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Harnessing the Power of Our Network to Reimagine a Better Post-Covid World: Launching Bellagio Dialogues

Hunter Goldman — Former Director, Innovation, The Rockefeller Foundation

This year is likely to go down as one of the most significant years of the 21st century in terms of how rapidly society has transformed. The Rockefeller Foundation is prioritizing accelerating an equitable recovery, focusing on near-term responses to the crisis while recognizing that we also have an opportunity to lay the foundations for structural change that can transcend our current generation. This is a challenge far bigger than what any one institution can do alone, which is why we also prioritize building and maintaining a global network of experts to work with us to build a better post-Covid world.

The Rockefeller Foundation has a history of fostering bold new ideas that catalyze action and collaboration across sectors. Part of that commitment means providing a platform for the most promising thinkers and practitioners to harness their expertise to ensure we’re equipped to face the challenges of tomorrow. Over the past 61 years, our Bellagio Center in Italy has been a hub for translating ideas into action. The Bellagio Center offers those who pass through its gates an opportunity to maximize the impact of their work. We facilitate this experience through two mechanisms.

Convening

Gatherings of people, either in-person or virtual, with three distinct characteristics:

  1. Composed of diverse stakeholders, often from different organizations, bringing a range of perspectives
  2. Designed to accomplish a clear purpose and concrete outcomes
  3. Optimized to generate insights and catalyze action beyond what any single actor could achieve on their own

In 1984 we convened the world’s leading experts on protecting the health and welfare of children, which ultimately led to the creation of the Children’s Vaccine Initiative. Building upon the success of that effort, in 1999 a World Bank Summit organized at The Bellagio Center established the earliest framework for what would eventually evolve into the Global Vaccine Alliance, or GAVI. Today GAVI is a critical actor bridging the public and private sectors together with civil society to ensure that once a Covid-19 vaccine is developed, it gets distributed to all corners of the world.

Residencies

Support and amplify breakthrough ideas of exceptional individuals through a month-long residency that fosters deep thinking, reflection, collaboration and nurtures engagement with others.

Every year The Rockefeller Foundation hosts up to 100 best-in-class practitioners, scholars, writers, policy makers, and artists from around the world for a month-long residency at The Bellagio Center to advance their work and engage with a globally diverse cohort of fellow residents. This often serves as a critical moment in careers – where contemplation, reflection, and stepping away from the hustle of daily life inspires a reframing of their work in order to formulate a bold new vision.  Former residents include Nobel Laureates such as Joseph Stiglitz and Mohamed Yunus, renowned authors Maya Angelou and Michael Ondaatji, and leading scholars such as Atul Gawande and Ruth Bader Ginsberg.

When Italy became Europe’s Covid-19 epicenter earlier this year, we, unfortunately, had to shut down The Bellagio Center for the remainder of 2020. While there was sadness knowing that we would not be able to host residents this year, we were inspired by how concerned the former residents were for the Center and its staff and how they continued to stay in touch with one another. The warmth and camaraderie of The Bellagio Center network made us realize the magic of the connections formed during the residency. We wanted to harness that alchemy by reconnecting with resident alumni to better understand how they were coping with the pandemic and how they are envisioning a societal pathway forward.

What emerged was a wide-ranging series of conversations. Former residents shared insights from their field, from their personal circumstances, and from their memories of how their time at The Bellagio Center prepared them for this moment. What follows is a collection of musings and insights from a handful of former Bellagio Center residents, which we are launching today as Bellagio Dialogues. This series is meant to showcase the wisdom of those who have spent years in their respective fields. Their insight, ingenuity, and creativity can inspire collective action to address some of this year’s most daunting challenges. We believe that by providing a platform to showcase their ideas we can do what we have consistently done for over 100 years – promote the well-being of humanity throughout the world – in partnership with others.

Bellagio Dialogues:

Harnessing the Power of our Network to Reimagine a Better Post-Covid World

  • Bellagio Dialogues: Andres Mignucci

    Andres discusses how we can rethink public spaces to ensure they are equitable, sustainable and climate-smart as well as the role of design in informing new operating modes for inhabiting spaces.
  • Bellagio Dialogues: Carol Becker

    Carol discusses how art can we used to effectively communicate ideas and influence public policy conversations - particularly during the unprecedented Covid-19 crisis more effectively.
  • Bellagio Dialogues: Dr. Urvashi Sahni

    Dr. Sahni talks about how Covid-19 had affected access to education in India, particularly the digital divide and the role technology has played.
  • Bellagio Dialogues: Jacqueline Novogratz

    Jacqueline talks about how policy makers, practitioners and funders need to reflect on the key lessons from the Covid-19 pandemic and translate them into improving policies, structures and practices. She also talks about how Acumen will drive this forward as we think about building back better.
  • Bellagio Dialogues: Newman

    Newman discusses how we experience agency in a technology driven society and how her work on the ‘Moral Labyrinth’ are challenging a wide range of societal structures.
  • Bellagio Dialogues: Suzanne Lacy

    Suzanne discusses how artists collaborate for social change and how artists and art institutions are adapting during the Covid-19 pandemic.
  • Bellagio Dialogues: Tobias Rees

    Tobias talks about how technology is shifting paradigms to better address complex social changes and the implications of platform capitalism.
  • Elizabeth Kolbert

    Elizabeth Kolbert discusses the relationship between the Covid-19 pandemic and climate change and how both are exacerbating inequality as well as how journalism has changed as a result of Covid-19.
  • Chris Graves

    Chris Graves discusses how behavioral science can support the field of communications and how the Covid-19 pandemic has shifted the role and tactics of communications professionals.
  • Rosanne Haggerty

    Rosanne Haggerty discusses the effect Covid-19 has had on homelessness and the tools we need to take action to address homelessness as a public health issue.
  • Lloyd Sederer

    Lloyd Sederer discusses how the Covid-19 pandemic is affecting mental health and the changes that are being made to help improve public health services.
  • Marcelo Gomes

    Marcelo Gomes discusses how the Covid-19 pandemic has impacted how he thinks about cinema and the impact it can have and how it has changed his approach to making films. Marcelo also reflects on his time as a resident at the Bellagio Center and how it influenced him to approach film making in a whole new light.