【交流】关于推荐优秀研究生和本科生参加香港中文大学研讨班的通知

全校各相关学院:

为进一步推动内地高校与香港高校间的交流与合作,加强两地高校间的友好往来与联系,促进两地学生间的学术交流。香港中文大学2008714日-17日之间在香港中文大学举行关于交叉学科之间的学生领导力研讨班,主题为“环境、卫生及和谐”,参加学生必须是法学、公共事务、新闻、环境科学、城市规划、经济管理等相关专业大三以上本科生或研究生,要求专业成绩及英语水平优秀,可以用英语参加研讨活动,自己支付往返香港的旅行费用,在港期间的食宿费用由活动举办方负责。

为了更好地组织此次活动,我们将在全校遴选活动能力强、多才多艺、口头表达能力强、组织及领导能力好的5名学生参加这一活动,请有意愿的同学将申请表于5月8日(包括8日)交至新闻传播学院院楼402室李老师处,逾期视为放弃处理。学院将推荐2名学生。

附件1:研讨班行程安排

附件2: 活动介绍

附件3:申请表

 

                                       港澳台事务办公室

                                           2008年5月4日

 

Environment Health and Harmony:

An Interdisciplinary Student Leadership Conference

 

Supported by the Rockefeller Brothers Fund and the Lingnan Foundation

 

Hong Kong America Center and School of Public Health

Chinese University of Hong Kong

 

July 14-17, 2008

 

Draft program schedule as of May 1, 2008

 

 

 

Monday 14 July 2008 (Day 1)

 

11:00 � onward        Registration at I-house on CUHK campus

13:30                      Bus from I-house on CUHK campus to SPH

14:00 � 14:30          Opening and Welcome Remarks

                              Dr Kenneth Young, ProVice Chancellor, CUHK

Dr. Sian GRIFFITHS, Director, School of Public Health, CUHK

                              Dr. Glenn SHIVE, Director, Hong Kong America Center

Dr. Linda MILAN, Director, Building Healthy Communities and Populations, WHO Centre for Health Development (pending)

14:30 � 15:30          Keynote Speeches: 

Dr. Linda MILAN

Professor E.K. YEOH, Director, Centre for Systems for Health, School of Public Health, CUHK pending

15:30 � 16:00          Group Photo + Break

16:00 � 16:45          Environment and Health: Perspectives from the Disciplines by Dr. Jennifer Holdaway, Social Science Research Council, USA

16:45 � 17:15          Simulation activities presentation by Dr Marjorie King, Director of Model UN, American School in Taichung          

17:15 � 18:30          Group Discussions

18:30 � 19:45          Welcoming Dinner in Shing Hin Restaurant on campus

19:45 � 21:00          Film: Inconvenient Truth

21:00                      Bus to I-House at CUHK

 

 

Tuesday 15 July 2008 (Day 2)

 

8:00                        Bus from I-house to SPH

8:30 � 9:00              Breakfast

9:00 � 9:45              Problem 1: Air Pollution and Public Health

                          Dr. T W Wong, Dept of Family and Community Medicine, School of Public Health, CUHK

                          Charles Wong, Environmental Science, HK PolyU           

9:45 � 10:30            Problem 2: Water Pollution and Public Health

Professor Yok-shiu LEE, Associate Professor, Geography Department, The University of Hong Kong

10:30 � 10:45          Break

10:45 � 12:00          Group Discussions  

12:00 � 13:30          Lunch in SPH

13:30 � 14:15          Problem 3: Food Contaminants and Public Health

Professor Hoi Shan KWAN, Chairman, Expert Committee on Food Safety, HKSAR; Dean, Faculty of Science, CUHK

Professor Wen Hua LIN, Dean, School of Public Health, Sun Yat Sen University

14:15 � 15:00          Problem 4: Occupational Safety and Health

Dr Louisa WONG, Chief Consultant, Occupational Safety and Health Council of Hong Kong   

15:00 � 15:15          Break

15:15 � 17:00          Group Discussions

                              Dinner and evening on your own

 

Wednesday 16 July 2008 (Day 3)

 

8:00                        Bus from I-house to SPH

8:30 � 9:00              Breakfast

9:00 � 9:45          Health, Nature and Harmony: Core Ideas from East and West by Dr Philip J. Ivanhoe, City University of HK

9:45 � 10:30            Evidence-based Policy-Making for Health Care

Professor Jin-lin TANG, Professor, School of Public Health, CUHK

10:30 � 10:45          Break

10:45 � 12:00          Project group meetings  

12:00 � 13:30          Lunch at SPH

13:30 � 14:15          Avian Flu: Are We Prepared for a Pandemic?

                              Dr. Yu-Gao LI, The University of Hong Kong and/or

Professor S. S. LEE, Deputy Director, Stanley Ho Centre for Emerging Infectious Disease, School Public Health, CUHK

14:15 � 14:30          Break 

14:30 � 17:30          Project meetings; preparations for Day 4 AM presentations        

                              Dinner and evening on your own

 

Thursday 17 July 2008 (Day 4)

 

8:00                        Check out/ Bus from I-house to SPH

8:30 � 9:00              Breakfast

9:00 � 10:45            Student Presentations

10:45 � 11:00           Break

11:00 � 11:30           Final Commentaries and Closing Ceremony

11:30                      Program ends

 

Environment Health and Harmony II

A Student Leadership Conference

July 14-17, 2008

 

Organized by the Hong Kong America Center (HKAC)

and the School of Public Health (SPH) of the  

Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK)

 

In association with the

Asia Pacific Network of Healthy Universities (APNHU)   

 

Prospectus

 

    

Summary:

 

The Hong Kong America Center and the School of Public Health (SPH) at the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) in Shatin plan an inter-disciplinary student leadership conference on Environment, Health and Harmony. 

 

Over 100 students in academic fields related to environment and health (EH) from more than twenty-five universities in southern China and the United States will spend four days together to understand more deeply the challenges of environmental degradation to human health in the south China region, and to learn the skills and roles essential to improving human health through environmental improvement.                      

 

Goals:

 

To strengthen networks of young advocates and committed professionals in greater China and the USA, initiated by the HKAC conference in Zhuhai in July 2007 and the Asia-Pacific Network of Healthy Universities (www.sph.cuhk.edu.hk) conference at CUHK in March 2007, for improving environmental health (EH) in China. 

 

To educate advanced students in academic and professional fields related to EH in universities about the challenges to human health resulting from environmental degradation created mainly by the recent rapid industrialization of south and eastern coastal China and linked to the national and global economy.            

 

Background and Rationale:

 

The Pearl River Delta (PRD) has grown dramatically in the past 25 years of the reform-and-opening era in mainland China.  The region’s GDP grew from about US$ 8 billion in 1980 to over $ 89 billion in 2000 and to over $ 220 billion in 2005.  This has meant an average annual GDP growth rate of over 16%, well over the PRC national rate of 9.8%.  The PRD has the highest per capita of GDP in China.  The population of this mega-city surrounding the downstream delta region of the Pearl River is estimated between 45 and 60 million.  The region has seen unprecedented urbanization and a deep and complex integration with the global economy. 

 

The PRD region has multiple and often competing governmental jurisdictions, which inhibits effective regional planning and control regimes for environmental protection.  Often called the “workshop of the world,” the PRD is also the site for the enormous industrial wastes that emanate from that industrial workshop.  Indeed, the PRD is a major site for the export of pollution from the more advanced economic regions, including Hong Kong, that have invested heavily in the new manufacturing infrastructure in evidence everywhere in the delta. 

 

While standards of living in the PRD have been raised, so have the risks to human health to residents as a result of the unprecedented load on the ecological system that has come as a cost for this breakneck growth.  How does one balance the wealth generated in the short-run in the PRD with the human cost of diminished health and destabilized ecosystems in the longer run?  One need only consider the outbreak of SARS in 2003 and the threatened pandemic of bird flu in 2005 to conceive the potential for world-wide impact of an eco-disaster in this part of the world.

 

As the dynamic economic center of the south China region, the PRD has become the focal point for a nine-province initiative for further industrialization and linkage to the global export and trade economy.  This region of south China includes the provinces of Guangdong, Guangxi, Fujian, Hunan, Jiangxi, Guizhou, Yunnan, Sichuan, Hainan, as well as the HK and the Macau SARs, or the so-called “9+2”.  As labor costs rise in the PRD proper, many industries are moving further inland while extending their transport links back to the export platforms in Hong Kong and Shenzhen for access to the supply chains for global trade.  The export-led industrialization model developed in the epicenter of the PRD in the past 20 years - including its polluting factories of air and water � is thus moving into the interior of south China and with it, is broadening the ecological crisis into the agrarian hinterland.  Whereas our initial geographic focus for the PRD leadership conferences was on the Pearl River estuary, the environmental issues branching out form it have extended our purview into the so- called pan-PRD region.                                        

 

Conference Program:

 

Environmental health (EH) seeks to promote health and quality of life by preventing or controlling those diseases or deaths that result from interactions between people and their environment.  EH may include such topics as air quality, chemical agents, food safety, transport of hazardous substances, hazardous waste sites, uses and abuses of herbicides and pesticides, lead poisoning, smoking and tobacco use, sea vessel sanitation, water quality and urban planning for healthy places. 

 

In the Zhuhai conference in July, 2007 we concentrated on issues of air and water pollution in the PRD.  In this follow-on education project, we will extend our focus on several additional major factors in shaping EH, including health in the workplace, health issues for the food supply chain in south China, and hygiene and product safety.  We will look at health risks to employees inside the workplace, and to hygiene and health integrity of the products and services emanating from this industrial platform so closely integrated with the global economic system.       

 

This year’s conference will also study the extent of our preparedness for a possible pandemic of infectious diseases in the urban system, such as avian flu.  A major section of the program is devoted to building leadership in environmental health, including a seminar on evidence as a tool for health care policy-making.  Top leaders in the health care system in HK will speak to the conference.  We are also keen to create a wider awareness of the need for research and evidence-based thinking about EH in China.  To help in this regard, Dr. Jennifer Holdaway from the Social Science Research Council in the US will speak on the perspectives of the disciplines on EH.      

 

Please see the enclosed draft program schedule of themes, invited speakers and team activities.     

 

Our outreach to the campuses is strengthened this year by collaborating with the Asia Pacific Network of Healthy Universities, and its Campus Health Ambassadors program.  We will invite leaders in this program from the eight HK universities and elsewhere in the region to participate in the 2008 conference, thus bringing a confluence of these two university-based initiatives in EH.             

 

By focusing on the crisis in our common environment, our conference will enable people to think beyond the conventional economic terms and political jurisdictions that may have been important in the past to see a single, interdependent ecological system from the interior mountains of southwest China to the South China Sea.  Indeed, the globalization of the pan-PRD economy, and the vast scale of human migration and industrialization occurring within China’s southern provinces, has drawn this beleaguered regional eco-system into wider global patterns of earth and climate change.                                                                                                       

 

This conference aims to bring EH in the pan-PRD into focus for the over 100 students and young leaders at universities in the region.  It is designed to move students from greater awareness of the challenges to connections and networking among one another around these common issues.  Some will have met in either the CUHK meeting in March 2007 or the Zhuhai meeting in July 2007 to focus on EH.  All students will have some grounding in an academic discipline such as public health, law, environmental science, public administration, business, resource economics, and urban planning.  The participants will be chosen to represent their universities and to plan to next stage of inter-campus activities of the APNHU.  The APNHU will in turn provide a useful means of communicating with the participants between their meetings about these activities.        

                                                                                                            Selection of Participants:

 

The conference is designed for over 100 university students, including about one third each from universities in Hong Kong/ Macau, the United States and mainland China.  As in years past, the participating universities in the HKAC consortium, who are also all in the APNHU, will be asked to nominate students in their Campus Health Ambassadors program who have a good overall academic performance, good English language skills, and demonstrated leadership potential.  We ask for multiple disciplines and departments and faculties to be represented.  For example, we will seek out students in fields of environmental science, geography and urban planning, public health, public administration and policy studies, law, and economics/ business studies.  We expect a mix of early post-graduate and upper level undergraduate students.  The geographic range of students will create an international context for discussions about environmental health, and will assure they are held in English.       

 

Mainland Students:

 

The same criteria will be used to select students from the major universities in Guangzhou ands the broader pan-PRD region.  As in years past, we will invite universities in Guangzhou, including Sun Yatsen University (SYSU), Jinan University (JNU), South China Normal University (SCNU), the Guangdong University of Foreign Studies (GDUFS), South China University of Technology (SCUT) to nominate and send students.  This year we will also reach out to the South China Agricultural University and Shenzhen University (SZU).  As last year, we will invite students and the University Town of Shenzhen (which includes graduate programs at Peking University/SZ, Tsinghua University/SZ and Harbin Institute of Technology/ SZ) to send post-graduate students to the conference.  All these universities recruit students nationwide, so their selected representatives will come from all over China.  We will also invite Shantou University (STU), Xiamen University, Haikou Univesity, Guangxi Normal University and others.  Other universities on the mainland will also be recruited into the APNHU through this conference.                           

 

Hong Kong/ Macau Students:

 

As mentioned, the HKAC will work with the Healthy Universities Network representatives in the universities in Hong Kong and Macau to select five or more students from each institution to participate in the conference.  These include Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK), Hong Kong University (HKU), Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU), Hong Kong Polytechnic University (HKPU), City University of Hong Kong (CityU), Lingnan University (LN), and Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (HKUST).  We also work closely with the University of Macau (UMAC), the Macau University of Science and Technology (MUST), the Institute for Travel Management (ITM) and the Macau Polytechnic Institute (MPI).  We will pay the travel for mainland and Macau students to HK, while the HK-based students will attend the conference on a computer basis, and thus not need transport and housing.  Priority will be given to students who have strong English skills, have been active in the APNHU and other health-related activities, and have demonstrated leadership potential and commitment to public service.     

 

American students: 

 

Each summer the HKAC hosts cohorts of American university students as interns in Hong Kong.   In summer 2008, Yale University will send 12 undergraduates through Yale-China and the New School University will send 12 MA students.  All will be doing internships in HK and participating in a series of seminars and workshops on leadership and management over the summer in association with their internships.  The conference on EH from July 14-17 will be an integral part of their program, and will get released time from their internship hosts to participate.  We will also welcome individual Americans who are studying at our eight member universities in HK in various summer institutes, by recommendation by those universities.  This conference will serve as an important enhancement experience for these 30+ American students to meet and have in-depth conversations with students from HK/Macau, Guangzhou and the greater pan-PRD region.    

   

We are excited to build on last year’s conference on the compelling theme of Environmental Health.  We also capitalize on the efforts initiated last March by the eight HK universities to create a Healthy Universities Network in the region, and seek to drive this network forward in the service of improving EH in our common region. 

                                                                    

 

附件3

香港中文大学研讨班报名申请表

 

 

姓名

 

出生日期

                  

 

 

 

正面照片

 

 

性别

 

政治面貌

 

 

 

民族

 

身份证号

 

 

 

通讯地址

及邮政编码

 

 

  联 系 电 话

 

E-mail地址

 

 

所在学校、院系

 

入学时间

 

 

 

学 习 专 业

 

毕业时间

 

 

 

参加课外活动情况:

 

 

特长和担任社会工作情况:

 

 

 

申请人所在学校、院系的推荐意见:

 

 

 

学校或院系负责人签字:                           学校或院系公章:

                                                                  

 

 

申请人个人陈述

(介绍你的兴趣爱好、以及对此活动的看法及建议等300500字)