DIVERSE OPINIONS NEW WAYS OF THINKING

Curated & Moderated by:
Anna-Kynthia Bousdoukou
iMEdD International Journalism Forum
Wednesday 27 September 2023
7:00 p.m. EEST
In an age when crises are extensively documented and breaking news constantly floods our screens, new information has become something that can lead us to disengage rather than energizing us.
Topics
Thursday 03 August 2023
With travel having now become a commodity, tourism-related transportation, accommodation, and other activities, have exacerbated the global carbon footprint. Sustainable tourism practices and adaptation strategies are crucial in mitigating the negative effects of climate change; however, are we ready to embrace them?
Opinions
Tuesday 25 July 2023
In the light of his participation at the SNF Dialogues discussion titled "Mental Health: Reconnecting in a Fractured Political Landscape" at the SNF Nostos 2023, Dr. Peter Ditto discusses polarization as a moral phenomenon, the implications for our democracies and the need to remain united during these challenging times.
Topics
Monday 05 June 2023
Prompted by the World Environment Day, the SNF Dialogues held a discussion with paleoclimatologist Carlo Barbante, to unpack the phenomenon of rising sea levels as well as what 1-million-year-old ice can teach us about climate change and its future course.
Sound Off
Sound On

Events on demand

About

QUESTIONS, CONCERNS, DEVELOPMENTS, AND NEW DATA ARE UPDATED CONSTANTLY. IN A RAPIDLY CHANGING WORLD IN AN INCREASINGLY DIGITAL ENVIRONMENT, WE ALL SEEK ANSWERS FOR THE PRESENT, AND GUIDANCE AS WE ENVISION THE FUTURE, THROUGH IDEAS, INSPIRATION, AND ACTION.

55 Dialogues
263 Unique Dialoguers
20 Different Locations

OPINIONS

Speakers, experts, and citizens share their knowledge and experience on every possible field of science, culture, or just everyday life, keeping the Dialogue alive.

Dialoguers

Lilliana Mason

Associate Professor of Political Science at the SNF Agora Institute of Johns Hopkins University
Leaders have a big role to play (…) Their motivations are often based on how to get more votes and how to get more money and…[they] create more conflict to get those things. Having leaders be more responsible participants in democracy (…) could tone things down.
Appears on:
55 Reconnecting in a Fractured Political Landscape

Peter Ditto

Professor of Psychological Science at the University of California, Irvine
When you feel that it’s morally offensive what the other side is doing…it creates anger, anxiety, very often fear, particularly when they are in power, and you could see the connections between the political and the personal in this sort of situation.
Appears on:
55 Reconnecting in a Fractured Political Landscape

Carlo Barbante

Director of Italy's Institute of Polar Sciences
What is happening in polar regions, doesn’t stay in polar regions. It affects the ocean, the atmosphere, and the continents at lower latitudes.

Esther Duflo

Abdul Latif Jameel Professor of Poverty Alleviation and Development Economics at the Department of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Co-founder and co-director of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL)
The…mistake is that we are focusing too much on economic growth. That should not be an end, that should be a means. The end would be welfare in developing countries. Simple things, like being alive, not dying in infancy or in childbirth, being able to go to school…

Foteini Tsalikoglou

Author and Professor of Psychology at Panteion University
Our psyche is a product of dialogue, as, from the moment that we are born, we are part of a relationship. There is no ‘I’ without an ‘other.’ From this initial condition derive the difficulties, but also the beauty, that shape the adventures of our psyche.
Appears on:
38 The Psychological Effects of a Year Living with Covid-19

Nikos Alivizatos

Emeritus Professor of Constitutional Law at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Everyone has the right to define themselves as they wish, and to believe whatever they want, but when they coexist with others, they cannot set the rules of the whole game.
Appears on:
37 Τhe Power of Dialogue

Alondra Nelson

President of the Social Science Research Council and Harold F. Linder Professor at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton University
More than ever before it’s both important to have real experts at the table and those who are not experts but live with the consequences of the decisions that are being made by a technocratic society.
Appears on:
33 The Interplay between Technology and Democracy: Pοtential and limitations
Dogfighting is inextricably linked to other crimes. When we investigate the issue of dogfighting, it's like investigating arms and drug dealing.
Appears on:
23 Cruelty toward Animals

Dimitris Christopoulos

Professor at the Department of Political Science and History at Panteion University
The purpose of dialogue is not to deliver compliments. Dialogue is necessary in difficult situations and arguments, where our patience and tolerance are being tested.
Appears on:
37 Τhe Power of Dialogue

Alex Piquero

Chair of the Department of Sociology and Criminology and Distinguished Scholar of Arts and Sciences at the University of Miami
One of the strongest risk factors for later violence is exposure to violence.
Appears on:
50 Manifestations of violence

Giannis Vassilopoulos

Member of the SNF Nostos Youth Advisory Committee
Social media has found a way to satisfy a need that is not met by our social circles.
Appears on:
52 Generation Social

Eric Klinenberg

Professor of Social Sciences at New York University
A public space is an essential part of modern democratic life.
Appears on:
44 The Return to Public Space, 
50 Manifestations of violence

Walter Puchner

Professor Emeritus of Theater Studies at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
Ancient tragedy had a mechanism that starts with hubris, which involves a human being, a mortal, transgressing the laws of the gods and being punished for it. And, today, we are in a parallel situation, in the sense that we are breaking the laws of nature, the absolute standard.
Appears on:
54 Modern political values, ancient drama

Irene Moundraki

Dramaturg and Head of the Drama, Library, Archive and International Relations Departments of the National Theatre of Greece
Theater does not simply reflect the ideas of philosophy, but also raises big questions that concern humankind and, I think, will always concern it.
Appears on:
54 Modern political values, ancient drama

Demetres Karavellas

CEO of WWF Greece
Climate change has become a crisis because we are already living it, and we have reached the point where reality confirms, or even exceeds, forecasts. Moreover, there is also the time factor; the fact that time is running out, and now is the time for change. The crisis is the harbinger of the need for change.
Appears on:
26 Climate Change

Thibeaux Hirsh

Member of the SNF Nostos Youth Advisory Committee
I’ve found social media to provide a sort of distorted reality as a result of the algorithms, the feedback loops, and for myself it has resulted in a lower general appreciation for life than when I’m off social media.
Appears on:
52 Generation Social

Harold S. Koplewicz

Founding President and Medical Director of the Child Mind Institute
The stigma attached to mental disorders for years prevented parents from seeking help. It is time, because of the pandemic, to think about our mental health, especially that of our children.
Appears on:
38 The Psychological Effects of a Year Living with Covid-19, 
51 Mental Health

Stelios Virvidakis

Professor of Epistemology and Ethics at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens
We cannot always decide on a moral dilemma on the basis of the use of algorithms.
Appears on:
45 Humanity - AI Symbiosis

Prodromos Zanis

Professor of Meteorology and Climatology at the School of Geology of the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki
Human beings may be small compared to nature, but they are big enough to disrupt it.
Appears on:
46 Climate Change - Part 2

Isobel Bruce

Digital Campaign Director at Purpose in London
Many movements have behaved intelligently. They’ve been able to use social media to enhance campaigns, enhance the dissemination and diffusion of messages, to reach out to more and diverse audiences.
Appears on:
53 Social Media and Social Change

Prodromos Tsinikoris

Director – Dramaturge
Τhe main role of art is to open a dialogue with the audience, which in cases such as theater, dance, or concerts has the role of co-creator, seeking common ground on how we envision society.
Appears on:
31 Art on Lockdown

Rinu Oduala

Founder of Connect Hub Nigeria and Activist
Social media platforms allow young people to drive meaningful political discussion and dialogue about what is happening. The platforms have provided the necessary space.
Appears on:
53 Social Media and Social Change

Steven Kushner

Professor of Psychiatry at Columbia University Irving Medical Center and the New York State Psychiatric Institute
It's highly likely that in the next five to ten years, we’re really going to see a dramatic breakthrough in the development of new treatments.
Appears on:
51 Mental Health

Joy Fan

Member of the SNF Nostos Youth Advisory Committee
We have a lot of this unverified, un-peer-reviewed information that is wandering unfettered, especially in the realm of social media.
Appears on:
52 Generation Social

Beatrice Nyamwenge Okech

Member of the SNF Nostos Youth Advisory Committee
Social media are a learning platform, and also my window into the outside world.
Appears on:
52 Generation Social

Konstantinos Kotsis

Assistant Professor of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry at the University of Ioannina and President of the Hellenic Society of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
Ιn psychiatry, we see that the stigma is usually greater in children, greater than in adults.
Appears on:
51 Mental Health

Marina Economou – Lalioti

Professor of Psychiatry at the 1st Psychiatric Clinic of the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Medical School and President of the Greek section of the World Association of Psychological Rehabilitation (WAPR)
There is a lack of information on mental health issues, and that’s where we need to factor in political accountability and trust in institutions.
Appears on:
51 Mental Health

Alexandra Tragaki

Associate Professor, Demography Economics at Harokopio University
Objectively speaking, we cannot achieve population growth only through migration…the demographic question cannot be an alibi for migration policymaking.
Appears on:
27 Population Aging: New Data and New Challenges