Ivey Women Join Roundtable Discussion at White House For Women in the Workforce
During Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s visit to the White House to speak with U.S. President Donald Trump, they—along with female business leaders from both countries—held a roundtable discussion about women in the workforce. According to The Globe and Mail, the goal of the discussion was to find “common ground with the new U.S. administration.” Invited to the discussion were two Ivey women graduates as well as a former Ivey dean. At the end of the roundtable, a White House official said the two countries would launch a new task force called the United States Canada Council for the Advancement of Women Business Leaders-Female Entrepreneurs. Continue reading…
Point Loma University Writes Letter to POTUS About Immigration
In early February, Point Loma Nazarene University President Bob Brower wrote an open letter to President Trump and Vice President Pence. In the letter, President Brower, alongside Jon R. Wallace, President of Azusa Pacific University and Jim J. Adams, President of Life Pacific College, spoke about the recent immigration policies. They asked President Trump to “consider the pain that these restrictions cause for many innocent people.”
Professor Spotlight: Greg Autry, USC Marshall
An MBA program’s professors are an integral part of the business school experience. That’s why rankings such as The Financial Times include faculty research and publications as a major indicator of program quality, and one of the reasons we post regular faculty spotlights. This week, we’re shining the spotlight on Greg Autry, a USC Marshall Assistant Professor of Clinical Entrepreneurship. Autry was recently appointed to President Trump’s transition team for NASA. Continue reading…
Trump Immigration Ban Stranding Business Students, Employees
On Friday, January 27, U.S. President Donald Trump signed his most prominent executive order of his early term; an effective Middle East immigration ban for at least 90 days.
The public outcry was defiantly swift and disruptive, with mass protests breaking out in airports across the country. In New York City, the New York Taxi Workers Alliance suspended all travel to JFK International Airport during the height of the protests, in which the United States effectively began turning away immigrants from Libya, Sudan, Somalia, Yemen, Syria, Iran and Iraq.
The implications are immeasurably vast. Prominent companies like Deloitte, McKinsey & Co. and Google—all of which hire many MBA graduates—have informed employees subjected to the terms of the ban, which also includes dual-citizens of the seven aforementioned countries, to cancel international travel plans for the time being.
Omid Scheybani, an MBA from the Stanford Graduate School of Business (GSB), spoke with Bloomberg after it became apparent he wouldn’t be leaving the country any time soon either. Scheybani, a dual-citizen of Germany and Iran, is stuck in California for now.
“I was invited to a wedding in Colombia, plans that I will probably cancel over the next few days,” he said in the interview. In March he was also planning a trip to Italy for first-year students. “It’s uncertain whether I will be able to attend, to lead this trip as well.”
Iran-born Khash Sajadi, also highlighted in the Bloomberg story, is the CEO of internet startup company Cloud 66. The 41-year-old works between London and San Francisco, but the ban has already warped plans to meet with clients stateside.
“That’s the problem we have now, we don’t know what to plan against,” he said. Sajadi hasn’t been to Iran in 11 years. His father, who lives in Iran, canceled a vacation to visit him and his two sisters, who also live in the U.S.
The Washington Post reports that around 90,000 people were directly affected from the immigration ban just between Friday and Sunday, January 29. This is in direct contrast from the White House, which claimed that 109 were affected. The 90,000 people, per the chart below, earned non-immigrant or immigrant visas according to the State Department in 2015. Visas, such as those for student, business and tourism purposes, only last for a finite period of time.
The chart above does include those who have dual-citizenship with any of the seven countries, which also numbers in the tens of thousands according to the State Department.
Of course, business students and employees aren’t the only ones included in those stark numbers. Students by-and-large are stranded across the country because of the immigration ban. And the implications of what is yet to come continues to flare the situation.
“If this could happen now—what does this mean if I were to be traveling for research or study abroad?” said Nate Mouttet, Seattle Pacific University Vice President For Enrollment Management. “Or if I am trying to come back into the country as someone who had a clear visa—will I be detained and not allowed back in?”
Stay tuned for more details as the situation continues to unfold.
San Diego And The Undocumented Worker Problem
If there were one city in the U.S. with the closest ties to Mexico, it would likely be San Diego. Not only is the city home to gorgeous beaches and towering palm trees, its southern edge sits on the American-Mexican border, specifically bordering Tijuana. Unfortunately, that could be a problem if President Trump decides to enact his pledge to deport America’s 11 million undocumented immigrants. Continue reading…
Trump Appoints Controversial UC Irvine Professor Peter Navarro
Paul Merage School of Business economics professor Peter Navarro, one of the nation’s harshest critics of China, has just earned a seat on President-elect Donald Trump’s cabinet.
As a professor with the business school for over 20 years, Navarro penned nine books, most of which unmistakably mark China as a threat to the U.S. and the world-at-large. Several of his published works include The Coming China Wars, Death by China: Confronting the Dragon – A Global Call to Action and Crouching Tiger: What China’s Militarism Means for the World.
Death By China was also adapted into a short documentary feature narrated by actor Martin Sheen, in which he argues that the American people must “help defend America and protect your family – don’t buy ‘Made in China’.”
Navarro acted as a special advisor during Trump’s campaign, likely driving his ideological attacks against global trade, Chinese manufacturing and the loss of U.S. jobs.
The announcement of Navarro’s appointment has arrived shortly after several potentially antagonizing tilts between the two economic superpowers. First, shortly after the election, Trump had a phone call with acting Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen allegedly without previous discretion (the Trump team stated that the call was pre-planned), going against decades of foreign policy agreements. Then, just last week, after China seized a submarine drone, Trump criticized the incident on Twitter. He writes:
We should tell China that we don’t want the drone they stole back.- let them keep it!
— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) December 18, 2016
He will head the White House National Trade Council, serving as director of trade and industrial policy.