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AFRICA SATELLITE EVENT - CALL FOR SESSION PROPOSALS

The SRI2025 Africa Satellite Event will be held from 04-06 June 2025 in Nairobi, Kenya, and Online (hybrid). For more information about the congress, please visit sricongress.org.

SRI2025 Africa invites proposals to the 2025 Congress program by 20 January 2025 (17:00 ET (UTC -4))

We invite you to submit session proposals around the issues and challenges facing us,  potential solutions, and the questions you want answered. Your proposals are critical to SRI2025 being innovative and inclusive: Covering a wide range of topics and engaging participants to collectively achieve a goal. The SRI Congress team will work with session organizers to design sessions that are interactive, informative and inclusive, making sure we provide all participants a range of ways to engage.

This call for contributions is open to any group of people working to develop and implement the solutions we need to create a more sustainable, equitable, inclusive, and just future. We invite session proposals from groups of people from all sectors including, but not limited to: research, government, business, philanthropy, art, communications, technology, and civil society. All submissions will be reviewed by the SRI2025 Program Team.

                SRI2025 Themes                
This year’s Congress focuses on Pathways to Sustainable Solutions but also has four related themes. To keep the African focus of the Congress, an additional theme for parallel session submission was identified by the SRI Africa Executive team. Sessions should align with the vision of the Congress and/or one or more of the following themes:

  1. One Health: Connecting Human, Animal & Planetary Health 
    The concepts of One Health and Planetary Health take an integrated and interdependent approach to balance and optimize the health of people, animals, plants, and the environment across our planet, on land, in air, and in freshwater and the ocean. This includes but is not limited to responding to effects of environment, climate, regional stress on humans and other life; disease control; biomes and health; optimizing health security; developing early warning systems for health risks.
     
  2. Collaborative Decision-Making: Fostering Connections with Communities
    This theme includes topics that bridge the gaps between sectors; such as: institutional and shared leadership; national, regional, and corporate leadership; science diplomacy, social, climate, and environmental justice, equity, intergenerational fairness; impacts from climate immigration; community engagement at all levels, including interfaith leadership; engagement with local communities and/or indigenous peoples.
     
  3. Holistic Solutions: Integrating Food, Energy, Water, and Infrastructure
    All communities, both urban and rural, need infrastructure to deliver food, energy, and water. How can we make these systems more sustainable? This theme includes the future of agriculture and aquaculture, freshwater availability, buildings, addressing energy and transportation systems transition; impacts on the nexus of food, energy and water; living in climate-impacted economies and urban and coastal environments.
     
  4. Innovative Tools: Developing & Deploying New Technologies for Sustainability Solutions 
    Addressing sustainability, climate, and equity challenges requires innovative applications and new tools. Includes digital world issues; future role of AI, machine learning and quantum computing and communications in sustainability solutions; advances in data evaluation, the role of virtual reality; demonstrations; open science.
     
  5. African science and innovation for transformation
    To showcase the richness of African science and innovation in sustainability. From tested local solutions to advanced academic research, the African region has a wealth of knowledge and innovation to offer to the wider world. Topics to be covered here:
    • Biodiversity from traditional knowledge to advanced techniques
    • Approaches to sustainable mining and agricultural practices and sustainable tourism
    • Africa diaspora as a resource for innovative transformation
    • African science unleashing through global cooperation
    • Policies to support innovations and products that are coming out of Sustainability research in Africa 
  • Below are example session topics that touch on one or more of the themes above:  
  • Deploying equitable solutions to mitigate the effects of heat waves in urban and rural communities (OneHealth, Innovative Tools)
  • Early warning systems, one size does not fit all. How to scale lifesaving information? (Innovative Tools, Holistic Solutions)
  •  A sustainable energy future (Holistic Solutions)
  • Future of transportation for a sustainable world (Holistic Solutions)
  • Achieving sustainable aviation: SAF and other solutions (Holistic Solutions, Innovative Tools)
  • Hidden opportunities for innovation: Corporate Environmental & Social Governance reporting (Collaborative Decision-Making, Innovative Tools)
  • Understanding the role of biomes in improving health (OneHealth)
  • Closing the gap on climate mitigation and adaptation investments (Collaborative Decision-Making)
  • Understanding and implementing solutions for resiliency (Collaborative Decision-Making)
  • Ecologists & Land Managers work together to Manage a Changing Landscape (Collaborative Decision-Making, OneHealth)
  • Scalable Solutions: Using Wastewater to Sequester Carbon (Innovative Tools)
  • Marine Protected Areas: What can we learn from successes and failures from around the world? (Decision-Making, OneHealth, Holistic Solutions)
  • Climate, Environment & Health Kick Off Meeting (Belmont Forum, OneHealth)
  • Tools for Changemakers: Creative Problem Solving (Collaborative Decision-Making)
  • Reducing the Urban Heat Island: Architectural and Urban Planning Solutions (Holistic Solutions, Collaborative, Decision Making)
  • Faith & Climate: How the religious community is addressing climate change (Collaborative Decision-Making)
  • Social Networking to Reduce Waste: How to grow circular urban economies (Holistic Solutions, Innovative Tools)

                 Session Design                 
Sessions can take on a variety of designs to facilitate a range of generative experiences for session leaders and participants. The proposal submission form will ask you to designate one of three types of sessions: (1) Panel Discussion, (2) Workshop, (3) Interactive Session. The SRI2025 team will then follow up with all chosen session convenors to discuss specifics and offer assistance. 

  1. Panel Discussions: The 3-5 panel speakers, chosen by session organizers each have a few minutes to speak towards a specific question or questions before getting questions from the panel facilitator and directly from the audience. (60 minutes)
  2. Workshops: An inclusive session geared towards building capacity and/or teaching skills to its participants. (60 - 90 minutes)
  3. Interactive Session: There are multiple participatory and innovative approaches for sharing ideas and advancing solutions. Working in concert with the SRI Congress team you will be able to co-design an exciting session to address your topic and meet your goals. 

General information for All Session Contributors

  • All session contributions are required to have an organizer/single contact point who is responsible for confirming speakers, session logistics, and reporting outcomes to the SRI2025 Program Team.
  • Session organizers should prioritize attending a virtual 30 minute Congress platform training prior to the Congress.
  • Session organizers should plan to meet with representatives with the SRI2025 Program Team to get input on their session at least once prior to the Congress in June.
  • In the case of similar proposals being submitted, the SRI2025 Program Team may ask those organizers to collaborate and co-create a combined session.
  • Given space limitations for concurrent sessions, we can not ensure session acceptance.
  • SRI is interested in supporting contributions from young and early career professionals, researchers, and Indigenous Peoples, as well as participants from low and middle-income countries and communities. Please see the definitions below: 
    • *Early career:
    • We define an early career as anyone whose career has started within the last 10 years. This includes researchers who have received their Bachelor’s or Master’s qualification within the last 10 years or their PhD within the last six years, as well as professionals working at the interface of society, policy, practice, and research.
    • Low and middle-income countries:
      Low and middle-income countries are defined according to the OECD DAC list of ODA recipients. 
    • Indigenous groups:
      Indigenous groups are defined according to Article 1 (1b) of the International Labour Organisation’s Convention concerning Indigenous and Tribal Peoples (ILO No. 169 ). This convention applies to: 
      a) tribal peoples in independent countries whose social, cultural and economic conditions distinguish them from other sections of the national community, and whose status is regulated wholly or partially by their own customs or traditions or by special laws or regulations;
      (b) peoples in independent countries who are regarded as indigenous on account of their descent from the populations which inhabited the country, or a geographical region to which the country belongs, at the time of conquest or colonization or the establishment of present state boundaries and who, irrespective of their legal status, retain some or all of their own social, economic, cultural and political institutions.

                Criteria for Selection                
The SRI 2025 Program team intends to build on your successes and select sessions that will be generative, interactive, inclusive, focus on solutions and are clearly linked to one or more of the Congress themes. These values are reflected in the rubric on which all session submissions will be scored by the Program Team.

Criteria

Excellent (5)

Good (4)

Fair (3)

Needs Improvement (1-2)

Theme

The topic of the proposed session clearly links to the themes of the Congress

The topic of the proposed session links to one or more of the themes of the Congress

The topic of the proposed session is solutions oriented but not clearly linked to one of the themes

The topic of the proposed session is not solutions oriented nor in line with the SRI2025 themes

Inclusive

The session includes ALL 3 of the following: diverse perspectives, engagement with multiple sectors, and a transdisciplinary perspective

The session includes 2 of the 3 of the following: diverse perspectives, engagement with multiple sectors, and a transdisciplinary perspective.

The session includes 1 of the 3 of the following: diverse perspectives, engagement with multiple sectors, and a transdisciplinary perspective

The session includes none of the following: diverse perspectives, engagement with multiple sectors, and a transdisciplinary perspective.

Generative

The session goals and outcomes are clearly described and well matched with session format. Session participants leave with an action

The session goals OR outcomes are described but not both. Unclear what the take-away action is for session participants

While the session has goals described, it is unclear how the proposed plan will lead to said outcomes

The proposed session has no tangible outcome nor goals provided.

Session Team

Session Team members each represent different disciplines, sectors, and regions of the world

Session team members represent 2 of the 3: different disciplines, sectors, or regions of the world

Session team members only represent one of the following: different disciplines, sectors, or regions of the world

Session team members are all from the same organization and/or same discipline and/or country

 

Scholarship opportunities will be available in the next few weeks. To stay updated, please visit sricongress.org or sign up for our newsletter

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More information at sricongress.org