Overview of Conference
In their collaborative volume Transprofessional Diplomacy (Brill, 2017), Costas M. Constantinou, Noé Cornago and Fiona McConnell crafted a term to describe the reality of how diplomacy is currently practiced. For while nation-state diplomatic representatives continue the vital work of practicing diplomacy as it has been traditionally understood, diplomatic actors today also include businesspeople, scientists, artists, educators, religious leaders, social workers, community organizers and activists, among others. As we confront multiple transnational challenges, including the global ecological crisis, the rise of nationalism, racial and economic inequality, the fear of religious and ethnic difference and the manner in which all these phenomena have been amplified by the COVID-19 pandemic - the need for a deeper level of collaboration among all practitioners of diplomacy has never been greater. This conference explores the work and the strategies being proposed and employed by practitioners and scholars of diplomacy across multiple vocations and contexts to promote such cooperation.
In his book Diplomatic Theory of International Relations (Cambridge University Press, 2009), Paul Sharp wrote, "We should expect private enterprises, civil society organizations and possibly individual people to engage in more and more diplomacy as they become more influential in international relations. We should want them all to be good at it." The mission of the Grace School is to train future practitioners of diplomacy across all vocations - from those pursuing careers in the foreign service to those who want to build bridges in their own neighborhoods as community organizers and activists. The goal of the Grace School is to create cohorts of students with a wide range of vocational trajectories who engage the study and practice of diplomacy together, and in so doing establish networks that they will take with them as they pursue their respective careers upon graduation. It is this goal that informs the theme of our conference.
Panel One: The Promise of Transprofessional Diplomacy and its relevance for understanding diplomacy's current role in the world and its future potential
In their collaborative volume Transprofessional Diplomacy, Costas M Constantinou, Noé Cornago and Fiona McConnell crafted a term to describe the reality of how diplomacy is currently practiced. In this roundtable discussion, Constantinou, Cornago and McConnell explore the central question of the conference: “What do you believe is most needed to promote a deeper level of cooperation among governmental and non-governmental actors to find the most effective responses to the challenges we face in the 21st century?”
Panel One Panelists and Biographies:
Costas M. Constantinou, Professor of International Relations at the University of Cyprus
Noé Cornago, Associate Professor of International Relations at the University of the Basque Country in Bilbao
Fiona McConnell, Associate Professor in Human Geography and Tutorial Fellow at St Catherine's College, Oxford University
Panel Two: Religion, Diplomacy and the Work of Building Interconvictional Bridges across Boundaries of Difference
Each one of our speakers for this roundtable are noted leaders in the work of interfaith bridge building in Europe, and between the three of them head four NGOs on the continent devoted to the work of building interconvictional solidarity across boundaries of religious, racial and ethnic difference. "Interconvictional" is a term which is inclusive of both practitioners of a religious tradition and those who are agnostic or atheist, and its proponents view all groups as having equally valuable convictions and making equally valuable contributions to civil society. The organizations each of our speakers head are central players in the practice of network diplomacy among young people in Europe - and it should therefore come as no surprise that each are involved in the work of one another's NGOs.
Panel Two Panelists and Biographies:
Rafael Tyszblat, founding leader of Connecting Actions and the European Institute for Dialogue
Ilja Sichrovsky, founder and General Secretary of the Muslim Jewish Conference
Radia Bakkouch, President of the Paris-based NGO Coexister
Panel Three: Urban Diplomacy and its Role in Promoting Cooperation across Boundaries of Economic, Racial and Ethnic Difference
The term
Urban Diplomacy was coined at the Grace School to describe diplomatic acts which take place within the boundaries of a single city, which may or may not have international ramifications. Our three panelists for this round table include both scholars of diplomacy and practitioners, and together they examine the role of Urban Diplomacy in the context of three different geographic locations: Nairobi, Chicago and Mexico City.
Panel Three Panelists and Biographies:
Sam Okoth Opondo, Associate Professor in Political Science and Africana Studies at Vassar College N.Y.
Sana Syed, Director of Development and Strategy of the Inner-City Muslim Action Network
Antonio Alejo, collaborator of the Research Group on Societies on Move at University of A Coruña and Research Associate in the Instituto Galego de Análise e Documentación Internacional
Panel Four: Diplomacy, Social Justice and their Role in Promoting Cooperation Across Boundaries of Economic, Racial and Ethnic Difference
Depending upon who is practicing it, diplomacy may or may not be used with the goal of promoting social justice. In the case of our three panelists - a scholar of religion, a foreign service officer and a human rights activist and NGO leader - the goal of social justice is central to their work and practice. In this roundtable, our three panelists discuss the work of building networks among millennial leaders in the MEA region, the need for diversity among foreign service officers and pedagogical approaches to integrating the work of social justice into a diplomatic studies program.
Panel Four Panelists and Biographies:
Christopher Tirres, Inaugural Endowed Professor of Diplomacy and Interreligious Engagement in the Grace School of Applied Diplomacy and the director of DePaul's Center for Religion, Culture and Community
Caroline Savage, a career Foreign Service Officer and most recently Director of the U.S. Department of State’s Foreign Press Center
Mohamed Abubakr, President of the African Middle Eastern Leadership Project
Panel Five: Diplomacy, the COVID-19 Pandemic and the New Emerging Diplomatic Landscape
For our final session, we turn to an intentionally global perspective and consider the present and future of diplomacy in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. Our panelists include four individuals who have all distinguished themselves as both scholars and practitioners of diplomacy in high stakes contexts which have impacted broad cross sections of our global population.
Panel Five Panelists and Biographies:
Geoffrey Wiseman, former diplomat, foundation program officer, and advisor to the Australian Foreign Minister, Gareth Evans
Meritxell Relaño Arana, Deputy Director of Emergency Operations for UNICEF in Geneva
Dr. Andrea Bartoli, President of the Sant’Egidio Foundation for Peace and Dialogue
Ertharin Cousin, former Director of the World Food Programme















