Carina van Leeuwen
Forensic coordinator in the Cold Case team of the police force
Carina van Leeuwen worked as a surgical assistant in several hospitals in the Netherlands and abroad until she joined the Dutch Police in The Hague in 1991. After several years in the uniformed service, she became one of the first female forensic investigators. Since 2006, she works as a forensic coordinator in the Cold Case team of the police force of Amsterdam. Besides advising other investigation teams throughout the country in solving Cold Cases, she took action to identify a large number of unknown dead buried in Amsterdam. That initiative was followed in the rest of the Netherlands.
Carolin Vahar-Matiar
Development Studies
After having focused her Bachelor thesis on development, Carolin became very aware of the shortcomings of advertisement against poverty. She is currently working for NewMotion and volunteering for UNICEF.
Cees Hamelink
Professor of International Communication
As the divides between individuals, countries and groups are getting stronger and stronger across the globe, paths diverge and start to constitutes threats to our very planet. There is a need to heal and reconnect across these gaps, and international institutions responsible for this are now at stake. Cees Hamelink appeals here to our generations to disconnect from these institutions and how they work to invent new solutions, using innovation to create adapted structures.
Cornelia Dinca
Founder of Sustainable Amsterdam
Cornelia Dinca is the founder of Sustainable Amsterdam, which functions as a platform for new initiatives and approaches in the field of sustainability.
Ingeborg van Beek
PR and Communication Consultant
Imagine being diagnosed with an incurable disease. What would you do? Your life will turn upside down and you tend to rush through all the good experiences. Our brain directs what we do, such as walking and talking. But people can completely lose their perception of time. “Time cells” in our brains cause this change, but how does this work?
Kees Klomp
Consultant, Mentor, Entreprenuer
After having been introduced to Buddhist teaching, Kees Klomp decided to quit his job and use his business skills solely to help humanity - not hurt it. A lot of companies try to corporate with respect to human and environment. Kees Klomp goes a step further, and focuses on business that create an increase in wellbeing and happiness. He accompanies purpose giving start-ups, such as Mobile Factory: a start-up that developed a method to transform rubbish to sort of ‘lego’, which can be used to build temporary houses in disaster areas.
Koen Wessels
Education developer, teacher, and writer
When thinking about ways to make an impact on the educational system, Keon Wessels alwyas wondered his role within this system: A teacher? A curricula developer? An educational consultant? But then he thought, why choosing one? Koen Wessels is one of the initiative takers at the Bildung Academie, an educational institution that attempts to foster empathy, imagination and a strong moral sense amongst students.
Musicican, cultural anthropologist, social activist
Conflicts and wars grow as fear is used to propagate hatred. Laura Hassler argues that the divides this way existing between populations and individuals can be overcome using empathy. As a musician, she explains how music builds empathy and how this can be used as a tool to help heals the wound left by war.
Marlies Schijven
Surgery professor, expert at gaming and technology applied to healthcare
Professor Marlies Schijven (born in 1969) researches the field of mHealth, Simulation and Serious Gaming. On the 28 th of October 2013; she was the first surgeon livestreaming an abdominal operation to YouTube directly using GoogleGlass. She is program leader and EU lead researcher of the OR Black Box™ system. She is the Program Chair on e-Health of the Netherlands Federation of University Medical Centres (NFU).
Martin Klein
Medical Neuropsychology Professor
Martin Klein received the Tim & Tom Gullikson Foundation and Society for Neuro-Oncology Award for Excellence in Quality of Life Research in 2001 and the National Brain Tumor Foundation/Tug MgGraw Foundation Caregiver Research Award in 2008. His current research aims at determining the brain mechanisms underlying frequent symptoms (e.g., neurocognitive deficits, epilepsy, fatigue, depression), the prevention of treatment effects on neurocognitive functioning, and on behavioral or pharmaceutical symptom treatment in primary and metastatic brain tumor patients and in oncological patients undergoing neurotoxic treatments affecting brain functioning. Within the European Organization for the Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Martin Klein is responsible for neurocognitive testing as part of the clinical trials initiated by the EORTC Brain Tumor Group.
Peter Knoope
Counter Terrorism Expert
Peter Knoope, expert at the International Centre for Counter-Terrorism, will present us his reasons why young people join political violence. His work with the UN, NATO and the EU, together with his travel experiences to countries where terrorism is imminent, enabled him to grasp the complexities of the problem.
Saga Norrby
Social Science Student at Amsterdam University College
First year student at Amsterdam University College, Saga Norrby is the founder of the website Bitfrbit (www.bitfrbit.se) which outlines the most important choices people can make to make the world thrive. Mainly interested in the environment, she started looking at sustainability from a broader point of view through her interdisciplinary studies in Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Timothy Noël
Assistant Professor
Since 2014, Timothy Noël has been serving as an associate editor of the Journal of Flow Chemistry. Recently, he received a prestigious VIDI grant (NWO) and he coordinates the Marie Skłodowska-Curie ETN program “Photo4Future”. As assistant Professor at Eindhoven University of Technology, where he is currently working on new ways in which science can solve the environmental issues we are facing today... with a leaf.