Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Y2Y Global Youth Conference 2008 on Thursday, October 23 in Preston Auditorium

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This year's conference ? Empowering a Generation: Developing Skills and
Capacities in Youth ? emphasizes the urgency to focus on and invest in the
needs of young people the world over. A holistic approach to youth
development is necessary to address the growing educational and employment
needs of youth. This year's conference aims to highlight the importance of
this approach by promoting a dialogue among various stakeholders on how to
equip youth with the adequate tools and competencies that will enable them
to earn a dignified livelihood while positively impacting their communities.

The conference will convene practitioners, experts, academia and
organizations from around the world and facilitate the exchange of lessons
learned, formulation of new ideas and models, and the creation of symbiotic
relationships with the common goal of empowering the world's youth. The
conference sessions will feature organizations from Asia, Africa, Europe,
the Americas, and the Middle East. Representatives from these organizations
will present their key projects and engage in discussions on the challenges,
constraints and successes experienced during the implementation and
evaluation of their work.

Registration is only open for Bank staff who can attend the full program.
Staff who are not able to commit all day are welcome to stop by the Preston
auditorium for individual sessions, if space is available.

Conference registration is free. For registration, agenda and more details
visit: www.worldbank.org/y2ycommunity
Email youthcommunity@worldbank.org if you have specific questions.
|------------------+-------------------------------------------------------|
| | |
| (Embedded image | The Global Youth Conference is presented by the |
| moved to file: | Youth-to-Youth Community (Y2Y) of the World Bank. Y2Y |
| pic18397.jpg) | is a community of young staff within the World Bank |
| | striving to be young leaders for change. Y2Y's |
| | mission is to engage and empower youth in development |
| | to impact efforts to achieve a world free of poverty. |
| | |
| | The conference is one of Y2Y's main products and is |
| | organized by an enthusiastic group of Y2Y volunteers. |
| | In previous years, the conference has attracted |
| | audiences of more than 300 individuals from around |
| | the world. The conference is part of the United |
| | Nations Week celebrations. Every year, UNA-NCA |
| | (United Nations Association of the National Capital |
| | Area) commemorates the day the Charter of the United |
| | Nations went into effect (October 24 th , 1945) by |
| | organizing a program of events with several partners |
| | in the capitol area. Y2Y is proud to collaborate with |
| | UNA-NCA and host the Global Youth Conference as part |
| | of these events. |
| | |
|------------------+-------------------------------------------------------|


|--------------------+-----------------------------------------------------|
| | |
| (Embedded image | The InfoShop is the public information center of |
| moved to file: | the World Bank and serves as a forum for |
| pic31418.jpg) | substantial debate on international development. |
| | Our extensive events program consists of more than |
| | 250 events over the past two years and has hosted |
| | many internationally recognized speakers including |
| | Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey Sachs, |
| | Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, |
| | Senator Hagel, and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop |
| | functions as the only publicly accessible space at |
| | headquarters and provides internal and external |
| | audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the |
| | World Bank, international organizations, and other |
| | publishers on development issues. |
| | For more information, visit |
| | www.worldbank.org/infoshop |
| | For comments about the events program, visit |
| | InfoShop. |
| | |
|--------------------+-----------------------------------------------------|

Monday, October 13, 2008

REMINDER: "Can Russia Compete" launched on Wednesday, October 15 at 3:00 PM in J1-050

(Embedded image moved to file: pic01763.jpg)
PRESENTING EDITORS
Raj Desai
Nonresident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution and
Associate Professor of International Development, Georgetown
University School of Foreign Service
For the past eight years, Mr. Desai has taught courses on
comparative and international political economy at Georgetown
University. His work focuses on problems of economic reform,
poverty, and international development. Previously, Mr. Desai was a
member of the core team for the World Bank's World Development
Report team in 2003-2004. From 1996 to 1999, he was as a private
sector development specialist at the World Bank, where he worked on
the privatization and restructuring of public enterprises in Eastern
Europe and the former Soviet Union, and on the recovery of financial
systems following economic crises in East Asia and Latin America.

Itzhak Goldberg
Policy and Strategy Advisor, Private and Financial Sector Unit,
Europe and Central Asia Region, World Bank
Mr. Goldberg has been with the World Bank since 1990, mostly in the
ECA region in different departments. He joined the Private and
Financial Sector Unit of ECA in 1997. He has been in charge of
private sector development programs in various countries in the
region (Azerbaijan, Armenia, Romania, Turkmenistanand Uzbekistan)
and he was pivotal in the design and implementation of the
Privatization Program of the Government of Serbia.

DISCUSSANTS
Mark Dutz
Senior Economist, Private and Financial Sector Unit, South Asia
Region, World Bank
Mr. Dutz works in the World Bank?s South Asia Poverty Reduction,
Economic Management, Finance and Private Sector Development
Department. His responsibilities include helping partner governments
spur competition, entrepreneurship and competitiveness, enhance the
environment for technology development and innovation, enable access
to finance and other essential business services, and more broadly
assist in facilitating productivity growth and job creation. As part
of recent work on India, he is lead author and editor of the book
Unleashing India?s Innovation: Toward Sustainable and Inclusive
Growth(2007). Mr. Dutz previously worked as Sr. Advisor to the State
Minister of Economy on competitiveness and infrastructure issues in
Ankara, Turkey; and in the Office of the Chief Economist, EBRD.

Anders Åslund
Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics
Mr. Åslund has been a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute since
2006. He is also an adjunct professor at GeorgetownUniversity. He
examines the economies of Russia, Ukraine, and Eastern Europe, as
well as focuses on the broader implications of economic transition.
He worked at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace from
1994 to 2005, first as a senior associate and then from 2003 as
director of the Russian and Eurasian Program. He also worked at the
Brookings Institution and the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian
Studies. Mr. Åslund served as an economic adviser to the governments
of Russia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan. He is the author of eight books,
including Russia's Capitalist Revolution: Why Market Reform
Succeeded and Democracy Failed (2007) and How Capitalism Was Built:
The Transformation of Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and
Central Asia (Cambridge University Press, 2007).

MODERATOR
Fernando Montes-Negret
Director, Private and Financial Sector Unit, Europe and Central
Asia, World Bank
Mr. Montes-Negret, a Colombian national, is the Sector Director of
ECSPF in charge of defining and implementing the Bank?s strategy for
the development of the financial and private sectors of the client
countries in the ECA Region. Mr. Montes-Negret joined the Bank in
October 1984 as an Economist in the Latin America and Caribbean's
Industrial Development and Finance Division 2, working in Chile
(during the 1984-85 banking crisis), Costa Rica and Argentina. After
a three-year break in service, serving as Deputy Governor of the
Banco de la Republica (Colombia?s Central Bank), he returned to the
Bank in June 1989 and held various positions as Sr.
Economist--working in the East Asia Region (as Country Economist for
China), Europe and Central Asia Region and the Financial Sector
Development Department.

________________________________________________________________________________________________________?
About The InfoShop
The InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
serves as a forum for substantial debate on international
development. Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
events over the past two years and has hosted many internationally
recognized speakers including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
Sachs, Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, Senator Hagel,
and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop functions as the only publicly
accessible space at headquarters and provides internal and external
audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the World Bank,
international organizations, and other publishers on development
issues.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/infoshop
For comments about the events program, visit InfoShop.

REMINDER: "Can Russia Compete" launched on Wednesday, October 15 at 3:00 PM in J1-050

(Embedded image moved to file: pic09010.jpg)

Coffee and cookies will be served


PRESENTING EDITORS
Raj Desai
Nonresident Senior Fellow, Brookings Institution and
Associate Professor of International Development,
GeorgetownUniversitySchoolof Foreign Service
For the past eight years, Mr. Desai has taught courses on
comparative and international political economy at Georgetown
University. His work focuses on problems of economic reform,
poverty, and international development. Previously, Mr. Desai was a
member of the core team for the World Bank's World Development
Report team in 2003-2004. From 1996 to 1999, he was as a private
sector development specialist at the World Bank, where he worked on
the privatization and restructuring of public enterprises in Eastern
Europe and the former Soviet Union, and on the recovery of financial
systems following economic crises in East Asia and Latin America.

Itzhak Goldberg
Policy and Strategy Advisor, Private and Financial Sector Unit,
Europe and Central Asia Region, World Bank
Mr. Goldberg has been with the World Bank since 1990, mostly in the
ECA region in different departments. He joined the Private and
Financial Sector Unit of ECA in 1997. He has been in charge of
private sector development programs in various countries in the
region (Azerbaijan, Armenia, Romania, Turkmenistanand Uzbekistan)
and he was pivotal in the design and implementation of the
Privatization Program of the Government of Serbia.

DISCUSSANTS
Mark Dutz
Senior Economist, Private and Financial Sector Unit, South Asia
Region, World Bank
Mr. Dutz works in the World Bank?s South Asia Poverty Reduction,
Economic Management, Finance and Private Sector Development
Department. His responsibilities include helping partner governments
spur competition, entrepreneurship and competitiveness, enhance the
environment for technology development and innovation, enable access
to finance and other essential business services, and more broadly
assist in facilitating productivity growth and job creation. As part
of recent work on India, he is lead author and editor of the book
Unleashing India?s Innovation: Toward Sustainable and Inclusive
Growth(2007). Mr. Dutz previously worked as Sr. Advisor to the State
Minister of Economy on competitiveness and infrastructure issues in
Ankara, Turkey; and in the Office of the Chief Economist, EBRD.

Anders Åslund
Senior Fellow, Peterson Institute for International Economics
Mr. Åslund has been a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute since
2006. He is also an adjunct professor at GeorgetownUniversity. He
examines the economies of Russia, Ukraine, and Eastern Europe, as
well as focuses on the broader implications of economic transition.
He worked at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace from
1994 to 2005, first as a senior associate and then from 2003 as
director of the Russian and Eurasian Program. He also worked at the
Brookings Institution and the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian
Studies. Mr. Åslund served as an economic adviser to the governments
of Russia, Ukraine, and Kyrgyzstan. He is the author of eight books,
including Russia's Capitalist Revolution: Why Market Reform
Succeeded and Democracy Failed (2007) and How Capitalism Was Built:
The Transformation of Central and Eastern Europe, Russia, and
Central Asia (Cambridge University Press, 2007).

MODERATOR
Fernando Montes-Negret
Director, Private and Financial Sector Unit, Europe and Central
Asia, World Bank
Mr. Montes-Negret, a Colombian national, is the Sector Director of
ECSPF in charge of defining and implementing the Bank?s strategy for
the development of the financial and private sectors of the client
countries in the ECA Region. Mr. Montes-Negret joined the Bank in
October 1984 as an Economist in the Latin America and Caribbean's
Industrial Development and Finance Division 2, working in Chile
(during the 1984-85 banking crisis), Costa Rica and Argentina. After
a three-year break in service, serving as Deputy Governor of the
Banco de la Republica (Colombia?s Central Bank), he returned to the
Bank in June 1989 and held various positions as Sr.
Economist--working in the East Asia Region (as Country Economist for
China), Europe and Central Asia Region and the Financial Sector
Development Department.

________________________________________________________________________________________________________?
About The InfoShop
The InfoShop is the public information center of the World Bank and
serves as a forum for substantial debate on international
development. Our extensive events program consists of more than 250
events over the past two years and has hosted many internationally
recognized speakers including Queen Noor, Francis Fukuyama, Jeffrey
Sachs, Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Thomas Friedman, Senator Hagel,
and Carly Fiorina. The InfoShop functions as the only publicly
accessible space at headquarters and provides internal and external
audiences with over 10,000 titles published by the World Bank,
international organizations, and other publishers on development
issues.
For more information, visit www.worldbank.org/infoshop
For comments about the events program, visit InfoShop.