29 Jan 2018

The Economist: Humanity teeters on the brink of world war

James Cogan

The Economist magazine, the influential London weekly described by Karl Marx over 150 years ago as the “European organ” of the “aristocracy of finance,” has devoted its latest issue to discussing “The Next War” and “The Growing Threat of Great Power Conflict.” Its lead editorial opens with a chilling warning:
In the past 25 years war has claimed too many lives. Yet even as civil and religious strife have raged in Syria, central Africa, Afghanistan and Iraq, a devastating clash between the world’s great powers has remained almost unimaginable.
No longer … powerful, long-term shifts in geopolitics and the proliferation of new technologies are eroding the extraordinary military dominance that America and its allies have enjoyed. Conflict on a scale and intensity not seen since the second world war is once again plausible. The world is not prepared.
The Economist envisages a dystopian, violent future, with the American military deploying to intimidate or destroy purported challenges to its dominance everywhere.
In the next 20 years, the Economist predicts that “climate change, population growth and sectarian or ethnic conflict” are likely to ensure that much of the world descends into “intrastate or civil wars.” Such conflicts will increasingly be fought in cities, ringed by “slums” and populated by millions of people, at “close quarters, block by block.” The future for large sections of humanity is the carnage that was witnessed during last year’s murderous battles over the Iraqi city of Mosul and the Syrian city of Aleppo.
But more chilling are the series of scenarios it outlines for a major escalation in tensions between the United States and Russia and China, presented as its strategic adversaries, which at any moment threaten to spiral into nuclear holocaust.
In July of 2016, Mehring Books published David North’s A Quarter Century of War, which noted:
Beginning with the first Persian Gulf conflict of 1990-91, the United States has been at war continuously for a quarter century. While using propaganda catchphrases, such as defense of human rights and War on Terror, to conceal the real aims of its interventions in the Middle East, Central Asia, and Africa, as well as its confrontation with Russia and China, the United States has been engaged in a struggle for global hegemony. As the US seeks to counteract its economic weakness and worsening domestic social tensions, its relentless escalation of military operations threatens to erupt into a full-scale world war, between nuclear-armed states.
Less than two years later, much of this assessment has been echoed by one of the most significant political organs of Anglo-American capitalism. But the conclusions drawn by the Economist, speaking as the unalloyed representative of financial and corporate oligarchs whose wealth is bound up with American imperialist global dominance, is the exact opposite of North’s stated aim of helping build a “new antiwar movement.”
Rather, the Economist urges the United States to develop the “hard power” to defend itself against “determined and able challengers,” presenting the sociopathic argument that peace is best safeguarded by America’s ability to utterly destroy its adversaries.
The premise of the special report is that urgent action must be taken by the United States to stem the decline of its hegemony. It asserts that if the Chinese and Russian ruling class are permitted to realise their ambition of dominant influence in their own regions, then the “plausible” consequence will be a “devastating clash between the world’s great powers”—a world war fought with nuclear weapons.
China and Russia, its editorial in the January 27 edition declares, “are now revisionist states that want to challenge the status quo and look at their regions as spheres of influence to be dominated. For China, that means East Asia; for Russia, eastern Europe and Central Asia.”
The conclusion advanced by the Economist is that America must end “20 years of strategic drift” under successive administrations, which has allegedly “played into the hands of Russia and China.” In a series of articles, its special report advocates that the US spends staggering sums on new nuclear weapons and conventional weapons systems, including robotic, artificial intelligence (AI) technology, to ensure that it retains the military superiority that has, until now, inspired “fear in its foes.”
It warns: “The pressing danger is of war on the Korean peninsula, perhaps this year.… Tens of thousands of people would perish, many more if nukes were used.”
The US military is ready to launch such a war. It has B-2 and B-52 nuclear-capable bombers forward deployed at Guam, and hundreds of jet fighters and an armada of warships in other Pacific bases. There is ample reason to believe that the confrontation Washington has provoked with North Korea, through its demand that Pyongyang give up its nuclear weapons’ program, is a massive rehearsal for a future nuclear stand-off with China.
The Economist opines that “a war to stop Iran acquiring nuclear weapons seems a more speculative prospect for now, but could become more likely a few years hence.”
It asserts that the US is threatened by the so-called “grey zone” in which China, Russia, Iran, and other countries are seeking to “exploit” American “vulnerabilities” in parts of the world without provoking an open conflict. It gives as examples Chinese territorial claims in the South China Sea, Russia’s annexation of Crimea, and Iran’s political influence in Iraq, Syria and Lebanon.
US imperialist meddling, however, is considered entirely legitimate by the Economist. In Syria, the US has waged seven years of intrigue for regime-change to overthrow the Russian and Iranian-backed government. Washington’s announcement this month that it intends to effectively occupy one third of the country and assemble a 30,000-strong proxy army from Kurdish and Islamist militias has created conditions for not only direct clashes with Iran or Russia, but also with its nominal NATO ally Turkey.
Predictably, amid the frenzied moves in the US and internationally to impose state control and censorship over the Internet, the journal accuses Russia of seeking to “undermine faith in Western institutions and encourage populist movements by meddling in elections and using bots and trolls on social media to fan grievances and prejudice.”
Technology companies, it insists, must be even more integrated with the military, while Internet corporations must work with the state apparatus to suppress access to oppositional views, on the fraudulent pretext of combatting “influence operations” and the “mass manipulation of public opinion.”
It notes in passing that for the American government, which already runs annual budget deficits approaching $700 billion, “finding the money will be another problem.”
The truth is that the subordination of every aspect of society to war preparations will be paid for by the ongoing destruction of the living standards and conditions of the American working class, combined with the elimination of its democratic rights and repression of opposition.
In an unintended echo of George Orwell’s “Newspeak,” the Economistconcludes that “a strong America”—armed to the teeth and permanently threatening its rivals with obliteration—is the “best guarantor of world peace.”
The most chilling aspect of the report, however, is that it is pessimistic of its own prognosis that US imperialism can intimidate its rivals into submission. The very development of an ever more aggressive military stance toward China and Russia raises, not lessens, the likelihood of war.
“The greatest danger,” it states, “lies in miscalculation through a failure to understand an adversary’s intentions, leading to an unplanned escalation that runs out of control.”
What is being referred to is escalation into a nuclear holocaust. The article quotes Tom Plant, an analyst at the RUSI thinktank: “For both Russia and the US, nukes have retained their primacy. You only have to look at how they are spending their money.”
The US is upgrading its entire nuclear arsenal over the coming decades at a cost of $1.2 trillion. Russia is upgrading its nuclear capable missiles, bombers and submarines. China is rapidly expanding the size and capability of its far smaller nuclear forces, as is Britain and France. Discussions are underway in ruling circles in Germany, Japan and even Australia on acquiring nuclear weapons so they can “resist” the nuclear-armed states.
The madness of a nuclear arms race in the 21st century arises inexorably from the contradictions of the capitalist system. The struggle among rival nation-states for global geostrategic and economic dominance is the inevitable outcome of its intractable crisis and the ferocious conflict for control over markets and resources.
The epoch of world war, wrote the Marxist revolutionary Vladimir Lenin, is the epoch of world revolution. The overthrow of the capitalist system that gives rise to the war danger is an urgent necessity for the survival of human civilization.
The International Committee of the Fourth International and its sections are fighting to build an international, anti-war socialist workers’ movement. The open discussion on the prospect of nuclear war in the pages of journals like the Economist should motivate all serious workers and young people to join our struggle.

European Commission STARTS Prize (€20,000 plus funded to Award programs in Brussels and Amsterdam) 2018

Application Deadline: 2nd March 2018
Eligible Countries: All
To Be Taken At (Country): The winning projects will be presented at the Ars Electronica Festival in September 2018 in Linz, Austria, at the BOZAR Electronic Arts Festival in September/October 2018 in Brussels, Belgium, at Waag Society in Amsterdam, Netherlands and at various partners worldwide.
About the Award: Science, Technology and Arts (=STARTS) form a nexus with an extraordinarily high potential for creative innovation. And such innovation is considered to be precisely what’s called for if we’re to master the social, ecological and economic challenges that Europe will be facing in the near future. The role of artists thus is no longer seen to be just about propagating scientific and technological knowledge and skills among the general public but much more as a kind of catalyst that can inspire and trigger innovative processes. The artistic practice of creative exploration and experimental appropriation of new technologies has a wide reaching potential to contribute to the development of new products and new economic, social and business models. Accordingly, the STARTS Prize focuses on artistic works that influence or change the way we look at technology, and on innovative forms of collaboration between the ICT sector and the world of art and culture.
Considering the novelty of this award competition and the interdisciplinary approach, Ars Electronica is launching the STARTS Prize 2018 with a dual approach for submissions:
  • Submission via open call: The STARTS Prize aims to showcase and celebrate visions and achievements at the interface between innovation and creation—driven by both science/technology and the Arts. The submission is open to all forms of artistic work and all types of technological and scientific research and development. Submission deadline is March 2nd, 2018.
  • Recommendations through international advisors: 15 international advisors who have reputation and credibility in the field will recommend projects and help to encourage wider ranges of participants as well as a geographical and gender balance. These recommended projects will be contacted by the organizers and asked to submit their project via the submission platform. So the same process and deadlines will be applied as for the open submissions. The international advisors serve as facilitators to identify relevant works and projects during the submission process. However, they will not be part of the jury meeting and therefore will not have voting rights.
Type: Contest
Eligibility:
Who can enter?
  • Artists / creative professionals or the researchers / companies involved from throughout the world; STARTS is not limited to citizens of EU-member states.
What can be submitted?
  • groundbreaking collaborations and projects driven by both technology and the arts. Purely artistic or technologically driven projects are not the focus of this competition.
  • all forms of artistic works and practices with a strong link to innovation in technology, business and/or society; furthermore, STARTS is not restricted to a particular genre such as media art and digital art.
  • all types of technological and scientific research and development that has been inspired by art or involves artists as catalysts of novel thinking.
Selection Criteria: 
  • Quality of the artistic research and its potential influence on technology
  • Quality and success of the collaboration between art and technology
  • Quality and intensity of the connection to innovation, education, social inclusion or sustainability
  • General criteria such as aesthetics, originality, convincing concept, innovation and the technique and quality of the presentation
Number of Awards: 2
Value of Award: 
  • Two prizes, each with €20,000 prize money, are offered to honor innovative projects at the intersection of science, technology and the arts: one for artistic exploration, and thus projects with the potential to influence or change the way technology is deployed, developed or perceived, and one for innovative collaboration between industry/technology and art/culture in ways that open up new paths for innovation.
  • Grand Prize—Artistic Exploration
    Awarded for artistic exploration and art works where appropriation by the arts has a strong potential to influence or alter the use, deployment or perception of technology.
  • Grand Prize—Innovative Collaboration
    Awarded for innovative collaboration between industry or technology and the arts that opens new pathways for innovation.
Duration of Program: The jury convenes on April 23th, 2018. All STARTS Prize 2018 winners will be notified by beginning of June 2018 at the latest.
How to Apply:
  • A video documentary (approximately 3 minutes in length)
  • Images (JPG, TIF, BMP, PNG) at the highest possible resolution; compressed files (such as .zip or .lzh files) are unacceptable.
  • A clear, detailed description of the artistic concept, the form of interaction and technical implementation; since specific prerequisites have to be fulfilled for an onsite presentation to take place (e.g. in conjunction with the Ars Electronica Festival), the project’s specifications as to hardware & software and spatial requirements should be as detailed as possible. Moreover, the entrant must specify what he/she can provide on his/her own in order to stage such an onsite presentation, and what must necessarily be furnished by Ars Electronica Linz.
  • A printable portrait photo and a biography of the artist
  • At the entrant’s option, additional material such as images, documents and drawings (as PNG or PDF) can also be submitted.
Award Providers: European Commission

ABO Capital Essay Contest (Win Scholarship and fully-funded trip to Angola) 2018

Application Deadline: 
  • Entries will be due 28th February, 2018
  • Finalists will be notified by 31st March, 2018
Offered Annually?
Eligible Countries: All
To Be Taken At (Country): Angola
About the Award: Africa is a continent bursting with economic opportunities. Under the right circumstances, it could become a global leader across industries including technology, sustainability, and agriculture. Show us how you can change Africa to change the world.
In 500 words or less, demonstrate your knowledge of Africa and explain your deep conceptual ideas for tapping into its economic potential and bettering the continent. These ideas could be your own or showcase your support of projects
already in development.
Type: Contest
Eligibility: Must be 18 years or older and currently enrolled in undergraduate, graduate, or university program to enter.
Number of Awards: 3
Value of Award: The Grand Prize essay will win a scholarship for one full semester of college, up to $30,000. The top three essays will win a 5-night all-expenses paid trip to Angola.
How to Apply: Participants can submit their essays to scholarship@abocapital.net.
Award Providers: Sponsored by ABO Capital and Zandre Campos

South Africa Washington International Program (SAWIP) for South African Students 2018

Application Deadline: 7th February 2018
Eligible Countries: South Africa
To be taken at (country): USA
About the Award: The South Africa-Washington International Program (SAWIP) inspires, develops and supports a diverse new generation of young South African leaders who have a history of serving others with humility and integrity and ambition to be active citizens and servant leaders. Through a richly varied program of service activities and hands-on leadership opportunities as well as skills development, these emerging leaders establish a trust based on shared experience with their team that transcends racial, socio-economic, religious and other boundaries.
Type: Training
Eligibility: SAWIP candidates:
  • May be from any academic discipline
  • Must be South African citizens or permanent residents
  • Must be in their second year (or beyond) of university
  • Must be prepared for a high demand programme
  • Must be available to participate in the international component of the program from 16 June to 29 July 2018
  • Must be between the age of 19 – 25 years
  • Must be currently studying at the University of Cape Town, the University of Johannesburg, the University of Stellenbosch, the University of Pretoria or the University of the Western Cape
  • Must have a record of community engagement and leadership, with a strong service ethic
  • Should envisage themselves as future leaders in South Africa
Duration and Number of Scholarships: The selected 20 team members participate in a demanding seven-month development experience which includes community engagement and six-weeks of global and work exposure in Washington, DC.
How to Apply: Applicants can find the link to the form here.
Applicants are able to prepare your answers ahead of time by reading through and downloading the Application Instruction Document.
Award Provider: South Africa Washington International Program

ICGEB Arturo Falaschi Fellowship for Scientists in Developing Countries 2018/2019

Application Deadlines: 
  • Closing date for applications for PhDs: 31st March 2018
  • Closing dates for applications for Postdocs: 31st March and 30th September 2018
Eligible Countries: Developing Countries. See List below.
To be taken at (country): Trieste, New Delhi or Cape Town.
About the Award: Fellowships include participation in a competitive research programme, access to state-of-the-art facilities, participation in ICGEB Meetings, Seminars and Journal Clubs. A competitive stipend, travel provision plus full coverage of tuition fees and health insurance. Additional benefits for postdocs.
Type: Fellowship
Eligibility: 
  • Applicants must be nationals of an ICGEB Member State and may not apply for fellowships to be undertaken in their country of origin, unless they have been working abroad for, at least, the last 3 years and at the time of application.
  • Degree requirements: applicants should hold a recent PhD in Life Sciences or have at least 3 years research experience.
  • Preference is given to candidates below the age of 35.
Selection Criteria: The ICGEB Fellowships Selection Committee will evaluate complete and endorsed applications received by the closing date. The main criteria for selection include scientific excellence of the project, the qualities of the candidate’s CV and potential benefit for the home country.
Selection: All submitted applications will be transmitted to the respective ICGEB Liaison Officer in the country of which you are a national for endorsement. Endorsement is a fundamental requirement for the Fellowship to be awarded
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Fellowship: The Fellowships consist of a very competitive package including stipend, health insurance and additional benefits. The most successful fellows will also be eligible, upon completion, to apply for ICGEB Early Career Research Grants to support their own research programmes as young PIs upon return to an ICGEB Member State.
Duration of Fellowship: 2 years with the possibility of a 1-year extension.
Eligible Countries: Afghanistan, Algeria, Argentina, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Brazil, Bulgaria, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Cameroon, Chile, China, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ivory Coast, Croatia, Cuba, Ecuador, Egypt, Eritrea, FYR Macedonia, Hungary, India, Iran, Iraq, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Kuwait, Kyrgyzstan, Liberia, Libya, Malaysia, Mauritius, Mexico, Montenegro, Morocco, Namibia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Panama, Peru, Poland, Qatar, Romania, Russian Federation, Saudi Arabia, Senegal, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, South Africa, Sri Lanka, Sudan, Syrian Arab Republic, Trinidad and Tobago, Tunisia, Turkey, United Arab Emirates, United Republic of Tanzania, Uruguay, Venezuela and Vietnam
How to Apply: To apply, Applicants should contact the ICGEB Group Leader/PI of their choice with a motivation letter, to determine availability of laboratory space and to define the research project proposal that will form an integral part of the application.
Award Provider: Arturo Falaschi
Important Notes: ICGEB makes no financial provision, nor can it provide administrative support for family members of participants in the programme.

Government of Mauritius Scholarships for African Students 2018/2019

Application Deadlines: 
  • Electronic application to be submitted: 16th April 2018
  • Hard copies to be submitted: 2nd May 2018
Eligible Countries: Countries in the African Union or African Commonwealth countries.
To be taken at (country): Mauritius
Fields of Study: Scholarships shall NOT be awarded for:
  •  Top-up degree programmes;
  •  Foundation programmes;
  •  Part-time courses;
  •  Distance Education programmes;
  •  Mixed modes (distance and on-campus learning);
  •  Non accredited courses; or
  •  Postgraduate programmes.
Type: Undergraduate
Eligibility: 
  • Applicants should be above 18 years of age and should not have reached their 26th birthday at the closing date of application;
  • Applicants must have applied for full-time on-campus undergraduate studies at any public Tertiary Education Institution in Mauritius for academic year starting in 2018;
  • The scholarship will be for a maximum of four (4) years or the minimum course duration whichever is lesser.
  • Qualification entry requirements
    • Candidates should have successfully completed end of secondary school to be eligible and should satisfy the minimum grade requirements as indicated below: : (i) 24 points at GCE A – Level which will be computed on the basis of the following grades obtained in three Principal subjects: A+=10, A=9, B=8, C=7, D=6 & E=5; OR (ii) at least an overall average of 70% or an overall average of, 14/20; OR (iii) criteria equivalent to (i) or (ii) above.
    • In case the language of instruction is not English in the qualifying examination, the candidate will have to provide a valid TOEFL or IELTS test results with a minimum score not less than 550 or 5.5 respectively, or an appropriate proof of English Language proficiency.
  • Candidates who are already holders of an undergraduate degree will NOT be eligible under this scholarship scheme.
  • Self-financing candidates already studying in Mauritius in an undergraduate programme will NOT be eligible under this Scholarship scheme.
Number of Awardees: Not specified
Value of Scholarship: The Scholarship will support successful candidates in meeting tuition fees and contribute to their living expenses during their studies in Mauritius. Furthermore, the airfare, by the most economical route, from the country of origin at the beginning of studies and back to the country of origin at the end of the studies will be covered. This will be valid for travel from the country of origin at the beginning of the studies and back to the country of origin upon successful completion of studies.
Duration of Scholarship: 4 years maximum
How to Apply: Application Form
It is important to go through the Scholarship Webpage for application instructions before applying.
Award Provider: Mauritius Government

United Nation’s Women in Science (WiSci) Girls STEAM Camp for Young African Girls 2018 – Namibia

Application Deadline: 16th February 2018
Offered Annually? Yes
Eligible Countries: Namibia, Ethiopia, Swaziland, Kenya or the United States of America
To Be Taken At (Country): Namibia
About the Award: The Women in Science (WiSci) camp aims to close the gender gap through access to education, mentorship opportunities, and leadership training. Girls will participate in hands-on activities to learn about various STEAM topics in a cross-cultural learning environment.
Type: Training
Eligibility: 
  • Applicants must be citizens or residents of Namibia, Ethiopia, Swaziland, Kenya or the United States of America, self-identify as female and be between the ages of 15-18 to apply.
  • Applicants must have the expressed permission of a parent or guardian to apply for this opportunity.
  • It is required that applicants have at least one year of secondary school still left to complete, and can commit to attend the full duration of camp. Applicants should also have regular access (at least once per week) to internet at a home, school, community center, internet café or other location.
  • WiSci strongly encourages all eligible candidates to apply without regards to race, ethnicity, religion, disability, income-level or level of STEAM experience.
Number of Awards: Not specified
Value of Award: 
  • All selected participants will receive a scholarship to attend the camp free of charge. All costs associated with lodging, food, and activities during the camp are covered through the support of WiSci partners, in addition to transportation to/from the capital city of your home country (origin of departure).
  • Participants can bring a limited amount of spending money for small souvenirs and snacks if they wish.
  • Limited need-based financial assistance is available for direct costs associated with travel to the capital city to fly to the camp.
Duration of Program: June 17 – June 29, 2018.
How to Apply: 
  • Click on the button below that corresponds to your country of citizenship or residence to begin your application. 
  • The deadline to complete the application is Friday, February 16, 2018 at 23:59 UTC/GMT. Please be sure to read the WiSci FAQs to ensure you are eligible and able to participate in the full camp before you apply.
  • If you have trouble with the application system or would like a fillable PDF form in compliance with screen readers, please email wiscicamp@worldlearning.org.
  • If you have any additional questions about the camp, eligibility, or the application process beyond what is covered in the FAQ page please email info@girlup.org.
Award Providers: The camp is a public-private partnership effort between the U.S. Department of State, the United Nations Foundation’s Girl Up Campaign, Intel Corporation, Google, NASA, the American Society of Microbiology, and other partners, implemented by World Learning.

School of Hotel and Tourism Management (SHTM) Full Tuition Masters Scholarship for Students from Developing Countries 2018 – Hong Kong

Application Deadline: 28th February 2018.
Eligible Countries: Developing Countries
To Be Taken At (Country): Hong Kong
About the Award: For close to 40 years, PolyU’s School of Hotel and Tourism Management has refined a distinctive vision of hospitality and tourism education and become a world-leading hotel and tourism school. Rated No. 1 in the world in the “Hospitality and Tourism Management” category according to ShanghaiRanking’s Global Ranking of Academic Subjects 2017, placed No. 1 in the world in the “Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism” subject area by the CWUR Rankings by Subject 2017 and ranked among the top 3 “Hospitality and Leisure Management” institutions globally in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2017, the SHTM is a symbol of excellence in the field, exemplifying its motto of Leading Hospitality and Tourism.
With 75 academic staff drawing from 22 countries and regions, the School offers programmes at levels ranging from undergraduate degrees to doctoral degrees. In 2012, the SHTM was bestowed the McCool Breakthrough Award by the International Council on Hotel, Restaurant, and Institutional Education (I-CHRIE) recognising its breakthrough in the form of its teaching and research hotel – Hotel ICON – the heart of the School’s innovative approach to hospitality and tourism education. A member of the UNWTO Knowledge Network, the SHTM is also the editorial home of Asia Pacific Journal of Tourism Research, Journal of Travel and Tourism Marketing, Journal of Teaching in Travel and Tourism and Journal of China Tourism Research.
Fields of Study: For the 2018/2019 academic year, the SHTM offers scholarships to new and eligible students of the following programmes: 1) Master of Science (MSc) in International Hospitality Management; or 2) MSc in International Tourism and Convention Management; or 3) MSc in International Wine Management
Type: Masters
Selection Criteria: The awarding of the scholarships takes into consideration of the following selection criteria:
  • a) Outstanding academic achievement at bachelor’s degree level;
  • b) A minimum of one full-year of cumulative industry work experiences; and
  • c) TOEFL 100 or IELTS 6.5
Preferences will be given to applicants from developing countries.
Number of Awards: Not specified
Value of Award: Successful applicants will be provided with a full tuition waiver scholarship for their chosen MSc degree to start in September 2018.
How to Apply: 
Award Providers: The Hong Kong Polytechnic University

McKinsey&Company Next Generation Women Leaders Event for Female Students and Professionals (Fully-funded to France) 2018

Application Deadline: 8th March, 2018
Eligible Countries: Europe, the Middle East and African countries
To Be Taken At (Country): France
About the Award: We passionately believe in developing outstanding female leaders. We do so every day, internally and with our clients. Take the next step in your leadership journey and apply to our Next Generation Women Leaders event,  to be held on May 24-26 in Paris.
In this exclusive three-day workshop, McKinsey will offer you the opportunity to explore the importance of women in leadership and the impact they are having on the economy. You will also shape your personal leadership styles by playing to your strengths and understand how to grow your potential. Across the three days, you will meet our consultants and participate in group sessions, workshops, discussions, and social events.
 McKinsey offers you—talented women based in Europe, the Middle East and Africa—the opportunity to shape your personal leadership style.
Eligibility: We are looking to get to know women who:
  • are students, graduates or working professionals with fewer than 6 years of experience
  • hold an outstanding record of academic and/or professional achievement
  • have a proven record of leadership in an academic and/or professional setting
  • thrive when working with other people
  • want to use their talents to make positive changes in their lives and the world we share
Number of Awards: Not specified
Value of Award: In this exclusive three-day workshop, McKinsey will offer you the opportunity to explore the importance of women in leadership and the impact they are having on the economy. You will also shape your personal leadership styles by playing to your strengths and understand how to grow your potential. Across the three days, you will meet our consultants and participate in group sessions, workshops, discussions, and social events.
Duration of Program: May 24-26
How to Apply: APPLY NOW
Award Providers: McKinsey&Company

Dickson Poon Undergraduate Law Scholarships at Kings College, London 2018

Application Deadlines: 
  • 12 noon (GMT) Tuesday 31st October 2017,
  • 12 noon (GMT) Thursday 1st March 2018.
There are two application rounds, and applicants may only apply to one round.
Eligible Countries: UK, EU and international
To Be Taken At (Country): UK
About the Award: The Dickson Poon Undergraduate Law Scholarship Programme offers prestigious and generous scholarships to outstanding new Law students at The Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s College London.  The level of competition for the scholarships is high and Dickson Poon Scholars are expected to play an active role in the School community during their studies and in the global community after graduation.
Type: Undergraduate
Eligibility: 
  • The Dickson Poon Scholarship programme is open to all applicants who apply via UCAS for a place on an undergraduate Law programme at King’s commencing in September 2018 (2018 entry).
  • The programme is also open to applicants who apply via UCAS for deferred entry to an undergraduate Law programme at King’s commencing in September 2019 (deferred entry in 2018).
Number of Awards: Up to 30
Value of Award: Scholars will receive financial support of £5,000 per year for the duration of the degree programme to which they are admitted. Scholars will also receive complimentary King’s accommodation during the first year of their LLB programme.
 How to Apply: 
  • The scholarship application form can be downloaded at the bottom of this page and includes full instructions on how to apply. Please also carefully read the guidance notes, which can also be downloaded below.
  • The Scholarships will be awarded by a Selection Panel appointed by the Dean of The Dickson Poon School of Law. The Selection Panel will assess and select successful applicants on the basis of outstanding merit. The Panel will not take into account an applicant’s financial circumstances.
Award Provider: The scholarships are made possible by the generous support of Sir Dickson Poon.
Important Notes:
  • Applications received before the October deadline will be considered in the first round. Applications received at any time after the October deadline but before the March deadline will be considered in the second round. Applications received after the March deadline will not be considered.
  • You will be informed of the outcome of your application by Friday 1 December 2017 (for first round applications) or by Tuesday 10 April 2018 (for second round applicants), including whether you have been shortlisted for an interview, and in any case by no later than Friday 8 December 2017 (for first round applications) or Tuesday 17 April 2018 (for second round applications).

Shell AccelerateHer Women-in-Entrepreneurship Initiative 2018

Application Deadline: 31st January 2018

Eligible Countries: African countries
To be taken at (country): South Africa
About the Award: AccelerateHer is a fully-funded 3 month business accelerator for 25 exceptional women entrepreneurs, offering unrivalled training, mentorship and business development support alongside in-depth coaching from successful women mentors. Entrepreneurs in the programme are eligible for access to development opportunities through Shell’s Enterprise and Supplier Development programme and LiveWire, in addition one entrepreneur stands the chance of winning R50,000 towards to their business!
Type: Entrepreneurship
Eligibility: To be eligible, candidates must:
  • be women, aged 18-35
  • be from the Ekurhuleni area
  • have a business idea aligned to Shell’s value chain
  • be must be driven, motivated and committed
Number of Awardees: 25
Value of Program: Fully-funded.
  • Go from an idea to having a registered business in 90 days
  • Receive ongoing support for your business after the programme
  • Get access to markets
  • Get support and assistance in dealing with the specific challenges that women face in building and growing their  businesses
  • PLUS! Stand a chance of winning R50,000 to kickstart your business
Duration of Program: 3 months. February to May 2018.
How to Apply: The application will be competitive. We know you have what it takes. We encourage you to apply!
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Approaching the Apocalypse, the Doomsday Clock Moves Forward

Robert F. Dodge

The Bulletin of Atomic Scientists has just moved their Doomsday Clock forward to two minutes till midnight. Midnight represents nuclear apocalypse. The Clock is recognized around the world as an indicator of the world’s vulnerability to catastrophe from nuclear weapons, climate change, and emerging technologies. Each year the decision to move the Clock forward, backward, or not at all, is determined by the Bulletins Science and Security Board in consultation with its Board of Sponsors which includes 15 Nobel Laureates.
In making this year’s move to two minutes till midnight, the Bulletin stated that “in 2017, world leaders failed to respond effectively to the looming threat of nuclear war and climate change, making the world’s security situation more dangerous than it was a year ago-and as dangerous as it has been since World War II.”
In recent years the Bulletin has added climate change to nuclear weapons as a major risk of global conflict. This year the greatest threat remained that of nuclear conflict with the ongoing North Korea crisis featuring dangerous rhetoric and actions coming from both sides. World experts have made their assessments; leadership in the US and North Korea have now radically elevated the risk of nuclear war either by accident or miscalculation.
Coupled with deteriorating relationships between the world’s nuclear powers, with US and Russian relations at the lowest point in decades and rising tensions between the US and China, all while the United States plans to rebuild its nuclear arsenal—prompting all of the other nations to follow suit. The situation is further undermined from a diplomatic standpoint by an understaffed and demoralized US State Department and thus the Clock ticks forward.
The Board stated, “To call the world nuclear situation dire is to understate the danger—and its immediacy.”
It was also emphasized that this urgent warning of global danger described a future that did not have to be, but in order to change demanded action now from the citizens of the world. We have the ability and now the legal framework with the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons to abolish nuclear weapons, just as we have the ability to address climate change.
What is necessary is the political will for change arising from the people across the country and the globe demanding this action now.
At this year’s Nobel Peace Prize ceremony, the leader of the recipient, International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN), Beatrice Fihn, said regarding abolishing nuclear weapons, “those who say that future is not possible need to get out of the way of those making it a reality.”
It’s time, possibly our final chance, to abolish nuclear weapons. It’s two minutes till midnight.