Thursday, March 17, 2022

Dr. Laura A. Dean: Ukrainian Refugee Crisis--what can be done?

 













Lithuanian-American Club of Central Illinois and The World Affairs Council of Central Illinois will be hosting the Associate Professor of Political Science Dr. Laura Dean as she talks about the ramifications of the refugee and displaced person crisis caused by the Russian attack on Ukraine. This free event will be held at the Lincoln Library on Saturday, March 26 at 2 pm.

The greatest humanitarian crisis since World War II has been created as millions of Ukraine civilians have been forced to flee for their lives. Mainly women, children, and the elder have flooded into the neighboring countries, whose resources have been stretched to the breaking point. The overburdened systems have led to uncertainty and confusion abound, making the refugees more vulnerable to human traffickers. Those, who remain behind in Ukraine, face shortages in the basic necessities--food, water, medical attention, and safe shelter. Bodies are buried in mass graves as indiscriminate bombing makes it too dangerous to retrieve them for proper burial.


Currently, Laura A. Dean is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Millikin University. From 2014-to 2016 she was an Assistant Professor at Clayton State University in Georgia. She graduated from the University of Kansas in 2014 with a Ph.D. in Political Science. She also has a Graduate Certificate in Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies (2013) and a Master of Arts in Political Science (2011) from the University of Kansas, a Master of Arts in International Studies focusing on Russian, East European, and Central Asian Studies (2006) from the University of Washington, and a Bachelor of Arts in World Politics (2003) from the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire.


Dr. Dean researches gender and political issues focusing on public policy, migration, and gender-based violence in the former Soviet Union. Her research has been supported by the American Association of University Women, Social Science Research Council, Fulbright Program, Rotary Foundation, and appeared in The Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis, Human Rights Review, Journal of Baltic Studies, Journal Teorija in Praksa, and Femina Politica, the Feminist Journal of Political Science. In the summer of 2016, She was a Title VIII Summer Research Scholar at the Kennan Institute, part of the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.


Dr. Dean is the author of Diffusing Human Trafficking Policy in Eurasia forthcoming in 2020 from Policy Press at the University of Bristol and distributed by the University of Chicago Press in the US. She is the adviser of the Model United Nations Club, chair of the Fulbright Committee, and a member of the Gender Studies Committee and the International Programs and Policies Committee. She also serves as head of the Research Committee on the Central Illinois Human Trafficking Task Force and is a Regional Faculty Associate with the Russian, East European, and the Eurasian Center University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.



Dr. Laura Dean's website




Sunday, March 13, 2022

How introductions make connecting more successful The new face of networking


 How introductions make connecting more successful

The new face of networking


Both in-person and online, networking remains an important element of promotion and marketing strategies. The events have been designed to bring people together in a safe, comfortable setting in which they can expand their business network, client base, and find necessary resources.


With most in-person events you are given a name tag as you walk into a sea of people. Other than what is printed on the tag, the attendees know very little about each other. Who do you talk to? What's the best way to approach others? Do you just walk up and start talking? What do you say? What is the best way to meet the people you are looking for? The event becomes little more than a series of cold contacts or the equivalent of a speed dating event with most people standing around feeling awkward.


Most online events start with a summit or seminar in which one person or a small group shares their experience and expertise, while others listen. Attendees usually can private message each other, yet in doing so their attention is diverted from the speakers. Sometimes these events break into small groups, in which the members are more able to share and learn about each other. But this contact venue is only viable during the event. The members must quickly exchange their information or the ability to connect is lost at the end of the event.


In both cases, the art of relationships building has gotten lost in the sea of collecting business cards or contact information as the attendees race against the clock to meet as many people as possible. Under these circumstances, it's impossible to develop long-lasting business relationships.


Catalytic Connections doesn't host large networking events, it arranges introductions. Rochelle Arjmand finds connections the same way she chooses her clients. She learns about their businesses but more importantly, she learns who her clients are as people. What they are passionate about? The information gives her the ability to find who and what they need because she has the same information about the people they are trying to meet. However, she does so much more than send a connecting email with simply bios and the reason for the introduction. She brings them together for three-way calls, zoom chats, or in-person introductions. In many ways, Rochelle Arjmand can be described as a conduit in which others find common ground and reach their goals. Her passion is to bring others together to make positive things happen for all involved. A natural connector, Arjmand is best known for connecting people with others that most think are impossible to reach and then having them work together to create a bigger, better vision.


Website



Thursday, March 10, 2022

Only the Russian People Can Stop Putin

 The escalation of the bombing of civilians Putin is attempting to provoke the other nations into attacking as a way to shore up and solidify his support in Russia. He used the false flag of Nazism to create an external enemy. Many Russians blame the hardships they experience during WW II and the Cold War that followed not on their leaders, but the Nazis that ignited the war.


Putin needs the west to set up the no-fly zone. It would be a lose-lose for the other nations. The goal is to force the other nations to shoot down Russian pilots. It would prove to his people that he was right about the Nazis and the attack on Ukraine was justified. If the other nations give him what he wants, the situation will escalate in Ukraine and empower the white supremacists around the world.


The simple fact is only the Russians can stop him and the war. But they need to be shown not just told what Putin is doing. He isn't providing aid and comfort to Ukraine. He is bombing cities. He is murdering civilians. He is deliberately sending Russian soldiers to die for no reason other than his own self, ego driven need for power. The best way for the west to stop him is to circumvent his media blackout and propaganda campaigns to show the Russians the truth. Only they can hold him accountable. Only they can save Ukraine--and the world from the white supremacy of people like Putin.


Tuesday, March 01, 2022

Putin: The Death of Toxic Patriarchy



Putin's manipulation of other nations, especially with the Unite States' elections, made the attack on Ukraine enviable and necessary for him to retain power within Russia. His overreach and trump's loss proved to his citizens and the world that his control over others was not absolute. The blow to Putin's ego has blinded him. He is refusing to see and accept that the world has changed. Instead, he is trying to bring back the USSR's glory days through bullying and brute force. In the past, these tactics were successful. However, the world has radically changed. New technologies and economic interdependence has ended the days of being able to have total control over what others see, hear, and informational exposure. It's the primary reason that the other dictators remain silent, neither supporting nor condemning Putin's actions; they simply refuse to participate in his ego-driven power grab because they see no profit in sharing the negative spotlight with him.


Although it doesn't seem like it, the world has and continues to change. If it wasn't, the toxic elements of patriarchy would be desperately fighting to keep and restore their ability to control others. It's unnecessary to fight for those things you confidently own. Putin's attack on Ukraine represents an extreme example of the battles between the past and the present that has been happening around the world. White supremacists, no matter how they label themselves, have been using the old tactics of harassment, violence, and misinformation to retain power over others. They see their way of life rapidly vanishing as women and people of color work together to attain equality in their homes, the marketplace, politics, and on the world stage. In the past, this has been primarily the white males' purview. The balance of power had been changing for decades to become more diverse and inclusive. Racism, misogyny, and bigotry have been brought out of the shadows and those, who practice them, are being held accountable for what they say, do and cause to happen. All three are the keystone behaviors that are the basis of the white supremacists' belief that they are superior to others and therefore have the right to dominate them. Being held morally, legally, and financially accountable for their actions has sparked the rage, which has caused the upsurge of violence around the world. Putin's attack on Ukraine is only the most extreme and public example of what has been happening in towns and cities around the world Putin and others' attacks are designed to restore the white supremacists' standing in individual countries and the world.


The global social-economic interdependence has become the axis on which the world now spins. Yet at the same time as most of the world has been developing ways to find common ground to expand their markets to sell their products and services, white supremacists and dictators, like Putin, have been diligently trying to restore feudalism with themselves as the would-be kings or emperors. Putin still believes that boots on the ground, tanks on the field, and planes in the air are the only pathways to power and national pride. However, economics, technology, science, and social equality have become the new battlegrounds. New technologies have removed the barriers that limited international commerce to governments and large corporations. Small companies and cottage industries now actively participate in the global marketplace. But this interdependence is a double-edged sword, as the success or failure of every nation's economy reverberates throughout the world.


More than just products and services, a nation's financial success also relies heavily on innovation, exploration, and expansion in the areas of technology, science, and medicine. Finding new uses for the old while creating new products, methods, and procedures, keeps societies strong and healthy. When innovation and creativity are discouraged, as it is in oppressive societies, individuals can't live up to their full potential. It causes the individuals and the societies they live in to begin to stagnate and die. April 12, 1967, Russia sent cosmonaut, Yuri Gagarin, into space, which won them the initial leg of the space race. However, that was one of their final achievements. The United States won the race to the moon. In 2021 three billionaires, Richard Branson, Jeff Bezos, and Elon Musk took the space race to a new level with their private companies taking flight, creating the age of space tourism. Whereas Russia began as a leader in the race, they were passed by three billionaires, none of whom are Russia. It must have been a bitter pill for Putin to swallow when Bezos hosted, William Shatner, the star of Star Trek, and others for on a ride alongs. To add insult to injury, Elon Musk realigned his satellites to give Ukraine free internet access, thereby keeping them connected to the rest of the world.



Putin's attempt to seize Ukraine has backfired. Instead, of reestablishing his and Russia's reputations as respected world leaders, they have become social and economic pariahs. The only thing they have won is broad sanctions. Counties, including Switzerland, have frozen the financial, real estate, and corporate assets of Putin, Russian banks, Russian corporations, and Russian billionaires. Corporations have begun to pull their resources from Russia and cancel their contracts to purchase its raw materials. The value of the Rubal has and continues to fall. People have and will continue to die because of Putin's ego. His inability to learn from history will hurt the people of Russia. He might have been wise to read up on what Russians did to the Romanovs in 1917 before starting an unnecessary war.