These are small-group, multi-day deliberations, convened
by experts, that enable participants to explore in depth particular issues
introduced in the annual symposium. The topics addressed -- for example
failed states and sovereignty in Africa, humanitarian intervention and
human rights, the morality of the death penalty -- reflect and anticipate
some of the urgent and contentious concerns of the day. The workshops
are often designed to have policy outcomes.
These nonpartisan workshops merge the theoretical insights of academia
with the practical experiences of world affairs and have often created
lasting linkages among its participants, across professions and disciplines. They
have included:
A workshop that considered the creation of WarWatch, to track the proliferation
of conventional weapons. This has evolved into the on-going ArmsWatch
of Human Rights Watch.
A workshop on pandemics and microbial threats, Microbial
Threats and Global Society, that refined the position papers and guidelines
issued on global infectious diseases by the Centers for Disease Control
and Rockefeller University.
A workshop on Darwinism and
Artificial Intelligence, which was published
on CD-Rom by Oxford University Press.
A day-long workshop that considered the Emerging
Issues in Complex Humanitarian Emergencies, including humanitarian intent, human rights
obligations, the notion of neutrality, and the possibilities for cooperation
between NGOs and the military. It was co-sponsored by Tufts'
Feinstein International Famine Center and the Center for Population
and Development Studies at Harvard University.
Highly Capitalized Anti-Social
Activities, a workshop that provided
an in-depth probe into transnational trends and threats to global civil
society from prominent predatory and licit and illicit criminal enterprises,
including the trade in arms and the trafficking of people.
Reactions
Daniel C. Dennett
Professor of philosophy, director of the Center for Cognitive
Studies at Tufts, and twice National Book Award Finalist ( The
Origins of Consciousness and Darwin's Dangerous Idea )
"This was an opportunity to participate in an unusual --
but tested -- form of public education. EPIIC at Tufts has had
remarkable success over a decade in bringing the brightest people
together to talk about controversial topics, always in a spirit
of constructive dialogue. I wouldn't have agreed to organize
a workshop if I hadn't been sure that everything would be done
to make the setting as conducive as possible to serious exchange
of ideas, communication at the highest levels, responsibly disseminated
to a wide audience."
The Boston Globe
Editorial, March 4, 1995
"...The topics are as cutting-edge as today's headlines. Thus
a workshop on human rights and humanitarian emergencies will look
at the conflict between the desire for peace and the desire for
justice; another on "Darwinism and artificial intelligence" will
try to get at the essential differences between humans and machines
with the director of cognitive studies at Tufts and the editor
of the magazine Wired .
"As rarefied as the discussion may seem, each workshop is
aimed at producing concrete policy recommendations. In a
time of rampant anti-intellectualism, the thinking alone is worth
celebrating. |
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