Join guest speaker Dr. Cornelius Adebahr, associate fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP) and adjunct faculty at the Hertie School, for a Policy & Pizza session discussing the current state of transatlantic relations.
Do the current events and crises that dominate the headlines keep you up at night? Do you ever wish that someone would help you make sense of it all? Our experts here at the Hertie School are there for you, and they've even brought pizza.
Join guest speaker Dr. Cornelius Adebahr, a Fellow and an Adjunct Faculty at the Hertie School whose work focuses on European foreign policy, geopolitics, and citizens’ engagement, for a Policy & Pizza session discussing the current state of transatlantic relations following the US administration´s tumultuous first 10 weeks in office.
As with our ‘Policy and Pizza’ sessions, this is an opportunity to engage directly with practitioners and leaders shaping the world of policy and international relations in a meaningful way. Bring your questions!
This discussion will be held in as part of our Open Day event, and if you wish to register for the entire programme, please do so here.
The event is public, will be in English, and will be hosted at the Henrik Enderlein Forum at the Hertie School in Berlin. There will be no live stream. Due to limited seating, registration is required.
Free drinks and pizza will be served from 5:30 pm, and the talk will begin at 6:00 pm
Please register in advance via the form on right or by sending an email to m.poet[at]hertie-school[dot]org
Speakers
Cornelius Adebahr is a Fellow and an Adjunct Faculty at the Hertie School. He is a political analyst and entrepreneur based in Berlin, focusing on European foreign policy, geopolitics, and citizens’ engagement. He is interim executive director of ISD Germany, the Berlin-based branch of the Institute for Strategic Dialogue in London. He also is an associate fellow at the German Council on Foreign Relations (DGAP) in Berlin and a member of the European Commission’s experts’ network, Team Europe. From 2014 to 2024, he worked with the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, first running the global think tanks’ Europe Program in Washington, DC, then as a non-resident fellow at its Brussels centre, Carnegie Europe.
He is the author of "Europe and Iran: The Nuclear Deal and Beyond” (Routledge 2017) and "Learning and Change in European Foreign Policy: The Case of the EU Special Representatives“ (Nomos 2009), and has been awarded academic and professional scholarships inter alia from the German Academic Scholarship Foundation, Fulbright Commission, Robert Bosch Foundation, and Volkswagen Foundation.
Questions? Get in Touch!
- Matthew Poet, Associate Student Recruitment