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Scholar Spotlight

Nikolai Zlobin

Dr. Nikolai Zlobin is director of the Russia and Eurasia Project at the World Security Institute.

25 September 2006

Events

Paradise Lost, and Found? A Discussion on Conflict, Environment and Economic Development

2 May 2007

On May 2, 2007, Director of WSI's Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Jon Sawyer will moderate a discussion on what the struggle for Mozambique's Gorongosa National Park means for Africa.

 

 

Event: A discussion on conflict, environment and economic development
When: Wednesday, May 2, 6:00-7:30 p.m screening and panel discussion, 7:30 p.m. light reception
Where: Choate Roome, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 1779 Massachusetts Ave., NW, Washington, D.C.
 
Moderated by Jon Sawyer, director of the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

Panelists include:

  • Armando A. Panguene, Ambassador of Mozambique
  • Greg Carr, President of the Carr Foundation
  • Stephanie Hanes, journalist (author of profile on Gorongosa park restoration appearing in the May issue of Smithsonian)
  • Judy Oglethorpe, director of Community Conservation, WWF-US

*See below for full bios

 
Please contact Nathalie Applewhite for more information about this event at 202.797.2922 or at .

To RSVP  (recommended), please respond to Suzanne Ostrofsky, 202.797.5273, .


Gorongosa National Park was once among the most popular destinations in Africa - a place where movie stars and astronauts vacationed, where animal herds were denser than on the famed Serengeti Plain. But Mozambique's long civil war turned this natural wonderland into a battlefield. By the time the war ended in 1992, Gorongosa was a wasted, abandoned, empty place -- yet another African casualty in a century filled with tragedies.

A few years ago, philanthropist Greg Carr became enchanted by the story of this lost park. The founder of Harvard's Carr Center for Human Rights, Carr was looking for new ways to tackle the humanitarian and environmental crises of southern Africa. Gorongosa, he came to believe, might be the answer.
Now, a 30-year, $40 million pledge later, he is only beginning to face the challenges&

A short video documentary about the Restoration of Gorongosa National Park will be screened before the panel begins and a Q&A session will follow...
The Pulitzer Center's mission is to promote in-depth coverage of international affairs, focusing on topics that have been under-reported, mis-reported - or not reported at all.

For more information about the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting and the Gorongosa reporting project please click here.

Panelists:
 
Armando Alexandre Panguene, Mozambique Ambassador to the United States
Amb. Panguene was born in the Marracuene District in the province of Maputo. He has been in public service since the independence of Mozambique. He was appointed as Provincial Governor in Nampula Province in 1974 and was deputy minister of Foreign Affairs of the first government of Mozambique after independence from 1975 to 1977.  In 1977, Mr. Panguene was the first ambassador to Portugal until 1980.  He was again appointed as provincial governor in Cabo Delgado Province from 1980 to 1983.  He served as the deputy minister of defense from 1984 to 1987; presidential roving ambassador from 1987 to 1988.  He was appointed ambassador to Great Britain from 1988 to 1996, and from 1996 to 2001, he was accredited in the Republic of South Africa and covered Namibia and Lesotho on a non-resident basis. Amb. Panguene was accredited to the United States in January 2002; from Washington, D.C., he also covers Canada.
 
Greg Carr, President of the Gregory C. Carr Foundation
The main focus of the Carr Foundation today is the restoration of the Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique. Carr received his master's degree in public policy from Harvard University. He is the co-founder of Boston Technology, where he served as chair until 1998; served as chair of Prodigy from 1996 to 1998; and is the co-founder of Africa Online. In 1998 Carr resigned from his for-profit boards and dedicated himself to humanitarian activities. In 1999, he formed both the Carr Foundation and the Carr Center for Human Rights at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He currently sits on the boards of Internews, Physicians for Human Rights, and Witness. He has also been active in human rights activities in his home state of Idaho: he is the largest donor to the Idaho Human Rights Education Center, which was founded to construct the Idaho Anne Frank Human Rights Memorial, and he purchased the former Aryan Nation compound in northern Idaho with the intent to turn it into a world-renowned human rights education destination.
 
 
Judy Oglethorpe, Director of Community Conservation in WWF-US
Judy works on integrating social, economic and political issues into biodiversity conservation. She currently runs WWFs Population, Health, Gender and Environment Program. Previously, she was executive director of the Biodiversity Support Program, where she developed a project that identified adverse impacts of armed conflict on the environment, and ways to mitigate them. She has 14 years of experience in Southern and East Africa, where she worked in biodiversity, forest and wildlife conservation; community-based natural resource management; ecotourism development; environmental impact assessment; institutional development and training; conflict resolution; and project development and management. Protected area work included research and planning in Gorongosa National Park in Mozambique before and after the last war. Judy has a master's degree in environmental management from the University of London and a bachelor's degree in ecological science from the University of Edinburgh.
 
Stephanie Hanes, Freelance Reporter
Based in Johannesburg, South Africa, Stephanie has written news and feature stories about Africa for The Baltimore Sun, The Christian Science Monitor, the San Francisco Chronicle, USA Today, the Boston Globe and other publications. Hanes is on leave from The Sun, where she covered federal courts and law enforcement. There, she focused on systemic problems within the criminal justice system - wrongful convictions; the misuse of evidence such as gunshot residue; and the power and limitations of DNA exonerations. She also regularly wrote about the death penalty and Baltimore's drug culture. Before joining The Sun, Hanes worked for the Concord Monitor in Concord, New Hampshire. She now writes a "Letter from Africa" essay for the Monitor, which appears several times a year. Those essays have focused on AIDS and poverty, hope and beauty, struggle and peace - the breathtaking contradictions that form today's South Africa. Hanes grew up in Baltimore, Maryland and graduated with honors from Yale University in 2000.
 
Jon Sawyer, Director of the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
Jon Sawyer is director of the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting, a non-profit organization that funds independent reporting with the intent of raising the standard of media coverage of global affairs. Sawyer became the center's founding director after a 31-year career with the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, where he specialized in enterprise reporting around the world. Sawyer was selected three years in a row for the National Press Club's award for best foreign reporting. His work has been honored by the Overseas Press Club, Investigative Reporters and Editors, the Inter-American Press Association and the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University. He received a bachelors degree in English literature and history from Yale University and has held fellowships at Harvard and Princeton Universities.
 
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News

Pulitzer Center Featured as Finalist for Game Changers Award by We Media

Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting Director Jon Sawyer introduces the Game Changers Award finalist Pulitzer Center and its initiatives on the We Media website in an essay, along with two video clips.

12 December 2008

Events

"Project: Report" Event at American University on Jan. 11, 2009

Come join the Pulitzer Center in an evening of films from "Project: Report" on Sunday, Jan. 11, 2009 from 7:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m. at American University's Harold and Sylvia Greenberg Theatre, 4200 Wisconsin Avenue NW, Washington, D.C.

22 December 2008

Publications

Advance Preview of America's Defense Meltdown

In response to media coverage about "America's Defense Meltdown," the Center for Defense Information presents this limited opportunity for a full preview of the new anthology by 13 non-partisan Pentagon insiders, retired military officers & defense specialists.

20 November 2008