Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Events for the Week of May 9

FGS EVENTS:

Federal and Global Fellows and IVSP Spring Networking Breakfast
WHEN: Wednesday, May 11 (9:30am-12:00pm)
WHERE:
FGS Office (2407 Marie Mount Hall)
DESCRIPTION:
Please join our office for our final networking event of the year! You all have been great students all year long, so take the beginning of your Reading Day to stop by, grab some coffee, and complete your Spring Check-In! Besides opportunity to wish you all well in your exams, chat, network and get updates, we can also review your progress to ensure you are all set to collect your graduation cords and receive notation for completion of the program.  
LINK:
RSVP

U.S. Department of State Spring 2017 Internship Workshop
WHEN: Friday, May 13 (11:00am-1:00pm) OR Tuesday, May 17 (11:00am-1:00pm)
WHERE:
FGS Office (2407 Marie Mount)
DESCRIPTION:
Our office will be conducting two workshops for those of you interested in applying for internship at the Department of State for Spring 2017. The application (http://careers.state.gov/intern/student-internships) has not open yet, but should open soon.  The application dateline would normally around the 1st week of July, so if you start preparing now, you’ll have ample of time to familiarize yourself with the process and put together a great application.

If you wish to apply to Department of State internship, we highly recommend that you attend this workshop before applying.

Please bring a HARD copy of your resume to the meeting.

Please note that much of the information and tips of the State workshop is transferable to other types of applications.  So feel free to attend the State workshops for tips that are transferable to other applications.

UMD EVENTS:
Cities and Immigrants in Southeast Asia: The Case of Colonial Rangoon
WHEN: Monday, May 9 (4:00-6:00pm)
WHERE:
2110 Taliaferro Hall
DESCRIPTION:
  Our paper lays out the broad contours of urban development in Southeast Asia, focusing on a case study of Rangoon between 1860 and 1940. In this period Rangoon was the most important rice port in the world and immigrants comprised an extremely high proportion of the population —much higher, for example, than was the case in New York, long considered the quintessential “immigrant city.”  An analysis of Rangoon’s economic role in Burma (and in the British Empire) will afford us insight into a variety of important questions relating to economic development, and shed light on the dynamics of migration flows in (and around) Southeast Asia during the age of high imperialism.  We shall also detail some of the profound social and political effects of massive immigration on the city of Rangoon itself.

Peter A. Coclanis is Albert R. Newsome Distinguished Professor of History and Director of the Global Research Institute at UNC-Chapel Hill. He works primarily in U.S., Southeast Asian, and global economic and business history and has published widely in all of these areas. His most recent book is Rice: Global Networks and New Histories (Cambridge University Press, 2015) edited with Francesca Bray and Edda Fields-Black.

Angelo Coclanis (MA/MSc– Columbia and London School of Economics) has focused his research on the social and economic impact of Indian migrant labor in Rangoon (1886-1932). He currently teaches history at the Solebury School in Bucks County, PA.
LINK:
http://history.umd.edu/events/cities-and-immigrants-southeast-asia-case-colonial-rangoon?mini=2016-5&&date=2016-5

Whiting-Turner Lecture: Will Clean Energy Take Our Economy to the Cleaners?
WHEN: Thursday, May 12 (4:30-6:00pm)
WHERE:
1110 Jeong H. Kim Engineering Building, Stanley Zupnik Hall
DESCRIPTION:
In 2009 when the Obama–Biden ticket was inaugurated into office, they set out to accomplish the following aspirational goals:

-          Implement an economy-wide cap-and-trade systems to reduce U.S. greenhouse gas emissions by 83% of 2005 levels by 2050;
-          Save more oil than we import from the Middle East and Venezuela by 2019;
-          Ensure 10% of our electricity comes from renewables in 2012 and 25% by 2025;
-          Put one million plug-in hybrid vehicles on the road by 2015; and
-          Create five million jobs by investing $150 billion over 10 years to catalyze private efforts to build a clean-energy future.
-           
And in the 2011 State of the Union address, the President put forth a goal to reach 80% clean electricity by 2035. The Office of the Under Secretary for Energy at the US Department of Energy put together a plan to realize these goals, along with the cost of attaining 80% clean electricity by 2035. This talk will summarize this "Strategic Technology Energy Plan (STEP)" and progress made on achieving this plan to date, and highlight the unique role of run-of-river hydroelectric power generation in carrying out STEP.

The speaker, Kristina M. Johnson, is the co-founder and CEO of Cube Hydro Partners, LLC, a clean-energy infrastructure company focused on building and operating hydropower plants in North America. Cube Hydro is backed by ISquared Capital with $900MM in equity and currently operates fifteen plants on eight rivers in six eastern states.

Prior to Cube Hydro, Dr. Johnson served as Under Secretary of Energy at the U.S. Department of Energy. As Under Secretary, she was responsible for unifying and managing a broad $10.5 billion Energy and Environment portfolio, including an additional $37 billion in energy and environment investments from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009.
LINK:
http://eng.umd.edu/html/events/index.php?mode=4&id=11468
DC EVENTS:

STEM education and future generations of American investors, technologists, and explorers
WHEN: Monday, May 9 (10:00-11:00am)
WHERE:
Brookings Institution, Falk Auditorium
DESCRIPTION:
On May 9, the Center for 21st Century Security and Intelligence (21CSI) at Brookings will host NASA Administrator Charles Bolden and Dean Kamen, founder of FIRST, for a discussion of the future of science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) education in America. With increasingly complex problems emerging throughout government and with economic competitiveness at the fore of so many public debates, STEM education has the potential to deliver mission success and continued prosperity. But questions remain about how STEM programs should be implemented and which skills should be promoted and where.

As leaders in areas of the public and private sectors that rely heavily on STEM-related skills and knowledge, Bolden and Kamen will speak to the state of STEM education across the country, why making it a national priority is critical, and how educators and policymakers can better promote STEM in the nation’s future workforce. John Allen, senior fellow and co-director of 21CSI, will moderate discussion.

After the program, participants will take audience questions.
LINK:
http://www.brookings.edu/events/2016/05/09-stem-education-future-generations

Power Play: Energy and Manufacturing in North America
WHEN: Tuesday, May 10 (9:00-10:30am)
WHERE:
Woodrow Wilson Center, 6th Floor
DESCRIPTION:
The Wilson Center's Mexico Institute, Canada Institute, and the International Monetary Fund are pleased to invite you to our launch of the book "Power Play: Energy and Manufacturing in North America." Despite the recent fall in energy prices, fuller development of energy resources in North America has potentially important implications for global energy markets and the competitiveness of North American manufacturing industries. The book "Power Play: Energy and Manufacturing in North America" describes the transformation of the energy landscape in North America due to the upsurge in unconventional energy production since the mid-2000s and tells the story of the energy-manufacturing nexus from the perspective of Canada, Mexico, and the United States, and the region as a whole. Based on the research done at the International Monetary Fund, the book discusses the energy boom and its macroeconomic implications for the three countries individually and for the region overall, exploring also how the changing energy landscape can affect the potential benefits of greater integration across the three North American economies
LINK:
https://www.wilsoncenter.org/event/power-play-energy-and-manufacturing-north-america

Educational Series on Affordable Medicines, Impact of Federal Policy on Innovation, Competition, and Costs
WHEN: Tuesday, May 10 (10:00-11:30am)
WHERE:
Bipartisan Policy Center
DESCRIPTION:
The Bipartisan Policy Center is hosting three educational forums to inform the national conversation on affordable medicines. The purpose of these forums is to seek an understanding of how private sector decisions and public sector policies impact the prices of drugs and their costs to the health care system. They will highlight what is known about the present system and explore the full range of viewpoints on this issue. BPC hopes each convening will explore how best to support medical innovation while ensuring access and affordability for patients.

Please join us for the second of these forums on May 10, where we will address how existing federal statutes and regulations impact pharmaceutical innovation, market competition, and costs.
LINK:
http://bipartisanpolicy.org/events/educational-series-on-affordable-medicines-federal-policy/

Challenges Ahead for U.S. Global Competitiveness
WHEN: Wednesday, May 11 (10:30am-12:00pm)
WHERE:
Bipartisan Policy Center
DESCRIPTION:
Join our event to understand global company decision-making and U.S. competitiveness, hosted by the Bipartisan Policy Center, the Organization for International Investment (OFII), and PwC. More than 100 CFOs of global companies already investing in the United States shared their insight in PwC and OFII’s 2016 CFO Insourcing Survey. We will unveil the new survey results and discuss the future outlook with CFOs, business leaders, and policy experts.

Given U.S. subsidiaries of global companies employ 6.1 million American workers and have much at stake in America’s future economic competitiveness, their global perspectives can help policymakers address barriers to growth in the United States. Relevant issues to be explored include U.S. tax reform efforts and international trends, global slowdown concerns and its impact on the United States, America’s skilled labor shortage, the future of trade liberalization, and quality of American infrastructure.
LINK:
http://bipartisanpolicy.org/events/challenges-ahead-us-global-competitiveness/

Mexico and the United States: Combating Illicit Finance Together
WHEN: Thursday, May 12 (1:00-2:00pm)
WHERE:
Woodrow Wilson Center, 5th Floor
DESCRIPTION:
Mexico and the United States enjoy strong cooperation across a range of issues, including in their common goal of combating illicit financial activity. Money launderers and their associates pose a challenge to financial and regulatory authorities in Mexico and the United States due to the diversity of the means they use to move money illegally, and the speed with which financial flows – both legitimate and illegitimate – cross the shared border. This situation, if unaddressed, has the potential to undermine the financial systems in both countries and to impede both legitimate trade and the further integration of our economies.


Mexico and the United States are approaching this issue within a cooperative framework to further strengthen their anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism finance (AML/CFT) regimes. Join us for a discussion with senior representatives from each government to learn about the illicit financial threats both countries face and the innovative approaches they are undertaking to address this common challenge.
LINK:
https://www.wilsoncenter.org/event/mexico-and-the-united-states-combating-illicit-finance-together

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