Foreign Affairs Symposium

The Foreign Affairs Symposium (FAS) is an entirely student-run lecture series sponsored by The Johns Hopkins University. First launched in 1998, the Symposium has become a hallmark of the University and greater Baltimore community, with attendance reaching up to 1,000 people at some recent events.

The Foreign Affairs Symposium
GenreStudent-run lecture series and forum
BeginsFebruary
EndsMay
Location(s)The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland
Inaugurated1999
AttendanceOver 1,500
Websitejhufas.org

The Symposium runs each year over the course of the Spring semester, as a counterpart to the Milton S. Eisenhower Symposium. Bound together by a unique, poignant theme, each year's series typically features 4-6 events, including a Presidential Lecture and the Anne Smedinghoff Memorial Lecture.

Background

In fall 1997, a group of undergraduate students recognized the need for a forum to discuss and debate global affairs and international issues. Merging the existing Woodrow Wilson International Studies Symposium and International Studies Forum Symposium, students formally created the “Symposium on Foreign Affairs.” Their first series launched in Spring 1998 with ten events, nearly all of which featured foreign ambassadors and Maryland officials. The Symposium quickly expanded over the next few years, hosting notables that include Sonia Gandhi, Shimon Peres, and Noam Chomsky.

In 2002, the name of the series changed permanently from “Symposium on Foreign Affairs” to the “Foreign Affairs Symposium” (FAS for short). The Symposium shifted away from individual speakers, instead hosting panels that covered current, controversial topics ranging from drug wars in Colombia to the war in Iraq. Overtime, the series returned to inviting individual notable leaders to speak and then engage students in discussion. During this time, symposium directors launched the flagship Presidential Lecture in partnership with the President’s Office. This annual event recognizes one speaker for their unique leadership and expertise in their field, and is fully funded by the President’s Office. Since then, the symposium has undergone rapid growth each year, continuing to expand in size and reach.[1]

Mission Statement

The Foreign Affairs Symposium is a student-run, non-profit speaker series that aims to educate the Johns Hopkins and greater Baltimore community on innovative ideas of international significance by:

  1. Establishing a forum for discourse on current issues from diverse fields
  2. Providing students and community members with access to distinguished, knowledgeable speakers
  3. Contextualizing topic areas to make them relatable and approachable for all audiences

Leadership

The forum and organization is entirely run by undergraduate students working to raise financial resources, secure a lineup of notable speakers, manage media relations, and engage the community. Approximately 40 students comprise the organization with Executive and Committee Directors leading four subcommittees that work together to achieve the Foreign Affairs Symposium's success.[2]

Symposium structure

Symposium talks and panels are held on the main Homewood Campus of the Johns Hopkins University, usually in historic Shriver Hall. Each event begins with a keynote address by the featured speaker, followed by an extended question and answer session open to all audience members. Typically, the main speech will last for around a half-hour, followed by a similar time allotment for the Q&A. Ultimately though, each speaker determines the length of each segment of the event per their own preferences.

As is tradition, each event is followed by an open reception, usually hosted in the same venue. Light refreshments and open discussion allow audience members to intimately interact with speakers. The length and structure of the reception changes from event to event, based on the preferences of the speaker, the Symposium staff, and reception co-sponsors. During the 2014 Symposium, for example, Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley extended the reception past 10:30pm to ensure that he could speak with all interested attendees.

The Anne Smedinghoff Memorial Series

In April 2013, Hopkins alumna Anne Smedinghoff (’09) was killed in a suicide bomb attack in southern Afghanistan while trying to deliver books to underserved school children. A former Executive Director of the Foreign Affairs Symposium, her passing had a profound impact on the organization and the Johns Hopkins University. The Foreign Affairs Symposium seek to commemorate her life and acknowledge those committed to her values: education, development and global harmony.

The Anne Smedinghoff Award is awarded to an individual who embodies Anne's values: education, development and global harmony.

2014 Recipient: Shabana Basij-Rasikh, founder of the School of Leadership, Afghanistan

2016 Recipient: World Bicycle Relief

2017 Recipient: Ron Capps, founder and director of Veterans Writing Project

2018 Recipient: Greg Asbed and Laura Germino, co-founders of Coalition of Immokalee Workers,

2019 Recipient: Erlendy Cuero Bravo, Vice President of the National Association of Displaced Afro-Colombians

2020 Recipient: Muzoon Almellehan, Syrian activist and UNICEF Goodwill Ambassador

Controversy

Paul Rusesabagina

In 2008, Paul Rusesabagina was invited to speak. He was a hotel manager in Kigali that hid and protected Hutu and Tutsi refugees during the Rwandan Genocide. Throughout the speech, a group of Rwandan men gathered on the steps of Shriver Hall where the event took place and handed out fliers alleging that Rusesabagina promoted "promote his revisionist and negationist theories in the U.S. and around the world."[3]

John Michael McConnell

In 2008, U.S. Director of National Intelligence John Michael McConnell was invited to speak with political science professor Steven R. David serving as the moderator. The event became testy with exchanges over issues on waterboarding, warrantless wiretapping, and nuclear proliferation. David also noted concerns about the long delays in processing job applications in intelligence agencies, promoting McConnell to provide the audience with his personal email address.[4] During the Q&A session, a member of the Network of Spiritual Progressives refused to give up the microphone and called McConnell to be arrogant.[5]

John Yoo

In 2010, former Bush Administration official and author of the so-called Torture Memos John Yoo was invited to speak. Students stood in front of the lecture hall and protested the event. While the protesters did not move, they did not interrupt Yoo as he delivered his speech.[6]

Stanley Allen McChrystal

In 2013, Retired General Stanley McChrystal, best known for his command of Joint Special Operations Command was invited to speak. Students protested outside of Shriver Hall protesting drone warfare and engagement with drone warfare research at Johns Hopkins University. Protesters did not interrupt the event.

Gloria Steinem

In 2015, American feminist and journalist Gloria Steinem was invited to speak. Throughout the event, Hopkins students part of Voice for Life protested the event and Steinem's pro-life views outside of Shriver Hall. Protesters held banners with statistics and images of women who died during abortion procedures.

İlker Başbuğ

In 2018, former Chief of the General Staff of Turkey İlker Başbuğ was invited to speak. Students and local organizations, including Friends of Rojava in America, protested the event, citing Başbuğ's support of policies against the Kurdish people and Turkish incursions into Afrin in Operation Olive Branch. Protesters were escorted to the lobby where they continued to protest.[7]

FAS ultimately had to end the event early, cutting short the time allocated for the Q&A session. Many students expressed frustration that the protests were counterproductive as it did not allowed for students to ask questions.[8]

Samantha Power

Protesters in Shriver Hall

In 2018, Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power was invited to speak. This decision sparked controversy as Power advocated for the 2011 military intervention in Libya and U.S. support for Saudi-led intervention in Yemen. Students in Students for a Democratic Society organized a silent protest in front of the audience as Power spoke. While the protestors left before the event was over, Power addressed the protestors during the Q&A session.[9]

Joshua Wong and Nathan Law

In 2020, Hong Kong pro-democracy activists Joshua Wong and Nathan Law were invited to speak. The announcement triggered a Change.org petition that gathered more than 2,000 signatures. Three Chinese students attending Johns Hopkins also wrote a letter to the University administration in protest.[10]

On the day of the event, approximately 100 students protested the choice of speakers while another 20 engaged in a counter-protest in support of the pro-democracy activists. The protests first started outside Shriver Hall then continued inside before and after Wong and Law spoke.[11]

Notable Speakers

Past Foreign Affairs Symposium speakers include:[12]

Politicians and Activists

Journalists

Academia

Business

Literature, arts, and media

Past Themes

2020

Anthem

Executive Directors: Claire Zou, Turquoise Baker, Katy Oh

2019

Disrupt

Executive Directors: Kiana Boroumand, Nimish Vyas

2018

Ravel / Unravel

Executive Directors: Aliya Doctor, Kat Gross, Jilliann Pak

2017

Undercurrent

Executive Directors: Jonathan Brown, Mollie Cueva, Tim Shieh

2016

Architects of the Future

Executive Directors: Mona Jia, Jack Laylin, Alex Sadler

2015

Chaos / Catalyst / Clarity

Executive Directors: Bryan Ricciardi, Putt Rodchaereon, Sam Romanoff

2014

Confronting Global Dissonance: The Balance Between Realism and Idealism

Executive Directors:

2013

From the Front Line to the Bottom Line

Executive Directors: Ben Kupferberg, Henry Chen, Natalie Boyse, Sarah Horton

2012

The Paradox of Progress: Chasing Advancement Amidst Global Crisis

Executive Directors: Andrew Davis, Eleanor Gardner, Jillian Martynec

2011

Global Citizenship: Re-Examining the Role of the Individual in an Evolving World

Executive Directors: Caroline Berger, Isaac Jilbert, Kieran Coleman

2010

Re-Engaging the World: The New Global Community

Executive Directors: Mark Brennan, Max Cohen, Yuvaraj Sivalingam

2009

Global Leadership in the 21st Centuy

Executive Directors: Michael Glenwick, Laila Ameri, Jonathan Jacobs, Claire Cravero

2008

A Decade of Discussion

Executive Directors: Katie Collins, Elizabeth Caudle, Pamela Lachman, Anne Smedinghoff

2007

Shifts in the Global Tides

2006

Ideologies in Flux

Executive Directors: Adnan Ahmad, Carey Polis, Marc Goldwein

2005

Enduring Responsibility: America and the Politics of Conflict Resolution

2004

Inside Out

Executive Directors: Erica Weiss, Hadi Husain

2003

Psyche of the State: The Commonality of Discontent

2002

Capitalism in Contemporary World

Executive Directors: Zainab Akbar, Brandon Yoder

2001

Interconnections: The Interaction of Developed and Developing Nations

Executive Directors: Arati Shroff, Mustafa Ahmed

2000

Globalization

Executive Directors: Aparna Saraf, Michael Rossi

1999

Superpower or Supercop? America's Response to the New World Order

Executive Directors: Jay Suresh and Hari Chandra

References

  1. "About Us, The Foreign Affairs Symposium". Johns Hopkins University.
  2. "Press Release, Foreign Affairs Symposium at Johns Hopkins University". Johns Hopkins University.
  3. "FAS starts with controversial speaker". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  4. "Symposium discussion turns into heated debate". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  5. "Remarks and Q&A by the Director of National Intelligence Mr. Mike McConnell" (PDF). Office of the Director of National Intelligence.
  6. "Johns Hopkins Students Disrupt Yoo Speech". Democracy Now!. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  7. "Ex-Turkish general cuts U.S. speech after Afrin protest". Ahval. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  8. "FAS shuts down İlker Başbuğ talk after protests". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved 2020-05-26.
  9. "Samantha Power discusses U.S. foreign policy at FAS". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  10. "Johns Hopkins students protest speeches by Joshua Wong, Nathan Law - Global Times". www.globaltimes.cn. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  11. "Hong Kong activists spark controversy at FAS". The Johns Hopkins News-Letter. Retrieved 2020-05-25.
  12. "Past Events". Johns Hopkins University.
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