Al Akhawayn News

Student Houda Lamqaddam Receives Best Social Activism Award

 

Student Houda Lamqaddam (‘13) won the 2013 Best Social Activism Award at the Deutsche Welle Global Media Conference in Bonn, Germany, on June 17-19, 2013. Under the theme of "The Future of Growth: Economic Values and the Media," the sixth installment of the conference gathered distinguished guests such as Avram Noam Chomsky, American political critic; Vandana Shiva, Minister of Foreign Affairs in Germany; and other renowned German political actors.

Houda Lamqaddam attended the conference as a representative of the crew that made the documentary 475:  When Marriage Becomes Punishment, produced by Nadir Bouhmouch with her assistance directing, writing the script, and narrating the story of Amina Filali, a 16-year-old Moroccan girl who, in 2012, committed suicide after she was forced to marry her alleged rapist. 475 refers to Article 475 in the Moroccan Penal Code that makes young girls marry their rapists to save the family’s honor, thus freeing the criminals from all charges. 475, the film, was released online in February 2013.

The Deutsche Welle's jury members honored the work done to promote democracy and human rights through social media.

Earlier this year, Lamqaddam was also nominated for the Morocco Web Awards for her article “Ce n'est pas de Votre Faute.” 

“The film is further evidence of Houda’s commitment to national social issues particularly those relating to the status of women,” said Cherif Bel Fekih, Vice President for Student Affairs.

The Deutshe Welle Global Media Forum is organized in light of the world economic challenges to debate concepts such as energy turnaround, green economies, social justice and environmental responsibility, bringing together experts from politics, business, finance, culture, academia, civil society and the media around more than 50 workshops and podium discussions. (Click here for the source)  

African Digital Libraries Move beyond Embryonic Stage

 

Al Akhawayn University hosted the 3rd International Conference on African Digital Libraries and Archives (ICADLA) under the theme Digital Libraries and Archives in Africa: Changing Lives and Building Communities, on May 30—31, 2013.

ICADLA 2013 constituted a platform for African institutions to examine best practices for the development and sustainability of the digitization of library collections. The conference attracted participants from different countries across the globe including Australia, Egypt, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Spain, Uganda, the US and more. Participants shared initiatives undertaken by the different institutions represented on the preservation and management of digital collections. They also discussed the opportunities for collaboration and partnerships in developing digital libraries and archives in Africa, and they shared expertise in the digital infrastructure and information management, policies and strategies frameworks, and the challenges.

“We expect to build a network of highly motivated and passionate librarians across Africa so that they can lead the advocacy action within Africa to build more digital libraries as this is a weak field in the African continent,” said Misako Ito, Advisor in Communication and Information at UNESCO Office for Algeria, Morocco, Mauritania, and Tunisia. “The conference in Ifrane has succeeded in that as I have seen friendship develop among the participants, collaborative actions and discussions also took place even outside the sessions. The conference was a good initiative to contribute to the global road map for digital libraries at the international level.”

ICADLA is the major African forum focusing on digital libraries and associated technical, practical, organizational, and collaborative issues and is a vehicle for accelerating the preservation of and access to African cultural and heritage materials. ICADLA aims to facilitate the development of skills in the field of digitization, facilitate the sharing of knowledge, mobilize experts to conduct training and support in digitization and coordinate collaborative digitization content and digital data preservation initiatives.  (source, click here)

 

Engaging the Development of Renewable Energies

 

Aimed at promoting the development of renewable energies in the Mediterranean countries, the Mediterranean Institute of Renewable Energies  organized “The First Training Symposium on Renewable Energies in the Mediterranean Region” on May 29-30, 2013, at Al Akhawayn University.

The organization of the conference collaborated closely with the Moroccan Association for Solar and Aeolian Industries  and Al Akhawayn University. Experts in different fields of renewable energy and participants from different countries gathered at this meeting with the goal of creating a network of competencies that would provide a basis for an international education throughout the Mediterranean area. 

“Our university has strategically embarked in the field of renewable energies, both at the level of academic programs and applied research. This event is an excellent example that demonstrates the university’s approach based on effective collaborations between academic institutions and industrials,” said Khalid Sendide, coordinator of the conference and Associate Professor of Chemistry and Program Coordinator in the School of Science and Engineering at Al Akhawayn. 

“We tried, through these two-day workshops, to adopt the state-of-the-art practices in order to identify academic programs and engineer profiles that would satisfy the national and Mediterranean upcoming needs for the flourishing renewable energies industries.”

The two-day conference comprised a series of workshops led by national and international speakers. Participants fielded current inquiries on the competencies and career options of the industry, development on the horizon for various countries of the Mediterranean basin during the years 2015-2020, and brainstormed on the possibility of launching Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees specialized in the Mediterranean field in order to introduce students to this area and its advancements.

Objectives of the meeting included identifying and defining training themes in the field of renewable energy and energy efficiency, liaising with the Tempus project at the University of Paul Sabatier in Toulouse, developing exchanges between professors, and establishing a steering committee that would ensure the implementation of the program and its evaluation.

The Mediterranean Institute of Renewable Energies is an association created in 2009 that unites the professional world of renewable energies around collaborative projects involving public and private actors, training centers, and research laboratories in the 44 countries of the Union for the Mediterranean. The institute addresses all stakeholders and projects related to renewable energy for the countries in the Union for the Mediterranean.

As part of its commitment to support the socioeconomic and industrial development of Morocco, Al Akhawayn University contributes to the national energy strategy through training programs and research and development activities in the field. Several actions have been undertaken by the university and others are planned to be launched in the near future. In addition to research and development projects in solar, wind, and biomass energy, Al Akhawayn University has launched a Master of Science program in Sustainable Energy Management

Al Akhawayn has also taken the initiative of developing the first “green” educational campus in Morocco and establishing different social programs using renewable energies to help Middle Atlas communities. Moreover, Al Akhawayn is involved in several other renewable energy research projects with international organizations and various stakeholders in the fields of concentrated photovoltaic energy, wind energy, electrolysis for hydrogen production, energy efficiency, and biomass.

 

International Computer Science Experts Confer at Al Akhawayn University

 

A scientific and technological meeting gathered 250 participants from all over the world around the premier Computer Science and Engineering Conference in the Middle East and North Africa organized by the Arab Computing Society (ACS)  and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)  on May 27-30, 2013. 

Held every year in an Arab country, the International Conference on Computer Systems and Applications (AICCSA) intends to enhance the participation and contribution of the Arab world in the domain of information technologies. The conference took place this year in the city of Fez during the week and in Ifrane at Al Akhawayn University on May 29.  Present at the one-day conference at Al Akhawayn was President Driss Ouaouicha. The participants joined together around a plenary session and a series of workshops to share theory practice, and knowledge on computer science and information technology.

 

“As imagined by its founders, our campus was created to foster intercultural understanding, to marry tradition and modernity, and to bridge between east and west,” said Driss Ouaouicha, President of Al Akhawayn University at the opening speech. “While we train our students for Morocco, we also teach them global competencies and transformable skills for an international horizon.” 

In general, the topics discussed in AICCSA 2013 included areas such as cloud and distributed computing; networking, sensor networks, and mobile computing; IR, data and knowledge management; BPM and web; services and SOA; data quality and integration; social computing; and more.

The ACS is a non-profit scientific, professional, and educational society whose mission is to advance the theory and practice of information science and technology as well as to enhance the participation and contribution of the Arab world in information technologies and to maximize its benefits.

 

Al Akhawayn Hosts the 6th International Migration and Development Conference

 

Besides two keynote speeches that introduced respectively a theory with application to Moroccan Migration and a new model of key player that applies to networks, the conference enjoyed having inputs from 30 other presentations.  Around 120 people from 16 universities and research centers from Belgium, France, Great Britain, Mexico, Morocco, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, and USA have contributed as speakers, discussants and participants. The topics covered include Labor Markets, Migration and Institutions, Migration and Social Media, Determinants of International Migration, Political Economy of Migration, Return Migration and the Selection of Migrants, Migration and Family besides others. The session on Migration and Development in the MENA region included presentations on Tunisian Migration and Labor Markets, Internationalization of Education and Mobility of Students in the Arab World and Impacts of Migration on two Regions of Algeria with the introduction of a new dataset. 

All the presentations have had innovative features with regard to the theory, the methods, and the data and on the final results. The overall contributions of the two day conference could be summarized as follows:

1.Theory and overall approach: Participants to the conference have had the opportunity of learning about the most current and available theories linking migration and development. Large series of applications have been also introduced in relation to the theories but also in relation to the empirical work presented on series of occasions. As theories are important frameworks for the overall understanding of the migration process, the presentations have also shown the likely causalities between migration and development in series of contexts.  The relationships between economics and other social science components have been implicit in a large number of presentations. 

2.Methodological frameworks for analysis: Participants enjoyed also the diversity of methodological frameworks introduced in each of the presentations. This covered the use of accurate descriptive models, multivariate and regressions analysis, partial and general equilibrium models, household models, labor markets and others. New methods such as those introduced in relation to experimental economics and to the “key player” in social networks have been also provided. Also probabilistic decisions models have been largely mobilized to understand the decisions of mobility. Looking at talents related to football is a presentation that addresses the implications of institutional changes in sports on the final outcomes besides the mobility of players. This has invited the participants to think about new ways thinking about competitions for talents in different fields. 

3.Techniques for data collection and formation of databases: While new methods including experimental ones have been introduced, further attempts to develop new databases from the existing ones have been shared with comparisons related to the enhancement and refinement of raw factual knowledge. These sessions have shown how communities, countries and regions could gain more from ensuring support for further and well refined databases and information. 

4.Empirical investigations: The major gains from these presentations relate to the practical applications and their outcomes in relation to real players and decision makers in a diversity of contexts. Series of countries are covered but local features and specificities appear to be important and could prevent from any misuse of replications to other places and socioeconomic contexts. The inclusions of local features to better capture determinants and causalities have been shown as crucial in the final research outcomes. This implies that further investigations need to be pursued when looking at other places and locations. 

This diversity of dimensions tackled and learnt from the presentations do have real links to what is happening in both current sending and receiving countries but shed light on the prospects taking place in different locations and internationally. Among the major implicit lessons that could be learnt from the experience of this international conference, there are those that concern production, diffusion and implementation of research outcomes besides ensuring sustainability in social research:

1.How social scientists and researchers in developing economies and in the MENA region are encouraged to address more questions related to the links between migration and development. They could pursue and accelerate their investigations to account for the research trends taking place internationally in the domain of migration with its links to growth and development. 

2.How policy makers could support and promote further investigations on the multidimensional aspects of migration and development, as this is becoming an important issue with globalization as well as with ensuring the needs of local populations in different contexts. 

3.Diffusion of research outcomes is central for the enhancement and promotion of decision making at the levels of individuals, families, groups, Governments and international organizations. Different means need to be mobilized to ensure that outcomes from research are shared with different players. 

4.Further openness of researchers and research groups with participation to research networks are likely to enhance research outcomes with their diffusion,

5.Further exposure of students and youngest researchers to new methods and issues related to migration and development is likely to help ensure sustainability of research in social sciences as migration and development have increasing impacts on developing and developed economies. 

Report contributed by

Ahmed Driouchi, participant at the conference, Professor of Economics, Advisor, and Dean of the Institute of Economic Analysis and Prospective Studies (IEAPS) at Al Akhawayn University in Ifrane, Morocco.

Briefly Noted

Christopher Evan Longhurst, Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Al Akhawayn School of Humanities and Social Sciences, published an article entitled “Miḥrāb: Symbol of Unity and Masterpiece of Islamic Art and Architecture” in Lonaard Magazine, an art and archi…