Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Affairs

Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Affairs

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Enhancing the global reach of research and bringing together the brightest minds around the world.

Under the Office of the Provost, Northwestern Buffett is driving and supporting the University’s global ambitions: to globalize the University, to catalyze the new ideas that will define our time, and to train the next generation of global leaders. By building the capacity of new and existing global offices, the Institute is improving services and increasing opportunities for all Northwestern faculty, students, and staff.

06/10/2026

📣Call for poster abstracts!

Stellenbosch University (South Africa) and Northwestern University invite you to participate in the SU/NU Global Health Knowledge Hub Conference, taking place at Northwestern University in Chicago September 28–30, 2026.

Join researchers, students, university leaders, and practitioners from across disciplines for a dynamic gathering focused on advancing global health innovation, collaboration, and equitable care.

Submit a poster abstract related to global health research, implementation, education, and practice in any discipline.

Northwestern submissions due: Mon, June 15

Details and submit: http://spr.ly/6186B8tcMj

06/09/2026
06/08/2026

With the Roberta Buffett Institute's support, our new cohort of Buffett Faculty Fellows is embarking on research projects spanning Colombia, France, Jeju, Okinawa, Hawaiʻi, and beyond. Their projects deal with issues ranging from the hidden costs of civil war to the sacred grounds of Pacific islands, and from the logic of kidnapping to the philosophy of the unthinkable.

The 2026–27 cohort includes Weinberg College Center for International & Area Studies, Northwestern's Professors Ana Arjona, Jeong Eun Annabel We, Danielle Gilbert, Silyane Larcher, and Shmulik Nili. Each year, the Roberta Buffett Institute awards non-residential fellowships to full-time Northwestern faculty conducting international research, supporting scholars whose work requires them to engage deeply with communities, archives, and field sites around the world. This cohort reflects the breadth and ambition of that mission. Learn more about this cohort's work: buffett.northwestern.edu/programs/faculty-funding/faculty-fellows-program/cohorts/

A lack of clean drinking water is associated with lacking food and experiencing food safety threats in 121 countries across the globe - Nature Food 06/05/2026

When people lack reliable access to clean drinking water, they are far more likely to struggle with food insecurity and food safety concerns according to new research co-authored by Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University's Sera Young, co-lead of the Roberta Buffett Institute's former Making Water Insecurity Visible Global Working Group. Drawing on data from 121 countries, this study shows how food insecurity, water insecurity, and food safety challenges often go hand in hand in both low-income and high-income countries, and underscores the need for a more integrated approach to addressing these challenges worldwide. Learn more about the study:

A lack of clean drinking water is associated with lacking food and experiencing food safety threats in 121 countries across the globe - Nature Food Food preparation typically requires access to clean drinking water. This Analysis of data from the World Risk Poll explores the links between food sufficiency, clean drinking water availability and their impact on food safety threats across low-, middle- and high-income regions.

06/02/2026

Academic freedom is often discussed as a faculty concern. But what role do international higher education practitioners play in protecting and advancing it?

In a new practitioner brief, Samantha Nissen, Senior Director for Global Programs and Strategic Initiatives at the Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Affairs, explores how academic freedom is shaped not only by teaching and research, but also by the everyday work that enables international collaboration, student mobility, and global knowledge exchange.

Drawing on research and professional experience, Nissen examines how visa policies, research security frameworks, institutional risk management, and administrative practices can either support or constrain academic freedom in practice. Read the brief: https://scholarship.shu.edu/cisr/vol6/iss1/3/

Photos from Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Affairs's post 05/28/2026

Since the start of Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, thousands of Ukrainian children have been separated from their families and communities. New research, supported by the Roberta Buffett Institute's Global Fam DNA Global Working Group, shows that this crisis is not unique to Ukraine. "We have found reports from Syria that also describe conflict-related child separations. Children are displaced, absorbed into new systems or lost across borders with little documentation...Families are left searching, often with few leads and real fear of the regimes involved with the disappearances. This is why we must work as a global community to build systems not just for today or for specific countries, but also for years and decades to come," shares Sara Huston, Global FamDNA co-lead and Research Assistant Professor of Pediatrics at the Northwestern Feinberg School of Medicine, in her op-ed for the Chicago Tribune.

Huston emphasizes that effective reunification requires more than advancement in DNA technology, but prioritizing sustained community engagement and trust-building with the families of the missing. Read more: https://www.chicagotribune.com/2026/05/27/opinioin-ukraine-missing-children-dna-identification/

05/18/2026

Malicious actors and rogue states are seeking to exploit AI for phishing, malware generation, intellectual property theft, and even the development of dangerous biological or chemical agents.

Join the Northwestern Security & AI Lab (NSAIL), jointly housed at the Roberta Buffett Institute and McCormick School of Engineering, for a workshop on AI-driven threats to global security and a new framework for countering them. The framework was developed with support from the US Department of State in collaboration with leading experts from Georgetown University’s Security Studies Program and the Netherlands Defence Academy. Learn what AI threats, both cyber and kinetic, are emerging, and explore several threat-specific mitigation methods developed by the team, including how you can safeguard training data, protect AI models and trade secrets, mitigate drone threats, and more.

🗓️ Thursday, May 21 from 9:30–11:15 a.m.
📍 Chambers Hall, Ruan Room (600 Foster St.)
👥 Register to attend in person: http://spr.ly/6184BBQWRj
💻 Register to attend online: http://spr.ly/6186BBQWRe

05/14/2026

Kelli Morgan McHugh, Associate Professor of Instruction in Music Theatre at Northwestern University's School of Communication, found little to no literature on musical theatre vocal training for gender expansive performers while searching for resources for her trans and nonbinary students. This gap led McHugh to collaborate with the University of Sydney on the "Q***r Voice, Vocal Training, and Singing for Inclusion" workshop in April 2025. Held at Northwestern and supported by a Global Collaboration Grant from the Roberta Buffett Institute for Global Affairs, the gathering focused on the inclusion of q***r voices in music theatre and convened more than 65 scholars, students, artists, and industry professionals.

In April 2026, McHugh and Isa Hernandez extended the initiative through workshops at the University of Sydney. Stay tuned for a recap of their recent visit and information on their forthcoming white paper outlining best practices for inclusive vocal training and music theatre production.

Tune in to a voice collage recapping their first workshop, and learn more about the initiative: https://buffett.northwestern.edu/news/2026/q***r-voice-vocal-training-and-singing-for-inclusion-sound-collage.html

05/12/2026

Join us tomorrow! 🚨 Since Russia’s large-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russian public opinion polls have consistently shown overwhelming support for the “special military operation.” Regardless of how these surveys are interpreted, the Russian perception of the war is not that of jingoism or belligerence. Rather, Maria Lipman will argue during her Buffett Lecture this afternoon that the Russia's primary national resource—its people's resilience—is fueling the trend.

🗓️ Wednesday, May 13 from 12:30 – 1:45 p.m. CDT

🥗 For those attending in person, lunch begins at 12:15 PM and the lecture at 12:30 p.m.

📍 Buffett Reading Room (720 University Place, Second Floor, Evanston)

🔗 Register to attend in person: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/peoples-resilience-as-russias-primary-national-resource-with-maria-lipman-tickets-1986572581067?aff=PlanItPurple

💻 Register to attend online: https://northwestern.zoom.us/webinar/register/1017751638022/WN_Eu-mzWGfQSWcIUOM2A0iyQ #/registration

Lipman is the 2026 Roberta Buffett Visiting Professor of International Studies as well as a political analyst and commentator whose work focuses on state‑society relations, media, and the politics of history in Russia.

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720 University Place
Evanston, IL
60208

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm