Skip to main content

Web Content Display Web Content Display

Skip banner

Breadcrumb Breadcrumb

Web Content Display Web Content Display

Uczelnia Badawcza Inicjatywa Doskonałości

Logo Priorytetowego Obszaru Badawczego FutureSoc

Web Content Display Web Content Display

Our social media

Web Content Display Web Content Display

Global Trends Lab (GTL)

The main research interests of Global Trends Lab include factors influencing the future of democracy and political models of contemporary world, evolution of international order and new balance of forces in international relations, as well as the impact of innovations and new technologies on politics, security and international relations.

Taking into account the impact that the Covid-19 pandemic has on political processes, international relations and security, Global Trends Lab will prioritise interdisciplinary research about the influence of pandemic on the change of scientific paradigms, as well as the most important phenomenons and factors in this regard, which have the potential to significantly contribute to the development of scientific research in social sciences.

Head: dr hab. Magdalena Góra
Social media of Global Trends Lab: Facebook
 

Mini-Grants in GTL

Web Content Display Web Content Display

November 2021

20211108
Previous week
Next week

Out of Ivory Towers: Can the Academics Help Solve the World’s Problems? (8.11)

Date: 08.11.2021
Start Time: 17:00
Place: Faculty of International and Political Studies (Kraków, 4 Reymonta St), room 111 / online: YouTube WSMiP UJ
Organiser: Global Trends Lab

Global Trends Lab invites for a seminar "Out of Ivory Towers: Can the Academics Help Solve the World’s Problems?". The event will take place at the Faculty of International and Political Studies (Kraków, 4 Reymonta St), room 111, on Monday November 8th at 5:00 – 6:30 PM.

It will also be possible to watch the seminar online via YouTube: https://youtu.be/BXz6TJsZmkU

In this seminar, we will ask scholars who specialize in politics, security studies, and international relations about their experiences in combining academic research with out-of-the-campus activities as think-tank analysts, public intellectuals, and popular authors. We will talk about the impact of their research analyses and reports on domestic and foreign policies, and discuss the ways in which academics can be part of the solutions to the local and global challenges. Finally, we will assess whether it is possible to develop relevant research programs and effective publishing models, which would successfully combine the experiences, skills, and knowledge of these experts for greater public goods.

 

Experts:

Dr. Patrick Mendis is an award-winning diplomat, educator, author, philanthropist, and executive in government service in the United States. An alumnus of the Harvard Kennedy School and the University of Minnesota’s Humphrey School, Dr. Mendis was appointed by the Obama administration to serve two-terms as a commissioner to the US National Commission for UNESCO at the State Department until the United States withdrew from the UN agency. Currently, he is a distinguished visiting professor of global affairs at the National Chengchi University in Taipei. He is the author of over 150 books, government reports, journal articles, and newspaper columns. 

 

Dr. Antonina Łuszczykiewicz is an assistant professor at the Institute of the Middle and Far East of the Jagiellonian University in Krakow. Her research agenda was supported by the American–Polish Kosciuszko Foundation, the Taiwan Fellowship from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of China (ROC), and the Confucian Scholarship of the People’s Republic of China (PRC). In cooperation with experts on public and international policy issues, she published numerous articles in The Harvard International Review, The SAIS Review of International Affairs, The National Interest, The South China Morning Post, and The Diplomat.

 

Dr. Wojciech Michnik is an assistant professor of International Relations and Security Studies at the Jagiellonian University (JU) and coordinator of the Transatlantic Project at LSE IDEAS Central and South-Eastern European Program at JU. Dr. Michnik served as an Eisenhower Defense Fellow at NATO Defense College and Fulbright visiting scholar at Columbia University’s Harriman Institute. In 2014 he worked as a foreign and security policy analyst at the Department of Americas, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Poland. He authored and co-authored various policy-oriented publications for New Eastern Europe; NATO Defense College; LSE IDEAS; European Centre of Excellence for Countering Hybrid Threats, and Elcano Royal Institute. 

 

Chair: prof. Joanna Dyduch, Institute of the Middle and Far East of the JU.