Student’s Tea with Mr Sean Hesh

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Tembusu College Student’s Tea

Mr. Sean S. Hesh

7.30pm, Thursday, 30th October 2014

Common Lounge, Only 30 Seats Available!

More About Mr Hesh:

Mr Sean Hesh is currently the Regional Head of Network Management, and is responsible for Citibank’s Issuing and Acquiring relationship with all of the Card Networks. Additionally, he is also the Regional Head of the Merchant Acquiring business for Citibank in Asia Pacific.

Mr Hesh graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science, from the University of California, Berkeley, and a Master’s Degree in International Relations from San Francisco State University.

He has held the positions of CEO and Managing Director of Merchant Solutions Pte. Ltd.; CEO of Wells Fargo Merchant Services; Chief Operating Officer of Cardservice International; Senior Vice President of TASQ Technology; and Vice President and General Manager of Alliances at First Data Corporation, before joining Citibank in 2010.

In his free time, Mr Hesh also enjoys travelling, playing golf or simply chatting over a good drink with his friends.

Highlights:

Come down and hear Mr Hesh share about his past working experiences, provide insights and tips on networking, which kind of alcohol is superior and much more!

Master’s Tea with Minister of Manpower Tan Chuan-Jin

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Tembusu College Master’s Tea

Min. Tan Chuan-Jin

3.30pm, Monday

20th October 2014

Master’s Common Lounge,

Level 3, Residential Block

Refreshments will be served.

Only 30 seats available!

Please sign up at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Mr Tan Chuan-Jin served in the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) for nearly 24 years before retiring in 2011.

When the Indian Ocean Tsunami struck on Boxing Day 2004, Mr.Tan led the SAF’s relief effort to Meulaboh, Aceh in Indonesia. As chairman Executive Committee, Mr. Tan was also responsible for organising the National Day Parade in 2009.

In May 2011, Mr. Tan was elected as one of the Members of Parliament for the Marine Parade Group Representation Constituency and subsequently appointed Minister of State for National Development and Manpower.

On 1 August 2012, Mr. Tan was appointed Acting Minister for Manpower,concurrently Senior Minister of State for National Development. Mr. Tan relinquished his National Development portfolio on 1 September 2013, but he continued to helm the Ministry of Manpower as Acting Minister. He was made full Minister on 1 May 2014.

Photos taken may be used for Tembusu publicity materials

Student’s Tea with Mr Lawrence Low

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Tembusu College Student’s Tea

Mr. Lawrence Low

7-8pm, Tuesday, 21st October 2014, Seminar Room 4

Only 30 Seat Available!

More About Mr Low:

Mr Lawrence Low is currently the Managing Director of Alphatron Asia,

which handles the distribution, system integration for Satellites and broadcast, along with Software Development.

Awarded the ASME Entrepreneur of the Year in 2007 and Enterprise 50 in 2012, he is also previously worked as the Regional Sales Manager for Richardson Electronics in USA.

Mr Low graduated with a Masters of Science (Electronics), and a Diplome d’Engenieur (equivalent of a Master’s in Engineering) from the Universite de Valenciennes in France, and MBA in NUS.

In his free time, Mr Low enjoys playying tennis, video games such as FIFA 14 and Winning Eleven, and spending time with his family.

Highlights:

Come down and hear Mr Low share what engineering is about, how he started his own business and won the ASME Entrepreneur of the Year, his working experience, possible career options as an engineer, beating you at FIFA 14 and much more!

Master’s Tea with Mr Koh Buck Song

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Tembusu College Master’s Tea

Mr Koh Buck Song

3pm, Wednesday

15th October 2014

Master’s Common Lounge,

Level 3, Residential Block

Refreshments will be served.

Only 30 seats available!

Please sign up at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Mr Koh Buck Song is the author and editor of 23 books, including the recently-launched Learning For Life: Singapore’s Investment in Lifelong Learning Since the 1950s. His other books also capture slices of Singapore’s history, including 100 years of electricity and energy policy, 50 years of economic development strategy and 40 years of public housing, in addition to three poetry volumes and several literary anthologies. His book Brand Singapore: How Nation Branding Built Asia’s Leading Global City (2011) was published in China in Chinese in 2012.

Mr Koh holds a master’s degree in public administration from Harvard Kennedy School, and degrees in English from Cambridge and in education from London University . He was Adjunct Associate Professor in leadership at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and Adjunct Faculty in media policy at Singapore Management University. Previously, he was a political and arts editor and regular columnist at The Straits Times.

Photos taken may be used for
Tembusu publicity materials

WIP with Dr. Jolynna Sinanan and Dr. Connor Graham

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Work In Progress Seminar

Celebrity Blogs in Singapore

Dr Jolynna Sinanan & Dr Connor Graham

22nd October 2014, 6pm

Master’s Common Lounge

Register at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

In Recent years there has been a proliferation of self-proclaimed celebrity bloggers in Singapore, from the experienced to the debutant. Many of these blogs are widely read by Singaporeans,provoking the question: why? In previous work we have explored the appeal and influence of these blogs through focusing on aesthetics and content. Now we turn our attention to the audience. Our aim is to uncover the influence and politics of these blogs. What does the nature of this influence tell us about the role of consumption in Singapore society?

WIP with Dr. Jolynna Sinanan

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Works In Progress Seminar

What They Post: Social media as ethnography?

Dr Jolynna Sinanan

16th October 2014, 6pm

Master’s Lounge

Register at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

Social media has provided a huge entry point for ethnography into forms of communication, but it also has grounds to count as participant observation in itself, Can we use this material in way that is similar to move ‘traditional’, ‘offline’ ethnography?

This presentation will introduce a book I am currently working on with Danny Miller called ‘What They Post’, contrasting posting on social media in England and Trinidad. If we compare my work on current social media photographs in Trinidad with Miller’s previous ethnography of Trinidad, we find to a surprising degree this corresponds to the analysis with a dual logic he previously called ‘transcience’ the world of the street and reputation the ‘transcendence’ the values around the home and family.

The claim to ethnography is strengthened by the contrast between these sites.

While there are common genres such as celebrations and baby photos, Trinidadian postings are dominated by topics such a religion and moral homilies on the other hand and an emphasis on style and sexuality on the other, topics that are almost absent in English postings

WIP with Ms. Birgit Buergi

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Work In Progress Seminar

Thai Sci-Fi Comics

Ms Birgit Buergi

30th October 2014, 6pm

Level 1 Common Lounge

Register at dev-tembusu-nus.pantheonsite.io

‘On top of Volcano Olympus, at a height of 26 kilometres (six times higher than Mount Everest), Captain Ariya, unknowingly, is holding Dr Darin’s hand. Dr Yoshi glance at the couple and smiles secretly thinking of the day he took his own lady there’.

This passage is taken from a graphic science fiction novel in the Thai language. It’s part of collaborative sci-art project that embraces the ‘Science, technology and innovation encluturation’ and the ‘Youth-driven innovation’ motto, which the Association of Southeast Asian Nations(ASEAN adopted in 2010. In this talk, I will Show how the power of sci-fi comics can be used to analyze Thailand’s market-oriented research communities and their production of a ‘new breed of scientists and engineers’.

Book Launch of Charles Darwin in Cambridge (Cancelled)

You are cordially invited to the launch of Charles Darwin in Cambridge: The Most Joyful Years by John van Wyhe on 30 September 2014 at 3.30pm – 4.30pm. (Cancelled due to illness)

This book reveals Darwin’s time in Cambridge in unprecedented detail through newly discovered documents. The life of an undergraduate in Darwin’s time couldn’t be more different than it is today. And yet many of the customs and traditions of modern universities date back to this forgotten world of university life.

RSVP to Ms S Veronica: veronica@wspc.com.sg, Tel: +65 64665775 ext 226

Venue:
BookHaven, Utown

Forum Casts Spotlight on Human Rights

(From left) Mr Faustenhammer, Ms Mathi, Prof Koh and Prof Woon examined the universality of human rights at the recent Tembusu Forum

The 12th Tembusu Forum titled “Are Human Rights Truly Universal?” brought to light issues on the interpretation and implementation of human rights, and the effectiveness of existing frameworks in encouraging nations to protect those rights. The Forum on 12 September, organised by Tembusu College, was attended by 250 students.

Members of the panel comprised NUS Faculty of Law David Marshall Professor Walter Woon, who is also Dean of the Singapore Institute of Legal Education; President of MARUAH (Working Group for an Association of South East Asian Nations [ASEAN] Human Rights Mechanism, Singapore) Ms Braema Mathi; and the European Union (EU) Delegation to Singapore’s Head of Political and Press and Information Section Mr Bernhard Faustenhammer. Tembusu Rector Professor Tommy Koh, who is Ambassador-at-Large at the Singapore Ministry of Foreign Affairs, moderated the discussion.

Panel members and Prof Koh debated whether people should exert their rights at any cost, which many Western countries advocate, or whether they should balance it with the responsibility to the community they live in. Another thread linking several points made at the Forum was that even though many would agree with the principle behind the idea of human rights—rights that enable one to live his or her life in dignity, they might not agree with what constitutes a right.

“The problem with human rights is that they’re not black and white. The colour of human rights is not black and white. It’s grey, and that’s the problem, because we have to work out where does black turn to white and that’s terribly difficult,” said Prof Woon.

Mr Faustenhammer said he believed that universality was a core element of human rights. He, however, acknowledged that while this world view was not shared by everyone, it was gradually gaining acceptance in other parts of the world. The culture of human rights advocacy in Europe, the epicentre of the two World Wars, was borne out of persecution and an environment where philosophical thought emerged outside of religion. For this reason, he explained, the evolution of human rights in Europe looks very different from that of other regions of the world.

tembusu-2

About 250 students attended the Forum

There are existing frameworks such as the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights (UNDHR) and Article 7 of the ASEAN Charter that countries can use to implement human rights laws. Many countries, however, find it a challenge to translate these frameworks into concrete laws.

Firstly, there is no accepted central authority on human rights. Some might say that the UN Human Rights Council could play this role, but in Prof Woon’s opinion, the Council is not an accepted final arbiter and it has no mechanism to enforce the UNDHR. Secondly, the desire to uphold the population’s rights has to be weighed against domestic concerns, he added.

Mr Faustenhammer said the EU has an effective mechanism in place—the European Court of Human Rights in France, where individuals, groups or member states can seek redress for infringements against the European Convention on Human Rights.

Ms Mathi, whose advocacy work addresses issues within ASEAN, said governments need to put people’s rights as the main consideration in forming human rights laws in order for them to be effective.

The Tembusu Forum, spearheaded by Prof Koh, aims to raise awareness and engage undergraduates through bringing informed discussions about important global, regional and national issues with distinguished academics, policymakers, diplomats and intellectuals.

 

Source: http://news.nus.edu.sg/highlights/8118-forum-casts-spotlight-on-human-rights

Are Human Rights Truly Universal?

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Audience to be seated by 6:45pm

Register at this link or click on the poster.

PROGRAMME:
6.45pm: Audience to be seated at Tembusu College Multi-purpose Hall
6.50pm: Arrival of speakers at Tembusu College Multi-purpose Hall
7.00pm: Assoc Professor Gregory Clancey, Master of Tembusu College, will introduce the Tembusu Forum
7.05pm: Professor Tommy Koh, Rector of Tembusu College, will introduce the topic and speakers
7.15pm: Speaker1
7.30pm: Speaker2
7.45pm: Speaker3
8.00pm: Question & Answer session with students
9.00pm: End of forum

Brief Biography of Speakers:

Mr. Bernhard N. Faustenhammer joined the Delegation of the European Union to Singapore in October 2011 as the Head of the Political, Press and Information Section.

Mr. Faustenhammer has been an Austrian diplomat since 1998. In the course of his career, he served in political, economic and legal departments at the Federal Ministry for Foreign Affairs in Vienna, including as Deputy Director for Austrians living abroad (2009-2011).

His previous postings abroad include assignments to the Austrian embassies to Finland and France, as well as to the Austrian Permanent Mission to the United Nations in New York. From 2004 to 2008, Mr. Faustenhammer was the Deputy Consul General of Austria to the Western United States, based in Los Angeles.

Mr. Faustenhammer was educated in Geneva, Vienna, Madrid and Bruges. He holds a Master of Laws of the University of Vienna and a Diploma in Higher International Studies (S.E.I., Madrid).

Miss Braema Mathi is an advocate for social justice. This has led her to become very involved in issues related to women, migrants and HIV. She has led AWARE, founded and led Transient Workers Count Too and is today the President of the regional group, MARUAH (Singapore Working Group for ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism). She is also the Singapore focal Point for MARUAH.

Miss Mathi is also the Regional President (Southeast Asia and Pacific) of the International Council of Social Welfare and is currently the Director (Hon.) of Research and Advocacy at AWARE.

Miss Mathi has worked as a teacher, a journalist for The Straits Times and as a researcher with the Institute of South East Asian Studies (ISEAS) prior to becoming a consultant on social issues. She was also a Nominated Member of Parliament.

Professor Walter Woon is currently David Marshall Professor at the Law Faculty, National University of Singapore. He is concurrently Dean of the Singapore Institute of Legal Education and Deputy Chairman of the Centre for International Law, National University of Singapore. He is also the President of the Society for International Law Singapore (SILS); an Executive Committee Member of the Asian Society of International Law (Asian SIL); President of the Goethe Institute Society of Singapore; and an Honorary Fellow of the Singapore Institute of Directors (SID). He was a Nominated Member of Parliament (1992 to 1996), during which time he was instrumental in the passage of the Maintenance of Parents Act, which he introduced as a private members bill. From 1995 to 1997 he was Legal Adviser to the President and Council of Presidential Advisers. Between 1998 and 2006 he was Singapore’s ambassador to Germany, Greece, the European Communities, the European Union, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg and the Holy See.

From 2006 to 2008 he served as Solicitor-General, and subsequently became Attorney-General from 2008 to 2010. He has also served as a member of the board of directors of the Monetary Authority of Singapore, Judge Advocate-General and member of the Presidential Council for Minority Rights. He was a director of two listed companies between 1989 and 2001. He is also the author of three four novels: The Advocates Devil (2002), The Devil to Pay (2005), The Devils Circle (2011) and The Devil and the Deep Blue Sea (2014).