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  • This podcast is part of an educational series sponsored by The United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR) for innovative learning solutions for individuals, organizations, and institutions to enhance global decision-making and support country-level action for shaping a better future. The intention is to enhance employability and job creation for young women and men in South Sudan through strengthening the private sector, building entrepreneurship skills, and improving the enabling environment. We thank you for downloading

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  • Limited access to water, sanitation, and hygiene, or WASH, can cause conflict in certain parts of the world and WASH facilities can become casualties in disputes. But WASH also has a role to play in peacekeeping, according to experts Kelly Ann Naylor, associate director of WASH at UNICEF, and Gidon Bromberg, Israeli Director of EcoPeace Middle East, who join Amruta and Rebecca in this episode.

    This Podcast aims to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economics, peace, and conflict resolution.

    We offer various discussion forums, peacebuilding, civic education, health awareness. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    Please visit us @ www.bcgfederation.org

  • Judge George McKinnis and his wife have lived in Bronxville, NY, for over 40 years. They have two grown sons. He served two tours of duty as an Infantry officer and is now retired from the US Army Reserves. He has performed various services for his community, from being legal counsel to the Zoning Board of Appeals to serve as Village Counsel on a pro bono basis for three consecutive Mayoral terms to becoming and serving for twenty-four years as the Chief Justice for the Bronxville Justice Court with criminal, civil, landlord-tenant and traffic violation jurisdiction. He was President of the Bronxville Beautification Council for nine years. This Council is responsible for all of the plantings in the Bronxville commercial district.

    He is a member of the Bronxville Rotary Club, which has been very active in international projects and has been President of this Club three times. He is a Director of his Bronxville Rotary Club, was District Counsel for his Rotary District 7230 for a number of years, and was elected District Governor of Rotary District 7230 to take office in 2021. In addition, he is Secretary for the Rotary Global History Fellowship, an organization within Rotary dedicated to collecting and preserving the history of Rotary International. In 2019, he received the Community Service Award, which was jointly awarded by the Bronxville Rotary Club and the Bronxville Reformed Church, and served as Marshal of Bronxville’s Memorial Day Parade. Judge McKinnis is a member of the University Club in New York City and the Bronxville Field Club.

    This Podcast aims to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economics, peace, and conflict resolution.

    We offer various discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

  • The COVID-19 pandemic has raised concerns about the mental health of a generation of children. But the pandemic may represent the tip of a mental health iceberg – an iceberg we have ignored for far too long. The State of the World’s Children 2021 examines child, adolescent, and caregiver mental health. It focuses on risks and protective factors at critical moments in the life course and delves into the social determinants that shape mental health and well-being.

    It calls for commitment, communication, and action as part of a comprehensive approach to promote good mental health for every child, protect vulnerable children and care for children facing the greatest challenges.

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    This Podcast aims to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economics, peace, and conflict resolution.

    We offer various discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness. Whoever desires to be a part of this work is welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us @ www.bcgfederation.org.

  • Climate Services for Resilient Development, By ANGELA SORIANO-QUEVEDO

    Angela is a climate change consultant at the World Bank, where she advises task team leaders in the East Asia and Pacific Region on climate change. In addition, she is authoring two country studies on hydrometeorological services for climate-resilient

    development in Mozambique and Jamaica.

    She has also been an expert reviewer for the IPCC's Sixth Assessment Report, which assesses climate change's impacts, adaptation, and vulnerabilities. Previously, she worked on environmental security issues in Latin America.

    Angela received her Master's Degree in Climate and Society from Columbia University.

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    This Podcast aims to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economics, peace, and conflict resolution.

    We offer various discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @ www.bcgfederation.org.

  • Tatiana Androsov was born in a mining town in Belgium in the 1950s to parents who had fled the Soviet Union during World War II and who subsequently emigrated to America. She climbed out of Passaic, New Jersey, the daughter of immigrant factory workers, to the hallowed grounds of Mount Holyoke College and the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. A child locked in all summer without anything but a typewriter, she blossomed. Understanding the true meaning of being thankful for a half-filled glass, she wound up the president of the Thanks-Giving Foundation. Tatiana has lived life at both ends of the spectrum.

    Throughout this journey, her main preoccupation has been the welfare of her fellow human beings and the planet we all share. Going as far back as the “Letters to the World” that she wrote when she was twelve to the novels she created while a student, later as UN interpreter, UNDP and FAO staff member and C consultant in Rome and at NYHQs, and even during challenging missions abroad Tatiana kept writing. Now ‘retired’, she has published some of her work, including

    1) Before they Cut the Ivy on an elite women’s college just before the Ivy League opened its doors to women; 2) Mangoes and Blood on an unusual international hostage situation; 3) Choices on an American woman working for the United Nations in Africa; and 4) A Question of Seduction Vol 1 Eros Vol 2 Agape on an international, intercultural, interfaith relationship set against inequalities in position, past traumas and changing world situation

    Having witnessed countless warnings about the future going unheeded and having seen what can be done when people come together, Tatiana looks for the opportunities available to us. For her, many of these opportunities are to be found within the United Nations System. Though an imperfect system with an unusual mix of people, a motley crew, one which is not well understood, Tatiana is convinced that it deserves much greater support than it has had in its first seventy-five years.

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    This Podcast aims to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economics, peace and conflict resolution.

    We offer various discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @ www.bcgfederation.org

  • MICHAEL COLLINS is the executive director, AMERICAS- for INSTITUTE FOR ECONOMICS & PEACE.

    He develops working partnerships with Americas-based governments, civil society organizations, foundations, universities, businesses, and think tanks and seeks new opportunities to build IEP’s presence and impact throughout the Americas, with particular focus on expanding the use of IEP’s Positive Peace Framework as a training tool and an evidence-based metric for peace-centered development.

    Before joining IEP, Michael oversaw educational, job creation, and economic development programs in emerging nations recovering from natural disasters, frequently working with communities affected by poverty and gang violence. Before pursuing a career in the non-profit sector, Michael studied electro-mechanical engineering and worked in the construction industry.

    The Institute for Economics and Peace aims to create a paradigm shift in how the world thinks about peace. We do this by developing global and national indices, calculating the economic cost of violence, analyzing country-level risk and fragility, and understanding Positive Peace.

    Our research is used extensively by governments, academic institutions, think tanks, non‑governmental organizations, and intergovernmental institutions such as the OECD, The Commonwealth Secretariat, the World Bank, and the United Nations. The Institute headquartered is in Sydney with offices in 6 countries, and our research achieves over 20 billion media impressions across 150 countries each year.

    Founded by IT entrepreneur and philanthropist Steve Killelea (see full bio) in 2007, the Institute for Economics and Peace has profoundly impacted traditional thinking on security, defense, terrorism, and development over the last 13 years.

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    This Podcast aims to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economics, peace and conflict resolution.

    We offer various discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @ www.bcgfederation.org

  • What do funders want to see in your fundraiser proposal? Hear Cassandra Zawilski, Program Manager for Full Circle Fund, answer this question.

    Next step: Take our Introduction to Proposal Writing course to learn the do’s and don’ts of writing and submitting a project proposal to a foundation. Learn more: https://bit.ly/IntroPW

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    This Podcast its purpose is to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economic, as well as peace and conflict resolution.

    We offer diverse inspirational music, discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness, and children's programs. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @ www.bcgfederation.org

  • Presented by Cherlie Birker, the Program manager at California Botanic Garden. Brought to you by BC Global podcast its purpose is to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economic, as well as peace and conflict resolution.

  • Alex Edmans talks about the long-term impacts of social responsibility and challenges the idea that caring for society is at the expense of profit.

    Alex is a Professor of Finance at London Business School. Alex graduated top of his class from Oxford University and then worked for Morgan Stanley in investment banking (London) and fixed income sales and trading (NYC). After a PhD in Finance from MIT Sloan as a Fulbright Scholar, he joined Wharton, where he was granted tenure and won 14 teaching awards in six years.

    Alex’s research interests are in corporate finance, behavioral finance, CSR, and practical investment strategies. He has been awarded the Moskowitz Prize for Socially Responsible Investing and the FIR-PRI prize for Finance and Sustainability, and was named a Rising Star of Corporate Governance by Yale University. Alex co-led a session at the 2014 World Economic Forum in Davos, and runs a blog, “Access to Finance” (www.alexedmans.blogspot.com), that aims to make complex finance topics accessible to a general audience.

    This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community. Learn more at http://ted.com/tedx

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    This Podcast its purpose is to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economic, as well as peace and conflict resolution.

    We offer diverse inspirational music, discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness, and children's programs. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @ www.bcgfederation.org

  • Tackling Malnutrition Improves both Food and Health Systems During Covid-19?

    This is a Devex's report a media platform for the global development community and social enterprise.

    Edited by BC Global podcast, its purpose is to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economics, and peace and conflict resolution. We offer various inspirational discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness, and children's programs. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @ www.bcgfederation.org.

  • Voter Suppression and Disproportionality in the American Electoral System, By Prof. Andy Winnick

    Brought to you by BC Global podcast its purpose is to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economic, as well as peace and conflict resolution.

    Dr. Andy Winnick, Professor Emeritus of Economics and Statistics, California State. He is the president of the American Institue progressive democracy, a non-partisan organization that promotes voter registration. his organization organized voter democracy. He has worked with the president's council of advisors for economics

  • Meaningful Presentation by Prof. Jeffrey Sachs; " How Do We Make The International System Work Effectively To Solve The Problems?".

    He is widely recognized for bold and effective strategies to address complex challenges including debt crises, hyperinflations, the transition from central planning to market economies, the control of AIDS, malaria, and other diseases, the escape from extreme poverty, and the battle against human-induced climate change.

    Sachs serves as the Director of the Center for Sustainable Development at Columbia University, where he holds the rank of University Professor, the university’s highest academic rank. Sachs held the position of Director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University from 2002 to 2016. He is President of the UN Sustainable Development Solutions Network, a commissioner of the UN Broadband Commission for Development, and an SDG Advocate for UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres. From 2001-18, Sachs served as Special Advisor to UN Secretaries-General Kofi Annan (2001-7), Ban Ki-moon (2008-16), and António Guterres (2017-18).

    Sachs has authored and edited numerous books, including three New York Times bestsellers: The End of Poverty (2005), Common Wealth: Economics for a Crowded Planet (2008), and The Price of Civilization (2011). Other books include To Move the World: JFK’s Quest for Peace (2013), The Age of Sustainable Development (2015), Building the New American Economy: Smart, Fair & Sustainable (2017), A New Foreign Policy: Beyond American Exceptionalism (2018), and most recently, The Ages of Globalization: Geography, Technology, and Institutions (2020).

    Sachs was the co-recipient of the 2015 Blue Planet Prize, the leading global prize for environmental leadership. He was twice named among Time magazine’s 100 most influential world leaders and has received 34 honorary degrees. The New York Times called Sachs “probably the most important economist in the world,” and Time magazine called Sachs “the world’s best-known economist.” A survey by The Economist ranked Sachs as among the three most influential living economists.

    Prior to joining Columbia, Sachs spent over twenty years as a professor at Harvard University, most recently as the Galen L. Stone Professor of International Trade. Sachs received his B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees at Harvard. Sachs is a native of Detroit, Michigan, and currently resides in New York City.

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    This Podcast its purpose is to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economic, as well as peace and conflict resolution.

    We offer diverse inspirational music, discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health awareness, and children's programs. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @ www.bcgfederation.org

  • This topic is discussed and debated by Nils von Heijne and guest Bill Mehleisen

    In the everchanging world, we live in, questions about how, why, and what it means for individuals, organizations, and society as a whole are always raised.

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    This Podcast its purpose is to serve as a platform to promote culture, education, economic, as well as peace and conflict resolution.

    We offer diverse music, discussion forums, peace-building, civic education, health, women, and children programs. All who desire to be a part of this work are welcome, regardless of religious preference or background.

    You can visit us on @www.bcgfederation.org

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  • A conversation conducted by Rotary Club of New York with Bill Mehleisen/Leadership in times of crises

    Bill is a director at Mandalah where he works on regenerative business design, Owner of Seek Human, LLC where he runs his independent leadership advisory and coaching practice, and Lead Facilitator / Leadership Coach for Arcadia Consulting an organization performance consultancy. He is also an angel investor and mentor in the Entrepreneurs Roundtable Accelerator in New York.

    In each of his roles, Bill is exploring how to help businesses, leaders, and teams evolve their thinking and practices to be a transformational force for good.

    His philosophy comes from an eclectic mix of mentors, theory, and practices which he summarizes in the following way:

    We are going through a big shift: from a mechanistic, hyper-individualism mindset to a regenerative, ecosystem mindset. Business is a tremendous tool to build better futures and can support this shift.

    However, mechanistic thinking is often seen in business discounts externalities and can severely limit our potential. There are better ways of doing business. To instigate this shift we explore some key areas:

    ‱ Purpose: How do you operate from the Soul of your person / your organization?

    ‱ People: How are you developing people so they are better after working with you / your organization?

    ‱ Ecosystem: How are you cultivating generative relationships and creating more value than you capture?

    ‱ Stewardship: How will you contribute to the health of the system and leave your little piece better than you found it?

    Bill lives in Brooklyn, NY but loves spending time in the mountains around Park City, Utah. He enjoys the power of art, music, and play to instigate creativity and transformation.

  • Dr. Grill, a professor at Keck Graduate Institue (KGI), Dean of Research also teaches undergraduates at the Keck Science Department of The Claremont Colleges.

    His lab’s research at KGI is focused on low-cost vaccines for developing countries. The primary collaborator for this effort is the Botswana Vaccine Institute in Gaborone, Botswana. The focus of these efforts has been to address animal diseases that are devastating to smallholder farmers in Africa. With the disastrous COVID-19 outbreak, the research is now targeting the development of low-cost COVID-19 vaccines for the African countries.

    Dr. Grill received his Ph.D. from the University of California, Riverside in 1979. He has published over 25 scientific papers and is an inventor on more than 30 issued US and world patents.