Search Results
451 – 460 of 544 search results for 2021 Chicago Council Survey
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Ana Miyares PhotographyThe Longest Street in the World: Sesame Workshop's Global Impact
Join us for a conversation with Sesame Workshop president and interim CEO Sherrie Westin to learn how Sesame Street uses educational media to provide learning and hope to vulnerable children around the world. -
Avi WerdeGentrification: The Good, the Bad, and the Hipsters
Building and design experts consider the long-term effects of gentrification on communities and the role of young people. -
Global Food Security Symposium 2020
Discover how innovation is changing the way consumers, in the United States and abroad, think about the food system and how new breakthroughs can support a secure, healthy, and prosperous planet. -
ReutersSingapore Ambassador on Challenges Amidst COVID-19
Ambassador Ashok Mirpuri discussed on Singapore’s pandemic response and how the United States and Singapore can tackle the challenges of COVID-19 in the current geopolitical context. -
PM Morrison on Embracing the Challenge of a Changing World
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison MP outlined his government's approach to challenges posed by the changing global order and the development of a new agenda to shape the global economy. -
2019 Pritzker Forum on Global Cities
Learn how cities can develop solutions to pressing global challenges. -
ReutersAtlas of Impunity Reflects Governance Accountability Challenges in Africa
Experts discuss impunity and accountability across Africa in the 21st century. -
ReutersIran's Uprising and the Fight for Women's Rights
Experts discuss the movement’s momentum and the deteriorating human rights situation in Iran, and how it is shaping the future of women’s rights. -
ReutersUkraine and the Future of Warfare
A panel of military experts discusses what the war in Ukraine reveals about the future of armed conflict. -
Kevin RajaramGood Economics for Hard Times
MIT economics professor Abhijit Banerjee joined the Council to argue that traditional Western-centric thinking has failed to benefit the average worker and consumer in an ever more globalized world.