Cyber 9/12 Student Challenge General Informationatlanticcouncil
In Washington, DC, student teams confront a serious
cybersecurity breach of national and international importance.
Teams will compose policy recommendations
and justify their decision-making process, considering
the role and implications for relevant civilian,
military, law enforcement, and private sector entities
and updating the recommendations as the scenario
evolves.
In Geneva, Switzerland, in
partnership with the Geneva
Centre for Security
Policy (GCSP), students
respond to a major cyberattack
on European networks. Competitors will provide
recommendations balancing individual national
approaches and a collective crisis management response,
considering capabilities, policies, and governance
structures of NATO, EU, and individual nations.
The competition fosters a culture of cooperation and
a better understanding of these organizations and
their member states in responding to cyberattacks.
EMIP and Sanabel, the network of microfinance institutions in the Arab countries, held a conference in Tunis on 5 May 2008 on the subject "Microfinance in the Mediterranean: what impact?", which brought together over 420 participants to engage in debate with some thirty speakers from microcredit institutions, the banking sector, finance institutions, academia and civil society. The conference saw the unveiling of a study on the economic and social impact of microfinance in the Mediterranean designed to foster a better understanding of the outlook for microfinance in the region.
This presentation is about leveraging remittances for development by linking with microfinance institutions.
6th International Disaster and Risk Conference IDRC 2016 Integrative Risk Management - Towards Resilient Cities. 28 August - 01 September 2016 in Davos, Switzerland
HOTEL RESILIENT: STRENGTHENING THE RESILIENCE OF THE TOURISM SECTORWild Asia
A single disaster event has the potential to cause widespread damage and economic disruption, affecting private and public investments in tourism destinations, and the country’s image and reputation, while posing a threat to the lives of tourist, workers and surrounding communities. The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH is collaborating with the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction Asia and Pacific (UNISDR) and the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) within the framework of the Global Initiative on Disaster Risk Management (GIDRM) to improve climate and disaster risk management and to strengthen resilience in hotels and throughout destinations.
Cyber 9/12 Student Challenge General Informationatlanticcouncil
In Washington, DC, student teams confront a serious
cybersecurity breach of national and international importance.
Teams will compose policy recommendations
and justify their decision-making process, considering
the role and implications for relevant civilian,
military, law enforcement, and private sector entities
and updating the recommendations as the scenario
evolves.
In Geneva, Switzerland, in
partnership with the Geneva
Centre for Security
Policy (GCSP), students
respond to a major cyberattack
on European networks. Competitors will provide
recommendations balancing individual national
approaches and a collective crisis management response,
considering capabilities, policies, and governance
structures of NATO, EU, and individual nations.
The competition fosters a culture of cooperation and
a better understanding of these organizations and
their member states in responding to cyberattacks.
EMIP and Sanabel, the network of microfinance institutions in the Arab countries, held a conference in Tunis on 5 May 2008 on the subject "Microfinance in the Mediterranean: what impact?", which brought together over 420 participants to engage in debate with some thirty speakers from microcredit institutions, the banking sector, finance institutions, academia and civil society. The conference saw the unveiling of a study on the economic and social impact of microfinance in the Mediterranean designed to foster a better understanding of the outlook for microfinance in the region.
This presentation is about leveraging remittances for development by linking with microfinance institutions.
6th International Disaster and Risk Conference IDRC 2016 Integrative Risk Management - Towards Resilient Cities. 28 August - 01 September 2016 in Davos, Switzerland
HOTEL RESILIENT: STRENGTHENING THE RESILIENCE OF THE TOURISM SECTORWild Asia
A single disaster event has the potential to cause widespread damage and economic disruption, affecting private and public investments in tourism destinations, and the country’s image and reputation, while posing a threat to the lives of tourist, workers and surrounding communities. The Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) GmbH is collaborating with the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction Asia and Pacific (UNISDR) and the Pacific Asia Travel Association (PATA) within the framework of the Global Initiative on Disaster Risk Management (GIDRM) to improve climate and disaster risk management and to strengthen resilience in hotels and throughout destinations.
Five Points Youth Foundation Goodwill Ambassador Madeline Karita Fleming Minn...Andrew Networks
Five Points Youth Foundation Goodwill Ambassador Madeline Karita Fleming Minneapolis Minnesota USA United Nations Global Compact Caring for Climate Campaign 2015-2020
Five Points Youth Foundation Goodwill Ambassador Orion Darkstar USA United Na...Andrew Networks
Goodwill Ambassador Orion Darkstar Five Points Youth Foundation United Nations Global Compact Communication on Engagement COE and Caring for Climate Plan of Action 2015-2020
Publishing Development Research and Adding ValueEve Gray
A presentation made at the UNESCO workshop on Open Access in Africa, Pretoria, 22-23 November 2010, co-sponsored by the Academy of Science of South Africa and EiFL
International Maritime Rescue Federation singapore MROBruce Reid
Overview of the work and activities the IMRF are involved with to prevent the loss of life in the world's waters. Provided as part of the Mass Rescue Operations Workshop in Singapore August 2015
The Unleashed Vocational School. Best Practice In The Context Of Education Po...UWirth
This presentation deals with the so-called "unleashed university", a well-known but also controversial concept in higher education in Germany. It is controversial because as some critics are concerned that academic freedom could be sacrificed at the cost of business considerations and economic rationality. The author will present the main points of this concept. Of course, one can argue that a vocational school is just a school (working in the secondary sector) and not an university (which is located in the academic landscape, the so-called tertiary sector). However, the author is convinced that, if one does unleash a vocational school, it ca n surpass itself. The author will break down the concept of "unleashed university" into an "unleashed vocational school". It is clearly more than just a metaphor. He will show that an unleashed vocational school can, much like an university, be scientific and distinguished, competitive and profitable, international and open-minded about new media. However, and in contrast to an university (and this is the big discrepancy), a vocational school virtually does not have to be autonomous or a stand-alone entity; it merely requires a worldwide network of strong partners to have success. Apt partners can be found in a professional organisation, selected stakeholders in institutions and business, alumni, media etc.). Furthermore, a vocational school has to be customer-oriented - but who are its customers anyway? And what is the added value to customers? Using the example of the Euro-Schulen Trier, a small and straightforward vocational school in the South West of Germany where Health Informa tion Managers are trained since 2000, the author will outline what measures were taken in the past to cultivate a competitive profile and why they had to be taken. He will deal with the role of communication and marketing. In addition, which future measures to be taken to make the institution sustainable whilst also making graduates employable will be treated. This is not less than a paradigm shift, associated with both the challenges of education policy and the demographic shift in Germany.
Five Points Youth Foundation Goodwill Ambassador Madeline Karita Fleming Minn...Andrew Networks
Five Points Youth Foundation Goodwill Ambassador Madeline Karita Fleming Minneapolis Minnesota USA United Nations Global Compact Caring for Climate Campaign 2015-2020
Five Points Youth Foundation Goodwill Ambassador Orion Darkstar USA United Na...Andrew Networks
Goodwill Ambassador Orion Darkstar Five Points Youth Foundation United Nations Global Compact Communication on Engagement COE and Caring for Climate Plan of Action 2015-2020
Publishing Development Research and Adding ValueEve Gray
A presentation made at the UNESCO workshop on Open Access in Africa, Pretoria, 22-23 November 2010, co-sponsored by the Academy of Science of South Africa and EiFL
International Maritime Rescue Federation singapore MROBruce Reid
Overview of the work and activities the IMRF are involved with to prevent the loss of life in the world's waters. Provided as part of the Mass Rescue Operations Workshop in Singapore August 2015
The Unleashed Vocational School. Best Practice In The Context Of Education Po...UWirth
This presentation deals with the so-called "unleashed university", a well-known but also controversial concept in higher education in Germany. It is controversial because as some critics are concerned that academic freedom could be sacrificed at the cost of business considerations and economic rationality. The author will present the main points of this concept. Of course, one can argue that a vocational school is just a school (working in the secondary sector) and not an university (which is located in the academic landscape, the so-called tertiary sector). However, the author is convinced that, if one does unleash a vocational school, it ca n surpass itself. The author will break down the concept of "unleashed university" into an "unleashed vocational school". It is clearly more than just a metaphor. He will show that an unleashed vocational school can, much like an university, be scientific and distinguished, competitive and profitable, international and open-minded about new media. However, and in contrast to an university (and this is the big discrepancy), a vocational school virtually does not have to be autonomous or a stand-alone entity; it merely requires a worldwide network of strong partners to have success. Apt partners can be found in a professional organisation, selected stakeholders in institutions and business, alumni, media etc.). Furthermore, a vocational school has to be customer-oriented - but who are its customers anyway? And what is the added value to customers? Using the example of the Euro-Schulen Trier, a small and straightforward vocational school in the South West of Germany where Health Informa tion Managers are trained since 2000, the author will outline what measures were taken in the past to cultivate a competitive profile and why they had to be taken. He will deal with the role of communication and marketing. In addition, which future measures to be taken to make the institution sustainable whilst also making graduates employable will be treated. This is not less than a paradigm shift, associated with both the challenges of education policy and the demographic shift in Germany.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee awarded the Tunisian National Dialogue Quartet, a civil society group comprising the Tunisian General Labor Union; the Tunisian Union of Industry, Trade, and Handicrafts; the Tunisian Human Rights League; and the Tunisian Order of Lawyers the 2015 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday, October 9, 2015 "for its decisive contribution to the building of a pluralistic democracy in Tunisia." In a new Atlantic Council Issue Brief, "Tunisia: The Last Arab Spring Country," Atlantic Council Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East Senior Fellows Mohsin Khan and Karim Mezran survey the successes of Tunisia's consensus-based transition and the challenges that lie ahead.
"The decision to award this year's Nobel Peace Prize to Tunisia's National Dialogue Quartet is an extremely important recognition of the efforts made by Tunisian civil society and Tunisia's political elite to reach a consensus on keeping the country firmly on the path to democratization and transition to a pluralist system," says Mezran. With the overthrow of the authoritarian regime of President Zine El Abedine Ben Ali in 2011, Tunisia embarked on a process of democratization widely regarded as an example for transitions in the region. The National Dialogue Conference facilitated by the Quartet helped Tunisia avert the risk of plunging into civil war and paved the way for a consensus agreement on Tunisia's new constitution, adopted in January 2014.
In the brief, the authors warn that despite political successes, Tunisia is hampered by the absence of economic reforms. Facing the loss of tourism and investment following two terror attacks, Tunisia's economy risks collapse, endangering all of the painstaking political progress gained thus far. Unless the Tunisian government moves rapidly to turn the economy around, Tunisia risks unraveling its fragile transition.
On April 4, 2016, the Atlantic Council’s Eurasian Energy Futures Initiative launched a report, Securing Ukraine’s Energy Sector, authored by Dinu Patriciu Eurasia Center’s Resident Senior Fellow, Anders Åslund.
Margo KONIUSZEWSKI’s motto in tackling cyber challenges is « Cybersecurity education is like a marathon, not a sprint. It calls for a sustained effort, crosscutting approach and questions that lead to novel thinking and action! »
She champions digital literacy, cybersecurity and lifelong learning as the new imperatives of Economy 4.0, from junior to senior.
Her Cybersecurity Challenge, that took place despite the COVID crisis, was the world’s first competition to bring together multi-disciplinary “tiger groups” - student teams from IT/engineering, business, law, medicine and military academies in tackling a massive and far-reaching cyber-crisis.
Building on this success she launched a Regional Cyber Labs network run by students for students and the wider community as centers of cyber competence to raise awareness and educate.
The project went worldwide with the Global Cyber Lab to promote cross-sectoral action between the private/public sectors, academia, and diplomats. Her « New Roadmap for Cybersecurity Education » report was adopted and commended by the United Nations Open Ended Working Group on Cybersecurity as a benchmark in cyber capacity-building for all 193 Member States to take-up to boost their cybersecurity landscape.
She then organized the first Global Cybersecurity Roadshow 2021-22 event as part of a year-long program of exchanges between university students from all continents and world class cybersecurity champions. She is now touring Poland with events and conferences around her new audiobook: “Striptease in the age of apps and algos” on technology and how the digital transformation is impacting every aspect of our lives.
For Margo, cybersecurity is too important to leave in the hands of bureaucrats or technicians. We must get everyone on board!
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Adam KONIUSZEWSKI is Adam Koniuszewski serves as President of the Warsaw Security Hub of the Swiss Embassy in Poland and as Executive in Residence at the Geneva Center for Security Policy (GCSP), an international think-tank on global affairs diplomacy to promote security and cooperation.
A social entrepreneur and philanthropist, he launched The Bridge Foundation with his wife Margo to promote awareness and cooperative action on pressing security, economic and social challenges.
Adam has extensive experience in a wide range of sectors including Big Four, Fortune 100, and global non-profit in close cooperation with the United Nations and international organizations. For close to a decade, he worked with President Mikhail Gorbachev as executive director of his international initiative to address global security and sustainability. He was particularly successful in developing partnerships with the private sector to implement development projects around the world.
Adam is actively engaged with the CPA and CFA organizations to promote the highest ethical standards and professional compliance for their members.
Adam holds a Graduate Diploma and ...
As an independent organization, CSCSS delivers a uniquely positioned and unbiased third party, globally focused, well-defined, strategic objective. We present clear cyber and cyberspace- based security goals for government and the public-private sector, leveraging on best practices, and lessons learned, and not affected by any particular point-of-view.
In the global forum, we are the only independent, multilateral, not for profit, cyberspace and security science group in operation, working to generate international strategies and scientific research that clearly articulates strategic priorities, goals, and objectives, providing unbiased intelligence reports for better decision making.
The Centre for Strategic Cyberspace + Security Science has created this International Strategy for Cyberspace (ISC) as a strategic-level policy document offering a practical, comprehensive, and clear vision for the future of cyberspace. It sets an agenda for partnering on cybersecurity and associated initiatives at an international level, and highlights the importance of international cooperation in advancing cyberspace as a foreign policy priority.
The C3i Group works with inter-agency partners and the security industry, collecting information intelligence related to risks emanating from cyberspace. We provide direction and leadership to industry, focusing on the intrinsic risks and threats posed by: potential shortcomings in the cyber information security infrastructure; actions of non-state actors, cyber- terrorists, and criminals; foreign business competitors and governments intent on illegitimately acquiring proprietary information and trade secrets.
If you are passionate about the humanitarian and development sector and are excited about building public-private partnerships, we are eager to hear from you.
We are currently expanding the team to help us succeed with our ambitious event plan for 2015 running large scale multi-stream summits on three continents (Asia, North America, Africa).
Certified Systems to Reduce Security Risks in Modern Societies and the Contri...Global Risk Forum GRFDavos
6th International Disaster and Risk Conference IDRC 2016 Integrative Risk Management - Towards Resilient Cities. 28 August - 01 September 2016 in Davos, Switzerland
Public safety interoperability: an international perspectiveComms Connect
The paper will discuss a wide range of public safety communications interoperability -related issues both with a view to the Canadian/US environment and their relevance to the Australia/New Zealand landscape.
These include:
- Public safety wireless broadband in North America;
- Public safety interoperability strategic planning at the local, regional, state, national and international levels;
- Trends in interoperability technology, including both voice- and data-related issues;
- Next Generation (NG) 911 and its future in Canada and beyond;
- Situational awareness, common/user-defined operating pictures, precision information environments, GIS systems, blue force tracking and location-based services;
- 3D in-door tracking and location for firefighters and public safety responders; and,
- Social media for emergency management (#SMEM).
Inspector (Ret.) Lance Valcour O.O.M, Chair, Law Enforcement Information Management Section International Association of Chiefs of Police
The C3i Group is a national-international outreach venture providing strategic leadership in Cybersecurity, Cybercrime, and Cyber Intelligence.
The C3i Group facilitates open dialog, communication, and information sharing among key public-private entities, enabling them to DISCOVER what is at cyber-counterintelligence risk, how to DEFEND against it, and how to ENSURE cyber-secure competitiveness in the digital global economy.
The UAE Security Forum, under the title “Bridging the Cybersecurity Talent Gap,” sought to explore best practices and make recommendations about how to tackle these challenges by bringing together government officials, educators, and industry executives in a number of interactive sessions during the day-long event. This report, summarizing the discussion and recommendations, is aimed to help enhance cybersecurity by building capacity across the board, and in particular contributing to the development of an Emirati workforce that can meet urgent challenges. - See more at: http://www.agsiw.org/uae-security-forum-bridging-the-cybersecurity-talent-gap/#sthash.sIGWDTM0.dpuf
Eduardo Valencia, AMETIC + Jonas Hoffman, NORMANN PARTNERSAMETIC
Presentación de la Mesa de debate 13: 'El ThinkTank de movilidad sostenible de AMETIC: Diseño estratégico y prospectiva de evolución de sistemas' en el 32º Encuentro de la Economía Digital y las Telecomunicaciones, Santander (3-5 septiembre 2018)
This presentation examines to what extent that cyber-insurance can be a useful tool to manage the risks and harms caused by massive cyber-attacks from the national as opposed to enterprise standpoint,
Can We Avert A Cyber-Insurance Market Crisis?Ethan S. Burger
This presentation examines to what extent that cyber-insurance can be a useful tool to manage the risks and harms caused by massive cyber-attacks from the national as opposed to enterprise standpoint --
Similar to Cyber912 student challenge_two_pager_sponsors (20)
It is the core purpose of the Atlantic Council to foster bipartisan support for policies that promote the security of the United States and the transatlantic community. The signatories of this piece have either served in Afghanistan, been involved in the formation of US policy in government, or otherwise devoted considerable time to Afghan affairs. They have come together to register a broad, bipartisan consensus in support of certain principles that they believe should guide policy formation and decision-making on Afghanistan during the remainder of the Obama administration and the first year of a new administration, of whichever party. It is critical that the current administration prepare the path for the next. A new president will come into office facing a wave of instability in the Islamic world and the threat from violent extremism, which stretches from Asia through the Middle East to Africa. This will continue to pose a considerable challenge and danger to American interests abroad, and to the homeland. The signatories support the continued US engagement required to protect American interests and increase the possibilities for Afghan success.
Crude Oil for Natural Gas: Prospects for Iran-Saudi Reconciliationatlanticcouncil
Despite the sectarian barbs traded between Saudi Arabia and Iran, Iran's unique ability to meet the kingdom's fast growing demand for electricity may help spur a reconciliation, according to the Atlantic Council's Jean-François Seznec. In his report Crude Oil for Natural Gas: Prospects for Iran-Saudi Reconciliation, Seznec argues that the two dominant energy producers do not necessarily need to see their energy production as competition.
Saudi Arabia's currently fuels its stunning 8 percent annual rise in demand for electricity with precious crude oil due to little low cost domestic natural dry gas reserves. Iran's vast gas reserves could be used to meet the kingdom's growing needs, but after decades of punishing sanctions its dilapidated gas fields need an estimated $250 billion in repairs. If Saudi Arabia used its investment power or buying power to help revitalize Iran's gas industry, it would both secure the energy it needs to meet its citizens' demands and free up its crude oil for export. While the sectarian rhetoric hurled back and forth may seem unstoppable and the timeline for reconciliation may be long, Seznec contends that both sides are rational at heart and highlights that that the benefit of economic cooperation on energy issues could open up better relations on a range of issues.
Foreign Policy for an Urban World: Global Governance and the Rise of Citiesatlanticcouncil
In the latest FutureScape issue brief from the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security's Strategic Foresight Initiative, author Peter Engelke discusses the long-term economic, environmental, and policy implications of urbanization. Entitled "Foreign Policy for an Urban World: Global Governance and the Rise of Cities," the brief examines how urbanization is hastening the global diffusion of power and how cities themselves are increasingly important nodes of power in global politics.
Toward a Sustainable Peace in the South China Seaatlanticcouncil
The South China Sea (SCS) has been, and remains, an area rife with tension. Disputes among SCS states stem from unresolved issues relating to sovereignty, exclusive economic zones, natural resources, and acceptable uses of the military. In the past two decades, fishing boats have been detained or damaged, fishermen and sailors arrested or killed, and artificial islands constructed for military purposes. These years of strife have led to the current SCS state of play: it is a vitally important region where competition is high and trust is low.
This issue brief argues that SCS countries need to work toward a "mutual confidence" and "mutual dependence" end state. In particular, the paper focuses on sharing meteorological data to support humanitarian assistance and disaster relief operations, including search and rescue operations, foreign disaster relief goods delivery, and medical care. A mutual confidence/mutual dependence relationship between two SCS states would help mitigate regional conflicts or disputes, which in turn can help lead to a more peaceful region.
On May 20-21, 2015, European leaders will gather for the Eastern Partnership summit in Riga, Latvia, to discuss the future of Europe’s East. Given the extreme challenges faced by the countries of the Eastern Partnership (EaP) since the last summit, in Vilnius, Lithuania in 2013, and the cooling of EU relations with several of the Eastern Partners, the upcoming meeting will surely pose tough questions for the future of the entire eastern framework.
At the same time, the Riga summit also presents an historic opportunity to put back on track a process that held significant promise at its inception but which has been slow to respond to crises and a low priority on the agenda for EU member states. In A Transatlantic Approach to Europe’s East: Relaunching the Eastern Partnership, Burwell examines the need for a closer and more integrated relationship between the European Union and the key countries of the EaP. Burwell argues that the Riga summit offers a key chance for Europe to both confront the challenges to its East, and to launch a new Transatlantic Partnership for Wider Europe in close cooperation with the United States. Failure to relaunch the EaP framework, by identifying the factors that make these countries vulnerable and designing strategies to overcome these specific weaknesses, will have dire consequences for the prosperity and security of the entire region.
President Barack Obama's summit meeting with Gulf leaders at Camp David on May 14 will end in failure if the administration does not propose a substantial upgrade in US-Gulf security relations that is as bold and strategically significant as the nuclear agreement–and likely formal deal–with Iran.
While the summit will not suddenly eliminate mistrust and resolve all differences, it presents an historic opportunity to put back on track a decades-old US-Gulf partnership that has served both sides and the region well, yet lately has experienced deep turbulence. Failure to strengthen these ties will have consequences, the most dramatic of which could be the acceleration of the regional order's collapse.
In a March 2015 Atlantic Council report entitled Artful Balance: Future US Defense Strategy and Force Posture in the Gulf, we made the case for a mutual defense treaty between the United States and willing Arab Gulf partners. In this issue in focus, we offer a more comprehensive and detailed assessment of the risks, concerns, benefits, and opportunities that would be inherent in such a treaty. We recommend a gradualist approach for significantly upgrading US-Gulf security relations that effectively reduces the risks and maximizes the benefits of more formal US security commitments to willing Arab Gulf states.
The solutions for socioeconomic development are no longer only in the public sector. Latin America has changed dramatically over the last decade, and the private sector can play an increasingly important role in the region’s progress. That’s where social impact investing comes in—a way that investors can make money while doing social good.
The White House has appointed a social innovation czar and the Inter-American Development Bank is doing work every day in this expanding arena. Is social impact investing one of the keys that will finally unlock the region’s intractable inequality?
In this new Latin America Center analysis, released today, Adrienne Arsht Center Senior Non-Resident Fellow Gabriel Zinny dissects how businesses, governments, and multilateral institutions can better provide goods and services to the underserved while making money.
Read this and key recommendations for accelerating the sector here:
• Formalize it. A clear, market-based legal system enforced by a solid judiciary branch is fundamental to attracting impact investments.
• Seed it. Governments should subsidize a measure of the often-lacking venture-stage capital for projects, especially when the entrepreneurs come from less-affluent communities.
• Decentralize it. Local governments should be viewed as public sector partners as they often have more flexibility to spur private social enterprise.
• Read more here…
If ever a turning point seemed inevitable in Pakistan’s militia policy, it was in the aftermath of the Peshawar school massacre in December 2014. Tehrik-e-Taliban Pakistan (TTP) killed 152 people, 133 of them children, in the bloodiest terrorist attack in Pakistan’s history. The carnage sparked an unprecedented national dialogue about the costs and contradictions of the Pakistani political and military establishment’s reliance on violent proxies, such as the Afghan Taliban (from which the TTP originates), for security.
Why does Pakistan continue to differentiate between “good” and “bad” militias in the face of the Peshawar massacre? What are the costs of playing the good-bad militia game? What can be done to end Pakistan’s dependency on armed nonstate groups? In “Reimagining Pakistan’s Militia Policy,” Visiting Assistant Professor of Government at Skidmore College and US-Pakistan Exchange Program Fellow at the Atlantic Council’s South Asia Center, argues that Pakistan’s unwillingness to crack down on all terrorist groups is more a product of cold calculation than ideological shortsightedness. Understanding Pakistan’s close relationship with militias requires recognizing the strategic logic through which many states outsource violence.
The Atlantic Council, in partnership with NATO Allied Command Transformation (ACT), held the 4th annual Young Professionals Day (YP Day) in Washington, DC, on March 24. The event featured a full-day, outcome-oriented, strategic design thinking exercise with sixty young professionals representing twenty-four of NATO's twenty-eight member nations. Delegates collaborated to produce a list of creative solutions to pressing challenges NATO faces, ranging from how to address hybrid warfare and threats on NATO's southern flank, to how NATO can encourage innovation and deliver on the promises from the 2014 Wales Summit.
The NATO Young Professionals Day Report includes detailed descriptions of the top fifteen recommendations produced by delegates. Delegates' recommendations included creative and out-of-the box concepts, such as the creation of an "Innovation CEO" position within NATO with substantial powers to experiment with new policies. The group also suggested developing a dramatized HBO style series about the history of NATO to increase public awareness and improve the alliance's public approval; fostering partnerships with venture capital and the defense industry to develop new technologies and create common standards; and the deployment of an elite, rapid response force in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region that includes personnel from NATO partner countries in the south, to leverage local expertise. Details on these recommendations and more can be found in the full report available online here:
Defeating the Jihadists in Syria: Competition before Confrontationatlanticcouncil
Since August 2014, the US-led air campaign against the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) has successfully inflicted casualties on ISIS and weakened its oil revenues. However, the same efforts have also accelerated the rise of the Nusra Front, an al-Qaeda affiliate, and the near-collapse of nationalist rebel forces.
In "Defeating the Jihadists in Syria: Competition before Confrontation," Faysal Itani of the Atlantic Council's Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East details the unintended consequences of the coalition air campaign and proposes a revised US strategy. He argues that the United States can effectively assist nationalist insurgents to defeat ISIS and the Nusra Front by enabling them to compete with and contain these groups before ultimately confronting them.
Itani writes that the US-led campaign thus far and the train-and-equip initiative set to begin next month undermine and weaken nationalist rebel forces. He criticizes these efforts for failing to provide sufficient support to the rebel forces, while directing them to target ISIS instead of the regime. Meanwhile, the Nusra Front and other jihadist organizations have greater resources and have been effective in targeting the Assad regime. As such, nationalist rebel forces and local populations have increasingly aligned with the Nusra Front and even tolerate ISIS in order to protect themselves against regime violence, criminality, and chaos.
Itani's proposed US strategy offers a practical and workable response to the rise of jihadists groups in Syria; this revised strategy seeks to support rebel forces to compete with the Nusra Front for popular support and to take control of the insurgency, contain ISIS, and build capacity for an eventual offensive against the jihadists. This approach will build on positive results in southern Syria by significantly increasing direct financial and material support and training for vetted nationalist groups that have already shown significant success. Simultaneously, in the north the campaign can provide sufficient material support to nationalist forces while expanding coalition air strikes to target ISIS's frontlines, allowing the nationalist insurgency to defend and govern territory. Only once nationalist insurgent forces have successfully competed with the Nusra Front and contained ISIS can they confront and ultimately defeat the jihadist groups in Syria.
Dynamic Stability: US Strategy for a World in Transitionatlanticcouncil
We have entered a new era in world history, a post-post-Cold War era that holds both great promise and great peril for the United States, its allies, and everyone else. We now can call this a "Westphalian-Plus" world, in which nation-states will have to engage on two distinct levels: dealing with other nation-states as before, and dealing with a vast array of important nonstate actors. This era calls for a new approach to national strategy called "dynamic stability."
The authors of this paper—Atlantic Council Vice President and Scowcroft Center Director Barry Pavel and Senior Fellow Peter Engelke, with the help of Assistant Director Alex Ward—kick off the Atlantic Council Strategy Paper series by telling the United States to seek stability while leveraging dynamic trends at the same time. The central task facing America is "to harness change in order to save the system," meaning the preservation of the rules-based international order that has benefited billions around the world, including Americans themselves, since 1945. Within its pages, the paper outlines the components of strategy in a swiftly-changing world.
Setting the Stage for Peace in Syria: The Case for a Syrian National Stabiliz...atlanticcouncil
In Setting the Stage for Peace in Syria: The Case for a Syrian National Stabilization Force, Frederic C. Hof of the Atlantic Council’s Rafik Hariri Center for the Middle East, Bassma Kodmani of the Arab Reform Initiative, and Jeffrey White of the Washington Institute, present a new way forward—a sort of train-and-equip on steroids—the Syrian National Stabilization Force (SNSF).
Mexico's historic energy reforms continue to hold exciting promise for the country, achieving the requisite constitutional and implementing legislation over the last fifteen months. The global oil price climate, however, has prompted a few mid-course corrections to the rollout of the reforms. For Mexico to continue to attract excitement for its energy sector, the government will need to maintain a degree of flexibility while holding true to the principles of the reforms.
Places like Singapore, Boston, Bangalore, Pittsburgh, Silicon Valley, and others are known as leaders in innovation, but when it comes to building the knowledge economy, the Gulf has become one of the most ambitious regions in the world.
A decade ago, the consensus from outside the region was that Middle Eastern countries, including those in the Gulf, were a long way from developing knowledge economies— defined as economies that combine advanced research and development, entrepreneurialism, and creative thinking into innovative, wealth-generating enterprises. Fast-forward to 2015, and many Arab Gulf countries have become well known for their attempts at building knowledge economies, for instance through innovation clusters such as Abu Dhabi's Masdar City, Dubai's TechnoPark, Qatar's Science and Technology Park, and Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah University of Science and Technology. Through these and other efforts, Gulf countries have invested billions of dollars in dozens of initiatives to co-locate the sources of innovation—research labs, venture capital, entrepreneurs, high-technology companies, and educational institutions, in hopes of building globally renowned knowledge economies.
In Brainstorming the Gulf: Innovation and the Knowledge Economy in the GCC, the report's author, Peter Engelke, Senior Fellow for the Strategic Foresight Initiative in the Atlantic Council's Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, highlights the successes that Gulf states have enjoyed to date and addresses the major hurdles to sustaining and expanding these successes. While all signs point to the staying power of Arab Gulf leadership's long-term commitment to the knowledge economy, the harder part will be sustaining the knowledge economy's soft infrastructure—the dimension of entrepreneurial culture involving creativity, expression, inclusion, disruption, and borrowing from global cultural flows. If talented people are at the core of the innovation process, government policy in the Gulf ought to focus as much on the creation of dynamic and livable places in order to attract and retain the best talent from all over the world. As Arab Gulf states have already discovered, this pathway is disruptive, bringing with it significant social consequences.
This report is the result of a series of brainstorming sessions that took place between the summer of 2013 and the winter of 2014-2015, and between American, Russian, and European experts. The teams were led by Ellen Tauscher, the Vice Chair of the Atlantic Council's Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security and the former US Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security, and Igor Ivanov, the president of Russian International Affairs Council (RIAC) and former Foreign Minister of Russia, in an effort to keep the dialogue open and frank at a challenging time for European security. Not surprisingly, as events in Ukraine unravelled the post-Cold War security order, it proved impossible to narrow the differences and develop a common, action-oriented approach to the challenge of rebuilding the European security order. The report, a project of the Atlantic Council, the European Leadership Network (ELN), and RIAC is focused instead on the necessary first step of listening to each other and reflecting on the significant differences in the Western and Russian approaches. Discussions focused on gaining clarity on the interests at stake, from the US, European, and Russian perspectives, in order to better define whether and where common interests may still lie and how best to advance them. The report clearly points to the fact that managing the differences in the aftermath of the Ukrainian crisis will continue to require significant efforts on the part of decision-makers, experts, officials, international organizations, and will take time and strategic patience.
Artful Balance: Future US Defense Strategy and Force Posture in the Gulfatlanticcouncil
A strategic review of US defense strategy and force posture in the Gulf is long overdue. In Artful Balance: Future US Defense Strategy and Force Posture in the Gulf, Bilal Y. Saab, Resident Senior Fellow for Middle East Security at the Atlantic Council’s Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, and Barry Pavel, Vice President and Director of the Scowcroft Center, analyze how historic changes and developing trends in Washington, the Middle East, and across the globe—along with Iran’s nuclear ambitions and asymmetric threat—are all affecting US defense strategy in the Gulf.
The Healthcare Internet of Things: Rewards and Risksatlanticcouncil
In The Healthcare Internet of Things: Rewards and Risks, a collaboration between Intel Security and Atlantic Council's Cyber Statecraft Initiative at the Brent Scowcroft Center on International Security, the report's authors—Jason Healey, Neal Pollard, and Beau Woods—draw attention to the delicate balance between the promise of a new age of technology and society's ability to secure the technological and communications foundations of these innovative devices.
The “green men” who fanned out across Crimea in early 2014, establishing control over key infrastructure and clearing the way for once-marginal political actors to seize the reins of power, were the vanguard of a forced political change that has led to grave human rights abuses across the Crimean peninsula.
ANAMOLOUS SECONDARY GROWTH IN DICOT ROOTS.pptxRASHMI M G
Abnormal or anomalous secondary growth in plants. It defines secondary growth as an increase in plant girth due to vascular cambium or cork cambium. Anomalous secondary growth does not follow the normal pattern of a single vascular cambium producing xylem internally and phloem externally.
Seminar of U.V. Spectroscopy by SAMIR PANDASAMIR PANDA
Spectroscopy is a branch of science dealing the study of interaction of electromagnetic radiation with matter.
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Travis Hills' Endeavors in Minnesota: Fostering Environmental and Economic Pr...Travis Hills MN
Travis Hills of Minnesota developed a method to convert waste into high-value dry fertilizer, significantly enriching soil quality. By providing farmers with a valuable resource derived from waste, Travis Hills helps enhance farm profitability while promoting environmental stewardship. Travis Hills' sustainable practices lead to cost savings and increased revenue for farmers by improving resource efficiency and reducing waste.
Nutraceutical market, scope and growth: Herbal drug technologyLokesh Patil
As consumer awareness of health and wellness rises, the nutraceutical market—which includes goods like functional meals, drinks, and dietary supplements that provide health advantages beyond basic nutrition—is growing significantly. As healthcare expenses rise, the population ages, and people want natural and preventative health solutions more and more, this industry is increasing quickly. Further driving market expansion are product formulation innovations and the use of cutting-edge technology for customized nutrition. With its worldwide reach, the nutraceutical industry is expected to keep growing and provide significant chances for research and investment in a number of categories, including vitamins, minerals, probiotics, and herbal supplements.
This presentation explores a brief idea about the structural and functional attributes of nucleotides, the structure and function of genetic materials along with the impact of UV rays and pH upon them.
Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intellige...University of Maribor
Slides from talk:
Aleš Zamuda: Remote Sensing and Computational, Evolutionary, Supercomputing, and Intelligent Systems.
11th International Conference on Electrical, Electronics and Computer Engineering (IcETRAN), Niš, 3-6 June 2024
Inter-Society Networking Panel GRSS/MTT-S/CIS Panel Session: Promoting Connection and Cooperation
https://www.etran.rs/2024/en/home-english/
ESR spectroscopy in liquid food and beverages.pptxPRIYANKA PATEL
With increasing population, people need to rely on packaged food stuffs. Packaging of food materials requires the preservation of food. There are various methods for the treatment of food to preserve them and irradiation treatment of food is one of them. It is the most common and the most harmless method for the food preservation as it does not alter the necessary micronutrients of food materials. Although irradiated food doesn’t cause any harm to the human health but still the quality assessment of food is required to provide consumers with necessary information about the food. ESR spectroscopy is the most sophisticated way to investigate the quality of the food and the free radicals induced during the processing of the food. ESR spin trapping technique is useful for the detection of highly unstable radicals in the food. The antioxidant capability of liquid food and beverages in mainly performed by spin trapping technique.
Observation of Io’s Resurfacing via Plume Deposition Using Ground-based Adapt...Sérgio Sacani
Since volcanic activity was first discovered on Io from Voyager images in 1979, changes
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Binocular Telescope, show evidence of a major resurfacing event on Io’s trailing hemisphere. When compared to the most recent spacecraft images, the SHARK-VIS images
show that a plume deposit from a powerful eruption at Pillan Patera has covered part
of the long-lived Pele plume deposit. Although this type of resurfacing event may be common on Io, few have been detected due to the rarity of spacecraft visits and the previously low spatial resolution available from Earth-based telescopes. The SHARK-VIS instrument ushers in a new era of high resolution imaging of Io’s surface using adaptive
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DERIVATION OF MODIFIED BERNOULLI EQUATION WITH VISCOUS EFFECTS AND TERMINAL V...Wasswaderrick3
In this book, we use conservation of energy techniques on a fluid element to derive the Modified Bernoulli equation of flow with viscous or friction effects. We derive the general equation of flow/ velocity and then from this we derive the Pouiselle flow equation, the transition flow equation and the turbulent flow equation. In the situations where there are no viscous effects , the equation reduces to the Bernoulli equation. From experimental results, we are able to include other terms in the Bernoulli equation. We also look at cases where pressure gradients exist. We use the Modified Bernoulli equation to derive equations of flow rate for pipes of different cross sectional areas connected together. We also extend our techniques of energy conservation to a sphere falling in a viscous medium under the effect of gravity. We demonstrate Stokes equation of terminal velocity and turbulent flow equation. We look at a way of calculating the time taken for a body to fall in a viscous medium. We also look at the general equation of terminal velocity.
The ability to recreate computational results with minimal effort and actionable metrics provides a solid foundation for scientific research and software development. When people can replicate an analysis at the touch of a button using open-source software, open data, and methods to assess and compare proposals, it significantly eases verification of results, engagement with a diverse range of contributors, and progress. However, we have yet to fully achieve this; there are still many sociotechnical frictions.
Inspired by David Donoho's vision, this talk aims to revisit the three crucial pillars of frictionless reproducibility (data sharing, code sharing, and competitive challenges) with the perspective of deep software variability.
Our observation is that multiple layers — hardware, operating systems, third-party libraries, software versions, input data, compile-time options, and parameters — are subject to variability that exacerbates frictions but is also essential for achieving robust, generalizable results and fostering innovation. I will first review the literature, providing evidence of how the complex variability interactions across these layers affect qualitative and quantitative software properties, thereby complicating the reproduction and replication of scientific studies in various fields.
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Exposé invité Journées Nationales du GDR GPL 2024
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THEMATIC APPERCEPTION TEST(TAT) cognitive abilities, creativity, and critic...
Cyber912 student challenge_two_pager_sponsors
1. STUDENT CHALLENGE
9/12
Cyber
We frequently hear the terms “Cyber 9/11” and “Digital Pearl Harbor,” but what might policymakers
do the day after a crisis? The Cyber 9/12 Student Challenge is an annual cyber policy competition
for students across the globe to compete in developing national security policy recommendations
tackling a fictional cyber catastrophe. In 2016, the Student Challenge will take place in Washington,
DC on March 11-12 and in Geneva, Switzerland, on April 7-8.
THE STUDENT CHALLENGE
In Washington, DC, student teams confront a serious
cybersecurity breach of national and international im-
portance. Teams will compose policy recommenda-
tions and justify their decision-making process, con-
sidering the role and implications for relevant civilian,
military, law enforcement, and private sector entities
and updating the recommendations as the scenario
evolves.
In Geneva, Switzerland, in
partnership with the Ge-
neva Centre for Security
Policy (GCSP), students
respond to a major cyber-
attack on European networks. Competitors will pro-
vide recommendations balancing individual national
approaches and a collective crisis management re-
sponse, considering capabilities, policies, and gover-
nance structures of NATO, EU, and individual nations.
The competition fosters a culture of cooperation and
a better understanding of these organizations and
their member states in responding to cyberattacks.
WHAT IS THE CHALLENGE ALL ABOUT?
Now entering its fourth year, the Cyber 9/12 Student
Challenge is a one-of-a-kind competition designed
to provide students across academic disciplines with
a deeper understanding of the policy challenges
associated with cyber crisis and conflict. Part
interactive learning experience and part competitive
scenario exercise, it challenges teams to respond to a
realistic, evolving cyberattack and analyze the threat
it poses to national, international, and private sector
interests.
Students have a unique opportunity to interact with
expert mentors and high-level cyber professionals
while developing valuable skills in policy analysis and
presentation. The competition has already engaged
over four hundred students from universities in the
United States, United Kingdom, France, Poland,
Switzerland, Hungary, Finland, and Estonia.
Gen. Michael Hayden (Ret.), former NSA and CIA
Director, addresses students at the 2015 Challenge in
Washington, DC.
Winners of the 2015 Euro-Atlantic Challenge, Team
Switzerland, with NATO Assistant Secretary General for
Emerging Defense Challenges Ambassador Sorin Ducaru
and GCSP Director Ambassador Christian Dussey.
A MAJOR CYBERATTACK HAS OCCURRED. HOW SHOULD YOUR NATION RESPOND?
2. HOW CAN YOU SUPPORT THE COMPETITION?
The Cyber 9/12 Student Challenge presents a prime
opportunity for companies to advance next-gen-
eration cybersecurity education and demonstrate
thought leadership in a field of rapidly increasing sig-
nificance, while actively engaging with top technical
and policy talent from around the world. By hosting
competitions in two major international policy hubs,
our supporters are represented in two crucial markets
and introduced to a skilled workforce on both sides of
the Atlantic. Our partners are also entitled to a series
of additional structured benefits:
Global Partnership Sponsor - $50,000
• Co-branded award for the winning team;
• Company video featured at the competition website;
• A one-page program ad in the 2016 Atlantic
Council Distinguished Leadership Awards, Wash-
ington’s leading event bringing together an elite
global audience of nearly 900 guests, including
heads of state, ambassadors, members of Con-
gress and the presidential administration, Su-
preme Court justices, military commanders, and
global business leaders;
and all benefits of lower levels.
Platinum Sponsor - $35,000
• Provide company representative as keynote
speaker and judge;
• Booth in competition venue, with recruiting and
advertisement opportunities;
• Recognition in the final report summarizing the
competition’s results;
and all benefits of lower levels.
Gold Sponsor - $20,000
• A banner and other signage for display in the
competition venue;
• A half-page advertisement in program;
• Video content played on a loop throughout the
competition;
and all benefits of lower levels.
Silver Sponsor - $10,000
• Company logo featured in all print and online
competition materials; and
• Competition bag insert—one piece of company
literature distributed to all competitors, judges,
coaches, and special guests.
For more information, please contact:
Anni Piiparinen
Program Assistant
Cyber Statecraft Initiative
Atlantic Council
Email: APiiparinen@AtlanticCouncil.org
Phone: +1-202-292-5164
AtlanticCouncil.org
1030 15TH STREET, NW | 12TH FLOOR | WASHINGTON, DC 20005 | 202-463-7226
Student team presenting policy recommendations to a
panel of judges in Geneva, 2015.
PAST SUPPORTERS
This event was supported by
NATO’s Public Diplomacy Division
Heli Tiirmaa-Klaar, Head of Cyber Policy Coordination
at the European External Action Service, in a conversa-
tion with students in Geneva in 2015.