FulbrightWarsaw
x = independently organized TED event

Theme: Be Bold. Never Regular

This event occurred on
January 29, 2019
Warsaw, Mazowieckie
Poland

H. Murray once said: “Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, begin it. Boldness has genius, power, and magic in it”.

We hope to inspire the audience to stand out from the crowd. One has to be able to think outside the box in order to break barriers and achieve outstanding results. Therefore, we want to acknowledge those who dare to be bold. It’s thanks to people like this that the world is a better and friendlier place.

Our speakers have been chosen from the network of Fulbright Program alumni and current grantees. We want to show the world all the wonderful things they have accomplished as researchers and in their private life, and how exceptional they are. Not only are they excellent in their academic fields, but they also have courage and curiosity about the world. They brought their talents and culture to another culture during their scholarship abroad.

Creating an impact on the world requires bravery, whether you research neurons, build important museums, or write children’s books. We would like to showcase Fulbrighters representing different disciplines who have achievements in various areas. Some of our speakers will talk about their research (including in the fields of life sciences, engineering, and social sciences), while others will present on achievements outside their academic careers, such as supporting the work of others–many of our alumni are mentors. Some are the authors of mentoring programs, some run leadership programs, and others are leaders of human rights or animal rights movements.

Kopernik Science Centre
Wybrzeże Kościuszkowskie 20
Warsaw, Mazowieckie, 00-390
Poland
Event type:
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Speakers

Speakers may not be confirmed. Check event website for more information.

BASTARDA TRIO

Warsaw-based musicians with close ties to Lado ABC independent music scene are playing new and original interpretation of medieval music by Petrus Wilhelmi de Grudencz (1392 – c.1480). They improvise, use „viola bastarda” technique and get to the early music material in modern and very personal way. Clarinet, cello and contrabass clarinet gives us unique, warm sound and texture for medieval melodies and songs. Petrus works found in German, Polish and Czech manuscripts scattered throughout Europe, was completely unknown until very recently. Most of his compositions appeared anonymously, as was common in the Middle Ages. In the 1970s, however, Jaromír Černý, who was studying 15th-century Czech manuscripts, was struck by both the words and music of certain part-songs and motets. All these texts were acrostics, with the initial letters of consecutive words invariably forming the composers name. Petrus Wihelmi’s works are of two genres, songs and motets, differing in the way the words are set and in contrapuntal technique. The songs, usually in two parts, occasionally in three, are often very concise, with a tendency to symmetry and repetition of rhythmic patterns.

Cezary Wójcik

Professor of finance and leadership, the founder of the Center for Leadership, former visiting scholar at Harvard, Berkeley, Melbourne, Glasgow and other universities. Studied at Harvard University where he completed, among other things, a Master Class for Leadership Educators, and at other leading schools, such as IESE Business School and HEC Paris. In 2011, received a Letter of Achievement in recognition of his dedication to leadership development from Harvard Kennedy School Government. In the past served as: Member of Macroeconomic Council to the Minister of Finance, Advisor to the Governor of the National Bank of Poland (NBP), Director of Bureau of Integration with the Euro Area at the NBP, Director of the Institute of Economics of the Polish Academy of Sciences. Worked at three central banks: ECB, Austrian National Bank and NBP. In 2016, ranked 1. as the best candidate for the Monetary Policy Council in Poland. In the same year, he was the candidate of the opposition for this position. In 2009, named one of the first six best candidates. In 2009, before he was 35, he was appointed professor of economics, one of the youngest in Poland. Author of a number of academic papers and nine books published in the USA, the UK, Germany, Austria, Estonia and Hungary. His work has been published and quoted in: The Guardian, Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, Die Zeit, Handelsblatt. In a study for 2001–2006, he topped the list of most quoted Polish economists in world academic journals. The SSRN database – the largest global electronic repository of academic papers in social sciences – classifies him in the top 5% of academics in the world.

Dominik Good

Dominik Good is a singer and songwriter, laureate of TopMinds program for students run jointly by the Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission and Top 500 Innovators. Since the beginning of his artistic activity, Dominik has delved into feelings, inviting listeners to experience them with him. He says that singing defines his view of the world and sensitivity to what is around him, he believes that it is all about honesty, truth, understanding people and oneself. The artist regularly gives concerts and works on his own songs filled with emotions and motivation. Last year he sang at an International Festival of Singing Doctors, being also a successful student of Pomeranian Medical University. Apart from singing, his passions include music therapy, physical therapy and sports, especially calisthenics. He considers the repertoire of Tom Odell, Jessie Ware, Ed Sheeran and Czesław Niemen as the closest to his heart.

Dzhuliyan Vasilev

Dzhuliyan Vasilev is a biomedical engineer with specific interest in merging the fields of engineering, medicine, and entrepreneurship. He was born in Bulgaria and later immigrated to St. Louis, Missouri with his family at the age of six. In May 2017, Vasilev graduated from Saint Louis University with a Bachelor of Science in Biomedical Engineering and emphasis in Engineering Mathematics. While at Saint Louis University, he spent four years conducting research in the spheres of soft tissue engineering and microfluidics, in addition to founding the Engineering Health Collaborative, an organization focused on the development of low-cost medical devices for medically underserved countries. He was also a pre-medical fellow with the Atlantis Project in Athens, Greece during summer 2016, where he observed clinicians in the private and public hospital setting. Currently, Vasilev is working on a new entrepreneurial venture to develop a novel preventative medical device for catheter-associated urinary tract infections. Vasilev was a Fulbright English Teaching Assistant at the Medical University of Warsaw during the 2017-2018 grant period. During this time he also took part in the Fulbright Diversity Initiative, working to address the complex and international dimensions of the diversity debates within Fulbright, and aiming at practical results for the European Fulbright Commissions. Further, he collaborated with Fulbridge and Fulbright Prism to promote diversity and exchange of ideas within the Fulbright Program globally. Currently, he is continuing his role as a lecturer at the Medical University of Warsaw. https://www.instagram.com/ignit3th3spark/ Dzhuliyan is a '18 Fulbright alumnus. He spent his Fulbright grant at the Medical University in Warsaw (Warszawski Uniwersytet Medyczny).

Hanna Mamzer

Hanna Mamzer is a psychologist and sociologist specializing in in sociology of culture and contemporary civilizations, with a focus on issues of identity and multiculturalism. Her recent research interests moved towards posthumanism. Dr. Mamzer is associate professor at the Adam Mickiewicz University in Poznan, she has also experience in lecturing abroad, including Europe, Africa, Asia, Central America and United States. She also provides workshops and trainings in soft skills development. Recipient of many distinguished awards, including Fulbright scholarship, Central European University scholarship, British Council scholarship and European University Institute scholarship. Dr. Mamzer is a member of Local Ethical Committee for Experiments on Animals and holds position of witness expert for Polish courts in animal welfare as well. Hanna is a '05 Fulbright alumna. She was a Fulbright Visiting Scholar at the Rutgers University.

Kacper Gradoń

Kacper Gradoń is an Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law at the University of Warsaw and the Director of the University of Warsaw Centre for Forensic Sciences. He also holds the position of the Honorary Senior Research Associate at the Department of Security and Crime Science at the University College London, and is the Faculty Affiliate of the Center for the Study and the Prevention of Violence at the University of Colorado Boulder. Kacper has spoken at over 200 academic and police conferences on every continent but Antarctica (and he hopes to get there, too!). He has held Visiting Professor positions in the USA, UK, and Canada, and has over 8 years of experience living and working abroad. Kacper was the UoW primary investigator of the European Commission FP7 project PRIME dealing with the radicalization, violent extremism, and lone-actor terrorism. He is the recipient of numerous awards, grants, and scholarships. He has completed several law-enforcement training sessions and professional development courses and has worked directly with police forces worldwide for twenty years. His main research area during the first ten years of his academic career was serial and mass homicide. Since then, he's focused primarily on the study of terrorism and cyber-enabled crimes. He develops the research agenda dealing with the so-called "future crimes", where the Internet (and associated information technologies) are becoming the new battlefield for the law enforcement and criminals. He is an avid free-ride skier, long-distance runner, and mountain climber, as well as a 60s/70s vinyl LP collector. Kacper is the 2018 Fulbright Senior Award alumnus (University of Colorado Boulder).

Karolina Sanchewska

Karolina Sanchewska is a Polish-American botanist, singer, and artist. Although she was born in Poland, Karolina grew up in Florida, eventually working as a florist, a horticulturist at Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden, and a professional singer. After getting her B.S. in Natural Resource Conservation with a focus in Botany from the University of Florida, Karolina was fortunate enough to be awarded a Fulbright grant to research epixylic (only growing on deadwood) moss species in Poland. In addition to her research, Karolina started the ‘Terrarium Project’ as a way to spread awareness of mosses and to help cultivate an appreciation for nature in Poland’s younger generation. With her Fulbright now over, Karolina and her husband Gabriel have decided to stay in Poland and are happily living in Krakow.

Krystyna Malińska

Krystyna Malińska is a researcher and academic lecturer at the Faculty of Infrastructure and Environment at Częstochowa University of Technology. Her work focuses on research in the field of environmental engineering, R&D project management, intellectual property rights and the commercialization of scientific results. Through teaching courses and performing research, she tries to encourage students to search for their own person passion and find their own career path. This is also the mission of the TopMinds training and mentoring program for students, which she coordinates together with the alumni from the Top 500 Innovators and Fulbright programs. She is proud that she can contribute to bridging the gap between academia and industry through research, development, and outreach. She pursues this goal by executing her own research projects, educating students, and promoting the principles of sustainable development and circular economy, but also through her work in consulting and shaping regulations, policies, and funding programs for research, development and innovations, and by helping research funding agencies to select projects that would bring the highest value to society and the economy.

Leszek Kaczmarek

Leszek Kaczmarek is a professor and head of the Laboratory of Neurobiology at the Nencki Institute, Warsaw; Poland. His research aims at understanding the brain-mind connection. He believes that it is possible to localize specific mind functions into the brain and then reveal their molecular and cellular underpinnings. The window to understand mind is learning and memory that can be successfully studied in experimental animals. At the molecular and cellular levels, phenomenon named synaptic plasticity appears to provide plausible explanation for those phenomena. Over the last 30 years his lab identified a synaptic molecule that is produced and released in response to enhanced neuronal activity to play a paramount role in the synaptic plasticity, learning and memory as well as in such neuropsychiatric disorders in humans as epilepsy, alcohol addiction, schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. Lab webpage: http://neurogene.nencki.gov.pl

Małgorzata Bonikowska

Małgorzata Bonikowska is a political scientist and EU expert, media commentator in international affairs, President of the Centre for International Relations (www.csm.org.pl)--a leading Polish independent think tank in foreign affairs--and co-founder of the THINKTANK Centre (www.think-tank.pl), as well as the publisher of “THINKTANK” journal. Dr. Bonikowska specializes in European Studies and international affairs. She was born in Poland, where she studied European History and political and social sciences. Graduated from Warsaw University, State Academy of Arts (history of culture) and University of Sorbonne in Paris, completed doctoral programs at the Postgraduate School of Social Sciences in the Polish Academy of Sciences and at the International Postgraduate School of Historical Sciences in the San Marino Republic. In 1996-97 she was a visiting scholar at Political Sciences Department and School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA) of Columbia University in New York under the umbrella of the Fulbright Program. Dr Bonikowska started professional carrier in 1989 as representative of an Italian company to Poland. After completing MA and post graduate studies, worked as editor in current affairs department of the Polish Public Television (1995-1998). After having defended a PhD thesis, moved to the Ministry of European Integration as Head of the European Information Centre as well as Adviser to the Minister (1998-2001) coordinating the network of the EU information centers in the country. In 2001-2007 dr Bonikowska worked for the European Commission as expert and Director of the EU Information and Communication Program – first in Poland and then in Bulgaria. In 2007-2017 she was senior advisor at the Centre for Human Resources Development under the Ministry of Labor and Social Policy. She was also consultant and advisor to the sever Ministers (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Ministry of Economy, Ministry of Regional Development, Ministry of Education and Ministry of Health). Since PhD, dr Bonikowska has been continuing academic career as associate professor, researcher, tutor and manager at public and private universities, among others as Deputy Rector of Warsaw School of Management and Marketing (2002-2003) and Rector of Enterprise Academy in Warsaw (2003-2006). Dr Bonikowska has been editor and supervisor of over 60 publications (books, brochures, leaflets, fact sheets, CDs), author of over 150 articles and co-author of 3 books.

Marcin Waligóra

Marcin Waligóra is a bioethicist specializing in the ethics and policy of biomedical research using human beings. Currently he works on methods and regulations of clinical trials with children. He is an Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and Bioethics at Jagiellonian University Medical College in Krakow, where he directs the REMEDY (Research Ethics in Medicine Study Group). Marcin spent the last academic year at the Harvard Medical School Center for Bioethics as a Fulbright Scholar. More about Marcin’s year at Harvard can be found here: http://bioethics.hms.harvard.edu/news/connecting-research-and-democracy Twitter: m_waligora

Monika Płatek

Monika Płatek is a professor and the head of the Criminology Department at the Institute of Penal Law, Faculty of Law and Administration at the University of Warsaw. In 1992 she received the Fulbright scholarship for the years 1992-1994. It changed her life. It was almost by an accident that she got a chance to get acquainted with Street Law clinic, which became her passion. She introduced that clinic first at her home institution, and next all over the former Soviet Union and other places. Street Law was an incentive to create the Polish Association for Legal Education (PSEP). Combining academic work with practice in non-governmental organization helps people learn how to be sensitive so they can react when faced with discrimination and injustice. After all this work, it was only logical for Monika to accept an invitation to teach gender jurisprudence at Gender Studies at the Polish Academy of Sciences. There she served as the Plenipotentiary of Polish Ombudsman, representing Victims' Rights under Ombudsman Prof. Andrzej Zoll and as an adviser to Prime Minister Plenipotentiary of Equal Rights. Monika Płatek is also the Member of International Advisory Board of “The British Journal of Criminology” and “Social & Legal Studies.” She was awarded in 2014 the International Tolerance prize for fighting homophobia and the Equality prize for her work in the field of gender equality. Monika is a ‘93 and ‘94 Fulbright alumna. She was a Fulbright Visiting Scholar at the University of Illinois in Chicago.

Monika M. Kaczmarek

Institute of Animal Reproduction and Food Research, Polish Academy of Sciences Monika M. Kaczmarek is a professor at the Department of Hormonal Action Mechanisms in the Institute of Animal Reproduction and Food Research, Polish Academy of Science in Olsztyn, where she also leads Molecular Biology Core Facility. Her research interests are wide, but at the very most related to biology of reproduction, which for almost a decade have been focused on untangling the role of non-coding RNAs in embryo-maternal dialog leading to successful pregnancy. In 2009-10 she visited Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge under the umbrella of the Fulbright Program. Since then her interests evolved towards understanding the mechanisms of nutritional programming of reproductive performance over generations. Since early stages of her scientific career she acknowledges the fundamental role of international research cooperation in accelerating joint progress of global science. Monika is strongly committed to promoting new generations of researchers. She is a mentor in the TopMinds training and mentoring Program for young scientists. She has an extensive track record of lectures on the topics related to reproduction and endocrinology delivered both in-house and outside her host Institute, e.g., at the Warsaw University of Life Science and the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, as well as outside the academia. Monika is dedicated to translating her research findings to the society and actively engages in science celebration events such as the European Researchers’ Night. She was awarded several scientific fellowships and research grants and has provided a broad range of services to the scientific community as well as governmental and professional organizations. In the past she was a member of The Polish Young Academy and Council of the National Congress of Science. In 2017 she joined Board of Directors of the Polish-U.S. Fulbright Commission. She loves to travel and modern dance performances. Her life motto is “Go beyond your limits on an everyday basis”.

Paweł Frelik

Paweł Frelik is an Associate Professor in the American Studies Center at the University of Warsaw, where he also leads the Speculative Texts and Media Research Group. His research and teaching interests include science fiction, video games, and unpopular culture. He has published widely in these fields, serves on the boards of Science Fiction Studies, Extrapolation, and Journal of Gaming and Virtual Worlds, and is the co-editor of the New Dimensions in Science Fiction book series (University of Wales Press). He has also lectured widely on these topics outside academia. He’s talked about video games in California, short films in Florida, and the architecture of cinematic spaceships at the British Film Institute in London. He currently serves as the Science Fiction Division Head of the International Association for the Fantastic in the Arts. In the past he was President of the Science Fiction Research Association, the first in the organization's history from outside North America, and Vice President of the European Association for American Studies. He is also the first non-anglophone recipient of the Thomas D. Clareson Award for Distinguished Service in the field of science fiction studies. He also has worked several parallel careers throughout the past twenty-five years. He’s worked as a stage manager in an Edinburgh theater; written lyrics for the premiere Polish metal band Vader; and has authored over 1,500 reviews and articles for a dozen music and cultural newspapers and magazines. He’s also translated, among other texts, Harry Matthews’ postmodern fiction into Polish and the biography of Behemoth (a Polish metal band) into English. He loves the Mojave. Twitter: @Nomad93

Organizing team

Justyna
Janiszewska

Warszawa, Poland
Organizer

shaz
akram

Washington, DC, United States
Co-organizer