The event will take place on Monday, November 25 10:00 AM to 1:00 PM.
This workshop is the final session of the Fall 2024 Columbia Law School training series.
This workshop will take place in Hybrid format, in person from UNHQ for all those with a valid UN ID and online for those without a UN ID.
UNITAR will not issue UN ID's for the participants.
The road traffic-related deaths and injuries have unparalleled health and socio-economic implications on society, as a whole. A staggering 1.35 million people die on the world’s roads every single year and up to 50 million more are left injured or disabled. Globally, over 500 children under the age of 18 are killed on the road each day.
How to create value? What is the organization’s strategy? How to involve the team in this goal? An effective leader must go beyond the immediate view of everyday life and have an integrated view of the fundamentals of management, mastering the language of various areas and promoting dialogue and discussion.
The subject of international law brings a lot of concepts to mind, from war and settlement of disputes between States, protection of the environment, responsibilities and obligations, to human rights protection between citizens, refugees of different States and corporations.
The world’s nurses have been enduring ceaseless challenges from the overwhelmed health care system—resulting in burn-out. This was further exacerbated by the most recent COVID-19 pandemic that strained the front-line nurses worldwide. Even as nurses have been appreciated and widely trusted for this service—their public voices are still rarely heard.
Cyber Intelligence will allow us, through the use of methodology traditionally used in police and military intelligence, to differentiate the different phases and stages through which an input, data, or information must pass to become intelligence that can fulfill the function of reducing uncertainty for the decision-maker, by allowing us to detect possible threats and challenges, which can be
The road traffic-related deaths and injuries have unparalleled health and socio-economic implications on society, as a whole. A staggering 1.35 million people die on the world’s roads every single year and up to 50 million more are left injured or disabled. Globally, over 500 children under the age of 18 are killed on the road each day.
According to the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), global temperature could increase by up to 2.9°C by the end of this century unless immediate and substantial reductions in greenhouse gas emissions are undertaken. Scientific consensus, as outlined in the Paris Agreement, underscores the need to limit warming to no more than 1.5°C to avert the most severe impacts of climate change.