Friend, read the June 2024 edition of the Carnegie Ethics Newsletter featuring the Council's latest resources with a focus on migration ethics.
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June 11, 2024

Unlocking Cooperation: Climate Change and Human Mobility

On June 20 at 6pm ET, World Refugee Day, Carnegie Council invites you to join a critical discussion on enhancing multilateral cooperation at the intersection of climate change and human mobility. The public panel and Q&A will mark the second event in the Council’s “Unlocking Cooperation” series in the lead up to the UN’s Summit of the Future. 

 

Be sure to register for this event featuring Ambassador Ali Naseer Mohamed, permanent representative of the Republic of Maldives to the UN alongside experts from the International Organization for Migration (IOM) and the New York Office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR). 

Register for this virtual event

How the World Ran Out of Everything, with Peter S. Goodman

On June 12 at 6pm ET, Carnegie Council Senior Fellows Tatiana Serafin and Nikolas Gvosdev will be joined by New York Times reporter Peter Goodman to discuss his new book How the World Ran Out of Everything and how geopolitics is connected to the goods that literally end up on our doorstep.

Register for this virtual event

Featured Resources

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The Intersection of AI, Ethics, & Humanity, with Wendell Wallach

In a wide-ranging discussion, Carnegie Ethics Fellow Samantha Hubner speaks with Carnegie-Uehiro Fellow Wendell Wallach about the re-release of his book A Dangerous Master and how thinking about the history of machine ethics can inform the responsible development of AI and other emerging technologies.

Listen
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Space-based Data Risks to Refugee Populations

Space-based data, like information gathered from satellites, is quite useful for observing environmental conditions, but Visiting Fellow Zhanna Malekos Smith writes that it also raises privacy concerns for vulnerable populations. How can we develop an ethical framework for these technological systems? 

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A Reflection on Climate Mobility: Has Causality Lost Resonance?

With the recent European Court of Human Rights' ruling against Switzerland in mind, Columbia/SIPA’s Mehreen Afzal discusses a legal pathway forward for climate-induced cross-border migration. How can acknowledging the emotions and politics of these discussions lead to more critical engagement?

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Addessing the Human Tragedy in the Darién Gap: A Call for Innovative Solutions

With hundreds of thousands of migrants making the dangerous trek through the Darién Gap each year, the Model International Mobility Convention (MIMC) could offer new solutions. “It is time for governments to transcend traditional paradigms and embrace a framework that puts human rights and dignity at its core,” writes Research Fellow Susie Han.

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