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| Bridge at Punggol Waterway, Singapore. CREDIT: Joshua Wong |
Deadline: April 30, 2015
The
contest will be conducted via Carnegie Council's online Global Ethics Network,
a social media platform for people across the world who are committed to
exploring the role of ethics in international affairs through joint projects,
ongoing dialogues, and the creation of collaborative multimedia resources.
ESSAY
OR VIDEO TOPIC: What is the future of U.S.-Asia relations or of the United
States and one of the Asian countries listed below? Please use specific
examples or stories to illustrate your points.
CONTEST
REQUIREMENTS:
Each
entry must be a collaboration between a student who is a citizen of the United
States and a student who is a citizen of one of the following: Brunei,
Cambodia, China (including Hong Kong and Macau), East Timor, Indonesia, Japan,
Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, North Korea, Philippines, South Korea,
Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, or Vietnam.
FIND
A PARTNER: If you need help finding a student partner for the contest, post an
inquiry on the Trans-Pacific Contest Matchmaker page, or answer one of the
existing requests.
The
contest is open to undergraduate and graduate students only, and entries must
be in English.
The
entry can be either an essay or a video.
Essays
should be written in op-ed style (not academic, footnoted papers) with a length
of 2,000-3,000 words. Videos should not exceed 10 minutes.
CONTEST
DEADLINE: April 30, 2015.
CONTEST
PRIZE: Contest winners will receive a free trip to New York City in autumn 2015
to participate in Carnegie Council's Fifth Global Ethics Network Annual
Meeting.
HOW
TO ENTER:
- Join the free Global Ethics Network (GEN) website: www.globalethicsnetwork.org.
- Post your essay in the blog section and tag it with #TPC2015; or
- Upload your video here in one of the supported formats and tag it with #TPC2015.
- Please include the full name, school affiliation, and nationality of both collaborators—at the end of the blog post or in the video description—in the following format:
- [Author 1 Full Name]
- [School Affiliation]
- Nationality: [Country Name]
- [Author 2 Full Name]
- [School Affiliation]
- Nationality: [Country Name]
Any
questions? Please contact Jenna Zhang at jzhang@cceia.org.
FOR
OUR OTHER INTERNATIONAL CONTESTS, CLICK HERE.
This contest was made possible by a generous
grant from the Henry Luce Foundation. The Henry Luce Foundation was established
in 1936 by the late Henry R. Luce, co-founder and editor-in-chief of Time Inc.,
to honor his parents who were missionary educators in China. The Foundation
seeks to bring important ideas to the center of American life, strengthen
international understanding, and foster innovation and leadership in academic,
policy, religious, and art communities.
Source: Global Ethics Network

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