Filtering by: Current Affairs

Current Affairs: Discussion Group - ChatGPT, fear it or embrace it?
May
11
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs: Discussion Group - ChatGPT, fear it or embrace it?

Though it all began quite a few decades ago, the current gush of AI tools and of articles about AI tools seems to have taken the world by storm. ChatGPT for instance, released to the public in 2022, currently has somewhere around 100 million active users, a feat achieved in record time, far faster than any other internet application (from: What can AI bring to Latin America? The Dialogue, March 2023).

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Current Affairs: Africa - Do we really know it?
May
13
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs: Africa - Do we really know it?

A region rich in oil and other natural resources, Africa is seen as always struggling to realize its full potential despite having approximately 30% of the world’s remaining natural resources. The African continent covers 6% of the world’s surface and 20% of the land area and has a population of over a billion people across 54 countries, between them speaking almost 2,000 languages. With such expanse and complexity it is therefore not surprising that simplifications, stereotypes, generalizations and misinformation about the continent abound. Continue reading about this event!

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Current Affairs Discussion Group: The Rise of China and the Challenge to Western Values
Feb
25
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs Discussion Group: The Rise of China and the Challenge to Western Values

For decades western countries seemed convinced that China would come around to their democratic way of thinking, that its greater involvement in international trade and international organizations would gradually make it a more open and democratic society. This has not happened. Continue reading about this event!

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Current Affairs Discussion Group: Remote Work
Jan
28
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs Discussion Group: Remote Work

Remote work has existed for quite a while in some sectors of the economy, but until the pandemic it seemed to have been assumed that working from an office was more productive and efficient all around. It took the pandemic to show that this is not necessarily the case. Continue reading about this event!

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Current Affairs Discussion Group: Judges in the Dock
Oct
8
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs Discussion Group: Judges in the Dock

The next session of the Current Affairs Discussion Group will be Judges in the Dock: “In a democracy, where the ultimate master is supposed to be the people, what should the chief umpire look like?” We will be discussing the role of judges in modern life. Continue reading about this event!

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Current Affairs: Building a Different Future
Jul
23
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs: Building a Different Future

The next session of the Current Affairs Discussion Group, to be held on Thursday July 23rd from 3.00-4.15 pm, is on the subject of: Building a different future - the rise of conscious capitalism and repurposing globalisation.

Capitalism is earning a bad name as the checks and balances that used to exist to curb the excesses of market forces have over the last few decades been largely eliminated or neutralized by the loosening of regulations. It has become increasingly evident that unchecked, capitalism works mainly for the few. Ways need to be found to make it more inclusive, so that it works for the many.

Globalization is a fact; it has its advantages and disadvantages, its supporters and its detractors, but it is here to stay. Disruption of international supply chains for food and for the medical and pharmaceutical goods particularly necessary under the current pandemic has highlighted one of the disadvantages. Another is that the use of cheap labour in poorer countries seems to have become a core strategic asset in global business operations. Globalization needs to be repurposed for the better. Continue reading about this event!

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Current Affairs: Water Is the New Oil
Jun
11
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs: Water Is the New Oil

The next session of the Current Affairs Discussion Group, to be held on Thursday June 11th from 3.00-4.25 pm is on the topic of water, encompassing a multiplicity of aspects.

Access to clean, safe drinking water is considered a human right and the total lack of it is a killer, clear and simple. But freshwater is not only crucial for individual survival. Water scarcity can have severe political implications as rivers and lakes form the borders between some countries and some rivers run through several countries: economic success depends on water, it affects agricultural production and trade, electric power generation and so on.

Water has been dubbed “the next oil”, alluding both to its value as an increasingly scarce resource and to the hydro-political games that will be played as it really sinks in that freshwater sources are drying up while demand for water is expected to grow 55% between 2000 and 2050. The importance of water naturally leads to competition for access and many conflicts across the globe derive from disagreement over water resources and how the supply is managed.

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Current Affairs: Coronavirus, Markets, and Inequality
May
21
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs: Coronavirus, Markets, and Inequality

In our first virtual meeting we will be discussing the wider social implications of COVID-19. The current pandemic and lockdown measures have meant loss of much or all of their income for many, particularly in the case of low-paid workers/marginalised sectors of society who are already suffering structural disparities. The “precariat” – those living in precarious situations- now refers not just to those living in or below poverty but includes as well masses of ordinary workers.

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Current Affairs: Identity politics
Oct
10
3:00 PM15:00

Current Affairs: Identity politics

There is a growing disconnect between the culture that majority populations identify with and the changing face of their countries today. As a consequence of this feeling of one’s identity being threatened, politics in many countries is becoming less to do with the business of government and more to do with ethnic self-interest.

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