Past Projects


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Green Europe

The Green Europe Challenge was a transatlantic dialogue competition organized by The George Washington University French Embassy Center of Excellence in partnership with the Georgetown University BMW Center for German and European Studies. During the competition U.S. and European students from George Washington University, King’s College London, and Sciences Po Paris worked together in transatlantic teams to produce video responses to a lecture by Sciences Po Lyon Professor Jerome Blanc on the economics of sustainability and solidarity. 

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What We Owe Debates

The predecessor to Los Diálogos Panamericanos, the What We Owe Debates were an international bilingual debate competition focused on the Colombian peace building process, which took place both online and in-person at Universidad Rosario in Bogota, Colombia. The debates brought together competitors from universities across the United States and Colombia to debate issues related to the peace process in front of topic experts drawn from Colombian civil society, government, and academia.



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NATO Debates

The NATO Debates 2019 was an international dialogue event put on by the GWU Debate & Literary Society with support from the US Mission to NATO in Brussels, Belgium across three days in the summer of 2019. During the three day program GW Debaters developed and administered a day of debates on transatlantic burdensharing judged by NATO scholars and officials, attended a day of scholarly panels reflecting on the program topic, and participated in a NATO simulation developed and organized by NATO Allied Command Transformation focusing on disputes over oil and gas resources in the Arctic circle.

MyFITE

MyFITE was a program which The GWU Debate & Literary Society participated in from 2016-2019 in partnership with the Institut Français, the Embassy of France to Indonesia and the Indonesian Ministry of Tourism. The mission of the Forum for International Tourism and the Environment is to raise awareness on the importance of sustainable tourism development, and as part of this program GW Debaters worked with students and tourism stakeholders around the world, in order to support the knowledge, commitment and skills needed in Indonesia for resilient communities, ready to address the challenges of 21st Century tourism growth.

CLS 21

From 2016-2019 GW Debate partnered with the French Embassy Center of Excellence and Georgetown University to host CLS21, a taskforce simulation on civil liberties and security in the 21st Century. Over the year’s topics ranged from the structure of NATO to European migration and participants presented their policy solutions to panels of elite French military officers from the Ecole de Guerre

EdG Talks

GW Debaters were invited to École de guerre in Paris, France to present in an academic conference on the topic: “NATO or Snapchat: Will Generation Z fight your wars?” The conference was a series of discussions by government leaders, academics, and military leaders to discuss the role that NATO will play in the 21st century. After listening to the peeches, GW Debaters served as respondents and concluded the program with a deliberative analysis and shared perspectives from Generation Z on the day’s discussions and the future of NATO.

Night of Ideas

In Spring of 2019 GWDebaters participated in the annual Night of Ideas put on by the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and the French Embassy in the U.S., an event which brings together an interdisciplinary group of thinkers and performers for evening of art, music and ideas. As part of the program, GWDebaters performed their arguments on the greatest challenges facing 21st century feminism before a large crowd in the Embassy’s main auditorium.

Embassy of France Screening

GW Debate participated in a panel at the Embassy of France following the French documentary Eloquentia. The film showcased a French competition surrounding public speaking, and followed a group of mixed race students who partake in the Eloquentia contest for the first time. GW Debaters had the opportunity to speak and answer questions from the audience regarding the importance of debate to civil society posing as an educational tool that should be widely accessible to students from diverse backgrounds.

iDebate Rwanda

GW Debate partnered with the Institute for African Studies to host iDebate Rwanda on the GW campus, during which GW Debaters worked in teams with Rwandan students to prepare for and compete in debates on conflict resolution in a post-genocide society. iDebate Rwanda is an organization that stands to change the lives of young Rwandans and East Africans by teaching them to think critically and to solve problems creatively through learning debate.

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NanoMedicine Debates

In 2018, GW Debate helped organize and participate in the Innovate NanoMedicine Debates opening workshop at Adelphi University. At the event GW Debaters engaged the ethics of nanotechnology enhancements to human beings, and enhanced their knowledge of the topic by engaging in thoughtful discourse with topic experts and members of the debate community.

METI Debates

In 2018, for the first time, GW Debate expanded into Spanish language debates, helping to organize the METI Debates at Universidad de los Andes in Bogotá in collaboration with GW Professor Derek Malone France. The METI Debates aim to promote scientific research, international cooperation, and collaboration in Messaging Extraterrestrial Intelligence (METI) and the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence (SETI).

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Students Demand Action

In fall of 2018, GW Debaters worked with representatives from Students Demand Action and Everytown for Gun Safety to reach out to hundreds of college students and student organizations. This included text and email outreach strategy that garnered students from across the DMV to GW in order to discuss action for gun control. Their work culminated with in-person training on GW’s campus, where students led workshops to galvanize the grassroots base and educate on topics invaluable to Students Demand Action’s work.

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Newseum Bill of Rights Day Debates

In 2017 GW Debaters participated in an exhibition debate at the Newseum in Washington, D.C. to celebrate Bill of Rights Day. The debate focused on free speech and safe spaces on college campuses, and took place in public at the Newseum with any museum visitor having the opportunity to watch. Ultimately, both teams were honored for their contributions, and neither was selected as winner or loser.

NASA Astrobiology Debates

Organized by the NASA Astrobiology Program and The George Washington University, the NASA Astrobiology Debates challenged students of all ages to research and debate the complex ethical and political questions raised by the topic, "Resolved: An overriding ethical obligation to protect and preserve extraterrestrial microbial life and ecosystems should be incorporated into international law."

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GW DATA Hackathon

In Spring of 2016, GW Debaters helped coordinate a special GW DATA project in partnership with the French Embassy, a hackathon designed to produce an app that will help people pair French wine and food. After the hackathon, GW Debate worked with Embassy staff to host a public forum at which GW Debaters and other GW DATA students presented their apps to topic experts recruited by the Embassy.

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Middle East Dialogue

In March 2016, GW Debaters held a public debate on the relationship between European refugee policy and extremism at the 2016 Middle East Dialogue: New Hopes and Aspirations. The conference was hosted by The Policy Studies Organization and The Digest of Middle East Studies and was focused on issues of social, political, and economic reforms as well as discussions about women’s rights and roles in the new Middle East, and ethnic and religious tolerance.

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DC ‘68 Riots Project

Led by History PhD student and former GW Debate assistant coach Kyla Sommers, the DC ‘68 Riots Project created a documentary and interview archive on the 1968 DC riots. The project included the creation of an oral history archive of interviews with DC residents who lived through the riots that followed the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. The interviews and film explored the topics of why the riots occurred, what actually took place, and the impact it had on Washington DC.

Climate Change Negotiation

In anticipation of the historic 21st Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change which took place in Paris in 2016 and saw the creation of the Paris Climate Accords, GWDebate worked with the GWU Sustainability Collective to host the COP 21 Climate Change Negotiation Simulation at GWU. At the event over 20 GW students participated as well as students from many other schools. Following the event, GWDebate worked with the French Embassy to arrange to have the simulation reception held at the French Embassy and to have French diplomatic and sustainability experts observe the simulation and provide feedback to the students, most notably then French Ambassador to the US Gérard Araud.

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DuPont SSTEP

In 2015 four GW Debaters were invited to perform an exhibition debate on space policy, law, and ethics at the 2015 DuPont Summit on Science Technology and Environmental Policy. During the debate, GW Debaters presented their arguments in front of a large public audience and panel of topic experts who filled the roll of judges. The exhibition debate culminated in an audience question and answer period where experts and other attendees probed the arguments presented by the GW Debaters and offered their own feedback and opinions on the topic of the debate.

GWU Veterans History Project

Let's Go: The George Washington University Veterans History Writing Project (VHWP) was a French Embassy Center of Excellence multimedia project commemorating the liberation of France. As part of the VHWP, a group of GWU student-veterans and student-leaders from GW Debate traveled with the veterans of the 29th Infantry Division of the U.S. Army to the historic “final landing” in Normandy, and were featured in the creation of the World War II Foundation documentary, "Omaha Beach: Honor and Sacrifice." After premiering at GW, Omaha Beach aired on public television. In addition, students created a documentary short on their experience, which premiered at GW along with Omaha Beach.

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Mvubu Debates

The Mvubu Debates were an event hosted by GW Debate in partnership with the Civis Institute and Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication. The debates focused on the topic “Resolved: The South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission is a desirable model for transitional reconciliation,” and engaged policy experts in Washington, D.C. and abroad as judges and observers of the debate series.

Elysee Treaty Debates

In 2013 to mark the 50th anniversary of the signing of the Elysee Treaty, the embassies of France and Germany partnered with GW Debate to host a series of debates focused one treaty and its results. At the debates topic experts from both embassies and around Washington, D.C. were engaged as judges. Following the competition, finalists were invited to continue to engage with the topic on a study tour of Paris, Berlin, and Brussles where they met with topic experts and toured relevant historical and cultural sites.

War Powers Debates

In 2013, GW Debate collaborated with the Miller Center at the University of Virginia to host a debate tournament and public debate on the topic of Presidential and Congressional War Powers. As part of the program, debaters had the pleasure of listening to a keynote address from US Senator Tim Kaine of Virginia who also served as a judge, and were moderated in the final round by Former Virginia Governor Gerald L. Baliles, then the Director and CEO of the Miller Center.