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Sep 14, 2017

Berkeley Haas Student App Helps Empower Syrian Asylum-Seekers

Berkeley student app syrian

Students at the Haas School of Business at UC Berkeley have found a unique and important way to potentially help the ongoing Syrian refugee crisis through a new student-built crowd-source platform.

Founded by Sarrah Nomanbhoy, MBA ’18, who’d previously launched a seed accelerator for new Sri Lankan startups, MarHub came to life with the help of a $5,000 Dean’s Seed Fund grant, a $5,000 Hansoo Lee Fellowship, and a $12,500 Jack Larson Scholarship. Nomanbhoy’s idea emerged from last year’s Hult Prize Challenge on Refugees.

Along with significant contributions from co-founders Jerry Philip, EWMBA ’19; Peter Wasserman, MBA/MPH 18; and Srinivas Vaidyanathan, EWMBA 18, MarHub addresses a common concern among refugees who struggle to navigate confusing and often conflicting sources of information once they reach a border.

Nomanbhoy explained in a recent interview, “Information from humanitarian agencies [was] too general, and social media was filled with unverified rumors. About 70 percent of asylum seekers receive negative decisions after this first set of interviews, and many are now in limbo pending the outcome of the appeal process.”

“The hard part psychologically is not knowing how long the wait is going to be. Time moves very slowly when you’re waiting in a queue, but imagine not knowing whether you’ll be stuck for two months or two years,” Philip added

Based on interviews at the Ritsona and Chios refugee camps in Athens, Greece, the MarHub platform evolved into a Facebook messenger-enabled chatbot that allows refugees to “view, evaluate, and comment on information from humanitarian agencies, volunteers on the ground, and other asylum seekers.” As MarHub accumulates users, “the data collected will enable more accurate, timely responses.”

But Chatbots are merely the beginning of Nomanbhoy’s plans for MarHub. Her long-term goal is to use data to “improve migration management” full stop. The product is expected to begin its initial pilot service with Greece’s RefuComm this fall, followed by more rounds of seed funding.

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Apr 14, 2017

Sloan Develops Algorithm To Spot Likely ISIS Members on Twitter

Isis

MIT Sloan recently looked into how a Ph.D. candidate and 15-year Army veteran Christopher Marks, along with KDD Career Development Professor in Communications and Technology Tauhid Zaman, built a machine-learning model that identifies likely Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) members on Twitter.

Continue reading…

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Feb 6, 2017

Seattle Pacific University President Responds To Trump Travel Ban

Travel Ban

With 100 undergraduate and 60 graduate students representing around 35 countries, Seattle Pacific University may as well be considered an international university. So, it comes as no surprise that when President Trump implemented his executive order to impose a travel ban to the United States for citizens of Iraq, Syria, Iran, Sudan, Libya, Somalia and Yemen, the University didn’t remain quiet. Instead, school President Dan Martin sent a message to every international student and all students, faculty and staff with friends and family overseas. Continue reading…

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Jan 31, 2017

Trump Immigration Ban Stranding Business Students, Employees

Immigration Ban

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.

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