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Showing posts with label global. Show all posts
Showing posts with label global. Show all posts

Friday, March 1, 2013

Engaging global commerce in Southeast Asia

Elon Law and MBA students traveled to Vietnam and Singapore in January to explore the dynamics of modern global trade.

Elon Law and MBA students and faculty toured manufacturing facilities and met with legal and corporate executives in Vietnam as part of the 2013 International Business course.

Part of an International Business course offered jointly by Elon's School of Law and Martha and Spencer Love School of Business, the trip allowed seventeen MBA students and six law students to engage lawyers and executives from a variety of law firms and corporations in discussions about the challenges of conducting business internationally.

MBA student Alexander Worth said the course was valuable in combining key aspects of doing business overseas with analysis of laws regulating labor and trade in other countries.

“As an MBA student, the ability to interact with law students during business meetings with multinational organizations offered a different and valuable perspective regarding the challenges one faces when operating in a foreign country,” Worth said. “The eye-opening firsthand knowledge gained by witnessing the difficulties and potential rewards one faces by relocating to an emerging market like Vietnam or an extremely advanced market like Singapore was unparalleled.”

The skyline of Ho Chi Minh City in Vietnam.

“The opportunity to visit and speak with business and legal leaders in Vietnam and Singapore enhanced my knowledge of how international commerce is conducted,” said law student Daniel Jessup. “Having law and MBA students work together provided for more comprehensive discussions and analysis of the businesses we visited in Singapore and Vietnam.”

In Vietnam, Elon Law and MBA students met with executives at Theodore Alexander, a furniture and accessories design and manufacturing company, Sprinta Co., Ltd., an apparel manufacturing company, Baker & McKenzie, the global law firm, and GE. In Singapore, the group held meetings with senior leaders at Maxwell Chambers, the world's first integrated dispute resolution complex, the American Chamber of Commerce, Singapore Management University, CSE Global, a global technologies company, and UPS.

“The business visits, speakers, and group tours allowed me to identify similarities and differences between Singapore's and Vietnam's businesses and cultures along with providing insights on points to consider when doing business outside the United States,” said MBA student Tisha Jefferson. “Meetings and discussions with expatriates, in particular, gave a valuable perspective of living and working abroad.”

The port of Singapore is one of the world's five busiest.

Corporate visits often included tours of manufacturing and logistics facilities. Topics of discussion included mergers and acquisitions, counterfeiting and trademark violations, employment and labor law, global transportation issues and incentive programs for global entrepreneurs.

“The International Business course offers a unique opportunity to analyze certain governmental, labor, and cultural perspectives that exist within Vietnam and Singapore,” said Eddie M. Holder, a member of the Class of 2013 at Elon Law who participated in the course. “As a law student with interests in intellectual property and corporate legal matters, having an understanding of how these perspectives may influence business dealings saves valuable time and resources for potential clients that have business interests within these countries and the greater Asian Pacific region.”

Mary Gowan, professor of management at Elon University who co-taught the course, said the joint MBA/JD class provides a unique opportunity for students to learn about both business and legal issues that impact international business activities.

“This year in particular the faculty spent a lot of time designing the course to ensure that students develop a deeper understanding and appreciation for how lawyers and business executives need to develop close, collaborative working relationships to succeed doing business in Asia,” Gowan said. “Speakers from the companies we visited reinforced this message.”

The itinerary for Elon's 2013 International Business course included visits to historic and cultural sites in Vietnam and Singapore.

In addition to Gowan, who teaches management, human resources, organizational behavior, and leadership courses, the faculty team for the course included:

Don Dancer, Distinguished Practitioner in Residence at Elon Law. Mr. Dancer is former General Counsel for three international corporations.

Catherine Dunham, Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Professor of Law. Professor Dunham teaches primarily in the areas of civil procedure and trial practice.

Jack Hicks, Adjunct Professor of Law and partner at the law firm of Womble, Carlyle, Sandridge & Rice, LLP. Mr. Hicks practices and teaches in the area of national and international intellectual property.

In addition to business meetings, the class also enjoyed several cultural experiences. In Vietnam, the group participated in a Tai Chi Class, visited Notre Dame Cathedral, Reunification Hall, and the War Remnants Museum. They also took a boat cruise on Mekong Delta waterways, visiting various local workplaces including a brickworks, a salt refinery, a coconut processing facility and a mat weaving house. In Singapore, the group’s experiences included a visit to Clarke Quay, an entertainment, dining and nightlife focal point in Singapore, Lau Pa Sat (Festival Market), and a traditional Singapore Bumboat River tour.

This was the fourth consecutive year that Elon’s law and MBA programs offered a joint winter-term international business course that included study abroad. It is one of the only collaborative courses of its kind in the country. Participants wrote about the experience on the MBA program blog: http://elonuniversitymba.wordpress.com/.

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by Philip Craft, Staff Last Updated - 2/4/2013

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Tuesday, February 12, 2013

Global literacy activist to speak at Fairfield University

Image: John WoodAuthor/philanthropist John Wood, who left a lucrative executive career at Microsoft to found an award-winning nonprofit building schools, libraries and vital opportunities for children around the world, will speak at Fairfield University's Regina A. Quick Center for the Arts at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, February 12. His lecture, "Creating Room to Read: A Story of Hope in the Battle for Global Literacy," is free and open to the public.

Wood's appearance is an Open VISIONS Forum-Espresso event, part of Fairfield's signature lecture series, in conjunction with The Inspired Writer Series, a program of the MFA in Creative Writing. The University's Study Abroad Program is also a contributor to Wood's appearance. Community partners for this event are the Fairfield University Bookstore and Fairfield Public Library.

In 1999, at the age of 35, Wood left behind his nine-year career as a marketing executive for Microsoft to found Room to Read, one of the fastest-growing charities founded during the 20th century. The statistics surrounding its success are staggering. To date, the nonprofit has opened more than 1,500 schools and 14,600 libraries and distributed more than 12 million books for an estimated six million children in 10 countries across Asia and Africa. It has also provided educational scholarships for more than 19,000 girls. Based in San Francisco, the organization has regional offices around the world and a goal of promoting education, gender equality and literacy worldwide. Wood is its board co-chair.

In addition to his work with Room to Read, Wood is a respected author. His latest book, "Creating Room to Read: A Story of Hope in the Battle for Global Literacy," (Viking, 2012) details the makings of the nonprofit and dovetails on his first book, "Leaving Microsoft to Change the World." In the new book, he tells the stories of some of the children who've been helped through Room to Read, including youngsters in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos, whose educational systems are still suffering the aftereffects of war; the Sri Lankan students whose schools and villages were swept away in the tsunami; and the Nepali children who had no books in a language they can read until Room to Read began publishing local-language titles - more than 700 of them.

In his latest book "Wood explains how he is achieving his goal of being 'one of many leaders of a global movement,' and he pays special tribute to Nelson Mandela's understanding of how encouraging 'a profound and deep love' for reading can be a transformative social force," according to Kirkus Reviews. "An absorbing personal account of a remarkable achievement."

Wood serves on the advisory board of the Clinton Global Initiative and he was the first-ever recipient of the Microsoft Alumni of the Year award bestowed by Bill and Melinda Gates. He is a five-time winner of Fast Company Magazine's Social Capitalist Award and a three-time speaker at the Clinton Global Initiative. He was named a Young Global Leader by the World Economic Forum and is a Henry Crown Fellow of the Aspen Institute. Barron's magazine has twice-named him as one of the world's 25 Most Effective Philanthropists. The San Francisco Chronicle described him as the "Andrew Carnegie of the developing world."

Wood teaches at the graduate level at the Wagner School of Public Policy at New York University and the Harvard Graduate School of Education. His degrees include an M.S. in business administration from the University of Colorado, an MBA from the Kellogg School of Northwestern University and three honorary Ph.Ds.

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Media Contact: Meredith Guinness, (203) 254-4000, ext. 2950, mguinness@fairfield.edu

Posted on January 14, 2013

Vol. 45, No. 147


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Sunday, January 27, 2013

Students to visit global destinations over Winter Term

For the first time ever, Elon University is sending students in two programs to Cuba as part of their business and graduate studies.

Photo courtesy of Brianna Ek, taken in Kunming, China, in January 2012.

*****

Hundreds of students will travel the world this month as part of Winter Term 2013 programs in nations such as New Zealand, India, Ghana and Greece.

As of Jan. 2, the university’s Isabella Cannon Global Education Center counted 678 undergraduates taking part in 28 formal Study Abroad programs, with another 70 students enrolled in six Study USA programs around the United States, including groups in Hawaii, Arizona and Kentucky. Students involved in the university's Fellows programs are taking part in their own domestic programs; the Washington Center for Internships and Academic Seminars in the nation's capital is one such location.

The Interactive Media graduate program also has master’s candidates traveling the globe to produce a multimedia project for nonprofit partners in Costa Rica, Portugal – and Cuba.

Photo courtesy of Brianna Ek, taken in Jinghong, China, in January 2012.

For the first time ever, Elon University will have a formal presence in the island nation just 90 miles south of Florida. iMedia students will report and produce material for an organic farm on the outskirts of Havana. The graduate students, led by School of Communications senior lecturer Randy Piland, will be joined by two Elon seniors reporting a project on sustainable farming for the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

Undergraduates enrolled in “Business in the Caribbean,” a program led by professors Kevin O’Mara and Art Cassill in the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business, will also visit Cuba as well as the Cayman Islands.

All programs will have departed for their respective destinations by Jan. 4; students, faculty and staff are expected back to the United States by Jan. 28, with many classes arriving a few days earlier.

“The traveling is exciting to students,” Morrison said, “but what’s really exciting for our office is the learning that happens with these experiences.”

Photo courtesy of Taylor Pewitt, taken in Chivay, Peru.

Parents, classmates and friends can keep up-to-date with program news by following the Winter Term 2013 blog managed by Study Abroad staff: http://blogs.elon.edu/elonstudyabroad/

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by Eric Townsend, Staff Last Updated - 1/3/2013

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Friday, January 25, 2013

Students to visit global destinations over Winter Term

For the first time ever, Elon University is sending students in two programs to Cuba as part of their business and graduate studies.

Photo courtesy of Brianna Ek, taken in Kunming, China, in January 2012.

*****

Hundreds of students will travel the world this month as part of Winter Term 2013 programs in nations such as New Zealand, India, Ghana and Greece.

As of Jan. 2, the university’s Isabella Cannon Global Education Center counted 678 undergraduates taking part in 28 formal Study Abroad programs, with another 70 students enrolled in six Study USA programs around the United States, including groups in Hawaii, Arizona and Kentucky. Students involved in the university's Fellows programs are taking part in their own domestic programs; the Washington Center for Internships and Academic Seminars in the nation's capital is one such location.

The Interactive Media graduate program also has master’s candidates traveling the globe to produce a multimedia project for nonprofit partners in Costa Rica, Portugal – and Cuba.

Photo courtesy of Brianna Ek, taken in Jinghong, China, in January 2012.

For the first time ever, Elon University will have a formal presence in the island nation just 90 miles south of Florida. iMedia students will report and produce material for an organic farm on the outskirts of Havana. The graduate students, led by School of Communications senior lecturer Randy Piland, will be joined by two Elon seniors reporting a project on sustainable farming for the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting.

Undergraduates enrolled in “Business in the Caribbean,” a program led by professors Kevin O’Mara and Art Cassill in the Martha and Spencer Love School of Business, will also visit Cuba as well as the Cayman Islands.

All programs will have departed for their respective destinations by Jan. 4; students, faculty and staff are expected back to the United States by Jan. 28, with many classes arriving a few days earlier.

“The traveling is exciting to students,” Morrison said, “but what’s really exciting for our office is the learning that happens with these experiences.”

Photo courtesy of Taylor Pewitt, taken in Chivay, Peru.

Parents, classmates and friends can keep up-to-date with program news by following the Winter Term 2013 blog managed by Study Abroad staff: http://blogs.elon.edu/elonstudyabroad/

emailEmail Author Your Email *
Message *
by Eric Townsend, Staff Last Updated - 1/3/2013

View the original article here