the Climate action and gender equality: Can we close the gap on one without the other? By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Mon, 15 Feb 2021 16:04:18 +0000 Climate action and gender equality: Can we close the gap on one without the other? 8 March 2021 — 2:30PM TO 4:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 15 February 2021 Online In partnership with the COP26 presidency, policymakers and experts examine the interrelationship between gender equality and climate action, and highlight innovative examples of policy and practice from around the world. Marking International Women’s Day, this event organized by the COP26 presidency in partnership with Chatham House, will explore how gender equality and climate action go hand-in-hand. The agreement of the Gender Action Plan (GAP) at COP25 sent the message that the time for gender-responsive climate action is now. This will be a unique opportunity to hear from policymakers and civil society leaders discussing whether enough is being done, as well as highlighting cutting-edge work around the world and suggesting what the future could hold. The event will be livestreamed on this event page. Full Article
the COVID-19 and food security in southern Africa By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 10 Jun 2021 14:40:31 +0000 COVID-19 and food security in southern Africa 16 July 2021 — 10:00AM TO 11:30AM Anonymous (not verified) 10 June 2021 Online This event aims to take a deeper look at the interlinking issues of food security, nutrition, climate change and food systems in southern Africa. Developing climate smart agri-food systems in sub-Saharan Africa is a precondition for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Over the years household food security has been affected by different shocks including climate change and the recent COVID-19 pandemic. The impact on rural households in southern Africa, in particular, has been significant due to the structure of food systems in the region. This event aims to take a deeper look at the interlinking issues of food security, nutrition, climate change and food systems in southern Africa and consider how practitioners and policymakers can build more equitable, resilient and better food systems. Full Article
the Nuclear, gas and green finance taxonomies in the EU and UK By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 20 Jan 2022 17:07:14 +0000 Nuclear, gas and green finance taxonomies in the EU and UK 23 February 2022 — 10:00AM TO 11:00AM Anonymous (not verified) 20 January 2022 Online Experts discuss EU, UK, and international perspectives on green taxonomy. This event will address the controversial additions to the EU green finance taxonomy, including the labelling of some nuclear and gas power sources as “green”. Hear perspectives from the UK, EU and international experts. The UK has committed to creating a green taxonomy to provide a shared understanding of which economic activities count as sustainable. It should be robust and evidence-based, taking an objective and science-based approach to assessing sustainability. Technical Screening Criteria (TSCs) for the climate change mitigation, and climate change adaptation objectives within the UK green taxonomy will be based on those in the EU Taxonomy. The Government is currently reviewing these and expects to consult on UK draft TSCs in the first quarter of 2022, ahead of legislating by the end of 2022. In recent weeks the European Commission has proposed controversial additional TSCs for the EU taxonomy, most notably the inclusion of nuclear and natural gas in power generation, which are currently being discussed by Member States and the European Parliament. The inclusion of controversial power sources not only risks affecting investment and deployment patterns in the net-zero transition, but may also be a threat to the authority of the taxonomy as a whole Key questions for the UK now include whether and how to address these issues in its own taxonomy, and how to promote a science-based ‘race to the top’ between jurisdictions that can lead to robust international standards. This Environment and Society Discussion Series event brings expert voices together to discuss EU, UK, and international perspectives, and is co-organized with E3G. Full Article
the Feminist solutions to the climate crisis By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Tue, 01 Mar 2022 12:07:14 +0000 Feminist solutions to the climate crisis 8 March 2022 — 11:00AM TO 12:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 1 March 2022 Online This International Women’s Day panel explores intersectional feminist approaches to solving the climate crisis. Gender inequality and climate change are closely intertwined. Due to their different and unequal social roles and status, women, girls and people of marginalised genders are disproportionately affected by climate change impacts, also differentiated by factors such as age, race, ability and location. They are also leading innovative solutions to climate change at all levels, especially in frontline communities. Yet as the Glasgow Women’s Leadership statement highlighted at COP26, there is still a lack of momentum for prioritising their knowledge, tools and leadership in climate policy and action. This panel considers what feminist approaches can bring to climate change communication and movement building, spotlighting a range of local and regional gender-responsive climate initiatives. It also discusses concrete examples of feminist and gender-responsive policies to address climate change, such as the Feminist Green New Deal. The panel highlights the critically important work being carried out by diverse feminist activists and researchers, and how the audience can centre gender and social equality in their work on climate change. Full Article
the The Ukraine war and threats to food and energy security By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 06 Apr 2022 09:17:14 +0000 The Ukraine war and threats to food and energy security 13 April 2022 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 6 April 2022 Online What are the potential impacts on food and energy markets emerging from the situation in Ukraine? Russia and Ukraine are key players in global energy, food, fertilizer and mineral markets. In the first few days after Russia’s invasion, both the threat and reality of resource flows being reduced drove up global prices, and has impacted the day-to-day life of people and businesses around the world. Developing and nutrition-fragile countries across Africa and the Middle East will be hit the hardest – Somalia, for example, is reliant on Russia and Ukraine for 100 per cent of its wheat imports and is currently experiencing its worst drought in years. The potential scale of disruption to food and energy markets increases with every week the war continues. This event launches the Environment and Society programme’s latest briefing paper The Ukraine war and threats to food and energy security: Cascading risks from rising prices and supply disruptions. The panel discusses: The political, socio-economic and resource pressures already faced by the international community prior to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. Direct and cascading impacts on the complex and interconnected energy, minerals, food and fertilizer markets, and policy or market responses that may exacerbate these impacts. Geopolitical ramifications that will affect the evolution of the conflict, as well as longer-term international cooperation and security. Measures that governments can take to build resilience, both to the ongoing impacts of the situation in Ukraine and to future risks of market disruption and geopolitical upheaval. Full Article
the Climate finance and conflict dynamics on the road to COP27 By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 09 Sep 2022 07:37:13 +0000 Climate finance and conflict dynamics on the road to COP27 21 September 2022 — 1:00PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 9 September 2022 Online Stakeholders discuss the role of conflict and conflict sensitivity in climate finance and action. With climate change, fragility and conflict challenges worsening, the role of international climate finance is more urgent than ever. From the implementation of climate finance and who it reaches to the rush for renewable energy, the inclusion of conflict analysis and conflict sensitivity principles often remain absent from climate finance discussions and planning. With COP27 around the corner and for the occasion of International Peace Day, stakeholders ranging from government representatives to climate activists discuss their perspectives on the role of conflict and conflict sensitivity as part of climate finance and action. This event was organized in partnership with International Alert. Full Article
the An Attack on the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ Principle in Hong Kong By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Mon, 11 Jan 2016 13:39:32 +0000 An Attack on the ‘One Country, Two Systems’ Principle in Hong Kong Expert comment sysadmin 11 January 2016 The disappearance of publisher Lee Bo may mark the beginning of the end of Beijing’s commitment to uphold the framework that provides the territory with a high degree of autonomy. — A book featuring Chinese President Xi Jinping and former political heavyweight Bo Xilai on the cover in a display cabinet of the Causeway Bay Books store in Hong Kong. Photo by Getty Images. The disappearance of a publisher in Hong Kong, Lee Bo, who owns a well-known bookshop that sells books critical of Chinese leaders, is a landmark event and potentially a historical turning point for Hong Kong. It is not clear if this happened at the behest of the senior Chinese leadership. But if those responsible for the disappearing of Lee are not punished, it will be clear that their acts are condoned by the authorities.This is deeply worrying as it gravely undermines the ‘one country, two systems’ framework, which provides Hong Kong with high degree of autonomy from Beijing. Under the Sino-British Agreement of 1984 and Hong Kong’s Basic Law, which govern relations between Hong Kong and China, the rights of Hong Kong citizens are meant to be protected within the territory. Mainland Chinese authorities do not have the legal power to arrest or detain an individual in, or remove anyone from, Hong Kong.The Chinese know the limit of their legal authority in Hong Kong. Hence, Lee was quietly disappeared, rather than openly arrested. But that it happened at all may mark the beginning of the end of Beijing’s commitment to uphold the ‘one country, two systems’ framework – a relationship that requires Beijing to tolerate, if not respect, the judicial integrity and the way of life in Hong Kong.Do we know for sure that Lee was ‘disappeared’ by China’s security apparatus? Before he disappeared, Lee said in an interview that he knew he had been watched and that his emails were accessed by Chinese agents, and that he would not travel to the mainland as a result. And we know that Lee’s travel documents are all in his home; yet he is now supposedly in China ‘assisting the authorities in an investigation’ into something unspecified. This explanation comes from a fax sent to Lee’s wife, probably intended by the Chinese authorities to put an end to speculation. But why would Chinese authorities work with Lee, a British citizen who carries no travel documents and would thus have broken the law by entering China? The circumstantial evidence is strong enough to show that whether he was taken by Chinese officers or someone else, his removal from Hong Kong to China must have received official endorsement.Should the rest of the world be concerned about this? Hong Kong is a major financial center that services the world economy, and it can do so largely because it enjoys judicial independence and the high degree of autonomy under the ‘one country, two systems’ framework. It is also a shining example of how the rights and scope of development for individuals can be respected in a Chinese community. Should the ‘one country, two systems’ framework be undermined, Hong Kong as we know it will be no more.Beijing’s quick response in requiring Lee to fax his family may come across as ham-fisted and callous, but it also demonstrates that it had not expected the strong backlash to Lee’s disappearance. A strong and well-articulated international response that brings the matter to Xi’s attention may persuade him that it is in China’s best interest to put a stop to this process of undermining the ‘one country, two systems’ framework. Given Hong Kong’s importance to the global economy, this should be a priority for the international community.This article was originally published in the Diplomat.To comment on this article, please contact Chatham House Feedback Full Article
the ‘Hong Kong is now in the hands of its people – they cannot rely on others to stick up for them now.’ By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 29 Jun 2017 14:18:34 +0000 ‘Hong Kong is now in the hands of its people – they cannot rely on others to stick up for them now.’ Expert comment sysadmin 29 June 2017 Kerry Brown on ‘one country, two systems’, the UK’s diminishing influence and the territory’s future, 20 years after the handover. — Hong Kong and Chinese flags hang in preparation for President Xi Jinping’s visit. Photo: Getty Images. 1 July marks the 20th anniversary of the transfer of Hong Kong’s sovereignty from Britain to China. Kerry Brown speaks with Jason Naselli about what the future holds for the territory. How sustainable is the ‘one country, two systems’ framework? Will the arrangement last the full 50 years (until 2047) as originally envisioned? It is questionable whether the arrangement that exists today was the one envisioned in 1997 when the handover happened. It was always a very abstract, flexible system, granting Hong Kong a high degree of autonomy, meaning it could maintain its capitalist system. Of course, in the lead up to 1997 all these things were broadly seen as being in Beijing’s interests to preserve. But these days, the one thing that few said in 1997 has come to pass – the People’s Republic has maintained one-party rule as a political system, but become one of the world’s great economies. It has been so far a huge success. Hong Kong therefore has diminished in importance over the years to the point that maintaining at least some semblance of one country, two systems is almost like an act of charity. It has been nibbled at, compromised and seems to grow weaker by the day. Most in Hong Kong would say there is a system: one country, one system. That’s the deal. The central government’s deepening involvement in the territory’s politics is a subject of growing controversy in Hong Kong. Does the Chinese government need to alter its approach? Not particularly. It doesn’t want to see Hong Kong fail as an economy. That doesn’t suit its interests at all. But nor does it want a truculent, disobedient polity that is meant to be part of its sovereign territory. So it has increasingly set political parameters. Hong Kong can have its unique system – as long as it is obedient. And on the whole, that is the deal that all of the city’s chief executives until now have internally understood perfectly. As part of the 1997 handover, the UK has ‘a continuing moral and political obligation’ to Hong Kong. How will this relationship play out as Brexit shifts Britain’s place in the world? The Foreign Office offers a six-monthly report to Parliament, updating on how the handover deal is going. As the years go on, however, it becomes increasingly illusive how the UK has any real locus to say much about the situation on Hong Kong. It did say, rightly, that the detainment of one of the booksellers taken in in 2015 was a violation of the treaty because he was British. This was the strongest wording that has ever appeared from an official British source. But with dependence on creating a new kind of relationship with China now foremost in people’s minds because of Brexit and other economic pressures, it is not surprising that the priority increasingly lies elsewhere. With direct management of Hong Kong gone, the UK was always going to be more and more irrelevant. That has happened. And in any case, relations with China have had to become more complex and multifaceted. Hong Kong was always the tail wagging the dog for the UK relations with China. Now there has been a rebalancing, the calculation always has to be how much unilaterally supporting Hong Kong will damage relations with Beijing. This has become an increasingly asymmetrical question: in a playoff, preserving links with Beijing will always prevail. That’s just the reality of the new world we are seeing come into being. Hong Kong has played an important financial role for China over the past 20 years, but where will it fit as markets and financial institutions on the mainland mature? It maintains is role as a major RMB hub, and as a finance centre. But it is surrounded by competition. Singapore, and Sydney, and other places in the region have RMB deals. Shanghai and Tianjin aspire to be portals for entry to the domestic Chinese market. Hong Kong every day has to think of new ways to maintain its relevance and beat back competition. So far, it has done well. But this is an issue it can never be complacent about. What has been the most significant change in Hong Kong society since 1997? The rising cultural and linguistic influence of the mainland on Hong Kong. Hong Kong has maintained its difference – but it has had to change. It is clear that Hong Kong is now in the hands of Hong Kongese – they cannot rely on others to stick up for them now. The culture, identity and future of the territory are in their hands. In that sense, they have autonomy. Full Article
the China, Liu Xiaobo and the New Reality of Human Rights By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Tue, 18 Jul 2017 14:46:12 +0000 China, Liu Xiaobo and the New Reality of Human Rights Expert comment sysadmin 18 July 2017 Liu Xiaobo, Chinese Nobel laureate and human rights campaigner, died on 13 July while serving an 11-year prison sentence for ‘subversion’. Steve Tsang tells Jason Naselli that the reaction to Liu’s death reflects the growing confidence of the Chinese government that it can ignore Western criticism. — A picture of Liu Xiaobo inside the Nobel Peace Centre on the day of his Peace Prize ceremony, 10 December 2010. Photo: Getty Images. What does the Communist Party’s handling of the case of Liu Xiaobo tell us about its approach to dissidents and freedom of speech in the Xi era? What it tells us is the party is tightening control much more than before. The Liu Xiaobo case shows that the party is not comfortable with people asking for the constitution of the People’s Republic of China to be enforced. Charter 08, for which Liu Xiaobo was jailed, ultimately amounts to asking for the rights of Chinese citizens, as articulated in the constitution, to be fully implemented. That resulted in Liu Xiaobo being incarcerated. But what is really important isn’t so much that the party is tightening its control – that is happening anyway. What is more important is that the party is not that worried about how the Liu Xiaobo case affects international opinion. If that’s the case, what lessons should countries looking to trade with China but concerned about human rights abuses take from Liu’s case? We haven’t seen any major Western country come out to strongly and clearly hold the Chinese government to account over Liu Xiaobo’s human rights situation. A few leading governments have asked for Liu Xiaobo’s widow to be allowed to choose to stay or leave China. But so far there is no indication of any government backing that up with anything concrete. That is very weak support for human rights in China. And it reflects a new reality: of the unwillingness of leading democracies to challenge the Chinese government on human rights matters, and the confidence on the part of the Chinese government to simply ignore what the rest of the world may think about it. Given that there has been much discussion of China taking a larger global leadership role in the wake of an inward political turn in the US, what are the implications of Liu’s case for China’s global standing? The implications are really small. There is a stronger expectation and desire to see China playing a global role because Donald Trump has damaged the standing of the United States as a global leader. It is not because of something that the Chinese government has done; it’s because of Trump. That wider context hasn’t changed. So the Chinese government’s calculation is that the negative international reaction to Liu Xiaobo’s death will blow over in a matter of days – at worst, a couple of weeks – and then things will get back to normal. There is no serious reason to believe that the Chinese government is wrong in their calculation. At the moment, the major Western countries are focusing on the economic relationship, and doing what they have to do pro forma about human rights issues in China. No major Western government is going to say that they are going to reconsider a major trade deal with China because of how Liu Xiaobo or his family has been treated. The Chinese government knows that and they act accordingly. Moving on from the international reaction, how does Liu’s situation resonate within China? Most Chinese don’t even know who Liu Xiaobo is. Within China, you cannot even search Liu Xiaobo’s name, or any permutation of Liu Xiaobo’s name, or the English initials of Liu Xiaobo. Anything potentially about or related to Liu Xiaobo is being censored. Some things still get through; the ingenuity of a lot of bloggers is infinite. But most Chinese don’t even know what happened to Liu Xiaobo, or if they do, they mostly see him as a shill of the Western world trying to infiltrate and destabilize China. If Western governments won’t engage China over human rights, what implications does that have for the global treatment of human rights as China becomes a bigger global player? You can ‘engage’ in the sense of raising the issue with the Chinese authorities, as indeed the UK government and the German government have done, for example. But they haven’t actually taken any concrete steps. The type of engagement where Western governments would get the Chinese government to demonstrate that something concrete was being done to improve the human rights situation – that era has gone. It is not going to come back in the foreseeable future. And therefore, the situation in terms of human rights in China will not be improving in the foreseeable future. But what is more significant is how the Chinese government is asserting itself and dealing with domestic and international challenges, including on human rights issues. For many other countries around the world, China is showing an example for how to deal with the West. They don’t see it as being negative; they see it in positive terms. There are still more countries in the world that abuse human rights than respect human rights. Most of those governments are pleased to see what the Chinese government has done in terms of how it handles the West. Full Article
the The Hard Truth Is Rohingya Refugees Are Not Going Home By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 06 Oct 2017 09:56:20 +0000 The Hard Truth Is Rohingya Refugees Are Not Going Home Expert comment sysadmin 6 October 2017 The only likely outcome of the crisis is the near-permanent presence of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya along the Bangladesh border. — A Rohingya refugee camp in Bangladesh. Photo: Getty Images. The harrowing scenes of human suffering on the Myanmar–Bangladesh border have provoked outpourings of sympathy and some firm statements by international politicians. At least half a million people have been brutally expelled from their homes and are now living in miserable conditions in muddy refugee camps and storm-drenched shanty towns. As the international community debates how to respond, it needs to take a clear-eyed view of the situation and recognise a brutal truth: the refugees are almost certainly not going home. Consequently, policymakers must not hide behind the fiction that Bangladesh is only temporarily hosting the refugees in preparation for their rapid return home. Over-optimistic assumptions now will lead to worse misery in the long term. Instead, the world needs to plan on the basis that Bangladesh will be hosting a very large and permanent refugee population. The expulsion of the Rohingya Muslims from Rakhine State in northwestern Myanmar is the culmination of decades of discriminatory policies enacted by the country’s military rulers since 1962. In 1978, the Burmese military’s ‘Operation Dragon King’ pushed 200,000 Muslims into Bangladesh. International pressure forced the military to allow most of them to return. Then, in 1991–92, the military again expelled a quarter of a million people. Bangladesh forced some of them back over the border and eventually the military agreed to allow the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees to manage the repatriation of most of the remainder. State-sponsored abuses of the Rohingya and ethnic violence perpetrated against them by chauvinists among the ethnic Rakhine population have continued. The abuse became dramatically worse in 2012 when tens of thousands of Rohingya were forced to flee their homes, although most remained inside the country. This year, armed attacks by self-proclaimed defenders of the Rohingya, the Arakan Rohingya Salvation Army, gave the military an excuse to mount what the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights called ‘a textbook example of ethnic cleansing’. It is tempting to believe that, as before, the Myanmar government will allow the expelled Rohingya to return after international pressure. However, recent geopolitical developments in southeast Asia and the election of a democratic government in Myanmar in 2015 make this much less likely. Southeast Asia is now an arena of geopolitical competition between China and its rivals: mainly the United States, India and Japan. All are battling for influence. Both China and India have made public statements of support for Myanmar’s government in the current crisis. In that context, diplomatic pressure or economic sanctions imposed by Europe or the United States will only have one effect – to push Myanmar towards China. Moreover, those in the EU and US who want to see democracy survive in Myanmar will be unwilling to push the elected government led by Aung San Suu Kyi too far. There is an extraordinary degree of hostility towards the Rohingya among the majority Bamar population. This has broken out into street violence on occasions but even where the situation is calm, anti-Muslim prejudice is easily awoken. The current government is very unlikely to challenge such sentiments at a time when it is trying to preserve its position against the military’s continuing domination of political and economic life. Myanmar is one of the 10 members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations but ASEAN is unlikely to impose any meaningful pressure. Only Malaysia has been publicly critical of Myanmar’s government. Indonesia has attempted to mediate – its foreign minister Retno Marsudi has held face-to-face meetings with Aung San Suu Kyi – but without apparent effect. Both countries have sent aid and volunteers to the Rohingya refugee camps but there is absolutely no talk of sanctions or other overt pressure. The question then is: what will happen to the refugees? One option could be resettlement, but neither Bangladesh nor any of the other states in the region are willing to take them in. Malaysia already hosts 60,000 registered Rohingya refugees and probably another 150,000 unregistered ones. Unknown thousands of Rohingya have fled to Thailand and Indonesia by boat but have often fallen victim to unscrupulous human traffickers in cahoots with local officials. Thailand has already said it will refuse to allow new ‘boat people’ to land. The only likely outcome therefore is the near-permanent presence of hundreds of thousands of Rohingya along the Bangladesh border. Delaying preparations for a permanent refugee population in the hope that they will be allowed to re-cross the border back into Myanmar will only make the situation worse. Seventy years ago, another ‘temporary’ movement of people into refugee camps created decades of instability around the Middle East. The world must remember the Palestinians as it plans for the future of the Rohingya. Full Article
the The Migration-Deportation-Return Nexus By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 23 May 2018 15:30:01 +0000 The Migration-Deportation-Return Nexus 6 June 2018 — 1:00PM TO 5:30PM Anonymous (not verified) 23 May 2018 Chatham House, London In 2015, the unprecedented numbers of migrants crossing borders subjected the EU to extraordinary moral and political pressure, as the number of asylum-seekers soared 122 per cent to 1.3 million people.In response, the EU has sought to accelerate the deportation of failed asylum-seekers and migrants who arrive without proper documentation. The European Commission has recommended that “all leverage and incentives” be used to “ensure that third countries fulfil their international obligation to take back their own nationals residing irregularly in Europe.” The Valletta Action Plan, the EU-Turkey deal, the Brussels Agreement with Afghanistan, the EU deal with Nigeria and the new “results-oriented Partnership Framework” signal more restrictive approaches and an outsourcing of the securitization of migration. However, the EU’s attempt to reconcile its legal and humanitarian obligations with stronger measures has encountered some serious challenges.This roundtable stimulates dialogue on the circumstances surrounding migrant youth both in Afghanistan and the Edo state in Nigeria, and identifies key questions for further research on the ground.Contextualising young people’s experiences within a “migration-deportation-return” nexus provides an entry point for the identification of both the commonalities and specifics of the challenges and risks that migrant youth face.In line with UNICEF’s policy priorities related to children on the move, and initiating global debates in child rights and development, this collaboration forms part of the efforts that seek to inform global research and policy agenda for this most vulnerable of groups under the radar.The intended outcome of this collaboration is to begin developing a set of core objectives and indicators to help guide the EU, Afghanistan and Nigeria in their treatment of youth, and to facilitate improved donor and host government understanding of the issues.Participants include experts, researchers, academics, representatives of civil society and governmental institutions.Attendance is by invitation-only.The event is co-hosted with UNICEF Office of Research – Innocenti and the University of Cambridge. Full Article
the Climate Change and the Pacific: Impacts and Adaptation By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 14 Nov 2018 14:20:01 +0000 Climate Change and the Pacific: Impacts and Adaptation 27 November 2018 — 8:30AM TO 10:00AM Anonymous (not verified) 14 November 2018 Royal Academy of Arts Pacific Island leaders have identified climate change as the single greatest challenge facing the region. Warming oceans and the increasing incidence of extreme weather events threaten Pacific peoples and their way of life. This event will explore the existing impacts of climate change on the South Pacific and what solutions are feasible for the region. This discussion will follow a brief screening of the documentary film, Subject to Change, which looks at the impact of climate change in New Zealand and Fiji and documents the personal stories of a tiny Pacific community faced with rising and acidifying seas, extreme weather conditions, tidal events and social changes. It also looks at New Zealand’s efforts to amplify the voices of its Pacific neighbours and to drive domestic and global action on climate change. This event is being held in partnership with the New Zealand government. THIS EVENT IS NOW FULL AND REGISTRATION HAS CLOSED. Full Article
the Combatting Human Trafficking: The Situation in East Asia By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 30 Aug 2019 15:55:01 +0000 Combatting Human Trafficking: The Situation in East Asia 16 September 2019 — 10:30AM TO 5:30PM Anonymous (not verified) 30 August 2019 Taipei, Taiwan In 2017, there were an estimated 40.3 million victims of modern slavery worldwide. The prevalence for individuals to fall victim to forced labour practices is highest in the Asia-Pacific region where four out of every 1,000 people have been found to be victims of forced labour and labour trafficking. Many of these victims end up in the more developed economies of East Asia as destination countries of labour trafficking. Such cases are, however, often under-reported and under-detected, largely owing to a lack of a coherent response to trafficking across the sub-region.At this roundtable, organized in partnership with the Taiwan Foundation for Democracy, the Taiwan-Asia Exchange Foundation and the University of Portsmouth, participants will discuss emerging anti-trafficking practices from a regional perspective including legal and policy frameworks and the role of business and recruitment agencies.Attendance at this event is by invitation only. Full Article
the Putting the Hong Kong Crisis into Historical and Comparative Perspective By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 17 Oct 2019 15:30:01 +0000 Putting the Hong Kong Crisis into Historical and Comparative Perspective 14 November 2019 — 8:30AM TO 9:30AM Anonymous (not verified) 17 October 2019 Chatham House | 10 St James's Square | London | SW1Y 4LE This roundtable will focus on current events unfolding in Hong Kong, where the territory has been convulsed with protests for several months.The speakers will examine how class, race and poverty play into the conflict. Taking a comparative approach, they will examine the generational divide, looking at the ideological gulf between the older, more conservative and pro-Beijing population versus the younger, more pro-democracy protesters. The discussion will also draw upon the erosion of trust between police and the wider public.While acknowledging the unique features of this wave of unrest, the speakers will draw parallels, placing the current crisis in Hong Kong beside events that have occurred in other periods and other places. Parallels to be explored include those with Shanghai struggles of the 1910s through 1980s and upheavals and crackdowns in the former Soviet bloc during the Cold War. Full Article
the Bangladesh: The Trade-Off Between Economic Prosperity and Human Rights By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 28 Feb 2020 17:20:02 +0000 Bangladesh: The Trade-Off Between Economic Prosperity and Human Rights 11 March 2020 — 1:00PM TO 2:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 28 February 2020 Chatham House | 10 St James's Square | London | SW1Y 4LE Bangladesh’s recent gains in economic and social indices, set against its record of corruption and poor civil rights, has at times been termed the ‘Bangladesh Paradox’. Yet this label is overly simplistic; the current situation proves that these trends can coexist.The Awami League government, in power since 2009, has increased political stability, delivered unprecedented economic and social advances, and adopted a counter-terrorism strategy to stamp out extremist groups. At the same time, it is criticized for curbing civil rights and failing to hold credible elections. However, as the two previous regimes have demonstrated, the rights situation is unlikely to improve even if the Awami League were replaced.How did worsening rights become a feature of the state irrespective of its political dispensation? An unresolved contest between political and non-political state actors may hold the key to that puzzle. The perils of the current dispensation have recently manifested in weakening economic indicators, which jeopardize the very stability and social progress for which the country has garnered much praise. Full Article
the Webinar: Hong Kong: Dissent in the Age of Coronavirus By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 08 Apr 2020 12:55:01 +0000 Webinar: Hong Kong: Dissent in the Age of Coronavirus 17 April 2020 — 12:00PM TO 1:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 8 April 2020 Street protests demanding greater autonomy and democratization in Hong Kong upended the city for seven months last year. However, with the outbreak of the coronavirus in China in late January, the protests quickly died out. What does this mean for the city’s protest movement?The speaker will argue that, despite the lack of high-profile street rallies, protest in the city is continuing. It is building on and evolving from last year’s protest movement albeit in different forms. At the same time, the Hong Kong authorities, emboldened by a hard line from Beijing, have begun cracking down on activists and protesters in the city as they seek to put a lid on dissent ahead of important Legislative Council elections scheduled for this September.In this webinar, the speaker will look at the current state of dissent in Hong Kong and prospects for Hong Kong’s future.This event will be held on the record. Full Article
the Webinar: On the Front Line: The Impact of COVID-19 on Asia's Migrant Workers By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Fri, 15 May 2020 11:00:01 +0000 Webinar: On the Front Line: The Impact of COVID-19 on Asia's Migrant Workers 21 May 2020 — 2:00PM TO 2:45PM Anonymous (not verified) 15 May 2020 Asia’s army of migrant workers are on the frontline in confronting the health and economic effects of COVID-19. Lacking formal safety nets, health care access, and facing social dislocation, hundreds of millions across the region are bearing the brunt of the coronavirus lockdown. Asian governments have scrambled to come up with an effective health and humanitarian response, exposing public apathy and significant shortcomings in public policy. Is better regional coordination necessary to mitigate the impact of the COVID-19 on migrant labourers? Is the private sector in Asia part of the problem or part of the solution? In this webinar, the speakers will discuss the likely implications of lasting economic damage on the livelihoods of Asia’s migrant workers, as well as responses and measures to effectively mitigate the impact. Full Article
the The Rohingya Crisis: Three Years On By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Wed, 09 Sep 2020 08:05:01 +0000 The Rohingya Crisis: Three Years On 17 September 2020 — 1:30PM TO 2:15PM Anonymous (not verified) 9 September 2020 Online Speakers examine the current situation of the Rohingya people and assess the threat that COVID-19 poses to the health and human rights of refugees and displaced people. It has been three years since a military-led crackdown forced more than 740,000 Rohingya to flee across the border into Bangladesh to escape collective punishment and violence in Myanmar. Most refugees have sought shelter in Bangladesh’s Cox’s Bazar district, where access to clean water is limited, sanitation facilities are lacking, and due to overcrowding, social distancing is impossible. While the number of reported COVID-19 cases has so far been relatively low, testing capacity remains limited and anecdotal reports from humanitarians suggest that COVID-19 has spread extensively through the refugee camps and the Bangladeshi host community. The speakers also consider the different approaches taken by neighbouring states, regional and international organizations in responding to the crisis. What can be done to address the needs of refugees in the short term and how can fundamental human rights be restored and protected during the time of COVID-19? What aid provision has been successfully delivered within Rakhine State and in what ways? Ahead of elections in Myanmar in November, how can the international community persuade the Myanmarese government into positive action? And what would a sustainable solution to the Rohingya crisis look like and what are the competing views over how such a solution should be delivered? This event is held in partnership with The Atlantic Council. Full Article
the The 2020 Inner Mongolia Language Protests: Wider Meanings for China and the Region By www.chathamhouse.org Published On :: Thu, 12 Nov 2020 18:54:46 +0000 The 2020 Inner Mongolia Language Protests: Wider Meanings for China and the Region 24 November 2020 — 3:00PM TO 4:00PM Anonymous (not verified) 12 November 2020 Online Speakers discuss the historical roots of the language issue, as well as the wider significance of the protests in China. Please note this is an online event. Please register on Zoom using the link below to secure your registration. In September thousands of people protested in Inner Mongolia in opposition to a government move to replace Mongolian language with Standard Mandarin in three school subjects – history, politics and Chinese language. Announced less than a week before the start of the new school year, the policy also requires schools to use new national textbooks in Chinese, instead of regional textbooks. The mass protests and classroom walk-outs reflect ethnic Mongolian’s anxiety that their native language may be eliminated. What has the government’s response to the protests been? Full Article
the Identifying the source term in the potential equation with weighted sparsity regularization By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2024 15:01 EDT Ole Løseth Elvetun and Bjørn Fredrik Nielsen Math. Comp. 93 (), 2811-2836. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the Numerical analysis of a time-stepping method for the Westervelt equation with time-fractional damping By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2024 15:01 EDT Katherine Baker, Lehel Banjai and Mariya Ptashnyk Math. Comp. 93 (), 2711-2743. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the High-order splitting finite element methods for the subdiffusion equation with limited smoothing property By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2024 15:01 EDT Buyang Li, Zongze Yang and Zhi Zhou Math. Comp. 93 (), 2557-2586. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the Solving the Mystery of the Wine Legs By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 21 Oct 2019 14:38:14 -0400 What causes wine legs (tears)? Andrea Bertozzi explains and describes how to generate legs. Full Article
the Doing the Math By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 24 May 2021 14:38:14 -0400 Math may sometimes seem as if it's comprised of countless meaningless unconnected exercises, but in reality, it's much more. It's figuring out how to do something, and, even better, why something works the way it does. The math you're doing now can open doors for you so that you can answer deep questions yourself about a subject or idea that you're interested in. Give those questions a shot and perhaps someday also help others solve their problems. Five mathematicians (Alexander Diaz-Lopez, Trachette Jackson, Francis Su, Erika Tatiana Camacho, and Deanna Haunsperger) talk about what mathematics means to them. Full Article
the Taking the "Temperature" of Languages By www.ams.org Published On :: Tue, 6 Jul 2021 14:38:14 -0400 Ricardo Bermudez-Otero and Tobias Galla discuss the mathematics describing the evolution of human languages. The sounds and structures of the world's approximately 7,000 languages never stop changing. Just compare the English in Romeo and Juliet or the Spanish in Don Quixote to the modern forms. But historical records give an incomplete view of language evolution. Increasingly, linguists draw upon mathematical models to figure out which features of a language change often and which ones change more rarely over the course of thousands of years. A new model inspired by physics assigns a "temperature" to many sounds and grammatical structures. Features with higher temperatures are less stable, so they change more often as time goes on. The linguistic thermometer will help researchers reconstruct how our languages came to be, and how they might change in future generations. Full Article
the Securing Data in the Quantum Era By www.ams.org Published On :: Wed, 1 Sep 2021 14:38:14 -0400 Angela Robinson explains the math behind the next generation of cryptographic algorithms. Whenever you log in to a website, send an email, or make an online purchase, you're counting on your data being sent securely, without hackers being able to crack the code. Our standard cryptographic systems hinge on mathematical problems that stump present-day computers, like finding the prime factors of a very large number. But in the coming decades, powerful quantum computers are expected to be able to rapidly solve some such problems, threatening the security of our online communications. To develop new methods that can withstand even the most sophisticated quantum computer, cryptographers are using a wide range of mathematical tools, many of which were originally developed without any real-life applications in mind. Full Article
the Exploring Thermodynamics with Billiards By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 14 Feb 2022 14:38:14 -0400 Tim Chumley explains the connections between random billiards and the science of heat and energy transfer. If you've ever played billiards or pool, you've used your intuition and some mental geometry to plan your shots. Mathematicians have gone a step further, using these games as inspiration for new mathematical problems. Starting from the simple theoretical setup of a single ball bouncing around in an enclosed region, the possibilities are endless. For instance, if the region is shaped like a stadium (a rectangle with semicircles on opposite sides), and several balls start moving with nearly the same velocity and position, their paths in the region soon differ wildly: chaos. Mathematical billiards even have connections to thermodynamics, the branch of physics dealing with heat, temperature, and energy transfer. Full Article
the Keeping the Lights On By www.ams.org Published On :: Tue, 15 Nov 2022 10:38:14 -0400 Rodney Kizito from U.S. Department of Energy discusses solar energy, mathematics, and microgrids. When you flip a switch to turn on a light, where does that energy come from? In a traditional power grid, electricity is generated at large power plants and then transmitted long distances. But now, individual homes and businesses with solar panels can generate some or all of their own power and even send energy into the rest of the grid. Modifying the grid so that power can flow in both directions depends on mathematics. With linear programming and operations research, engineers design efficient and reliable systems that account for constraints like the electricity demand at each location, the costs of solar installation and distribution, and the energy produced under different weather conditions. Similar mathematics helps create "microgrids" — small, local systems that can operate independent of the main grid. Full Article
the Giving Health Care Policy a Dose of Mathematics By www.ams.org Published On :: Wed, 5 Apr 2023 10:49:14 -0400 Imelda Flores Vazquez from Econometrica, Inc. explains how economists use mathematics to evaluate the efficacy of health care policies. When a hospital or government wants to adjust their health policies — for instance, by encouraging more frequent screenings for certain diseases — how do they know whether their program will work or not? If the service has already been implemented elsewhere, researchers can use that data to estimate its effects. But if the idea is brand-new, or has only been used in very different settings, then it's harder to predict how well the new program will work. Luckily, a tool called a microsimulation can help researchers make an educated guess. Full Article
the Smashing Particles up Against Mathematics By www.ams.org Published On :: Fri, 8 Mar 2024 14:33:14 -0400 Dr. Abiy Tasissa of Tufts University, discusses the mathematics he and colleagues used to study particle collider data, including optimal transport and optimization. Collider physics often result in distributions referred to as jets. Dr. Tasissa and his team used "Earth Mover's Distance" and other mathematical tools to study the shape of jets. "It is interesting for me to see how mathematics can be applied to study these fundamental problems answering fundamental equations in physics, not only at the level of formulating new ideas, which is, in this particular case, a notion of distance, but also how the importance of designing fast optimization algorithms to be able to actually compute these distances," says Dr. Tasissa. Full Article
the The space of vectored hyperbolic surfaces is path-connected By www.ams.org Published On :: Fri, 04 Oct 2024 16:24 EDT Sangsan Warakkagun Conform. Geom. Dyn. 28 (), 115-130. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the Mathematical Analyses of Decisions, Voting and Games By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 04 Mar 2024 14:51 EST Michael A. Jones, David McCune and Jennifer M. Wilson, editors. American Mathematical Society, 2024, CONM, volume 795, approx. 208 pp. ISBN: 978-1-4704-6978-8 (print), 978-1-4704-7608-3 (online). This volume contains the proceedings of the virtual AMS Special Session on Mathematics of Decisions, Elections and Games, held on April 8,... Full Article
the Advances in Functional Analysis and Operator Theory By www.ams.org Published On :: Mon, 01 Apr 2024 11:32 EDT Marat V. Markin, Igor V. Nikolaev and Carsten Trunk, editors. American Mathematical Society, 2024, CONM, volume 798, approx. 248 pp. ISBN: 978-1-4704-7305-1 (print), 978-1-4704-7611-3 (online). This volume contains the proceedings of the AMS-EMS-SMF Special Session on Advances in Functional Analysis and Operator Theory, held July 18–22,... Full Article
the Recent Progress in Function Theory and Operator Theory By www.ams.org Published On :: Wed, 01 May 2024 13:10 EDT Alberto A. Condori, Elodie Pozzi, William T. Ross and Alan A. Sola, editors. American Mathematical Society, 2024, CONM, volume 799, approx. 224 pp. ISBN: 978-1-4704-7246-7 (print), 978-1-4704-7612-0 (online). This volume contains the proceedings of the AMS Special Session on Recent Progress in Function Theory and Operator Theory, held virtually on April 6,... Full Article
the A Glimpse into Geometric Representation Theory By www.ams.org Published On :: Thu, 01 Aug 2024 13:17 EDT Mahir Bilen Can and Jörg Feldvoss, editors. American Mathematical Society, 2024, CONM, volume 804, approx. 216 pp. ISBN: 978-1-4704-7090-6 (print), 978-1-4704-7664-9 (online). This volume contains the proceedings of the AMS Special Session on Combinatorial and Geometric Representation Theory, held virtually on November... Full Article
the Corrigendum to “The Class Number one Problem for the Normal CM-fields of degree 32” By www.ams.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 16:22 EDT Soun-Hi Kwon Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 377 (), 6021-6022. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the On Jacobians of geometrically reduced curves and their Néron models By www.ams.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 16:22 EDT Otto Overkamp Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 377 (), 5863-5903. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the Characterization of ????-concavity preserved by the Dirichlet heat flow By www.ams.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 16:22 EDT Kazuhiro Ishige, Paolo Salani and Asuka Takatsu Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 377 (), 5705-5748. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the Surface counterexamples to the Eisenbud-Goto conjecture By www.ams.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 16:22 EDT Jong In Han and Sijong Kwak Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 377 (), 5561-5581. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the Bounded differentials on the unit disk and the associated geometry By www.ams.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 16:22 EDT Song Dai and Qiongling Li Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 377 (), 5445-5481. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the The positive mass theorem and distance estimates in the spin setting By www.ams.org Published On :: Thu, 31 Oct 2024 16:22 EDT Simone Cecchini and Rudolf Zeidler Trans. Amer. Math. Soc. 377 (), 5271-5288. Abstract, references and article information Full Article
the LEGO The Batman 2004 D.A.V.E. Rooftop Scene GRADED By www.flickr.com Published On :: Mon, 11 Nov 2024 16:47:13 -0800 bradders1999 posted a photo: The MATRIX-Style colour grading version. Minifigures made, photographed and edited by me. Full Article
the LEGO Classic Space: the robot final rebellion on the capital planet ousts the federation rule and replace with a techno republic and dictatorship (the final episode (for a while)) (AFOL toy hobby photography with droids, police and minifigures city MOC By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 05:00:15 -0800 dannyhennesy posted a photo: On the Capital planet the rebellious droids had followed maily the Bat-Bot, but as time progressed his circuits had gone all mushy at 780 years or so without maintenance… Several splinter groups all with their local bot leaders emerged such as the Che-bot, the traffic-light-robot and the Butt-bot, but none of these collected enough sentient circuits to call themselves a popular (or Animata) mass movement! That was until a cyborg came along, one known as Jones, a long time prisoner and terrorist, his easy solutions to every problem rang well in the masses' auditory circuits!!! His slogans and simple rhetoric were simple enough for the simple traffic-light to comprehend and cheer! His language was full of hate towards the organics and especially the humans who were the most common races among the ruling class of the federation!!! Despite being a “Fleshie” himself his message collected the angry enslaved bot community by only weeks all rebellious robots except for a few fringe loonies had forgotten the old leaders… One morning at Jones gave the signal… All over the capital planet hordes and swarms of any form of mechanical sentient beings attacked first the police stations, then the Company boards running the planet and the federation as well as their starfleet… Many died, especially the low level police and army! Many mechanicals died too, but their ranks were soon filled by Mutant fleshie allies of the lower levels who hated the Federation feudal society and upper classes as much as their technological allies… The Federation state apparatus and ruling class, most of their fleet army fled when they knew the game was up, they activated the emergency escape plan and whole city blocks with important factories, administrational units, valuable assets and so on separated from the capital by hidden rocket engines and homed in their course to Mars… On Mars the federation regrouped and formed their new society… On the Capital planet, the robots proclaimed the first Techno-republic of the advanced inorganic civilization, the low level fleshies left behind, became slaves and their mutant allies got to rule their own minute chiefdoms as protectorates under the Techno-republic… Jones was now the undisputed ruler of the capital planet, but the victory was a pyrros one since, all important buildings, all of value was now one Mars! But as Jones put it: Our proud race the Techno-species didn’t need the Fleshies administration, their infrastructure, their spaceships… We shall start from scratch, with a new administration, a new order, every droid shall work at 4x speed than they did during human oppression since now we are free and the fleshies shall work twice as hard than the Techno-Race, until we have breed enough new fleshies so they can do all work! Our future is bright and shiny like glistering shiny metal! The snapshot seen here is from the first police station attacked in sector 45-34v-ss-g the first one to fall according to official techno-history! ———————————————/ Designers note: I am sad to say that this is the last episode in this years-spanning space series… At least for a while, I will still post LEGO hobby stuff here but without a storyline, perhaps small designs and builds… and occasionally a story when I feel like it!!! I would like to thank all who had been in this journey of our heros, but it has taken far to much time and effort and since the state of the world is as it is, I am spiraling down in another depression, I must stop it before I reach the abyss, so I have remove some stress out of my equation… I ended it in a cliffhanger so I can easily restart it when my mental health improves… I hope that won’t be forever??? I would love if someone used my characters or ideas, please send me a link if you do, I would love to read it or look at it!!! But there will be more Lego, just in different format without long stories, I need to focus more on my art and to be honest that is the only time the mental pain eases, when I create!!! Peace and Noise! MushroomBrain a FOL Full Article
the Tekno - The Irish Collection - Ref. 258 - Scania Articulated Truck - Glynns, Galway - Miniature Diecast Metal Scale Model Heavy Goods Vehicle By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:44:08 -0800 firehouse.ie posted a photo: Full Article
the Tekno - The Irish Collection - Ref. 258 - Scania Articulated Truck - Glynns, Galway - Miniature Diecast Metal Scale Model Heavy Goods Vehicle By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 06:44:07 -0800 firehouse.ie posted a photo: Full Article
the The history of model railroading the the Walthers 1970 O Scale Catalog By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 07:38:05 -0800 Tangled Bank posted a photo: Full Article
the The history of model railroading the the Walthers 1970 O Scale Catalog By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 07:38:03 -0800 Tangled Bank posted a photo: Full Article
the The history of model railroading the the Walthers 1970 O Scale Catalog By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 07:38:01 -0800 Tangled Bank posted a photo: Full Article
the JOEPIE ON HIS WAY TO SAFE PETER FROM THE BAD BIRD || JOEPIE OP WEG OM PETER TE REDDEN VAN DE BOZE VOGEL By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 12:24:19 -0800 Anne-Miek Bibbe posted a photo: JOEPIE: I'm almost there! I wish Uncle Jeroen was here, I'm a little, really just a little bit afraid of the dark. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- JOEPIE: Ik ben bijna bij Peter! Ik wou dat oom Jeroen hier was, ik ben een beetje, echt maar een héél klein beetje bang in het donker. Full Article
the Behold the Power... of CHEESE By www.flickr.com Published On :: Tue, 12 Nov 2024 16:14:31 -0800 ridureyu1 posted a photo: CHEESE FOR ALL Full Article