Community College. She became involved in the Tennessee World Affairs Council through the Academic WorldQuest Competition. Campbell is interested in working in the foreign affairs field in the future. \nSarah Lingo has worked in Nashville and Tennessee politics for the majority of her career including with former Tennessee Governor Phil Bredesen in his Administration working for the Tennessee Department of Mental Health and on his 2018 bid for U.S. Senate\, and former Nashville Mayor David Briley. She completed a two-year service in the United States Peace Corps\, having served in Thailand from 2012-2014\, and was the head of Corporate Sponsorships at Nashville Zoo for three years before joining Sister Cities of Nashville. Originally from Ohio\, Lingo moved to Nashville in 2004 and it has been her home since.including U.S. banks. An article she authored\, entitled “Real Deposit Insurance Coverage at U.S. Banks\,” has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Business and Leadership: Research\, Practice\, and Teaching. \nHolly McCall is a fixture in Tennessee media and politics\, with decades of experience. She began her journalism career covering City Hall with Suburban News Publications in Columbus\, Ohio\, and wrote for the Joplin Globe in Missouri and the Nashville Business Journal. She has served as political analyst for WZTV Fox 17 and provided communications consulting for political campaigns at all levels\, from city council to presidential. \nBronte Prins is in-house counsel and head of the legal department of Southern Land Company\, a national real estate development and construction company headquartered in Nashville. She joined the Board of Directors of TNWAC in 2019 and co-founded its young professionals group\, YP Global. Bronte is a graduate of the University of Southern California and Fordham University School of Law. \nRachael Dean Wilson is the head of external affairs at the Alliance for Securing Democracy. Rachael honed her strategic communication skills while serving in senior roles on Capitol Hill and political campaigns\, as well as working in corporate communications and PR consulting. Most recently\, Rachael served as communications director to Senator Jon Kyl and prior to that\, she was a regional PR Director at Whole Foods Market where she managed strategic\, crisis and consumer communications for the company’s Mid-Atlantic and South regions. Rachael worked for the late Senator John McCain for six years\, most recently serving as his Senate communications director and as an adviser to his reelection campaign in 2016. From 2014 to 2015\, Rachael was the vice president of public relations at a boutique communications firm\, where she built and managed the PR team\, worked with a broad range of clients and developed new business. From 2010 to 2014\, she worked as Senator McCain’s press secretary in the Senate. She began her career as a press assistant on McCain’s 2008 presidential campaign. Rachael received a bachelor’s degree in communications and public service from the University of Pennsylvania. \nMission \nThe mission of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nVision \nA well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events.    \nThe World Affairs Council needs your support now more than ever. With a suggested donation of $100\, you can help the Council continue to offer free and public programming to discuss critical global issues affecting Americans’ security and prosperity. \nYou can give in one of several ways:\n\nPay with your credit card via the donation button below.\nMail a check to the TNWAC Office (Fidelity 304A\, Belmont University\, 1900 Belmont Blvd.\, Nashville\, TN 37212)\nPlanned giving through a bequest. Consult the attorney who assisted with your estate planning.\nRequest a distribution from your Donor Advised Fund\nCheck with your employer to see if they will match your gift!\n\nWith the passing of the CARES Act\, most individual taxpayers will become eligible for significant tax benefits for charitable contributions made this year. Two of these benefits will be:\n\nA $300 Above-the-Line Charitable deduction\, meaning that individuals who do not itemize their deductions will be eligible to claim up to $300 of charitable deductions in 2020\, on top of the standard deduction\nModified Limitations on Cash Charitable Contributions – for 2020\, the 60% AGI limitation on cash contributions to 501(c)(3) organizations\, such as WACA\, is suspended\n\n \nPlease give to support global affairs awareness programs in the community and in your schools.  \n  \n\n\n\n\n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/presidential-debate-watch-party-oct-22/
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201021T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201021T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190117Z
UID:24623-1603303200-1603306800@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Oct 21
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – October 21\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\nTOPICS FOR OCTOBER 21ST \n\n1 – Mexico: Don’t Drink the Water\n2 – The Uighurs and Global Human Rights\n3 – Presidential Debates and International Affairs\n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-oct-21/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201015T223000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201016T000000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204022Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190126Z
UID:24621-1602801000-1602806400@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:ELECTION 2020: America's Place in the World Pt One | Oct 15
DESCRIPTION:In Association with UpState International World Affaris Council\, World Affairs Council of Harrisburg\, Belmont University and the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce present\n\n\n\n\n\nAmerica’s Place in the World\n\n\nChair: Professor Thomas Schwartz\, Distinguished Professor of History\, Vanderbilt University\nGeneral John Allen\, President\, Brookings; former Commander NATO International Security Assistance Force\, Afghanistan\nDr. Jessica Tuchman Matthews\, Ph.D.\, Distinguished Fellow\, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She served as Carnegie’s president for 18 years.\n\n\nTNWAC is launching our Election 2020 global awareness series as we prepare for the Presidential Debate hosted by our partner Belmont University on October 22nd. \nTNWAC presents interviews and panels with distinguished specialists in international affairs to prepare voters with background and context on the critical issues they should know about the world. \nTNWAC is a nonpartisan educational organization that seeks to educate the community on global affairs. \nAmerica’s Place in the World\nThese questions may be among those to start things off\, plus your questions. \n\nThe U.S. relationship with China has emerged as one of the most prominent issues in the current presidential campaign. What are your thoughts on how American policy toward China should evolve over the next five to ten years? Are we competitors\, rivals\, or enemies?\nThe next administration will almost certainly face the question of the future of US policy toward Iran. Do you favor returning to the JCPOA\, or should a new agreement be negotiated?\nIf Biden wins the election\, can the United States resume its role in international organizations like the WHO and return to agreements like the Paris climate accords\, or has there been significant change in how the United States is perceived that would preclude such a restoration?\nIn the wake of the poisoning of Alexei Navalny\, and continued interference in the American elections\, is there a way forward for the US relationship with Russia under a Biden Administration? What should US policy toward Russia seek to accomplish?\nIf\, as Richard Haass has remarked\, that foreign policy begins at home\, how can or should a new presidential administration seek to rebuild the basis of domestic support for an engaged and active American foreign policy?\nIn what ways will advances in technology – AI\, quantum computing\, etc. – affect 21st century diplomacy and international engagement?\nGiven the various disputes between the United States and its European allies\, most notably over the Nord Stream pipeline and policy toward Iran and China\, is there a future for the NATO alliance?\nWhat are the greatest challenges that America faces in its foreign policy over the next five to ten years?\n\nSend your questions in advance to: info@tnwac.org \nThomas Schwartz \nThomas Alan Schwartz is a historian of the foreign relations of the United States\, with related interests in American politics\, the history of international relations\, Modern European history\, and biography. His most recent book is “Henry Kissinger and American Power: A Political Biography” (Hill and Wang\, 2020). The book has received considerable notice and acclaim. Harvard’s University’s Charles Maier has written: “Thomas Schwartz’s superbly researched political biography reveals the brilliance\, self-serving ego\, and vulnerability of America’s most remarkable diplomat in the twentieth century\, even as it provides a history of U.S. engagement in global politics as it moved beyond bipolarity.” Earlier in his career\, Schwartz was the author of America’s Germany: John J. McCloy and the Federal Republic of Germany (Harvard\, 1991)\, which was translated into German\, Die Atlantik Brücke (Ullstein\, 1992). This book received the Stuart Bernath Book Prize of the Society of American Foreign Relations\, and the Harry S. Truman Book Award\, given by the Truman Presidential Library. He is also the author of Lyndon Johnson and Europe: In the Shadow of Vietnam (Harvard\, 2003)\, which examined the Johnson Administration’s policy toward Europe and assessed the impact of the war in Vietnam on its other foreign policy objectives. He is the co-editor with Matthias Schulz of The Strained Alliance: U.S.-European Relations from Nixon to Carter\, (Cambridge University Press\, 2009).  \nProfessor Schwartz has held fellowships from the Social Science Research Council\, the German Historical Society\, the Norwegian Nobel Institute\, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars\, and the Center for the Study of European Integration. He has served as President of the Society of Historians of American Foreign Relations. He served on the United States Department of State’s Historical Advisory Committee as the representative of the Organization of American Historians from 2005-2008. Professor Schwartz received The Madison Sarratt Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching on April 3\, 2013 at the Spring Faculty Assembly\, Vanderbilt University. In 2008 Professor Schwartz received the Annual Alumni Education Award from the Vanderbilt Alumni Association. Schwartz is the recipient of the 2008 Book Award by Chi Chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order. This award is given to a faculty member who has been particularly influential in the lives and education of members of KAO. Professor Schwartz presented\, “The Arab Spring: Revolution in the Middle East\,” on April 19\, 2011\, as part of the Samuel L. Shannon Distinguished Lecture Series at Tennessee State University. Professor Schwartz has also presented lectures for the OAH Distinguished Lecturers Program. \nJohn Allen \nJohn Rutherford Allen assumed the presidency of the Brookings Institution in November 2017\, having most recently served as chair of security and strategy and a distinguished fellow in the Foreign Policy Program at Brookings. Allen is a retired U.S. Marine Corps four-star general and former commander of the NATO International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and U.S. Forces in Afghanistan. He is the co-author of the book “Turning Point: Policymaking in the Era of Artificial Intelligence” alongside co-author Darrell M. West (Brookings Press\, 2020)” \nAllen served in two senior diplomatic roles following his retirement from the Marine Corps. First\, for 15 months as senior advisor to the secretary of defense on Middle East Security\, during which he led the security dialogue for the Israeli/Palestinian peace process. President Barack Obama then appointed Allen as special presidential envoy to the Global Coalition to Counter ISIL\, a position he held for 15 months. Allen’s diplomatic efforts grew the coalition to 65 members\, effectively halting the expansion of ISIL. In recognition of this work\, he was presented the Department of State Distinguished Honor Award by Secretary John Kerry and the Director of National Intelligence Distinguished Public Service Award by Director James Clapper. \nDuring his nearly four-decade military career\, Allen served in a variety of command and staff positions in the Marine Corps and the Joint Force. He commanded 150\,000 U.S. and NATO forces in Afghanistan from July 2011 to February 2013. Allen is the first Marine to command a theater of war. During his tenure as ISAF commander\, he recovered the 33\,000 U.S. surge forces\, moved the Afghan National Security Forces into the lead for combat operations\, and pivoted NATO forces from being a conventional combat force into an advisory command. \nAllen’s first tour as a general officer was as the principal director of Asia-Pacific policy in the Office of the Secretary of Defense\, a position he held for nearly three years. In this assignment\, he was involved extensively with policy initiatives involving China\, Taiwan\, Mongolia\, and Southeast Asia. Allen also participated in the Six Party Talks on the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula and played a major role in organizing the relief effort during the South Asian tsunami from 2004 to 2005. \nBeyond his operational and diplomatic credentials\, Allen has led professional military educational programs\, including as director of the Marine Infantry Officer Program and commanding officer of the Marine Corps Basic School. He twice served at the United States Naval Academy\, first as a military instructor\, where he was named instructor of the year in 1990\, and later as commandant of midshipmen; the first Marine Corps officer to hold this position. Allen was the Marine Corps fellow to the Center for Strategic and International Studies and the first Marine officer to serve as a term member of the Council on Foreign Relations\, where today he is a permanent member. \nAmong his other affiliations\, Allen is a senior fellow at the Merrill Center of the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and a senior fellow at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory. He is an “Ancien” of the NATO Defense College in Rome\, and a frequent lecturer there. Allen is the recipient of numerous U.S. and foreign awards. \nHe holds a Bachelor of Science in operations analysis from the U.S. Naval Academy\, a Master of Arts in national security studies from Georgetown University\, a Master of Science in strategic intelligence from the Defense Intelligence College\, and a Master of Science in national security strategy from the National Defense University. \nJessica Tuchman Matthews \nJessica Tuchman Mathews is a distinguished fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. She served as Carnegie’s president for 18 years. \nBefore her appointment in 1997\, her career included posts in both the executive and legislative branches of government\, in management and research in the nonprofit arena\, and in journalism and science policy. \nShe was director of the Council on Foreign Relations’ Washington program and a senior fellow from 1994 to 1997. While there she published her seminal 1997 Foreign Affairs article\, “Power Shift\,” chosen by the editors as one of the most influential in the journal’s seventy-five years. \nFrom 1982 to 1993\, she was founding vice president and director of research of the World Resources Institute\, an internationally known center for policy research on environmental and natural resource management issues. \nShe served on the Editorial Board of the Washington Post from 1980 to 1982\, covering arms control\, energy\, environment\, science\, and technology. Later\, Mathews wrote a popular weekly column for the Washington Post that appeared nationwide and in the International Herald Tribune. \nFrom 1977 to 1979\, she was director of the Office of Global Issues at the National Security Council\, covering nuclear proliferation\, conventional arms sales\, and human rights. In 1993\, she returned to government as deputy to the undersecretary of state for global affairs. Earlier\, she served on the staff of the Committee on Energy and the Environment of the Interior Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives. \nMathews is a member of the Harvard Corporation\, the senior governing board of Harvard University. She has served as a trustee of leading national and international nonprofits\, including the Nuclear Threat Initiative\, Radcliffe College\, the Inter-American Dialogue (co-vice chair)\, four foundations (the Rockefeller Foundation\, Rockefeller Brothers Fund\, the Century Foundation\, and the Joyce Foundation)\, and the Brookings Institution. She co-founded the Surface Transportation Policy Project\, has served on study groups at the National Academy of Sciences\, and is an elected fellow of the American Philosophical Society. Since 2001 she has served as a director of SomaLogic\, a leading biotech firm in the breakthrough field of proteomics. She is also a director of HanesBrands Inc. and a member of the governing board of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute. \nMathews has published widely in newspapers and in foreign policy and scientific journals\, and has co-authored and co-edited three books. She holds a PhD in molecular biology from the California Institute of Technology and graduated magna cum laude from Radcliffe College. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \nOPEN TO ALL\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \n \nTHANKS TO OUR ELECTION 2020 PROGRAM PARTNERS \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/election-2020-americas-place-in-the-world-i-oct-15/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201014T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201014T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204015Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190130Z
UID:24619-1602698400-1602702000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Oct 14
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – October 14\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\nThis week we’re joined by David Plazas\, the Opinion and Engagement Director for the USA TODAY Network newsrooms in Tennessee and The Tennessean where he serves an editorial writer\, opinion columnist\, op-ed editor and an editorial board member. \n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n \n  \nGuest Host David Plazas \nDavid Plazas is the Opinion and Engagement Director for the USA TODAY Network Tennessee. He works as an editorial writer\, opinion columnist\, op-ed editor and an editorial board member. He oversees the opinion team for The Tennessean in Nashville\, The Knoxville News-Sentinel and The Memphis Commercial Appeal and frequently moderates community conversations and statewide and local political and policy debates. \nHe is an award-winning journalist who wrote an acclaimed series on affordable housing\, “The Costs of Growth in Nashville” (2017)\, and leads a statewide campaign\, “Civility Tennessee” (starting in 2018)\, to encourage\, promote and practice civil discourse and effective citizenship. He was part of the team of the award-winning “Dismissed” series\, examining inequities in the Nashville public schools\, and during the 2019-20 school year\, he served as a volunteer reading buddy to a Kindergartner at Buena Vista Elementary in North Nashville. He has worked on multiple national projects for parent company Gannett most recently the Table Stakes challenge. As a coach\, he worked with the Louisville Courier Journal\, which won a Pulitzer Prize for its politics coverage in 2020. \nIn March 2020\, as the COVID-19 pandemic cancelled events and forced many employees to work from home\, he created and launched the Tennessee Voices videocast\, a show focused on connecting the community with thinkers\, creators\, innovators and leaders who have written op-eds in the Tennessee network’s publications. \nHe started his career at The News-Press in Fort Myers\, Florida\, where he worked as a reporter\, Spanish-language community editor\, opinion editor and digital team leader. He holds a B.A. in political science and Spanish and an M.S. in Journalism from Northwestern University in Evanston\, Illinois\, and an M.B.A. with a focus on marketing from Florida Gulf Coast University in Fort Myers. He is a longtime mentor of young journalists. \nOn a personal note\, he has run a marathon\, gave his first TED Talks in September 2020 and had become a good cook. \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-oct-14/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201014T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201014T010000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T204005Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190135Z
UID:24617-1602633600-1602637200@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global Nashville with Karl Dean | Oct 13
DESCRIPTION:In Association with Belmont University and the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce present\n\nGlobal Nashville with Karl Dean\n \n\n\nKarl Dean\, former Nashville Mayor talks with community leaders about the things that make \nNashville a global city.\nJoin Mayor Dean for a conversation with Mohamed-Shukri Hassan\, Director of the Office of New Americans as they talk about Mr. Hassan’s new position and community issues in the headlines. \nMohamed-Shukri Hassan\, Nashville Mayor’s Office of New Americans\nHassan\, who was born in Somalia\, worked with or advised the Metro Public Health Department\, New American Development Center\, Nashville Entrepreneur Center\, Metro Arts and the Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition and the New Americans Advisory Council. \nThe Mayor’s Office of New Americans works to engage immigrants and empower them to participate in our government and our community. The number of foreign-born residents in Nashville has more than doubled over the past decade. Nearly 12 percent of our population was born outside of the United States\, and nearly half of those people are recent immigrants who entered the country since 2000. In fact\, in 2012\, Nashville had the fastest-growing immigrant population of any American city. Nashville is the proud home of the nation’s largest Kurdish population\, as well as growing enclaves of immigrants from Somalia\, Burma\, and all over the world. \n“Shukri-Hassan’s journey to Middle Tennessee is a unique one. Shortly after being born in Somalia in 1986\, his family fled their home country due to the growing Civil War. The family bounced from place to place in East Africa\, eventually settling in Nairobi\, Kenya. Though they found temporary solace\, they had dreams to live in the United States of America. Shukri-Hassan’s mother was the first to make the leap overseas through the immigration lottery. After a few years of saving\, the rest of the Shukri-Hassan family joined her in Decatur\, Georgia.”  [Continued here] \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-nashville-with-karl-dean-oct-13/
CATEGORIES:Global Nashville
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201008T223000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201009T000000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203957Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190142Z
UID:24615-1602196200-1602201600@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:TNWAC International Careers and Jobs Panel | Oct 8
DESCRIPTION:All students from all schools and all young professionals are welcome.\n\n\n\nIn Association with Belmont University Center for International Business\, Lipscomb University\, Tennessee Technological University\, the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce and Nashville Global Young Professionals\nInternational Careers and Jobs Panel\nWorking in the World\nOctober 8\, 2020\n6:30-8:00 pm Eastern Time / 5:30-7:00 pm Central Time\n\n\nJoin our panel of professionals who have lived and worked abroad or work in global affairs fields.\n\n\nChair: Dr. Susan Haynes\, PhD; Assistant Professor of Political Science\, Lipscomb University\nAmanda Knarr\, Global Account Manager\, Forrester Research (Confirmed)\nLindsay L. Rodman\, Executive Director\, The Leadership Council on Women in National Security (LCWINS); Adjunct Senior Fellow\, Center for a New American Security (CNAS); United States Marine Reserve JAG (Confirmed)\nDaniela Segovia\, Coordinator\, NGO Magnolia Foundation for Peace & Wellness (Confirmed)\nFrancine Uenuma\, Humanitarian Assistance Advisor to the Military with the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (Confirmed)\nNancy Youssef\, Chief Business Development Officer\, Soles4Souls\, Nashville (Confirmed)\n\nProgram Note: \nThis program is set for 90 minutes. Professor Haynes will chair a series of remarks from the panelists and questions and answers for one hour. The panelists will then each host follow on conversations in Zoom breakout rooms for 30 minutes. \n\n\nSusan Haynes \nSusan Turner Haynes joined Lipscomb University as an assistant professor in 2015. Prior to her doctorate\, Haynes was selected as a Public Policy and Nuclear Threat (PPNT) fellow at the University of California\, San Diego. Haynes research specializes in Chinese nuclear strategy (Chinese Nuclear Proliferation: How Global Politics is Transforming China’s Weapons Modernization\, 2016). In addition\, Haynes has published numerous articles in peer-reviewed journals\, including Asian Perspectives\, Asian Security\, PS: Political Science and Politics\, Strategic Studies Quarterly\, The Nonproliferation Review\, and Comparative Strategy. She has also authored chapters in the Ashgate Research Companion on Chinese Foreign Policy\, and has a chapter in the forthcoming Routledge volume on Nuclear Modernization. Haynes has been invited to present her research at the Department of Defense Strategic Multilayer Assessment Group and at the Air War College. Haynes is a member of the International Studies Association and American Political Science Association and serves as a board member for the Tennessee World Affairs Council (TNWAC). She serves as sponsor of the Lipscomb Model UN club and co-sponsor of the political science honor society\, Pi Sigma Alpha. \nAmanda Knarr \nAmanda Knarr recently moved to Nashville from Washington\, DC. She is enjoying her role as a global account manager at Forrester Research\, a market research and consulting company. Previously\, Amanda led the Western Hemisphere for the Business Council for International Understanding (BCIU)\, a nonpartisan\, U.S.-based organization that works to expand international trade and commerce. Ms. Knarr has been responsible for creating partnerships between business and U.S. government agencies on foreign policy initiatives. She has worked extensively with U.S. and foreign government departments and agencies- both federal and local. International affairs is in her blood and she is an alum of the United Nations\, the U.S. Government\, the Government of the Republic of Chile\, multiple internationally-focused think tanks and nonprofits. She received a Masters of Arts from the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University specializing in International Political Economy. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Political Science and International Relations from Washington & Jefferson College. \nLindsay L. Rodman \nLindsay L. Rodman is the Executive Director of LCWINS. She began her career as an associate at Arnold & Porter LLP. She then joined the Marine Corps and served as a judge advocate for eight years on active duty in various assignments including deployment to Afghanistan\, serving as Deputy Legal Counsel to the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff\, and selection as a White House Fellow\, placed at the National Security Council. After transitioning into the Reserves\, Lindsay became a political appointee in the Pentagon\, serving first as the Special Assistant to the Under Secretary of Defense for Personnel & Readiness and then as the Senior Advisor\, International Humanitarian Policy in the Office of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy. Prior to joining LCWINS\, Lindsay was selected as the Council on Foreign Relations’ inaugural International Affairs Fellow in Canada\, where she lived for two years\, and then served as Executive Vice President for Communications and Legal Strategy at Iraq and Afghanistan Veterans of America. Lindsay remains an officer in the U.S. Marine Corps Reserve. She is a graduate of Harvard Law School\, the Kennedy School\, and Duke University. \nDaniela Segovia \nA foreign policy analyst and international cooperation consultant\, Daniela Segovia is a Venezuelan former diplomat\, political scientist by training and a policy-maker. Segovia is part of Magnolia Foundation for Peace & Wellness\, where she focuses on advocacy\, public relations and partnerships to support programs\, and assist the victims of the Colombian conflict. Throughout the past 15 years\, she has held diverse positions in the global governance arena\, being her primary focus of expertise democracy\, migration and human rights in Latin America. For her initiatives defending refugees & migrants´ human rights\, she was selected as a Policy Leader Fellow (2018) at the School of Transnational Governance (SGT) at the European University Institute located in Florence\, Italy; and as an Eisenhower Fellow and Carnegie New Leader (2019) in the United States. Segovia is also a columnist on international politics for the Mexican news agency Subrayado.mx\, contributes to the Women in Foreign Affairs platform\, and contributes to the Women in International Affairs Network as a mentor. Her previous experience includes the UN Leadership Program (Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean); the Doctoral School of Latin American\, European and Comparative Regionalism (Andean University Simon Bolívar / United Nations University); and a doctoral research in Global Governance (Organization of American States / Andes University in Colombia). She holds a BA in Political Science (Central University of Venezuela)\, a MA in History of the Americas (Catholic University Andrés Bello); and a Master in Careers in International Organizations (University of Granada). \nFrancine Uenuma \n\n\n\n\nFrancine Uenuma is a Humanitarian Assistance Advisor to the Military with the U.S. Agency for International Development’s Bureau for Humanitarian Assistance (BHA)\, advising on issues of shared concern including displacement and the provision of humanitarian aid during conflict-related and natural disasters. After joining USAID at the beginning of 2016\, she served as Civil-Military Affairs Coordinator for Syria and Iraq on USAID’s Response Management Team and Disaster Assistance Response Team. Before joining USAID\, she was Director of Media Relations and Communications for disaster and humanitarian response at Save the Children\, focusing primarily on the Syria regional response in Washington\, D.C. and in Lebanon\, northern Iraq\, Jordan\, Greece\, and Serbia. She worked with national and international press to facilitate site visits and provide spokesperson interviews in both sudden-onset and chronic emergency settings. Prior to Save the Children\, she spent a year in Afghanistan for the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF). Francine previously worked in journalism\, including as a a digital news editor at the PBS NewsHour and multimedia producer at The Washington Post. She has a B.S. in Foreign Service (International History) from Georgetown University. \n\n\n\n\nNancy Youssef \nMs. Nancy Youssef currently serves as Chief Business Development Officer for Soles 4 Souls\, a not for profit social enterprise based in Nashville\, TN. Ms. Youssef is also founder and President of award winning Curves with Purpose\, a women’s e-commerce marketplace celebrating shape diversity\, and disrupting the cycle of poverty through charitable partnerships. Youssef is an adjunct professor of Fashion Entrepreneurship at Belmont University. Ms. Youssef served as senior vice president\, international business development for Canton\, MA-based Destination XL group\, the largest omni-channel specialty retailer of big and tall men’s apparel. Prior to joining Destination XL\, Youssef was vice president\, international business development for NYSE-listed Genesco\, Inc. where she pioneered the Fortune 1000 footwear and apparel retailer’s portfolio of brands outside the U.S. In this role she successfully directed the entry of the Fortune 1000 company into more than two dozen countries around the world and was pivotal in acquisitions\, partnerships and licensing relationships. Prior to that\, she served as senior brand manager for interactive multichannel retailer HSN\, Inc. and has led business development for fashion apparel and accessories importer and distributor SAS-Egypt. Ms. Youssef earned her B.S. in Marketing from The Pennsylvania State University with focuses in Accounting\, French & International Studies. Ms. Youssef completed a diploma in International Fashion Design studies at the Instituto Marangoni in Milan\, Italy which gave her the opportunity to become fluent in her fifth language\, adding Italian to Arabic\, English\, French and Spanish. Ms. Youssef serves as a director for Siloam Healthcare\, the Nashville Chamber of Commerce International Business Council\, Belmont University College of International Business\, Nashville Mayor’s Advisory Council for Minority and Women Owned Businesses and Nashville Mayor’s Advisory Council for New Americans. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \nOPEN TO ALL\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/tnwac-international-careers-and-jobs-panel/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201007T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201007T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203946Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190146Z
UID:24612-1602093600-1602097200@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Oct 7
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – October 7\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n\n \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-oct-7/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.tnwac.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/d6cc8199bb27e015676931337a5ac9af.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20201001T223000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20201002T000000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203943Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190149Z
UID:24610-1601591400-1601596800@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:ELECTION 2020: Foreign Policy Challenges: The Middle East | Oct 1
DESCRIPTION:.\nIn Association with the World Affairs Council of Harrisburg\, Belmont University and \nthe Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce\n.\n\n.\nU.S. Foreign Policy Challenges: The Middle East\n. \n \n. \nOctober 1\, 2020\n6:30-8:00 pm Eastern Time / 5:30-7:00 pm Central Time\n\nPatrick W. Ryan\, President\, TNWAC; LCDR\, USN (Ret); Panel Chair\nRami Khouri\, distinguished international journalist; Senior Public Policy Fellow\, American University of Beirut; Nieman Journalism Fellow at Harvard University​\nDr. Paul Pillar\, Non-resident fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and a non-resident Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Studies of Georgetown University; career official in the U.S. Intelligence Community\nMona Yacoubian\, Senior Advisor to the Vice President of Middle East & Africa\, United States Institute of Peace\n\n. \n\n\nRami Khouri \nRami George Khouri is an internationally syndicated political columnist and book author\, Journalist-in-Residence and director of global engagement at the American University of Beirut\, and a non-resident senior fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School.  He was the executive editor of the Beirut-based Daily Star newspaper\, the editor-in-chief of the Jordan Times\, and was awarded the Pax Christi International Peace Prize for 2006. \nHe teaches or lectures annually at the American University of Beirut and Northeastern University.  He has been a fellow and visiting scholar at Harvard\, Mount Holyoke\, Princeton\, Syracuse\, Northeastern\, Villanova\, Oklahoma and Stanford universities. He also serves on the Joint Advisory Board of the Northwestern University Journalism School in Doha\, Qatar. \nHe was general manager of Al Kutba\, Publishers\, in Amman\, Jordan\, where he also served as a consultant to the Jordanian tourism ministry on biblical archaeological sites. He has hosted programs on archaeology\, history and current public affairs on Jordan Television and Radio Jordan\, and often comments on Mideast issues in the international media. \nHe has BA and MSc degrees respectively in political science and mass communications from Syracuse University\, NY\, USA. \nDr. Paul Pillar \nPaul R. Pillar is a non-resident fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and a non-resident Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Studies of Georgetown University. He is also an Associate Fellow of the Geneva Center for Security Policy. He retired in 2005 from a 28-year career in the U.S. intelligence community\, after which he was visiting professor in the Security Studies Program at Georgetown University. His senior government positions included National Intelligence Officer for the Near East and South Asia\, Deputy Chief of the DCI Counterterrorist Center\, and Executive Assistant to the Director of Central Intelligence. He is a Vietnam War veteran and a retired officer in the U.S. Army Reserve. Dr. Pillar received an A.B. summa cum laude from Dartmouth College\, a B.Phil. from Oxford University\, and an M.A. and Ph.D. from Princeton University. His books include Negotiating Peace: War Termination as a Bargaining Process (1983)\, Terrorism and U.S. Foreign Policy (2001)\, Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy: Iraq\, 9/11\, and Misguided Reform (2011)\, and Why America Misunderstands the World: National Experience and Roots of Misperception (2016). He is a contributing editor of The National Interest. \nMona Yacoubian \nMona Yacoubian is Senior Advisor to the Vice President of Middle East & Africa\, United States Institute of Peace.  She joined the U.S. Institute of Peace after serving as deputy assistant administrator in the Middle East Bureau at USAID from 2014 to 2017\, where she had responsibility for Iraq\, Syria\, Jordan and Lebanon. Prior to joining USAID\, Ms. Yacoubian was a senior advisor at the Stimson Center focusing on the Arab uprisings with an emphasis on Syria. Prior to joining the Stimson Center\, Ms. Yacoubian served as a special advisor on the Middle East at the U.S. Institute of Peace\, where her work focused on Lebanon and Syria as well as broader issues related to democratization in the Arab world. From 1990 to 1998\, Ms. Yacoubian served as the North Africa analyst in the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research. \nMs. Yacoubian was a Fulbright scholar in Syria where she studied Arabic at the University of Damascus from 1985 to 1986. She has held an international affairs fellowship with the Council on Foreign Relations (CFR) and is currently a CFR member. Ms. Yacoubian earned a master’s degree in public administration from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government and a bachelor’s degree from Duke University. \n\n\nTNWAC is launching our Election 2020 global awareness series as we prepare for the Presidential Debate hosted by our partner Belmont University on October 22nd. TNWAC will present interviews and panels with distinguished specialists in international affairs to prepare voters with background and context on the critical issues they should know about the world. TNWAC is a nonpartisan educational organization that seeks to educate the community on global affairs. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \n \nTHANKS TO OUR ELECTION 2020 PROGRAM PARTNERS \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/election-2020-foreign-policy-challenges-the-middle-east-oct-1/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200930T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200930T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203933Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190153Z
UID:24608-1601488800-1601492400@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Sep 30
DESCRIPTION:Global News Review – September 30\, 2020\n\n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\n\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence\, along with a little fun and your questions. \n \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \n  \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-sep-30/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200930T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200930T010000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203925Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190156Z
UID:24606-1601424000-1601427600@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global Nashville with Karl Dean | Sep 29 | Guest: David Plazas
DESCRIPTION:Global Nashville with Karl Dean\nKarl Dean\, former Nashville Mayor talks with community leaders about the things that make Nashville a global city.\n \n\nJoin Mayor Dean for a conversation with David Plazas\, Opinion and Engagement Director for the USA TODAY Network newsrooms in Tennessee and The Tennessean\, as they talk about community issues in the headlines. \n \n  \nDavid Plazas \nDavid Plazas is the Opinion and Engagement Director for the USA TODAY Network newsrooms in Tennessee and The Tennessean where he serves an editorial writer\, opinion columnist\, op-ed editor and an editorial board member. He has written award-winning columns on affordable housing\, government accountability and civic engagement. He leads the acclaimed Civility Tennessee campaign. \nSPONSOR THIS PROGRAM! \nWe invite businesses\, organizations and individuals to sponsor this event. It is through your support that we are able to bring quality global affairs programs to the community. \nYou can enroll for sponsorship through the Eventbrite ticketing below. For information about sponsoring other programs and series of events contact Patrick Ryan\, TNWAC President @ 931-261-2353\, pat@tnwac.org \nSponsorship at the $250.00 level accords you with recognition in program materials — web site\, newsletters and social media — and with acknowledgement at the program start\, as well as admission to the program. Thank you for your support. \nOPEN TO ALL\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\n\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-nashville-with-karl-dean-sep-29/
CATEGORIES:Global Nashville
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200924T223000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200925T000000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190200Z
UID:24604-1600986600-1600992000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:ELECTION 2020: Global Issues | Sep 24
DESCRIPTION:Election 2020: Global Issues: Trade\, Climate\, Globalization\nA panel of distinguished speakers with panel chair: Dr. Jeffrey Overby\, PhD. \n\nClimate: Gary Garfield\, former CEO Bridgestone Americas (Confirmed)\nGlobalization: Dr. Richard Wike\, PhD\, Director Global Attitudes Research\, Pew Research Center (Confirmed)\nTrade: Dr. Erica Owen\, PhD\, Associate Professor\, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs at the University of Pittsburgh (Confirmed)\n\n \nThe Global Issues Panel of our Election 2020 project focuses on three key issues affecting American security and prosperity: climate change\, trade and globalization. We have assembled a distinguished panel of specialists to provide background and context. \nClimate: The United Nations says of the importance of understanding climate change: Climate Change is the defining issue of our time and we are at a defining moment. From shifting weather patterns that threaten food production\, to rising sea levels that increase the risk of catastrophic flooding\, the impacts of climate change are global in scope and unprecedented in scale. \nGlobalization: Mike Collins\, writing for Forbes\, said of globalization\, “There is no question that globalization has been a good thing for many developing countries who now have access to our markets and can export cheap goods. Globalization has also been good for Multi-national corporations and Wall Street. But globalization has not been good for working people (blue or white collar) and has led to the continuing deindustrialization of America.” Globalization is a complicated issue. It is necessary to evaluate the pros and cons before drawing any conclusions. \nTrade: The United States Trade Representative’s office says of the importance of trade: Trade is critical to America’s prosperity – fueling economic growth\, supporting good jobs at home\, raising living standards and helping Americans provide for their families with affordable goods and services. \nScroll down for reference material on these important\, complicated topics and materials provided by the panelists. \nTNWAC is launching our Election 2020 global awareness series as we prepare for the Presidential Debate hosted by our partner Belmont University on October 22nd. \nTNWAC is presenting interviews and panels with distinguished specialists in international affairs to prepare voters with background and context on the critical issues they should know about the world. \nTNWAC is a nonpartisan educational organization that seeks to educate the community on global affairs. \nPanel Chair Dr. Jeffrey Overby \nDr. Jeffrey Overby is Director of the Center for International Business and the Edward C. and Helen J. Kennedy Chair of Excellence at Belmont University. He teaches regularly around the world\, including recent programs in Argentina\, France\, Poland\, South Africa\, South Korea\, Spain\, and the United Arab Emirates. In the community\, Jeff currently serves on the Board of Directors of the International Business Council of the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce\, the Board of Directors of Sister Cities of Nashville\, and the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nGary Garfield \nRetired Chairman\, CEO and President of Bridgestone Americas\, Inc. Garfield initially joined Bridgestone Americas in the legal department in 1991\, eventually rising to the position of Vice President\, General Counsel\, Chief Compliance Officer and Secretary of Bridgestone Americas. In March 2010\, he was promoted to Bridgestone Americas’ CEO and President\, and in January 2016 he was named as Executive Chairman of Bridgestone Americas. Over the last years\, he also was promoted to a series of executive positions within Bridgestone Corporation\, ultimately culminating in the position of Executive Officer and Executive Vice President of Bridgestone Americas’ parent company\, Bridgestone Corporation. \nHe has been Director of Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce since July 03\, 2014 and served as an Independent Director of Piedmont Natural Gas Co. Inc. since June 2015. He serves as a Director of Firestone Diversified Products\, LLC\, the Tennessee Chapter of the Crohn’s & Colitis Foundation\, the Nashville Ballet and the Middle Tennessee Council\, Boy Scouts of America. He is also a member of the American Bar Association and the Nashville Bar Association. He has been the United Way of Metropolitan Nashville’s Board of Trustees since January 2011. Since 2011\, he has also served on the Board of Visitors for Vanderbilt University’s Owen Graduate School of Business. \nIn 2012\, Mr. Garfield was named National Chair for the Take Steps Be Heard walk program for the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation of America. He was a 2013 member of the Greater Nashville Executive Leadership Team for the American Heart Association and is serving as the 2015 Heart Walk Chairman. \nMr. Garfield holds a Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy from Wittenberg University and his Juris Doctor from Cincinnati University. \nErica Owen \nAssistant Professor\, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs\, University of Pittsburgh. Focusing on the intersection of domestic politics and the global economy\, Owen’s research examines how political processes resolve the conflict between the economic winners and losers of globalization. Examining labor markets and how globalization affects the economic well-being of the public\, her goal is to call attention to the importance of the role of labor as a political actor. Dr. Owen was previously Assistant Professor\, Department of Political Science\, Texas A&M University. She was a Visiting Researcher\, Department of Political Science\, University of Zurich and Post-doctoral Research Fellow\, Princeton University\, Niehaus Center for Globalization and Governance. Professor Owen received her Ph.D at the University of Minnesota; Political Science: International Relations and methodology. \nRichard Wike \nRichard Wike is director of global attitudes research at Pew Research Center. He conducts research and writes about international public opinion on a variety of topics\, such as America’s global image\, the rise of China\, democracy\, and globalization. He is an author of numerous Pew Research Center reports\, including U.S. Image Suffers as Publics Around World Question Trump’s Leadership; Post-Brexit\, Europeans More Favorable Toward EU; Globally\, Broad Support for Representative and Direct Democracy; Chinese Public Sees More Powerful Role in World\, Names U.S. as Top Threat; and Global Support for Principle of Free Expression\, but Opposition to Some Forms of Speech. In addition\, he has written pieces for The Atlantic\, Financial Times\, the Guardian\, Politico\, Foreign Policy\, CNN\, BBC\, CNBC\, and other online and print publications. Wike has been interviewed by American news organizations such as The Wall Street Journal\, The Washington Post\, NBC\, CNN\, C-SPAN\, and NPR\, as well as numerous non-U.S. news organizations\, including The Financial Times\, The Guardian\, El País\, BBC\, Deutsche Welle\, France 24 and Al Jazeera. Wike gives talks and presentations to a variety of audiences\, including government\, think tanks\, business groups\, and academic conferences. Wike received a doctorate in political science from Emory University. Before joining Pew Research Center\, he was a senior associate for international and corporate clients at Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research. \nAdditional Reading \nClimate \n\n“You Can’t Fight Science\,” Gary Garfield\, The Hill\, May 31\, 2018\n“Rejecting the gravity of climate change equates to ‘reckless disregard\,” Gary A. Garfield\, The Hill\, March 22\, 2019\n“Auto industry’s move toward electric vehicles is a jobs opportunity for Ohio workers\, if the state grabs it\,” Gary Garfield\, Cleveland.com\, March 31\, 2019\n\nTrade \n\n“How has trade survived COVID-19\,” The Economist\, September 12\, 2020\n“W.T.O. Says American Tariffs on China Broke Global Trade Rules\,” Ana Swanson\, The New York Times\, Sep 15\, 2020\n“Tech Giants\, Taxes\, and a Looming Global Trade War\,” by Vijay Govindarajan\, Anup Srivastava\, Hussein Warsame and Luminita Enache\, Harvard Business Review\, August 24\, 2020\n\nGlobalization \n\n“The Pros And Cons Of Globalization\,” Mike Collins\, Forbes\, May 6\, 2015\nThe World Is Becoming More Equal Even as Globalization Hurts Middle-Class Westerners\, Branko Milanovic\, Foreign Affairs\, August 28\, 2020\n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n\n\nFREE OF CHARGE AND OPEN TO THE COMMUNITY.\nYOUR VOLUNTARY CONTRIBUTION APPRECIATED.\n\n*Registration required. Follow EventBrite’s instructions.\nCheck here for guidance on EventBrite process.\nTrouble Registering? Email Pat@TNWAC.org\n\n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/election-2020-global-issues-sep-24/
CATEGORIES:Global Nashville
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200923T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200923T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203915Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190211Z
UID:24602-1600884000-1600887600@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Sep 23
DESCRIPTION:Join our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence. \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-sep-23/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series,Global Nashville
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200923T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200923T010000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203908Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190220Z
UID:24600-1600819200-1600822800@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Saudi Arabia | Vision or Mirage Author David Rundell | Sep 22
DESCRIPTION:What image do you have when someone says Saudi Arabia?\nAre you sure it’s accurate?\nSpend a little time with us as we talk with David Rundell\, the American with the most experience as a diplomat in the Kingdom.\nHave your questions ready.\nThis country is key to American policy in the Middle East. You should know more about it.\n“In February 1979\, the last Shah of Iran was overthrown by a violent Islamic revolution. Two years later when I arrived in the Middle East\, many commentators expected Saudi Arabia’s King Fahd would soon be the next monarch to fall. The Washington consensus held that we had paid inadequate attention to events outside of Iran’s capital\, Tehran. We did not want to repeat that mistake. So\, as the American Embassy’s most junior political officer\, I was assigned to spend ten days a month for nearly two years traveling the byroads of rural Saudi Arabia to see what I could learn. I learned a great deal\, and when I was done I argued against considerable skepticism that there would be no Saudi Revolution. Why was that my assessment then—and\, more importantly\, is it still correct today?”  — David Rundell \nThat is how David Rundell began his affair with Saudi Arabia and how he opened his book on the Kingdom he came to know during a large part of his thirty years as a United States Foreign Service Officer. He was posted to the U.S. Embassy in Riyadh and the Consulates in Jeddah and Dhahran. He served at various times chief of mission\, deputy chief of mission\, political counselor\, economic counselor\, and commercial counselor. \n\n\n\n\nJoin us for this Special Edition of Global Dialogue with David Rundell\, author of “Vision or Mirage: Saudi Arabia at a Crossroad.\n\n\nSomething extraordinary is happening in Saudi Arabia. A traditional\, tribal society once known for its lack of tolerance is rapidly implementing significant economic and social reforms. An army of foreign consultants is rewriting Saudi Arabia’s social contract\, King Salman is cracking down hard on corruption\, and his dynamic though inexperienced son\, the Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman\, is promoting a more tolerant brand of Islam. But is all this a new vision for Saudi Arabia or merely a mirage likely to dissolve into a more autocratic police state or an Iranian-style religious revolution? \nDavid H. Rundell – widely regarded as one of America’s foremost experts on Saudi Arabia – explains why the country has been so surprisingly stable for so long\, is less stable today\, and what is likely to happen there in the future. “Vision or Mirage” demystifies the world’s last strategically important absolute monarchy. It will prove valuable to anyone interested in global energy markets\, the Arab-Israeli conflict\, counterterrorism or regional stability in the Middle East. \n\n\n\n\n\nDavid Rundell served as an American diplomat for thirty years\, fifteen of which were spent in Saudi Arabia. He worked at the Embassy in Riyadh as well as the Consulates in Jeddah and Dhahran. His assignments included Chief of Mission\, Deputy Chief of Mission\, Political Counselor\, Economic Counselor\, and Commercial Counselor. This is a unique record for an American diplomat\, not only in Saud Arabia\, but in any country. \nDavid helped negotiate Saudi entry into the World Trade Organization. He made a crucial contribution to obtaining five-year reciprocal visas for American and Saudi travelers. He conceived and helped implement the Joint Commission for Critical Infrastructure Protection which has strengthened Saudi American relations as well as global energy security. He won numerous awards for his analysis and reporting from Saudi Arabia including four Superior Honor Awards and the Cox award given each year to the Foreign Service Office who has made the greatest contribution to American trade policy. \nAfter leaving the State Department in 2010 David worked as a business strategy consultant for Monitor Deloitte for five years. In Saudi Arabia\, this included work with the Saudi Ministry of Commerce\, Ministry of Foreign Affairs\, Saudi Aramco\, the King Abdullah University for Science and Technology (KAUST)\, and the Saudi Arabian General Investment Agency (SAGIA). For the past five years\, David has been a partner in Arabia Analytica a consulting firm based in New York\, Washington and Dubai. His new book Vision or Mirage\, Saudi Arabia at a Crossroads will be published by Bloomsbury in New York and London this fall. \nDavid holds a B.A. cum laude in economics from Colgate University and a M.Phil. in Middle East Studies from Oxford University. He lives in London and Dubai with his wife and daughter. \nDavid has been actively engaged in the production of oil and gas in the Permian Basin of West Texas and New Mexico for over 30 years. \n\n[raw] \n\n \n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/saudi-arabia-vision-or-mirage-sep-22/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200917T223000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200918T000000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203907Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190228Z
UID:24598-1600381800-1600387200@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:ELECTION 2020: Challenges: Russia\, North Korea\, Afghanistan | Sep 17
DESCRIPTION:Foreign Policy Challenges: Russia\, North Korea\, and Afghanistan\n \nPanel Chair: Dr. Breck Walker\, PhD\n\nDAS Annie Pforzheimer [Afghanistan] U.S. Foreign Service (Ret) Rank of Minister Counselor\, former Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Afghanistan; former Deputy Chief of Mission\, Kabul\, Afghanistan (Confirmed)\nSvetlana Savranskaya\, PhD.\, [Russia] Senior Analyst\, National Security Archive (Confirmed)\nAmbassador Christopher Hill [North Korea] U.S. Foreign Service (Ret); Chief Advisor to the Chancellor for Global Engagement; former Asst Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs; former Ambassador to four countries including South Korea (Confirmed)\n\nTNWAC is launching our Election 2020 global awareness series as we prepare for the Presidential Debate hosted by our partner Belmont University on October 22nd. \nTNWAC will present interviews and panels with distinguished specialists in international affairs to prepare voters with background and context on the critical issues they should know about the world. \nTNWAC is a nonpartisan educational organization that seeks to educate the community on global affairs. \nDr. Breck Walker \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \nAmbassador Christopher Hill \nAmbassador Christopher Hill\, who served 33 years in the U.S. foreign service and led the University of Denver’s school of international affairs for another seven\, will join SIPA’s faculty as George W. Ball Adjunct Professor for spring 2021. Over his long career\, Hill was at the forefront of U.S. foreign policy in multiple regions\, including as ambassador to Iraq\, the Republic of Korea\, Poland\, and Macedonia. As assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama\, Hill led U.S. efforts to end North Korea’s nuclear weapons program\, which induced North Korea to catalogue its nuclear activities and freeze and disable its plutonium production in 2008-2009.  Other career highlights include Hill’s service as U.S. envoy in negotiations that ended the Kosovo war in 1999\, and before that as a leading negotiator who helped forge the agreement that ended the Bosnian war in 1995. “Ambassador Hill’s extraordinary foreign policy experience will be of tremendous benefit to our students and intellectual community\,” wrote Dean Merit E. Janow in a message to the SIPA community. “We look forward to welcoming him to SIPA this spring.” Following his retirement from the State Department\, Hill served from 2010 to 2017 as dean of the Josef Korbel School of International Studies at the University of Denver. After he stepped down as dean he was until July 2020 the university’s head of global engagement and a professor of the practice of diplomacy. \nMinister Counselor Annie Pforzheimer \nA recently retired career diplomat with the personal rank of Minister Counselor\, Annie was until March 2019 the Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary for Afghanistan. From 2017-2018 she was the Deputy Chief of Mission in Kabul\, one of the largest embassies in the world\, during a period of both intensified violence and the beginning of a historic peace process. \nHer career has focused on security\, rule of law and human rights issues. She directed implementation of the Central America strategy at the National Security Council from 2014-2015\, organizing multiple U.S. government agencies to resolve the drivers of uncontrolled migration. She also led the Office of Andean Affairs in the Western Hemisphere Affairs bureau during Colombia’s peace process and the Office for Peacekeeping\, Sanctions and Counter-terrorism in the IO Bureau\, managing a $2 billion budget and monthly briefings to Congressional committees. She was the Director of the International Narcotics and Law Enforcement program in Mexico City\, Political Counselor in El Salvador\, and the human rights officer in Turkey and South Africa. Her first assignment was in Colombia. \nMs. Pforzheimer was awarded the State Department’s 2001 award for human rights reporting\, and has also received numerous State Department Superior and Meritorious Honor Awards. She is a graduate of Harvard University and the National War College. She speaks Spanish and some Dari\, and enjoys being the parent of a nearly-graduated son\, reading\, classical music and hiking. \nDr. Svetlana Savranskaya \nDr. Svetlana Savranskaya is a Senior Analyst at the Archive and since 2001 the director of the Archive’s Russia programs. She leads the Cooperative Threat Reduction Program of the Archive\, focusing on the Nunn-Lugar initiative and the ongoing challenges of U.S.-Russia cooperation\, and manages the Archive’s relationships with Russian academics and organizations. She served as lead organizer for the historic 2013 Nunn-Lugar conference at Musgrove\, and the 2015 Kazakhstan Nunn-Lugar conference in Astana and Kurchatov. Previously\, she organized and led six summer schools in Russia\, the successful Archive partnerships with Kuban State University\, Tbilisi State University\, the Gorbachev Foundation\, Memorial\, the Moscow Helsinki Group\, and organizations in the Caucasus culminating in the series of four major international conferences on access to information in the former Soviet space. \nShe won the Link-Kuehl Prize in 2011 from the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations\, for the best documentary publication over the previous two years\, for her book (with Thomas Blanton and Vladislav Zubok) “Masterpieces of History”: The Peaceful End of the Cold War in Europe 1989 (Budapest/New York: Central European University Press\, 2010\, 730 pp.). Her most recent book\, with the late Sergo Mikoyan\, is The Soviet Cuban Missile Crisis: Castro\, Mikoyan\, Kennedy\, Khrushchev\, and the Missiles of November (Washington D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Center Press/Stanford University Press\, 2012\, 589 pp.). She also serves as an adjunct professor teaching U.S.-Russian relations and Russian politics at the American University School of International Service in Washington D.C. (since 2001). \nShe earned her Ph.D. in political science and international affairs in 1998 from Emory University\, where she studied with Professors Robert Pastor and Thomas Remington. A “Red Diploma” (equivalent of summa cum laude) graduate of the Moscow State University in 1988\, she went on to study at the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the USSR Academy of Sciences in 1989-90\, before moving to Emory. \nHer articles have appeared in the Journal of Strategic Studies and the Cold War International History Project Bulletin\, and she has authored book chapters for the World Political Forum\, the Cambridge History of the Cold War\, and other volumes. Her online publications include major documentary postings on the Reagan-Gorbachev-Bush summits\, on the Moscow Helsinki Group\, on Charter 77 in Czechoslovakia\, on the Soviet war in Afghanistan\, and on the Soviet-era leader of glasnost\, Alexander Yakovlev. She is currently completing a groundbreaking new volume\, with Thomas Blanton\, The Last Superpower Summits: Gorbachev\, Reagan and Bush (Budapest/New York: Central European University Press\, 2016).
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/election-2020-challenges-russia-north-korea-afghanistan-sep-17/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200916T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200916T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203859Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190237Z
UID:24596-1600279200-1600282800@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Sep 16
DESCRIPTION:What in the World?\n \n  \n\nJoin our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments.\nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence. \n \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-sep-16/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200916T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200916T010000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203849Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190315Z
UID:24594-1600214400-1600218000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global Nashville with Karl Dean - YPs of Nashville | Sep 15
DESCRIPTION:Global Nashville with Karl Dean – YPs of Nashville\nFormer Nashville Mayor Karl Dean hosts a conversation with Bronte Prins and Mary Love Richardson\, members of the Board of the Tennessee World Affairs Council\, about the Global Young Professionals group. \n \nJoin them for a conversation about the activities of the group including the Fall YP calendar. Follow up the Webinar with a meeting with former Mayor Dean for a conversation about what’s happening in Nashville. \nThe Global YP Group is associated with the Tennessee World Affairs Council\, a nonpartisan educational organization that works to connect our community to global affairs awareness programs and resources. \n \nThe Young Professionals group of the Tennessee World Affairs Council unites like-minded young professionals living and working in Tennessee who are interested in international affairs and global literacy. With a strong focus on networking\, YP-TNWAC is committed to creating a connected community and providing opportunities for its members to develop socially and professionally. \n \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-nashville-with-karl-dean-yps-of-nashville-sep-15/
CATEGORIES:Global Nashville
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200910T223000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200911T000000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203848Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190326Z
UID:24592-1599777000-1599782400@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:ELECTION 2020: China: Confrontation and Conflict or Cooperation | Sep 10
DESCRIPTION:  \nChina: Confrontation and Conflict or Cooperation?\n \nTHURSDAY\, SEPTEMBER 10\, 2020\nVIA ZOOM WEBINAR (Register below)\n5:30pm-7:00pm (CDT)\n  \n• Panel Chair: Dr. Susan Haynes\, PhD\n• Dr. Yang Zhong\, PhD\, Professor of Political Science\, University of Tennessee\, Knoxville (Confirmed)\n• Jeremy Goldkorn\, Editor in Chief\, SupChina.com (Confirmed)\n• John Scannapieco\, Chair Global Business Team\, Baker Donelson\, Nashville (Confirmed)\n• Bonnie S. Glaser\, Senior Adviser for Asia; Director\, China Power Project; Center for Strategic and International Studies\, Washington (Confirmed) \nTNWAC is launching our Election 2020 global awareness series as we prepare for the Presidential Debate hosted by our partner Belmont University on October 22nd. \nTNWAC will present interviews and panels with distinguished specialists in international affairs to prepare voters with background and context on the critical issues they should know about the world. \nTNWAC is a nonpartisan educational organization that seeks to educate the community on global affairs. \nTNWAC needs your support now more than ever. With a suggested donation of $100\, you can help the Council continue to offer free and public programming to discuss critical global issues affecting Americans’ security and prosperity. \n \nDr. Susan Haynes \nSusan Turner Haynes is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Lipscomb University. Prior to her doctorate\, Haynes was selected as a Public Policy and Nuclear Threat (PPNT) fellow at the University of California\, San Diego. Haynes research specializes in Chinese nuclear strategy (Chinese Nuclear Proliferation: How Global Politics is Transforming China’s Weapons Modernization\, 2016). In addition\, Haynes has published numerous articles in peer-reviewed journals\, including Asian Perspectives\, Asian Security\, PS: Political Science and Politics\, Strategic Studies Quarterly\, The Nonproliferation Review\, and Comparative Strategy. She has also authored chapters in the Ashgate Research Companion on Chinese Foreign Policy\, and has a chapter in the forthcoming Routledge volume on Nuclear Modernization. Haynes has been invited to present her research at the Department of Defense Strategic Multilayer Assessment Group and at the Air War College. Haynes is a member of the International Studies Association and American Political Science Association and serves as a board member for the Tennessee World Affairs Council (TNWAC). She serves as sponsor of the Lipscomb Model UN club and co-sponsor of the political science honor society\, Pi Sigma Alpha. \nDr. Yang Zhong \nProfessor Zhong’s is Professor of Political Science at the University of Tennessee\, Knoxville. His main research interests include Chinese local government and politics\, mass political culture in China\, Sino-U.S. relations and relations between China and Taiwan. He has published two scholarly books and edited several others. He has published three scholarly books and edited several others. He has also published over 50 journal articles and book chapters. Some of his works have appeared in top political science journals such as The Journal of Politics\, Political Research Quarterly and Comparative Political Studies. Dr. Zhong also serves as an External Research Associate at China Policy Institute of the University of Nottingham. He was a Visiting Research Fellow at East Asian Institute of National University of Singapore between January and June 2001 and between July and October 2004. Professor Zhong has received research funding from Chiang Ching-Kuo Foundation for International Scholarly Exchange (USA)\, Pacific Cultural Foundation\, and the University of Tennessee. Professor Zhong has served as President of Association of Chinese Political Studies (USA). He has also served as Interim Director\, the Center for International Education\, Chair of Asian Studies Committee and Associate Head of Political Science Department at the University of Tennessee. \nMr. Jeremy Goldkorn \nJeremy Goldkorn is the founder and director of Danwei\, a research firm which began life in 2003 as a website that translated and analyzed Chinese media\, Internet\, government regulation\, and censorship. In 2009\, shortly after Goldkorn opened a consulting business in Beijing to operate the website\, it was blocked\, and the company pivoted to providing media and market research services. The Financial Times acquired Danwei in 2013. Goldkorn is an affiliate of the Australian National University’s Centre on China in the World\, and a co-editor of the China Story website and annual China Story Yearbook published by the Centre. He is is co-host of the Sinica podcast\, and founder of Great Wall Fresh\, a social enterprise to help Chinese peasant farmers run small tourism businesses catering to foreign outdoor enthusiasts. After moving to China in 1995\, Goldkorn lived in a workers’ dormitory\, founded\, edited and managed several Chinese- and English-language magazines\, ran a design firm\, produced a documentary film about African soccer players in Beijing\, and rode a bicycle from Peshawar to Kathmandu via Kashgar and Lhasa. He moved to Nashville Tennessee in 2015 and is a board member of the Tennessee China Network. \nMs. Bonnie S. Glaser \nBonnie S. Glaser is a senior adviser for Asia and the director of the China Power Project at CSIS\, where she works on issues related to Asia-Pacific security with a focus on Chinese foreign and security policy. She is concomitantly a nonresident fellow with the Lowy Institute in Sydney\, Australia\, and a senior associate with the Pacific Forum. Ms. Glaser has worked for more than three decades at the intersection of Asia-Pacific geopolitics and U.S. policy. From 2008 to mid-2015\, she was a senior adviser with the CSIS Freeman Chair in China Studies\, and from 2003 to 2008\, she was a senior associate in the CSIS International Security Program. Prior to joining CSIS\, she served as a consultant for various U.S. government offices\, including the Departments of Defense and State. Ms. Glaser has published widely in academic and policy journals\, including the Washington Quarterly\, China Quarterly\, Asian Survey\, International Security\, Contemporary Southeast Asia\, American Foreign Policy Interests\, Far Eastern Economic Review\, and Korean Journal of Defense Analysis\, as well as in leading newspapers such as the New York Times and International Herald Tribune and in various edited volumes on Asian security. She is also a regular contributor to the Pacific Forum web journal Comparative Connections. She is currently a board member of the U.S. Committee of the Council for Security Cooperation in the Asia Pacific and a member of both the Council on Foreign Relations and the International Institute for Strategic Studies. She served as a member of the Defense Department’s Defense Policy Board China Panel in 1997. Ms. Glaser received her B.A. in political science from Boston University and her M.A. with concentrations in international economics and Chinese studies from the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. \n \nMr. John Scannapieco \nJohn Scannapieco is head of the global business team at Baker Donelson. He assists U.S. and foreign clients in connection with the sale or disposition of assets\, as well as the negotiation and drafting of distribution\, manufacturing\, employment and agency agreements throughout the world\, including the United States\, Central and South America\, Europe and Asia. He works with a variety of U.S.-based companies in connection with their business activities in China\, Europe\, the Americas and Africa. He also advises companies that are contemplating pursuing a China strategy\, as well as those companies that are currently doing business in China or with China-based businesses. Mr. Scannapieco serves as Honorary Consul from Great Britain and Northern Ireland in Tennessee. He is a board member of the Nashville Area Chamber of Commerce’s International Business Council and has served as a chairman of the board of the Japan American Society of Tennessee. He also serves as a board member for Tennessee-China Network\, Tennessee World Affairs Council and Belmont University Center for International Business. He has been recognized by Mid-South Super Lawyers in International Law. \n \nTNWAC recently spoke with Admiral Bill Owens\, former Vice Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff\, about U.S.-China relations. You should watch this program before joining us for the September 10th panel on China. \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/election-2020-china-sep-10/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200909T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200909T190000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203841Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190329Z
UID:24590-1599674400-1599678000@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:Global News Review | Sep 9
DESCRIPTION:Join our team of Ambassador Dick Bowers\, Dr. Breck Walker and LCDR Patrick Ryan for expert analysis of current global developments. \nGive Dick\, Breck and Pat 45 minutes and they’ll give you the world. Analysis and entertaining commentary on the top events and issues leading global news reports. Hard to find insights and perspectives from diplomacy\, academia and intelligence. [Register Below] \nTopics for September 9: \n1 – United Nations General Assembly – UNGA75 \n2 – China Military Power \n3 – TBA \n  \nHERE’S A SAMPLE \n \nClick for video on YouTube.com/TNWAC \nCharles Richard (Dick) Bowers served as the US Ambassador to Bolivia from 1991 through 1994. During that time\, the American Embassy in Bolivia’s capital\, La Paz\, was the largest and most complex U.S. embassy in South America. Ambassador Bowers grew up in the San Francisco Bay area\, attended the University of California\, Berkeley. He entered the U.S. Foreign Service in 1967. From 1961 to 1964 he served in the U.S. Army as a Russian linguist in West Berlin at the height of the Cold War. As a career member of the U.S. diplomatic corps\, Ambassador Bowers served in the U.S. Embassies in Panama\, Poland\, Singapore\, Germany and Bolivia. He retired from the Foreign Service in 1995. Amb Bowers has been a Board Member of the Tennessee World Affairs Council since 2012. \nPatrick Ryan is a native of New York City. He enlisted in the Navy at age 17 and volunteered for submarine duty. He served aboard nuclear fast attack and ballistic missile boats during the Cold War\, rising to the rank of Chief Petty Officer. In 1982 he was commissioned and served aboard a cruiser in the Western Pacific before becoming a Navy Intelligence Officer. Ryan served aboard the carrier Constellation in the Pacific\, the Joint Staff Intelligence Directorate in the Pentagon\, the Center for Naval Analysis\, and the Intelligence Directorate of U.S. Central Command. Ryan retired from the Navy in 1998 and worked as a consultant on Intelligence Community projects and as the VP/COO of the National Council on U.S.-Arab Relations. Ryan ran a newsletter publishing business on international affairs from 1999-2016. He founded the Tennessee World Affairs Council in 2007. \nBreck Walker received his PhD in Diplomatic History from Vanderbilt in 2007. His dissertation was on the foreign policy of the Carter administration. He taught at Sewanee\, the University of the South\, 2007-2012\, and on the University of Virginia’s Semester at Sea Program in Spring 2013 and Fall 2015. He worked as a historian in the Historical Office of the Office of Secretary of Defense 2013-2016\, researching and writing a book on early Pentagon cyber policy. Prior to becoming a history professor\, Breck worked for twenty years as an investment banker\, the last ten as co-head of the Corporate Finance Group at J.C. Bradford & Co in Nashville. He has an undergraduate degree from the University of Texas\, and J.D. and M.B.A. degrees from Stanford University. Breck serves as a Member of the Board of Directors of the Tennessee World Affairs Council. \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/global-news-review-sep-9/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20200909T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20200909T010000
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200830T203833Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190332Z
UID:24588-1599609600-1599613200@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:New Henry Kissinger Book w/Prof Thomas Schwartz | Sep 8
DESCRIPTION:CAPACITY NOTE: Our Zoom Room contains 100 seats. If we reach capacity and you receive an indication the event is “SOLD OUT” you can still watch the program on FACEBOOK LIVE. Visit the “Tennessee World Affairs Council” FaceBook page at 7:00pm EDT to join the program. \nGlobal Dialogue Special Edition | Prof. Thomas Schwartz\, author of “Henry Kissinger and American Power: A Political Biography”\n \nJoin us as we talk with Prof. Thomas Schwartz\, Distinguished Professor of History and Politics at Vanderbilt University \nABOUT THE BOOK \nThe definitive biography of Henry Kissinger―at least for those who neither revere nor revile him \nOver the past six decades\, Henry Kissinger has been America’s most consistently praised―and reviled―public figure. He was hailed as a “miracle worker” for his peacemaking in the Middle East\, pursuit of détente with the Soviet Union\, negotiation of an end to the Vietnam War\, and secret plan to open the United States to China. He was assailed from the left and from the right for his indifference to human rights\, complicity in the pointless sacrifice of American and Vietnamese lives\, and reliance on deception and intrigue. Was he a brilliant master strategist―“the 20th century’s greatest 19th century statesman”―or a cold-blooded monster who eroded America’s moral standing for the sake of self-promotion? \nIn this masterfully researched biography\, the renowned diplomatic historian Thomas Schwartz offers an authoritative\, and fair-minded\, answer to this question. While other biographers have engaged in hagiography or demonology\, Schwartz takes a measured view of his subject. He recognizes Kissinger’s successes and acknowledges that Kissinger thought seriously and with great insight about the foreign policy issues of his time\, while also recognizing his failures\, his penchant for backbiting\, and his reliance on ingratiating and fawning praise of the president as a source of power. Throughout\, Schwartz stresses Kissinger’s artful invention of himself as a celebrity diplomat and his domination of the medium of television news. He also notes Kissinger’s sensitivity to domestic and partisan politics\, complicating―and undermining―the image of the far-seeing statesman who stands above the squabbles of popular strife. \nRounded and textured\, and rich with new insights into key dilemmas of American power\, Henry Kissinger and American Power stands as an essential guide to a man whose legacy is as complex as the last sixty years of US history itself. \n \nABOUT PROFESSOR THOMAS SCHWARTZ\, PHD \nThomas Alan Schwartz is a historian of the foreign relations of the United States\, with related interests in American politics\, the history of international relations\, Modern European history\, and biography. His most recent book is Henry Kissinger and American Power: A Political Biography (Hill and Wang\, 2020). The book has received considerable notice and acclaim. Harvard’s University’s Charles Maier has written: “Thomas Schwartz’s superbly researched political biography reveals the brilliance\, self-serving ego\, and vulnerability of America’s most remarkable diplomat in the twentieth century\, even as it provides a history of U.S. engagement in global politics as it moved beyond bipolarity.” Earlier in his career\, Schwartz was the author of America’s Germany: John J. McCloy and the Federal Republic of Germany (Harvard\, 1991)\, which was translated into German\, Die Atlantik Brücke (Ullstein\, 1992). This book received the Stuart Bernath Book Prize of the Society of American Foreign Relations\, and the Harry S. Truman Book Award\, given by the Truman Presidential Library. He is also the author of Lyndon Johnson and Europe: In the Shadow of Vietnam (Harvard\, 2003)\, which examined the Johnson Administration’s policy toward Europe and assessed the impact of the war in Vietnam on its other foreign policy objectives. He is the co-editor with Matthias Schulz of The Strained Alliance: U.S.-European Relations from Nixon to Carter\, (Cambridge University Press\, 2009). \nProfessor Schwartz has held fellowships from the Social Science Research Council\, the German Historical Society\, the Norwegian Nobel Institute\, the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars\, and the Center for the Study of European Integration. He has served as President of the Society of Historians of American Foreign Relations. He served on the United States Department of State’s Historical Advisory Committee as the representative of the Organization of American Historians from 2005-2008. Professor Schwartz received The Madison Sarratt Prize for Excellence in Undergraduate Teaching on April 3\, 2013 at the Spring Faculty Assembly\, Vanderbilt University. In 2008 Professor Schwartz received the Annual Alumni Education Award from the Vanderbilt Alumni Association. Schwartz is the recipient of the 2008 Book Award by Chi Chapter of the Kappa Alpha Order. This award is given to a faculty member who has been particularly influential in the lives and education of members of KAO. Professor Schwartz presented\, “The Arab Spring: Revolution in the Middle East\,” on April 19\, 2011\, as part of the Samuel L. Shannon Distinguished Lecture Series at Tennessee State University. Professor Schwartz has also presented lectures for the OAH Distinguished Lecturers Program. \n\nTNWAC needs your support now more than ever. With a suggested donation of $100\, you can help the Council continue to offer free and public programming to discuss global issues of critical importance to Americans’ security and prosperity. \nCAPACITY NOTE:Our Zoom Room contains 100 seats. If we reach capacity and you receive an indication the event is “SOLD OUT” you can still watch the program on FACEBOOK LIVE. Visit the “Tennessee World Affairs Council” FaceBook page at 7:00pm EDT to join the program. \n  \n[raw] \n\n \n\n[/raw]
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/new-henry-kissinger-book-w-prof-thomas-schwartz-sep-8/
CATEGORIES:Distinguished Speaker Series
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200903
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200905
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200831T183031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190349Z
UID:42999-1599109200-1599195599@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:COVID-19 Complexities: Global Town Hall | Part 1 | Impact in the Developing World | Sep 2
DESCRIPTION:COVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \nSeptember 2\, 2020\nPanel 1 – Impact in the Developing World\n7:00p-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & FaceBook Live \nSeptember 3\, 2020\nPanel 2 – Global Response and the Future\n7:00-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & Facebook Live \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSEPTEMBER 2 – IMPACT IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD \n \nExamining Critical Issues in the Global Pandemic \nCOVID-19 has touched every part of the world but its effects and the reaction of different countries has been uneven. In an interconnected world we need to understand the pandemic’s impact beyond our borders. Importantly\, the progress toward a COVID-19 vaccine and therapeutic treatments is a global pursuit. There are\, as well\, already no shortage of changes made and those to come in reaction to the global catastrophe – in our communities\, technology\, health and science\, government performance\, elections\, the global economy and our lifestyles. \nA group of World Affairs Councils – nationwide\, independent\, nonpartisan educational organizations – is joining together with an international network of journalists and specialists to organize conversations over the course of two evenings in early September. The goal is to help Americans understand the impact of the pandemic in an interactive program open to all. \nWe invite you to join this unique partnership to inform and inspire Americans to know more about COVID-19’s impact around the world\, the race for a vaccine and how the vaccine has changed the world. \nOn September 2nd and 3rd journalists\, physicians\, researchers\, NGO officials and others will come together to discuss the global impact of COVID-19 and the pursuit of a vaccine. \nThe program is brought to the public in partnership with many of the nationwide networks of World Affairs Councils and an international network of journalists. \nWEDNESDAY\, SEPTEMBER 2\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel One — COVID-19: Impact in the Developing World \nThe opening night of the two-night program will begin with a scene-setting keynote from Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel\, MD\, PhD\, U Penn Vice Provost for Global Initiatives and a former advisor for health policy in the Obama White House. That will kick off a deep dive into COVID-19 beyond America’s borders. \nThrough the eyes and reporters’ notebooks of journalists based around the world we’ll learn from: Yu Fen Tsao\, Radio Free Asia’s Executive Director about “China\, WHO and the Origins of the Pandemic”; Henry Flores\, Regional Reporter Director for Unbound\, an NGO that focuses on vulnerable communities on the situation in Latin America; Linord Moudou\, VOA’s senior health reporter for Africa on COVID-19 in Africa; and Niusha Boghrati\, Radio Farda RFE/RL Iranian Service Executive Editor on the situation in Iran. \nThe conversations will be aided by questions from our worldwide audience\, consisting of nationwide World Affairs Council viewers\, the general public\, student groups and a virtual group tied in through our global network of partners. \nTHURSDAY\, SEPTEMBER 3\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel Two – COVID-19: Global Response and the Future \nThe second evening of the COVID-19 Global Town Hall will focus on the responses to COVID-19 including the global pursuit of a vaccine and therapeutic remedies with a conversation with Irina Lagunina\, Senior Editor at Radio Svoboda\, Radio Free Europe’s Russian service; what was America’s response in an international context with Dr. Sandy Johnson\, Director of Global Health Affairs at the University of Denver; and how the pandemic has impacted efforts at peace and security in an already troubled world\, with Susan Stigant of the U.S. Institute of Peace. Other invited panelists will be announced. \nAs with panel one\, the Wednesday evening panel will feature a distinguished keynote speaker to focus the conversation and the participation of a nationwide audience in the United States and attendees from a global network. \n \nCOVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \n  \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSponsorship Contacts: \n• Patrick Ryan\, President\, Tennessee World Affairs Council | pat@tnwac.org | 931-261-2353 \n• Joyce Davis\, President WAC of Harrisburg | jdavis@pennlive.com | 717-255-4138 \nTHANKS TO THE COVID-19 GLOBAL TOWN HALL SPONSORS \n \nTHE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MEDICAL CENTER \n \nHARRISBURG UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY \n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n \n 
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/covid-19-complexities-global-town-hall-3/
CATEGORIES:Town Hall
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200903
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200905
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200831T183031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190337Z
UID:24901-1599109200-1599195599@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:COVID-19 Complexities: Global Town Hall | Part 1 | Impact in the Developing World | Sep 2
DESCRIPTION:COVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \nSeptember 2\, 2020\nPanel 1 – Impact in the Developing World\n7:00p-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & FaceBook Live \nSeptember 3\, 2020\nPanel 2 – Global Response and the Future\n7:00-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & Facebook Live \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSEPTEMBER 2 – IMPACT IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD \n \nExamining Critical Issues in the Global Pandemic \nCOVID-19 has touched every part of the world but its effects and the reaction of different countries has been uneven. In an interconnected world we need to understand the pandemic’s impact beyond our borders. Importantly\, the progress toward a COVID-19 vaccine and therapeutic treatments is a global pursuit. There are\, as well\, already no shortage of changes made and those to come in reaction to the global catastrophe – in our communities\, technology\, health and science\, government performance\, elections\, the global economy and our lifestyles. \nA group of World Affairs Councils – nationwide\, independent\, nonpartisan educational organizations – is joining together with an international network of journalists and specialists to organize conversations over the course of two evenings in early September. The goal is to help Americans understand the impact of the pandemic in an interactive program open to all. \nWe invite you to join this unique partnership to inform and inspire Americans to know more about COVID-19’s impact around the world\, the race for a vaccine and how the vaccine has changed the world. \nOn September 2nd and 3rd journalists\, physicians\, researchers\, NGO officials and others will come together to discuss the global impact of COVID-19 and the pursuit of a vaccine. \nThe program is brought to the public in partnership with many of the nationwide networks of World Affairs Councils and an international network of journalists. \nWEDNESDAY\, SEPTEMBER 2\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel One — COVID-19: Impact in the Developing World \nThe opening night of the two-night program will begin with a scene-setting keynote from Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel\, MD\, PhD\, U Penn Vice Provost for Global Initiatives and a former advisor for health policy in the Obama White House. That will kick off a deep dive into COVID-19 beyond America’s borders. \nThrough the eyes and reporters’ notebooks of journalists based around the world we’ll learn from: Yu Fen Tsao\, Radio Free Asia’s Executive Director about “China\, WHO and the Origins of the Pandemic”; Henry Flores\, Regional Reporter Director for Unbound\, an NGO that focuses on vulnerable communities on the situation in Latin America; Linord Moudou\, VOA’s senior health reporter for Africa on COVID-19 in Africa; and Niusha Boghrati\, Radio Farda RFE/RL Iranian Service Executive Editor on the situation in Iran. \nThe conversations will be aided by questions from our worldwide audience\, consisting of nationwide World Affairs Council viewers\, the general public\, student groups and a virtual group tied in through our global network of partners. \nTHURSDAY\, SEPTEMBER 3\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel Two – COVID-19: Global Response and the Future \nThe second evening of the COVID-19 Global Town Hall will focus on the responses to COVID-19 including the global pursuit of a vaccine and therapeutic remedies with a conversation with Irina Lagunina\, Senior Editor at Radio Svoboda\, Radio Free Europe’s Russian service; what was America’s response in an international context with Dr. Sandy Johnson\, Director of Global Health Affairs at the University of Denver; and how the pandemic has impacted efforts at peace and security in an already troubled world\, with Susan Stigant of the U.S. Institute of Peace. Other invited panelists will be announced. \nAs with panel one\, the Wednesday evening panel will feature a distinguished keynote speaker to focus the conversation and the participation of a nationwide audience in the United States and attendees from a global network. \n \nCOVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \n  \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSponsorship Contacts: \n• Patrick Ryan\, President\, Tennessee World Affairs Council | pat@tnwac.org | 931-261-2353 \n• Joyce Davis\, President WAC of Harrisburg | jdavis@pennlive.com | 717-255-4138 \nTHANKS TO THE COVID-19 GLOBAL TOWN HALL SPONSORS \n \nTHE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MEDICAL CENTER \n \nHARRISBURG UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY \n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n \n 
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/covid-19-complexities-global-town-hall/
CATEGORIES:Town Hall
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.tnwac.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/covid-logo-v3.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200903
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200905
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200831T183031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190423Z
UID:44087-1599109200-1599195599@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:COVID-19 Complexities: Global Town Hall | Part 1 | Impact in the Developing World | Sep 2
DESCRIPTION:COVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \nSeptember 2\, 2020\nPanel 1 – Impact in the Developing World\n7:00p-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & FaceBook Live \nSeptember 3\, 2020\nPanel 2 – Global Response and the Future\n7:00-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & Facebook Live \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSEPTEMBER 2 – IMPACT IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD \n \nExamining Critical Issues in the Global Pandemic \nCOVID-19 has touched every part of the world but its effects and the reaction of different countries has been uneven. In an interconnected world we need to understand the pandemic’s impact beyond our borders. Importantly\, the progress toward a COVID-19 vaccine and therapeutic treatments is a global pursuit. There are\, as well\, already no shortage of changes made and those to come in reaction to the global catastrophe – in our communities\, technology\, health and science\, government performance\, elections\, the global economy and our lifestyles. \nA group of World Affairs Councils – nationwide\, independent\, nonpartisan educational organizations – is joining together with an international network of journalists and specialists to organize conversations over the course of two evenings in early September. The goal is to help Americans understand the impact of the pandemic in an interactive program open to all. \nWe invite you to join this unique partnership to inform and inspire Americans to know more about COVID-19’s impact around the world\, the race for a vaccine and how the vaccine has changed the world. \nOn September 2nd and 3rd journalists\, physicians\, researchers\, NGO officials and others will come together to discuss the global impact of COVID-19 and the pursuit of a vaccine. \nThe program is brought to the public in partnership with many of the nationwide networks of World Affairs Councils and an international network of journalists. \nWEDNESDAY\, SEPTEMBER 2\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel One — COVID-19: Impact in the Developing World \nThe opening night of the two-night program will begin with a scene-setting keynote from Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel\, MD\, PhD\, U Penn Vice Provost for Global Initiatives and a former advisor for health policy in the Obama White House. That will kick off a deep dive into COVID-19 beyond America’s borders. \nThrough the eyes and reporters’ notebooks of journalists based around the world we’ll learn from: Yu Fen Tsao\, Radio Free Asia’s Executive Director about “China\, WHO and the Origins of the Pandemic”; Henry Flores\, Regional Reporter Director for Unbound\, an NGO that focuses on vulnerable communities on the situation in Latin America; Linord Moudou\, VOA’s senior health reporter for Africa on COVID-19 in Africa; and Niusha Boghrati\, Radio Farda RFE/RL Iranian Service Executive Editor on the situation in Iran. \nThe conversations will be aided by questions from our worldwide audience\, consisting of nationwide World Affairs Council viewers\, the general public\, student groups and a virtual group tied in through our global network of partners. \nTHURSDAY\, SEPTEMBER 3\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel Two – COVID-19: Global Response and the Future \nThe second evening of the COVID-19 Global Town Hall will focus on the responses to COVID-19 including the global pursuit of a vaccine and therapeutic remedies with a conversation with Irina Lagunina\, Senior Editor at Radio Svoboda\, Radio Free Europe’s Russian service; what was America’s response in an international context with Dr. Sandy Johnson\, Director of Global Health Affairs at the University of Denver; and how the pandemic has impacted efforts at peace and security in an already troubled world\, with Susan Stigant of the U.S. Institute of Peace. Other invited panelists will be announced. \nAs with panel one\, the Wednesday evening panel will feature a distinguished keynote speaker to focus the conversation and the participation of a nationwide audience in the United States and attendees from a global network. \n \nCOVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \n  \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSponsorship Contacts: \n• Patrick Ryan\, President\, Tennessee World Affairs Council | pat@tnwac.org | 931-261-2353 \n• Joyce Davis\, President WAC of Harrisburg | jdavis@pennlive.com | 717-255-4138 \nTHANKS TO THE COVID-19 GLOBAL TOWN HALL SPONSORS \n \nTHE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MEDICAL CENTER \n \nHARRISBURG UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY \n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n \n 
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/covid-19-complexities-global-town-hall-4/
CATEGORIES:Town Hall
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.tnwac.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/covid-logo-v3.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200903
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200905
DTSTAMP:20260510T150208
CREATED:20200831T183031Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250218T190345Z
UID:42827-1599109200-1599195599@www.tnwac.org
SUMMARY:COVID-19 Complexities: Global Town Hall | Part 1 | Impact in the Developing World | Sep 2
DESCRIPTION:COVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \nSeptember 2\, 2020\nPanel 1 – Impact in the Developing World\n7:00p-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & FaceBook Live \nSeptember 3\, 2020\nPanel 2 – Global Response and the Future\n7:00-8:30p EDT\nVia Zoom & Facebook Live \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSEPTEMBER 2 – IMPACT IN THE DEVELOPING WORLD \n \nExamining Critical Issues in the Global Pandemic \nCOVID-19 has touched every part of the world but its effects and the reaction of different countries has been uneven. In an interconnected world we need to understand the pandemic’s impact beyond our borders. Importantly\, the progress toward a COVID-19 vaccine and therapeutic treatments is a global pursuit. There are\, as well\, already no shortage of changes made and those to come in reaction to the global catastrophe – in our communities\, technology\, health and science\, government performance\, elections\, the global economy and our lifestyles. \nA group of World Affairs Councils – nationwide\, independent\, nonpartisan educational organizations – is joining together with an international network of journalists and specialists to organize conversations over the course of two evenings in early September. The goal is to help Americans understand the impact of the pandemic in an interactive program open to all. \nWe invite you to join this unique partnership to inform and inspire Americans to know more about COVID-19’s impact around the world\, the race for a vaccine and how the vaccine has changed the world. \nOn September 2nd and 3rd journalists\, physicians\, researchers\, NGO officials and others will come together to discuss the global impact of COVID-19 and the pursuit of a vaccine. \nThe program is brought to the public in partnership with many of the nationwide networks of World Affairs Councils and an international network of journalists. \nWEDNESDAY\, SEPTEMBER 2\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel One — COVID-19: Impact in the Developing World \nThe opening night of the two-night program will begin with a scene-setting keynote from Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel\, MD\, PhD\, U Penn Vice Provost for Global Initiatives and a former advisor for health policy in the Obama White House. That will kick off a deep dive into COVID-19 beyond America’s borders. \nThrough the eyes and reporters’ notebooks of journalists based around the world we’ll learn from: Yu Fen Tsao\, Radio Free Asia’s Executive Director about “China\, WHO and the Origins of the Pandemic”; Henry Flores\, Regional Reporter Director for Unbound\, an NGO that focuses on vulnerable communities on the situation in Latin America; Linord Moudou\, VOA’s senior health reporter for Africa on COVID-19 in Africa; and Niusha Boghrati\, Radio Farda RFE/RL Iranian Service Executive Editor on the situation in Iran. \nThe conversations will be aided by questions from our worldwide audience\, consisting of nationwide World Affairs Council viewers\, the general public\, student groups and a virtual group tied in through our global network of partners. \nTHURSDAY\, SEPTEMBER 3\, 2020\n@ 7-8p ET/6-7p CT/5-6 MT \nPanel Two – COVID-19: Global Response and the Future \nThe second evening of the COVID-19 Global Town Hall will focus on the responses to COVID-19 including the global pursuit of a vaccine and therapeutic remedies with a conversation with Irina Lagunina\, Senior Editor at Radio Svoboda\, Radio Free Europe’s Russian service; what was America’s response in an international context with Dr. Sandy Johnson\, Director of Global Health Affairs at the University of Denver; and how the pandemic has impacted efforts at peace and security in an already troubled world\, with Susan Stigant of the U.S. Institute of Peace. Other invited panelists will be announced. \nAs with panel one\, the Wednesday evening panel will feature a distinguished keynote speaker to focus the conversation and the participation of a nationwide audience in the United States and attendees from a global network. \n \nCOVID COMPLEXITIES – A GLOBAL TOWN HALL \nA Collaboration among World Affairs Councils And\nAn International Network of Journalists \n  \nOrganized through a partnership of: World Affairs Councils of Kansas City\, Denver\, Harrisburg\, Tennessee\, Colorado Springs\, Western Massachusetts and Kentucky & Southern Indiana \nSponsorship Contacts: \n• Patrick Ryan\, President\, Tennessee World Affairs Council | pat@tnwac.org | 931-261-2353 \n• Joyce Davis\, President WAC of Harrisburg | jdavis@pennlive.com | 717-255-4138 \nTHANKS TO THE COVID-19 GLOBAL TOWN HALL SPONSORS \n \nTHE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS MEDICAL CENTER \n \nHARRISBURG UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY \n\nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHANKS TO OUR PARTNERS IN GLOBAL AFFAIRS AWARENESS AND EDUCATION OUTREACH \n \nTHE MISSION of the nonprofit\, nonpartisan Tennessee World Affairs Council is to promote international awareness\, understanding and connections to enhance the region’s global stature and to prepare Tennesseans to thrive in our increasingly complex and connected world. \nTHE VISION of  the Tennessee World Affairs Council is a well-informed community that thinks critically about the world and the impact of global events. \n \n 
URL:https://www.tnwac.org/event/covid-19-complexities-global-town-hall-2/
CATEGORIES:Town Hall
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://www.tnwac.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/covid-logo-v3.jpg
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR