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National Prosperity through Modern Rural Policy 19-21 May 2015 Memphis, Tennessee, United States OECD Public Governance and Territorial Development Directorate 10th OECD Rural Development Conference www.oecd.org/regional/ Event Guide Competitiveness and well-being in rural regions
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Page 1: OECD Rural Conference, Memphis, 19-21 May 2015 - Event Guide

National Prosperity through Modern

Rural Policy

19-21 May 2015Memphis, Tennessee,

United States

OECD Public Governance and TerritorialDevelopment Directorate

10th OECD Rural Development Conference

www.oec

d.org/region

al/

Event Guide

Copyright and CreditsAndrea Zucker / Copyright © Memphis Convention & Visitors Bureau 2011 All Rights Reserved.

Competitiveness and well-being in rural regions

Page 2: OECD Rural Conference, Memphis, 19-21 May 2015 - Event Guide

10th OECD Rural Development Conference

This conference will mark the 10th meeting of the world’s leading policy officials, international experts and representatives from the private sector for discussing best practices for rural areas. Participants will meet under the theme National Prosperity through Modern Rural Policy: Competitiveness and well-being in rural regions. Building upon the New Rural Paradigm framework; Promoting Growth in all Regions; and Rural-Urban Partnerships, policy makers and high-level officials both from OECD and non-OECD countries will discuss modern rural policies, and how the implementation of such policies contributes to national growth and well-being.

These events provide a forum for key policy officials to engage in dialogue whilst strengthening existing networks and fostering knowledge-sharing on rural policy across the OECD. To mark this occasion, we will also take stock of the evolution and progress made in rural development since the first conference held in 2002.

This regular dialogue, comprising stakeholders of all levels, have helped shape OECD work on rural development leading to the definition and measurement of the performance of rural regions, the evaluation of rural policies amongst OECD member countries and the undertaking of a number of thematic studies on rural development.

The conference is hosted by the White House Rural Council with the support of the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency and Mexico’s Secretariat for Agrarian, Territorial and Urban Development.

Previous conferences in the series

Rural-Urban partnerships: an integrated approach to economic development, Bologna, Italy (2013)

Innovation and Modernising the Rural Economy, Krasnoyarsk, Russia (2012) Developing Rural Policies to Meet the Needs of a Changing World, Québec,

Canada (2009) Cologne, Germany (2008) Innovative Rural Regions: The role of human capital and Technology, Caceres,

Spain (2007) Investment Priorities for Rural Development, Edinburgh, UK (2006) Designing and Implementing Rural Policies, Oaxaca, Mexico (2005) New Approaches to Rural Policy: Lessons from Around the World, Warrenton,

Virginia, US (2004) The Future of Rural Policy, Siena, Italy (2002)

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

CONFERENCE HOSTS AND PARTNERS .................................................................... 2

CONFERENCE SPONSORS ........................................................................................ 3

AGENDA.................................................................................................................... 4

WHO’S WHO ............................................................................................................ 8

Conference hosts ................................................................................................ 8 Conference Partners ........................................................................................... 9 High-level participants ...................................................................................... 10 Speakers ............................................................................................................ 16

WORKSHOPS .......................................................................................................... 43

Building Strong Rural Economies through Local Food Systems ..................... 43 Building on First Generation Biofuel towards the Advanced Bioeconomy ... 45

PRACTICAL INFORMATION .................................................................................... 47

Memphis Cook Convention Centre - layout .................................................... 47 Sheraton Memphis Downtown Hotel -layout ................................................. 48 Map of Memphis............................................................................................... 49 Useful contacts ................................................................................................. 50 Wifi access codes .............................................................................................. 50

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CONFERENCE HOSTS AND PARTNERS

USDA provides leadership on food, agriculture, natural resources, rural development, nutrition, and related issues based on sound public policy, the best available science, and efficient management. The goal is to expand economic opportunity through innovation, helping rural America to thrive; to promote agriculture production sustainability that better nourishes Americans while also helping feed others throughout the world; and to preserve and conserve our Nation's natural resources through restored forests, improved watersheds, and healthy private working lands.

The mission of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) is to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world. The OECD provides a forum in which governments can work together to share experiences and seek solutions to common problems. It works with governments to understand what drives economic, social and environmental change. It measures productivity and global flows of trade and investment. It analyses and compare data to predict future trends. It sets international standards on a wide range of things, from agriculture and tax to the safety of chemicals.

The Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency works to create opportunities for economic growth in Atlantic Canada by helping businesses become more competitive, innovative and productive, by working with diverse communities to develop and diversify local economies, and by championing the strengths of Atlantic Canada. Together, with Atlantic Canadians, they are building a stronger economy.

SEDATU is the Federal Government institution that works for men and women who live in the country´s common land. It provides them with legal certainty for their land and promotes integral rural development and social justice.

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CONFERENCE SPONSORS

The OECD would like to warmly thank the following partners for their support to the conference:

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AGENDA

Day 1 Tuesday 19 May 2015 WELCOME TO THE CONFERENCE AND THE EXHIBITOR SHOW 9:00-9:30 Patrice Kunesh, Deputy Under Secretary, Rural Development USDA, USA

A. C. Wharton Jr., Mayor of Memphis, USA Chris Massingill, Federal Co-Chairman, Delta Regional Authority, USA Joaquim Oliveira Martins, Head, Regional Development Policy Division, OECD

9:30-11:00 NATIVE AMERICAN SHOWCASE 9:30-10:00 Discussion of the artefacts in the showcase.

Patrice Kunesh, Deputy Under Secretary, Rural Development USDA. USA

10:00-11:00 Discussion with representatives from the Mississippi Band of Choctaw and the Poarch Band of Creek Indians.

Mississippi Band of Choctaw is one of the United States' original first nations, and is the only Federally-recognized American Indian tribe living within the State of Mississippi. The Choctaw Indian Reservation consists of 35 000 acres of trust land scattered over 10 counties in Mississippi. There are 10 000 members. The Tribe is a major contributor to the state's economy providing permanent, full-time jobs for over 5 000 Tribal-members and non-Indian employees.

Steve Hockins, Project Manager, New Choctaw Health Center Construction Project, Mississippi Band of Choctaw Jay Wesley, Cultural Director Chata Immi Program, Mississippi Band of Choctaw

The Poarch Creek Indians, unlike many eastern Indian tribes avoided removal from their land and have lived together for almost 200 years in and around the reservation in Poarch, Alabama. The Poarch Band of Creek Indians is the only federally recognized Indian Tribe in the state of Alabama, operating as a sovereign nation with its own system of government and bylaws. The Tribe operates a variety of economic enterprises, which employ hundreds of area residents. Currently, there are 3,074 members of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians.

Mal McGhee, Director of Marketing, Muskogee Technology Poarch Band of Creek Indians

11:30-13:00 Lunch

PRE-CONFERENCE WORKSHOPS PARALLEL SESSIONS: MOBILISING ASSETS IN RURAL AREAS

13:00-14:30 Natural resources and rural development

ROOM: Mississippi (MCCC)

Food security - what role for rural policy?

ROOM: Sultana (MCCC)

Engaging with traditional settlements, native communities, and

socially disadvantaged groups ROOM: River Bluff (MCCC)

Discussions will focus around the challenges and opportunities present in rural regions with abundance of natural resources. In particular policy responses to deliver development goals and quality of life.

Food This panel will discuss the possibility to adopt a territorial approach to food security and nutrition (FSN) policy. Promoting rural development in regional communities could be an effective way to deliver better policy outcomes that can address multidimensional challenges such as malnutrition.

This panel will discuss the main bottlenecks for development that are present in disadvantaged areas and traditional settlements. In particular, the discussions will focus on how to promote bottom-up development approaches in co-ordination with top-down initiatives.

Moderator: Rhonda Koster, USA

Speakers: Andres Moran, Chile Thom Stubbs, Canada Risto Poutiainen, Finland Greg Halseth, Canada Andrew Noseworthy, Canada

Moderator: Raffaele Trapasso, OECD

Speakers: Vito Cistulli, FAO Maria José Uribe, Colombia Christel Alvergne, UNCDF Jaime de la Mora, Mexico Phil Karsting, USA

Moderator: Patricia Kunesh, Deputy Under Secretary, USA

Speakers: Cornelius Blanding, USA Margarita Flores, Mexico David Freshwater, USA Reginald Shumaker, USA Mal McGhee, USA

14:30-15:00 Coffee break

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PARALLEL SESSIONS: PROMOTING EVIDENCE BASED RURAL POLICIES 15:00-16:30 Telling the rural story: using

data to inform policy ROOM: Mississippi (MCCC)

Rural policies in Latin America ROOM: Sultana (MCCC)

Land use in rural regions ROOM: River Bluff (MCCC)

How can data inform policy? This panel will discuss the value of. data in understanding the diversity of rural regions. Better information will lead to better policy responses.

Can a territorial approach to rural development be adopted in emerging economies? This panel focuses on Latin American countries and discusses the way in which they are getting closer to the New Rural Paradigm policy framework.

Moderator: Arturo Nahle,,Under Secretary, Mexico Speakers: José Antonio Rojo, Mexico Jesús Valenzuela, Mexico J. Antonio Leos-Rodríguez, Mexico Diego Mora, Colombia Julio Berdegué, Chile

The interrelations between institutions and markets heavily influence the functioning of land-use markets and their impact on rural and urban development. This interface is complex, particularly within the fringes of urban and rural areas, in brownfield redevelopment zones, and in areas of social deprivation.

Moderator: Matt S. Erskine, USA Speakers: Alessandro Alasia, Canada Emilia Istrate, USA Teresa Capece, Italy Earl Gohl, USA David Shabzian, USA

Moderator: Richard Cormier, Canada Speakers: Richard W. England, USA John E. Anderson USA Salin Geervahese, USA Fildelma Mullane, Ireland Katsuhiko Yamauchi, Japan

17:30 Opening reception at the Civil Rights Museum at the Lorraine Motel Poverty and Mobility: The Rural American Experience

The museum covers five centuries of history - from the beginning of the resistance during slavery, through the Civil War and Reconstruction, the rise of Jim Crow, and the seminal events of the late 20th century that inspired people around the world to stand up for equality. The visit ends with the events leading up to the 1968 assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. There is also a Legacy Building (the boarding house from where the shot that killed Dr. Martin Luther was allegedly fired). Guests will be treated to a complimentary tour of the Lorraine Motel and the Legacy Building before the reception. Reception and Welcome remarks: Chris Massingill, Federal Co-Chairman, Delta Regional Authority Lisa Mensah, Under Secretary, Rural Development, USDA Keynote: Poverty and Mobility: The Rural American Experience: Thomas J. Vilsack, Secretary, USDA

Day 2 Wednesday 20 May 2015 8:00-9:15 WELCOME & REGISTRATION OPENING SESSION - ROOM: Ballroom B (MCCC) 9:30-10:30 Introduction by Ministers, conference hosts and partners:

Master of Ceremonies: Earl Gohl, Federal Co-chair, Appalachian Regional Commission, United States Chair: Thomas J. Vilsack, Secretary of Agriculture, United States

Mari Kiviniemi, Deputy Secretary-General, OECD Jesús Murillo Karam, Secretary SEDATU, Mexico Brenda LePage, Assistant Deputy Minister, Western Economic Diversification, Canada Phil Hogan, Commissioner for Agriculture, European Commission

10:30-11:00 Coffee break 11:00-12:30 PLENARY SESSION: IMPROVING THE QUALITY OF LIFE IN RURAL AREAS:

AN INTEGRATED APPROACH - ROOM: Ballroom B (MCCC)

Finding the right balance between three main pillars for an integrated approach to rural policy: the economic, social and environmental dimensions. Video message by Angel Gurría, OECD Secretary-General Moderator: Justin Hanson, Mayor of Covington, Tennessee, United States Doug O’Brien, Chair of Working Party on Rural Policy Rolf Alter, Director of Pubic Governance and Territorial Development, OECD High-level speakers: Marceli Niezgoda, Deputy Minister, Ministry for Infrastructure and Development, Poland Hisao Harihara, Vice-Minister for International Affairs, Ministry of Agriculture Forestry and Fisheries, Japan Lee Seung Ho, Deputy Minister for Land, Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, Republic of Korea Lisa Mensah, Undersecretary, United States Department of Agriculture, USA

12:30-13:30 Lunch

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PARALLEL SESSIONS PILLAR 1 – THE ECONOMIC DIMENSION

13:30-15:00 Creating jobs and economic opportunities ROOM: Ballroom C (MCCC)

Linking rural and urban places ROOM: Ballroom D (MCCC)

The aim of this session is to foment discussions to better understand the characteristics of rural firms and the main drivers that make them competitive. In addition to presenting data and evidence, the session will also dedicate discussions to policy responses that can help the private sector flourish in rural areas and create jobs and economic opportunities.

Most rural areas interact with cities of all sizes. This session will discuss governance systems, policy delivery and service accessibility taking into account the presence of territorial networks of rural and urban areas and challenges in terms of regulation, policy frameworks, etc.

Moderator: Enrique Garcilazo, OECD

Speakers:

Mihail Dumitriu, DGAgri, European Commission David Freshwater, University of Kentucky, USA Frederic Laurin, Université de Québec, Canada Alvin Simms, ACOA, Canada Lori Ries/Diana Jedig, CFNC, Canada Tim Wojan, USDA, USA Julian Pace/Julia Latto, Scottish Enterprise, United Kingdom

Moderator: Betty Ann Bryce, USDA, USA

Speakers:

Ana Maire Arilagos, Ford Foundation, USA Julio Berdegué, RIMISP, USA Aleksandra Zakrzewska, MIDD, Poland Taebyung Kim, MLIT, Korea Roman Haken, EESC, Czech Republic

15:00-15:30 Coffee break

PILLAR 2 –THE SOCIAL DIMENSION

15:30-17:00 Increasing citizen engagement and trust ROOM: Ballroom C (MCCC)

Improving access to services ROOM: Ballroom D (MCCC)

This session will address the importance of citizen participation and trust for rural development policy and how it is delivered at the regional level by involving citizens in policy cycles. It will discuss the need to involve citizens in the definition of new rural definitions to support rural development by improving visibility of rural issues at the national level. It will look at how the level of trust might be improved by engagement with and participation of the public sector. As trust is essential to implement public investment in a given region, citizen participation is a way of promoting rural development.

Access to adequate public and private services is crucial for the quality of life of citizens and the competitiveness of firms. Service availability is thus a central feature in rural development policy and strategy. However, rural regions face particular challenges in the form of relatively higher costs of service delivery due to a number of factors. The discussion aims to identify strategies for national and sub-national governments to work better with civil society and the private sector to improve access to services in rural areas.

Moderator: Raffaele Trapasso, OECD

Speakers:

Tom Murphy, MCOR, USA José Ramón Sobrón, Kaleidos, Spain, Francesco Mantino, INEA, Italy John Grieve, Rural Development Company, Scotland Chuck Fluharty, RUPRI, USA Raúl Hernández, Mexico

Moderator: Karen Maguire, OECD

Speakers:

İbrahim Kuzu, Ministry of Development, Turkey Cristell Åstrom, Ministry of Employment & the Economy, Finland Teresa Capece , Department for Development and Cohesion Policy, Italy

17:15 Cocktail at the Sheraton Hotel – MAGNOLIA BALLROOM

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Day 3 Thursday 21 May 2015

PILLAR 3 – THE ENVIRONMENTAL DIMENSION

8:30-10:00 Climate change Building resilience in rural areas

ROOM: BallroomC (MCCC)

Connecting the bio-economy to rural policy

ROOM: Ballroom D (MCCC)

Rural communities are vulnerable to climate change. Many rural communities depend highly on natural resource activities. These in turn are affected by climate change. These impacts will progressively increase over this century and will shift the locations where rural activities can thrive, including agriculture, forestry and recreation. Building resilience will require policy responses and strong co-ordination amongst rural stakeholders and levels of government.

Moderator: Joaquim Oliveira Martins, OECD

Speakers:

Mikitaro Shobayashi, Gakushuin Women’s College, Japan William Hohenstein, USDA, USA Jorge Galo Medina Torres, SAGARPA, Mexico

This session will discuss how the bio-economy can become one of the drivers of rural economies in the coming years. It will look at how the adoption of a smart diversification strategy in rural economies could promote jobs and income by promoting industries within the bio-economy global value-chain (agro-industry and forestry, among others). It will also look at the risks associated with public support to industrial specialisation. Moderator: David Freshwater, U. Kentucky, USA

Speakers:

John Bryden, University of Aberdeen, United Kingdom Risto Poutiainen, Regional Council of North Karelia, Finland Peter Nelson, AIDG, USA

10:00-10:30 Coffee break

10:30-11:30 Idea factory on Modern Rural Policy ROOM: Ballroom B (MCCC)

Participants will be invited to gather in groups to brainstorm around ten key issues on Modern Rural Policy. At the end of the session, the ten moderators will pass the information to the session coordinators who will then organise contributions (including from online) into a single document that will represent one of the key deliverables of the 10th OECD Rural Conference.

Moderator: Carol Guthrie, OECD

11:30-12:00 Coffee break

12:00-12:45 The way forward ROOM: Ballroom B (MCCC)

Closing remarks by Mari Kiviniemi, Deputy Secretary-General of the OECD

Chair’s statement by Lisa Mensah, Undersecretary of USDA, United States.

Departure field trips

13:00-13:30 Each field visit (optional) will provide the opportunity to engage with local actors, representatives of municipal bodies and local firms, tour projects and interact with the project developers.

o Field trip 1: The Innovative South o Field trip 2: Tourism the Delta Way

o Field trip 3: The Music of the Mighty Mississippi o Field trip 4: Science, Sipping, and Song

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WHO’S WHO

Conference hosts

Thomas J. Vilsack

Secretary of Agriculture United States

Tom Vilsack was appointed by President Barack Obama as the 30th Secretary of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and sworn into office on January 21, 2009. As Secretary of Agriculture, Vilsack is working hard to strengthen the American agricultural economy, to revitalize rural communities, to protect and conserve our natural resources, and to provide a safe, sufficient and nutritious food supply for the American people. Because USDA’s work affects every American every day, we are proud to be the ‘Every Way, Every Day’ USDA. As Agriculture Secretary, Vilsack has worked to implement President Obama’s ambitious agenda to turn around the economy and put Americans back to work. USDA has supported struggling farmers and ranchers, provided food aid to 1 in 4 Americans, and worked to create jobs and build a foundation for future economic growth – especially in rural America.

Mari Kiviniemi

Deputy Secretary-General

OECD

Mari Kiviniemi took up her duties as OECD Deputy Secretary-General on 25 August 2014. Her role consists of sharing her extensive experience to help increase the impact and relevance of OECD work and to contribute to the public policy challenges of promoting inclusive growth, jobs, equality and trust. She is responsible for the strategic oversight of the OECD’s work on Efficient and Effective Governance; Territorial Development; Trade and Agriculture, as well as Statistics. She is also responsible for advancing the better Life Initiative. Ms. Kiviniemi was Finland’s Prime Minister from 2010 to 2011. Previously, she was Special Advisor on Economic Policy to the Prime Minister, Minister for Foreign Trade and Development, Minister for European Affairs and Minister of Public Administration and Local Government. Elected for the first time at the age of 26, she was a Member of Parliament from 1995 to 2014, chairing and participating in a vast number of committees. She also held a variety of leadership positions in her political party, the Finnish Centre Party. An economist by training, she studied political science at the University of Helsinki and holds a Master's Degree in Social Sciences. Born in 1968, she is married and has two children.

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Conference Partners

Brenda LePage

Assistant Deputy Minister Western Economic Diversification

Canada

Brenda LePage was born in Brandon, Manitoba and completed her secondary school education in Saskatoon. Brenda obtained her Bachelor of Arts Degree from the University of Saskatchewan majoring in Psychology with a Political Science Minor. She joined the Public Service in 1984 as a Living Unit Officer in the Correctional Service of Canada (CSC). Ms. LePage enjoyed a 29+ year career with the CSC and was fortunate to be able to be part of a number of significant change initiatives including the implementation of the Creating Choices Task Force which eventually created 5 new regional prisons for women and a Women’s Healing Lodge. From 1996-2007 Brenda was the Deputy Warden and Warden of Saskatchewan Penitentiary and Riverbend Institution in Prince Albert, Saskatchewan. In 2009 Brenda was appointed as Regional Deputy Commissioner (ADM) for the CSC’s Prairie Region where she was responsible for overseeing federal corrections and parole services in the provinces of Northwestern Ontario, Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta and the North West Territories. In November 2013 Ms. LePage was thrilled to be appointed as the Assistant Deputy Minister responsible for the Saskatchewan Region of Western Economic Diversification. Ms. LePage has been active in her community volunteering as both a coach and manager for various sporting teams, board member for a number of non-profit and non-governmental organizations and coordinator for the Terry Fox Run. Brenda believes it is important to give back to our communities in whatever way possible. Ms. LePage is married and the mother of 3 sons. She enjoys spending time with family, camping, fishing, boating and gardening.

Jesús Murillo Karam

Secretary Ministry of Agrarian, Territorial and

Urban Development (SEDATU)

Mexico

Minister Murillo Karam holds a law degree from the Autonomous University of Hidalgo. He served as Governor of Hidalgo from 1993 to 1998. Afterwards he became Secretary of Public Security and later Under-Secretary of the Government of the Interior Ministry. Throughout his career he has been three times Secretary General of the PRI. He was elected Senator for a second time- in 2006 for the LX Legislature (2006-09). He was elected federal deputy for the third time in 2012, in addition to being named President of the Chamber of Deputies. He also served as Coordinator of Legal Affairs for the transition team of President Enrique Peña Nieto the same year. He is recognized as the author of recent initiatives to amend the Constitution Act regarding pursuant to collective actions, the federal law of justice for adolescents and the initiative of federal law on access to information and protection of personal data; promotes the initiative related to the general law on kidnapping. During his mandate as governor of the state of Hidalgo, the UN- through UNESCO - awarded him the NOMA Award for his work in education. He received the medal to the legislative merit by CANACINTRA. Since December 2012 he was ratified by the Senate as Attorney General of the Republic and on February 2015 he was named as the Minister of Agrarian, Territorial and Urban Development (SEDATU).

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High-level participants

Phil Hogan

Commissioner for Agriculture

European Commission

Phil Hogan served as Minister for the Environment, Community & Local Government from March 2011 until July 2014, when he was nominated as Ireland's candidate for the next European Commission. Hogan is considered to be a political heavy hitter and close ally of Taoiseach (PM) Enda Kenny. Hogan (54) was first elected to the Dáil (Lower House of Parliament) in 1989 and regained his seat at each subsequent General Election. Between 1987 and 1989, he was a member of Seanad Éireann (Upper House of Parliament). He briefly served as Minister of State for the Department of Finance with special responsibility for the Office of Public Works between December 1994 and February 1995. He has held a number of spokesperson positions for his party, including on the Food Industry (1989-1991), Consumer Affairs (1991-1993), Regional Affairs & European Development (1993-1994), Enterprise, Trade & Employment (2002 onwards), Environment, Heritage & Local Government (2007-2011). He was Chairman of the Fine Gael (EPP) parliamentary party between 1995 and 2001. Hogan graduated from University College Cork (UCC). He is separated with one adult son.

Mihail Dumitriu

Deputy Director General Directorate general Agriculture and

Rural development

Euroepan Commission

Of Romanian nationality, Mihail Dumitriu is an agriculture economist specialised in agrifood economics and rural development. He carried out postgraduate studies in France and Greece at the International Centre for Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies. PhD in economics. After graduation from the Academy of Economic Studies in Bucharest, Romania he worked three years in a large state owned farm in South Romania. After the farm experience he moved into economic research carrying out research studies in agricultural economics and rural economics at the Institute of Agricultural Economics a constituent institute of Romanian Academy where he was head of a research department. In 1995 he joined the Delegation of the European Commission in Bucharest where he followed the whole process of Romania's accession to the EU. In the last years prior to accession he headed the section of the Delegation in Charge of Agriculture and Internal market. In 2006 he joined DG AGRI where he was in charge of negotiation of the first rural development programme of Romania financed by EAFRD. Minister of Agriculture and Rural development of Romania in 2010, he re-joined the European Commission in early 2011 where he took over a directorate in charge of Rural development programmes. In February 2014 he became Deputy Director General responsible for rural development and research.

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Hisao Harihara

Vice-Minister for International Affairs Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and

Fisheries

Japan

Mr Harihara hold a Degree in Law from Tokyo University In 1980 he joined the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries becoming Secretary to the Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries in 1996. He became Director for the Administration Division, Administration Department of the Food Agency in 1997 and the following year became Director of the International Economic Affairs Division, International Affairs Department, Economic Affairs Bureau. In 2001 he took on the role of Director of the Planning Division, Marketing Department of the, Food Agency and then Director of the Policy Division in the Administration Department of the Food Agency. Mr Harihara joined the Cabinet Secretariat as a Counsellor in 2003 and became Director of the Budget Division in the Minster’s Secretariat in 2006. In 2007 he was Director-General of the Private Forest Department at the Forestry Agency and then Director-General of Forest Policy Planning Department, Forestry Agency in 2008. In 2009 Mr Harihara became Director-General for Policy Coordination in the Minister’s Secretariat. In 2011 he was director-General, General Food Policy Bureau followed by Director-General, Food Industry Affairs Bureau later that year. He has been Vice-Minister for International Affairs since July 2013.

Lee Seung Ho

Deputy Minister for Land Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and

Transport

Republic of Korea

Lee, Seung-ho was appointed as Deputy Minister for Land in the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport in June 2014. He is a land, urban and regional development policy expert who played a critical role in setting up plans for effective territorial management and regional development while serving as Administrator of Daejeon Regional Construction Management Administration from 2011 to 2012. While he was working as Director General for Railway Policy at the Ministry of Land, Transport and Maritime Affairs from 2008 to 2011, he focused on connecting railway development with territorial and regional development to provide more efficient and convenient railway services in all areas across the nation and greatly contributed to balanced regional development. Deputy Minister Lee passed the 29th National Higher Civil Service Examination. He earned the degree in English in Hankook University of Foreign Studies in Korea in 1984 and the M.A. degree in urban planning from Graduate School of Oregon University, the U.S. in 1993.

Arturo Nahle García

Deputy Minister of Agrarian Development

SEDATU

Mexico

Arturo Nahle studied law in the Nacional Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM). He specialized in Oral Trials as a Master degree from the University of Durango, México. He has a vast experience in the public sector since 1988. His experience covers:

• Second General Controller of the Ministry of the Agrarian Reform (1991-1992);

• Legal Coordinator of the Government of the State of Hidalgo (1993-1995);

• Undersecretary of the Governor of Hidalgo (1995-1998); • Secretary of Interior of the State of Zacatecas (2000-2003); • Congressman for the State of Zacatecas in the in the House of

Representatives (2003-2006); • Advisor of the General Counsel of the Federal Institute of

Elections (Instituto Federal Electoral, IFE) (2009-2010); and • General Attorney of the State of Zacatecas (2010-2015).

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Marceli Niezgoda Deputy Minister

Ministry for Infrastructure and Development

Poland

On 28 November 2013, Marceli Niezgoda was appointed Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Infrastructure and Development. From 24 January 2011 to 27 November 2013, he was the Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Regional Development. He graduated from the former Agricultural University of Lublin. He also finished post-graduate studies in the field of Structural Funds management and the European Union law. Before taking the position in the Ministry he has worked as the deputy Director in the Department of Strategy and Regional Development in the Office of the Marshall in Lublin where he was responsible for the implementation of the Regional Operational Programme of Lubelskie Voivodeship. He co-authored the most important programme documents of the voivodeship and supervised the calls for proposals and their assessment process.

Chris Masingill

Federal Co-Chairman Delta Regional Authority

United States

Christopher A. Masingill was appointed by President Obama and confirmed by the U.S. Senate in 2010 to serve as the Federal Co-Chairman of the Delta Regional Authority. In his five years with the Delta Regional Authority, Masingill has made it his hallmark to develop strategic connections between the public and private sectors to achieve economic and community development results on the local, state, and national levels. Prior to leading the Delta Regional Authority, Masingill served the state of Arkansas as Governor Mike Beebe’s Director of Intergovernmental Affairs and during that time was the Arkansas Recovery Implementation Director for the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009. Chairman Masingill believes in the natural, economic, and human assets of Delta communities and thus the opportunities they create for the region. While at the Delta Regional Authority, he has placed a strong emphasis on supporting small businesses and entrepreneurs as well as investing in workforce development and training efforts, recognizing these efforts as the greatest opportunities for the Delta region’s economy. Chris and his wife, Melissa, have two daughters, Mia and Ava, and live in Little Rock.

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Lisa Mensah

Under Secretary for Rural Development

United States Department of Agricultre United States

Lisa Afua Serwah Mensah was nominated by President Obama for the position of Under Secretary of USDA Rural Development and she was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in November of 2014. Ms. Mensah provides leadership for three USDA agencies charged with improving the economic wellbeing of rural America: the Rural Housing Service, the Rural Utilities Service and the Rural Business-Cooperative Service. Together, these agencies provide critical infrastructure investments in the form of loans and grants for rural housing, high-speed broadband access, telephone, electric and water utilities, renewable energy generation and conservation, local and regional food systems, community facilities, and small business development in rural America. An expert in using financial tools to improve the economic security of the working poor, Ms. Mensah has experience in the private financial sector and has worked extensively on small and micro business development, housing, financial and savings policy. Prior to joining USDA, she was the founding Executive Director of the Initiative on Financial Security at the Aspen Institute. In that role she led a national bi-partisan effort with leaders of financial institutions, non-profit executives and experts to promote solutions to the complex problems of helping more Americans save money, buy homes, and finance retirement. Ms. Mensah began her career in commercial banking at Citibank before joining the Ford Foundation where she was responsible for the country’s largest philanthropic grant and loan portfolio of investments in rural America. Ms. Mensah holds an M.A. from the Paul H. Nitze School of Advanced International Studies of The Johns Hopkins University and a B.A. from Harvard University. Born and raised in Oregon, she is the daughter of an immigrant from Ghana and of a former Iowa farm girl. She resides in Maryland with her husband and two children.

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A C Wharton, Jr.

Mayor of Memphis

United States

A C Wharton, Jr. was sworn in as the Mayor of the City of Memphis on October 26, 2009. Prior to being elected Mayor of the City of Memphis, A C Wharton, Jr. served as the Mayor of Shelby County for seven years and was the first African-American elected to that office. Twice elected as Shelby County Mayor, Wharton led initiatives that shaped the region's future. He inspired Operation Safe Community, the area's first comprehensive crime-fighting plan, developed the first smart growth and sustainability plan for our community, tackled education and early childhood development issues, and reduced the County's inherited debt while limiting its citizens to only one tax increase in seven years. A visionary leader, Mayor Wharton created a public-private partnership to preserve and cultivate Shelby Farms Park - the largest urban park of its kind in the country - and established the Shelby Farms Greenline, a new urban trail connecting Midtown Memphis to Shelby Farms Park recognising Memphis' potential as a green, connected, and healthy city. As the City's leading official, Mayor Wharton has worked untiringly to incubate innovation and create efficiencies throughout government at a level that has brought about dramatic improvements in a relatively short amount of time. An attorney by trade, Wharton is a former public defender and served as executive director of the non-profit Memphis Area Legal Services, which received national recognition as a result of his leadership. In 1982, he wrote and saw passed one of the first state laws in the United States to combat domestic violence. At a national level, he worked for a special appropriation for one of the nation's first transitional living facilities for juveniles. While serving as a public defender, Wharton's passion for reform in criminal justice system's treatment of the mentally ill led to the nationally renowned Jericho Project. Mayor Wharton received his law degree in 1971, graduating with honours from the University of Mississippi Law School, where he was one of the first African-American students to serve on the Moot Court Board and first to serve on the Judicial Council. He became the University's first African-American professor of law, where he taught for 25 years. He earned a political science degree from Tennessee State University and is a native of Lebanon, Tennessee. The Mayor and his wife, Ruby, have raised six sons in Memphis.

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Doug O'Brien

Senior Policy Advisor for Rural Affairs White House Domestic Policy Council and Chair of the OECD Working Party

on Rural Policy

United States

Doug O'Brien has served as the Senior Advisor for Rural Affairs for the White House Domestic Policy Council since January 2015. Before that time and since March of 2009, O’Brien served in a number of leadership capacities at the U.S. Department of Agriculture, including as the Acting Under Secretary for the Rural Development Mission Area. At the White House, he helps lead the work of the White House Rural Council, which President Obama created in 2011 to encourage interagency cooperation and improve the effectiveness of federal programs in rural areas. Recently, the Council announced Rural Impact, an effort focused on rural child poverty. This work builds on O’Brien’s leadership in rural community economic development that has focused on both emerging opportunities and in impoverished areas. Prior to serving in the Obama Administration, he worked for two State governors, the Senate Agricultural Committee, the U.S. House of Representatives, and in legal academia as a professor and author. O’Brien has degrees from Loras College in Dubuque, Iowa, the University of Iowa Law School, and a Masters in Law from the University of Arkansas. He was raised on a diversified farm in Iowa and dedicated his career to food and rural policy.

Rolf Alter

Director Directorate for Public Governance

and Territorial Development

OECD

Mr. Rolf Alter is Director for Public Governance and Territorial Development of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) in Paris. He leads a team of 150 staff to support governments in improving their public sector performance for the well-being of citizens and the competitiveness of their economies. Key areas include institutional reform, innovation, transparency and integrity in the public sector, results-oriented budgeting, regulatory reform, and the economics of regions and cities. Under his leadership, the Directorate pursues a rich programme of co-operation with non-member countries and international institutions to advance the research on empirical evidence and good policy practices of public sector economics and governance. Previously, Mr. Alter was Chief of Staff of OECD Secretary-General Mr. Angel Gurría. He joined the OECD in 1991. Throughout his career with OECD he held different positions in the Economics Department and the Department of Financial, Fiscal and Enterprise Affairs. Between 1996 and 1998, Mr. Alter was an advisor to the Executive Director of the OECD, Mr Jean-Jacques Noreau. Prior to joining the OECD, Mr. Alter was an economist in the International Monetary Fund, in Washington D.C. He started his professional career in 1981 in the German Ministry of Economy in Bonn. He is currently a member of the Global Agenda Council of the World Economic Forum. Mr. Alter holds a doctorate degree from the University of Goettingen, Germany, following post-graduate work in Germany and the United States.

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Speakers

Alessandro Alasia

Head of Special Projects Centre for Special Business Projects

Statistics Canada

Canada

Alessandro Alasia is the Unit Head of Special Projects, Centre for Special Business Projects, Statistics Canada, where he leads a team of analysts dedicated to special studies on business and territorial performance indicators, economic impact studies, and other innovative applications of traditional and alternative data sources in support of decision making of federal and provincial departments. Since 2011, he has been first a delegate to and then Vice-Chair of the Working Party on Territorial Indicators at the OECD; he also contributed to the OECD Territorial Review of Colombia and is currently working on the OECD Territorial Review of Peru. Before joining Statistics Canada full-time in 2007, he led several research projects with the Agriculture Division of Statistics Canada and the Rural and Cooperatives Secretariat (AAFC) as a consultant and as a post-doctoral fellow. He also consulted for several agriculture and rural development research projects, mainly in Southern Africa and Southeast Asia, with international organizations and national cooperation agencies. Alessandro has taught at the graduate and undergraduate level at the University of Bologna (Italy), the Eduardo Mondlane University (Mozambique), and the International Comparative Rural Policies Studies program. He graduated in Economics from the University of Torino (Italy), earned a MSc from the School of Specialization in Agriculture Economics and Business of the Catholic University (Italy), and a PhD in Agricultural Economics with specialization in Rural Studies from the University of Guelph.

Christel Alvergne

Deputy Director Local Development Finance Department

UNCDF

Christel is Deputy Director of the Local Development Finance Department of UNCDF – United Nations Capital Development Fund. Before that, she worked five years for UNCDF in West and Central Africa, where she served as LDFP Team Leader and o-i-c for the Regional Office. Christel spent ten years as researcher and university teacher, working in various organizations and universities on Urban and Regional Planning: Montreal (INRS) as researcher, University L. Senghor in Alexandria and the French university of Bordeaux. Then she worked for the Municipal Development Program for West Africa providing advice and guidance to local governments associations. She also served as Chargée de mission and Special Advisor to the Délégué Général for Territorial Planning and Regional Development (DATAR, Prime minister’s Office, France). Ms. Alvergne holds PhD in Economics (Geographical economics) and a Graduate in Political Science from Aix-en-Provence.

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John E. Anderson

Visiting Fellow Lincoln Institute of Land Policy,

Cambridge, MA

United States

Dr. John Anderson is an economist and an advisor to public policymakers in the field of public finance, fiscal reform, and tax policy. His academic research and policy advising has been published in more than one hundred journal articles, books, book chapters, and government reports. A new edition of his textbook, Public Finance: Theory and Policy, used by students around the world, was published by Cengage Learning in 2012. Dr. Anderson served as a senior economist with the President’s Council of Economic Advisers in Washington, DC, in 2005-06. He has also advised state governors and legislatures, and numerous state agencies in the United States. He is currently a Visiting Fellow with the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, Cambridge, MA, conducting research on property taxation. Internationally, Dr. Anderson has served as a technical advisor on fiscal reform projects and local government reform projects in Moldova, Montenegro, and Macedonia. He has taught and provided educational reform and curriculum advising to universities in Bulgaria, China, Russia, Mongolia, and Tajikistan. In recent years he has been a Visiting Scholar at the Peking University—Lincoln Institute Center in Beijing, conducting research on Chinese municipalities and their public finances. Dr. Anderson earned his B.A. in mathematics and economics at Western Michigan University and his Ph.D. in economics at Claremont Graduate University in California.

Anna Marie Argilagos

Senior Advisor Ford Foundation

United States

Ana Marie Argilagos is senior advisor to the foundation's Just Cities initiative. Her work focuses on urban development strategies to reduce poverty, expand economic opportunity, and advance sustainability in cities and regions across the world. Ana Marie is also currently an adjunct professor of international urban planning at New York University’s Wagner School of Public Service. Before joining the foundation in 2014, Ana Marie served as deputy chief of staff and deputy assistant secretary at the US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). There, she created the Office for International and Philanthropic Innovation (IPI) to deepen and scale collaboration between the public and philanthropic sectors. The IPI model of sourcing innovation and leveraging partnerships from broad global networks is now being successfully replicated at other federal cabinet agencies and cities across the US. Earlier, Ana Marie spent eight years as a senior program officer at the Annie E. Casey Foundation in Baltimore, where she spearheaded the foundation’s work in rural areas, indigenous communities, and in the US-Mexico border region. With experience in both the public and non-profit sectors—serving as educational programs manager at the National Association of Hispanic Journalists; director of the New Workplace for Women Project at the National Council of La Raza; and deputy director of AYUDA, a community-based legal clinic serving immigrants in Washington, DC—Ana Marie has proven to be an entrepreneurial thinker who bridges diverse agendas and achieves results. Ana Marie earned her bachelor’s degree in international relations from The American University, and a master’s in public administration from Harvard University.

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Cristell Åstrom

Senior Specialist Regional Department

Ministry of Employment and the Economy

Finland

Christell Åström is currently working as a senior specialist at the Regional Department at Ministry of Employment and the Economy. She is also the Secretary General of the Rural Policy Committee. The Rural Policy Committee is a cooperation body which aims to promote the well-being of the rural areas in various ways. The primary objective of rural policy is to improve the preconditions for living in the countryside. The Rural Policy Committee is appointed by the Finnish Government. More than 500 persons from several ministries and other organizations participate in its work. She studied in the faculty of Agriculture and – forestry in Helsinki University and got a masters´ degree in 1997. She has been working with rural development on a local and regional level in many NGOs. Before she started to work at the ministry she was working with rural policy and development and small municipalities as a senior adviser in the Association of Finnish Local and Regional Authorities.

Julio Berdegué

Principal Researcher Rimisp-Latin American Center

for Rural Development

Chile

Dr. Julio A. Berdegué is Principal Researcher at Rimisp-Latin American Center for Rural Development, Santiago, Chile. He holds a PhD. in Social Science from Wageningen University, Netherlands. Currently, he co-ordinates the Collaborative Program on Territorial Cohesion for Development. Dr. Berdegué has published extensively on different aspects of rural development, including on territorial development, rural non-farm employment, the role of small and medium cities in rural development, and the changing structures of agri-food and rural markets and their impact on small and medium rural producers and enterprises. Dr. Berdegué has advised national and sub-national governments in several Latin American countries, most recently in Colombia, Chile, Guatemala, Mexico, and Peru. His work on territorial development has received the generous support of IDRC (International Development Research Centre, Canada), as well as additional grants from IFAD (International Fund for Agricultural Development), the Ford Foundation, and others. Dr Berdegué has been a member of the boards of several international organizations, including the International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center (CIMMYT) that he chaired between 2008 and 2011, and the International Institute on Environment and Development (IIED).

Cornelius Blanding Executive Director of the Federation

of Southern Cooperatives

United States

Cornelius Blanding began his career in development work as an economic development intern for the City of Miami Beach and since then has gained a broad experience base including rural, international and cooperative economic development. His experiences include business and project development, management and marketing. He has worked as a small business development & management consultant, manager of a multi-million dollar revolving loan fund, domestic and international project director, Director of Field Operations & Special Projects, Deputy Director and is now presently serving as the Executive Director of the Federation of Southern Cooperatives. Cornelius has also served and continues to serve on various boards and committees, including the National Cooperative Business Association, Agricultural Safety & Health Council of America, Southeast Climate Consortium and the Presbyterian Committee on the Self Development of People.

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Betty-Ann Bryce

Policy Advisor Office of the Under Secretary USDA – Rural Development

United States

Betty-Ann Bryce is a policy advisor in the Office of the Under Secretary for Rural Development at the United States Department of Agriculture. Before joining the USDA in 2014, she was an administrator with the Rural and Regional Development Unit within the Regional Development Policy Division of the Public Governance and Territorial Development Directorate, OECD. She has contributed to several OECD Publications including: Regions and Cities: Where Policies and People Meet (2014), Linking Renewable Energy to Rural Development (2012), and the Rural Policy Reviews of the Netherlands (2008), Finland (2008) and Scotland, UK (2008). She coordinated and co-authored Innovation and Modernising the Rural Economy (2013), Rural-Urban Partnerships: An Integrated Approach to Economic Development (2013), the Rural Review of England, UK (2011), Strategies to improve Rural Service Delivery (2010), and the Rural Policy Review of Italy (2009). In addition to a Juris Doctorate, she holds a Masters in Economic and Territorial Development from the L'Institut d'Etudes Politique (IEP) de Paris (Sciences-Po), and a Masters in Economic and Political Development from Columbia University, School of International and Public Affairs (SIPA).

John M. Bryden

Research Professor, NILF, Norway Emeritus Professor

University of Aberdeen

Scotland, United Kingdom

John Bryden is part-time Professor in the “Grounded and Inclusive Innovation” research group at the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute (NILF) in Oslo, and Emeritus Professor at the University of Aberdeen in Scotland. He is a recognised expert on rural policy who has worked in UK, Norway, US, Canada, Chile, the Caribbean, Africa and India. He has been a Ministerial advisor on land reform and rural policy, and Secretary of a cross-party group on rural policy. He was a founder of the International Comparative Rural Policy Summer Institute. He was European Director of the joint EU-North America exchange programme on Rural Policy in the 1980’s. He has co-ordinated four major transnational research programmes on economic and social dynamics in rural regions. He has been an expert advisor to the OECD on rural services, service to industry, rural policies, rural innovation, and for the preparation of the New Rural Paradigm (2006). He contributed to the OECD project on Renewable Energy as a Rural Development Policy, and also worked for the UNEP REN-21 Policy Network on a Renewable Energy update in the North Africa and Middle East region in 2012-13. He has just completed a book with colleagues from Scotland, England, Finland and Norway on Northern Neighbours: Scotland and Norway since 1800. John studied Political Economy, Tropical Agricultural Economics, and Development Economics in the Universities of Glasgow, the West Indies and East Anglia respectively, and has been visiting scholar at several universities worldwide. John was also Programme Director of the Arkleton Trust from 1981 to 2006. He has been a keynote speaker or panellist at the major EU rural policy conferences as well as many OECD Territorial Rural Policy conferences and other conferences across the globe.

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Teresa Capese Geleota

Public Investment Evaluation Unit (UVAL) of the Italian Department for

Development and Cohesion Policy

Italy

Teresa Capece Galeota is a public officer at the Public Investment Evaluation Unit (UVAL) of the Italian Department for Development and Cohesion Policy. Since 2012 her work is mainly focused on “Inner Areas” and on the activities of the National Committee where she’s in charge of assisting the Coordinator in such activities as public and institutional relations, launching and promotion of the National Strategy for Inner Areas, information and communication activities, preliminary analysis on data. Before joining the Evaluation Unit she worked for the Italian Institute for Industrial Promotion (an Agency of the Ministry of Economic Development), where she gained an over ten years’ experience in the field of State aid, EU Structural Funds, policy measures and incentive systems to promote private investment. She was appointed Italian delegate at the European Commission WES Network (the European network to promote women's entrepreneurship) on behalf of the Ministry for Economic Development. She holds a degree in Political Sciences from LUISS University of Rome and a Master in Competition and regulatory practice within Transport and Energy sectors from Tor Vergata University of Rome.

Vito Cistulli

Senior Policy Officer Department of Economic and Social

Development

FAO

Vito Cistulli is a Senior Policy Officer at the FAO Department of Economic and Social Development. He is an agricultural economist with more than 30 years of experience in agriculture, natural resources and rural development as a free-lance or staff member with research institutes, international organizations including the World Bank, the Indian Ocean Commission, UNEP / MAP and the private sector (ENI Group). He joined FAOin 2003 as a senior policy officer in charge of supporting the member countries in the design and implementation of agricultural and rural development strategies. He is currently coordinating the social protection work of FAO and is responsible for the initiative on territorial approach to rural poverty reduction and food security and nutrition policies.

Richard Cormier

ACOA

Canada

Richard Cormier is the Director of Strategic Policy Development at the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency (ACOA), one of Canada's federal agencies responsible for regional economic development. Mr. Cormier joined ACOA in 2005 as a Senior Policy Analyst. His work at the Agency involves directing policy research and analysis related to regional economic development, multi-lateral engagement with the four Atlantic provincial governments, and advising senior officials and the Minister in regional development issues. Mr. Cormier has also been part of Canada's delegation to the OECD’s Regional Development Policy Committee since 2008, and was elected Vice-Chair of the OECD’s Working Party on Rural Policy in 2013. Prior to joining ACOA, Mr. Cormier was Senior Policy Advisor with the federal office responsible for the Toronto Waterfront Revitalization Initiative, a $1.5 billion, federal-provincial-municipal investment. Mr. Cormier was born in Moncton, New Brunswick, Canada, where he lives and works.

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Jaime de la Mora

Director Consulting Group

for Agricultural Markets

Mexico

Jaime Federico de la Mora studied Hydraulic, Irrigation and Civil Engineering. He was the Director of Administration and Finance of the Financial Agricultural Society and has worked in diverse private national and international consultancies in relation to the rural production. In 1995 he was appointed Deputy Minister of Rural Development. De la Mora Gomez was in charge of the design and implementation of the program for a structural change and modernization of the National Rural Bank for Credit in Mexico (Banrural, Banco Nacional de Crédito Rural) and has worked in programming budget in a national scale from the federal government. Currently he is a member of the Technical Advisory Council of the National Peasant Confederation (CNC, Confederación Nacional Campesina) of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI, Partido Revolucionario Institucional), member of the Mexican Society of Engineers of the National Confederation of Popular Organizations (CNOP, Confederación Nacional de Organizaciones Populares) of the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI, Partido Revolucionario Institucional), member of the College of Civil Engineers of Mexico (CICM, Colegio de Ingenieros Civiles de México) and participates in the Water Committee of the College.

Richard. W. England

Professor University of New Hampshire

United States

Dr. Richard W. England is a professor of economics and natural resources at the University of New Hampshire (USA) and a visiting fellow at the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy (USA). His research focuses on land and property taxation, real estate markets and land development. His most recent book, co-authored with Prof. John E. Anderson, is Use-Value Assessment of Rural Land in the United States (2014).

Matt S. Erskine

Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development and Chief

Operating Officer for the Economic Development Administration

United States

Matt S. Erskine was appointed by President Obama to serve as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Economic Development and Chief Operating Officer of the Economic Development Administration in September 2011. Mr. Erskine brings more than 20 years of leadership and management experience in business, public sector, and public-private partnerships. Prior to joining the Obama Administration and the Department of Commerce, he led the private-public partnership driving economic development and foreign direct investment for the 5th largest metropolitan region in the U.S. and worked in senior roles at global business consulting firms.

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Margarita Flores de la Vega

Academic Secretary University Program on Development

Studies Universidad Nacional Autónoma de

México (UNAM)

Mexico

Margarita Flores de la Vega is an Academic Secretary at the University Program on Development Studies, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), and Part-time Professor of The International Social Agenda and Cooperation for Development at the Post-graduate Division of the Faculty of Economics, UNAM. She is also member of the Experts Committee for the Cruzada Nacional contra el Hambre. Before joining UNAM, Dr. Flores served the United Nations for 24 years. From 1986 to 2002 at the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) and from 2002 to 2010 at the UN Organization for Food and Agriculture (FAO). From 2007 through the beginning of 2010, she was FAO Representative in Chile and FAO Deputy Regional Representative for Latin America and the Caribbean. Between 2002 and 2007, she was the Director of the FAO Food Security Analysis Service in Rome, as well as Secretary of the World Food Security Committee. Development and food security projects were developed in various countries in Africa Central America, the Caribbean and South Asia. Prior to FAO, she served as Deputy Director of the ECLAC Regional Office for Mexico, Central America and the Caribbean –Non English speaking countries. For more than a year she was director officer in charge. From 1986 to 1993 she was Economist officer and then (1994-1998) chief at the Agricultural Unit at ECLAC. Dr. Flores has participated in UN electoral as well as peacekeeping operations in Central America and the Caribbean (Nicaragua 1988-89, El Salvador 1991-1993 and Haiti), 1990. Her experience is mainly associated to rural development and food security. It includes the Mexican public administration, and NGOs work with peasant organisations.

Charles W. Fluharty

President Emeritus and Vice President for Policy Programs

RUPRI

United States

Charles W. Fluharty is the founder, President, and CEO of the Rural Policy Research Institute (RUPRI), the only U.S. national policy institute solely dedicated to assessing the rural impacts of public policies. Since RUPRI’s founding in 1990, over 300 scholars representing 16 different disciplines in 100 universities, all U.S. states and 30 other nations have participated in RUPRI projects, which address the full range of policy and program dynamics affecting rural people and places. Collaborations with the OECD, the EU, the German Marshall Fund, the Inter- American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture, the International Comparative Rural Policy Studies Committee, and other international organizations have framed RUPRI's comparative rural policy foci. A Clinical Professor in the University of Iowa College of Public Health and a graduate of Yale Divinity School, he was also a German Marshall Fund Transatlantic Fellow from 2007 to 2011. Chuck is the author of numerous policy studies and journal articles, has presented dozens of Congressional testimonies and briefings, and is also a frequent speaker before national and international audiences, having delivered major public policy speeches in over a dozen nations. He has also provided senior policy consultation to most federal departments, state and local governments, associations of government, planning and development organizations, and many foundations.

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David Freshwater

Professor Department of Agricultural

Economics University of Kentucky

United States

David Freshwater is a professor at the University of Kentucky, with appointments in the Department of Agricultural Economics and in the Martin School of Public Administration and Public Policy. He is also an adjunct professor in the Geography Department of Memorial University in Newfoundland. During 2009 he was Head of the Rural Policy Programme at the OECD in Paris. His main research areas are rural and agricultural policy in North America and Europe. His academic research focuses on: evaluation of the impacts of rural development policies, analysis of labour market conditions in rural areas, and the role of off-farm income in agricultural risk management. From 1994 to 2001 he was the Program Manager for TVA Rural Studies, a rural development research centre that was created through a cooperative agreement between the Tennessee Valley Authority and the University of Kentucky. Prior to joining the University of Kentucky he was a senior economist on the Staff of the Joint Economic Committee of the U.S. Congress and before that a member of the professional staff of the U.S. Senate Committee on Agriculture, Nutrition and Forestry. He has also been a visiting scholar at USDA, a member of the faculty of the Department of Agricultural Economics at the University of Manitoba, and a consultant on agricultural and rural policy for various domestic and international government agencies. He holds a B.A. in Economics from Brock University, an M.A. in Economics from McMaster University and a Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics from Michigan State University.

Jorge Galo Medina Torres

Director General Rural Development Capacities and

Extensionism, SAGARPA

Mexico

Dr Galo has been a research professor for over 38 years and has participated in teaching, research and development projects as well as in the university administration of several institutions of higher education in Mexico. He is also president of the International Society of Pasture Management (Mexico section) and of the SOMMAP.

Enrique Garcilazo

Head, Rural and Regional Programme Public Governance and Territorial

Development Directorate

OECD

Jose Enrique Garcilazo is the Head of Unit for the Rural and Regional Development Programme within the Regional Development Policy Division at the OECD. His work has mainly focused in the areas of regional competitiveness, measuring the performance of regions and understating the key factors for growth at the regional level and their impact to aggregate performance. He obtained a doctoral degree from the University of Texas at Austin at the LBJ School of Public Affairs.

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Salin Geervahese

Deputy Assistant Secretary International and Philanthropic

Innovation Department of Housing and Urban

Development

United States

Salin Geevarghese has been appointed by Secretary Shaun Donovan as HUD's Deputy Assistant Secretary for the Office of International and Philanthropic Innovation (IPI) within the Office of Policy Development and Research. In this role, Salin leads an innovation team that is charged with engaging philanthropic and other cross-sector partners (both internationally and domestically) to harness and apply best practices, programs and policies for the benefit of our communities and aligning our common efforts. Prior to this appointment, Sec. Donovan appointed Salin as Acting Director of the Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities. In that role, he was responsible for advancing housing and communities that increase affordability, cost savings, efficiency, and quality of life, while also expanding regional economic growth and opportunity. He provided technical and policy support for energy, green building, and integrated housing, transportation and economic development programs at HUD and around the nation. Salin came to the Obama Administration as a Senior Advisor and as part of the founding leadership of HUD's Office of Sustainable Housing and Communities. Before coming to HUD as an appointee of President Obama, Salin worked as a Senior Associate at the Annie E. Casey Foundation where he focused on urban redevelopment issues, anchor institutions, regional equity and opportunity, and community and economic development policy. He was in the senior management of The Harwood Institute for Public Innovation, focused on building the civic and change capacity of public, private, and non-profit leaders and organizations and in communities like Flint, MI, Orange County, FL, Newark, NJ, and throughout the state of Ohio. Salin was previously a corporate manager with the BellSouth Corporation where he worked with their corporate philanthropy on education reform and student achievement, community change and public engagement, and technology. He co-led the corporate practice of the national management consultancy TCC Group where he assisted CEOs, foundation executives, and non-profit leaders on strategic planning, organizational development and redesign, and evaluation projects. A recognized expert and leader, Salin has consulted, spoken, and written widely on open records laws and transparency, public education issues, civil rights and equity issues, community and economic development, and civic innovation and engagement efforts.

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Earl Gohl

Federal Co-chair Appalachian Regional Commission

United States

Earl F. Gohl was unanimously confirmed as federal co-chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC) by the U.S. Senate on March 10, 2010. He is the eleventh federal co-chair to be appointed since the Commission was established by an act of Congress in 1965. Gohl came to ARC with 20 years of experience in Pennsylvania state and local government. From 1975 to 1995, he held positions including executive assistant to the mayor of Harrisburg; elected member of the Harrisburg City Council; deputy secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Community Affairs; and director of the Pennsylvania governor's Washington office. As deputy secretary, Gohl awarded and administered $100 million annually in housing and community development programs benefiting communities within the Appalachian Region. He also managed several initiatives to strengthen the capacity of rural local governments to meet economic challenges. From 1996 to 2001, Gohl served as a special assistant, and then as an associate assistant secretary, at the U.S. Department of Labor. There he was responsible for the development and implementation of legislative strategy in the areas of immigration policy, employment standards, affirmative action and federal workers' compensation programs, and international affairs, including child labor and core labor standards. From 2001 to 2009, Gohl was the director of government relations/deputy director for the Puerto Rico Federal Affairs Administration, where he formulated legislative and executive branch initiatives related to taxes, economic security, health care, education, nutrition, environment, homeland security, labor, housing, and transportation. In his Senate confirmation hearing, Gohl stated that his objective as ARC federal co-chair would be to ensure that each federal dollar expended by the Commission was "an investment in the economic future of Appalachian families that will generate a return for American taxpayers." Gohl holds a bachelor of arts degree from Rider College (now Rider University) in New Jersey and a master of public administration degree from Pennsylvania State University.

John Grieve

Director Rural Development Company

Scotland

John Grieve is a director of the Rural Development Company, a specialist economic development practice based in rural Scotland. A former farms manager John qualified as a professional training manager working for a number of years with the UK Agricultural Training Board. John moved into wider rural development in 1993 initiating an area based initiative in the Angus Glens before managing a portfolio of domestic and EU funded projects and the Upland Tayside Leader II Programme. Moving into consultancy in 1999 his work includes substantial experience in the rural and fisheries sectors throughout the UK and elsewhere in Europe from the community grass roots to the European policy level. He is involved on a near continuous basis in managing or contributing in a senior role to programme, policy development, evaluation and networking projects and activities in the UK, overseas and at an EU level. As a trainer, development practitioner and evaluator putting learning into practice is his major driver, contributing to the development of guidance and implementation of good practice in the field of Community Led Local Development (CLLD) and in particular LEADER. He currently plays a senior role in the European Network for Rural Development as Policy Coordinator for the Contact Point. For the past six years has also been a core team member of FARNET, the European Fisheries Areas Network supporting the implementation of the CLLD approach in fisheries communities.

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Carol Guthrie

Head of the Washington Centre

OECD

Carol Guthrie is the Head of the OECD Washington Center, where she works to better connect the OECD’s unique research and best practices perspectives with policymakers and stakeholders in the United States and Canada.

Before joining the OECD, Guthrie was most recently the Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Public and Media Affairs in the Administration of President Barack Obama. Prior, she was the Communications Director for the U.S. Senate Committee on Finance, covering a wide range of issues including, domestic and international tax policy, trade, health care, and entitlement programs. Ms Guthrie has also served as the Communications Director and speechwriter for U.S. Senator Ron Wyden. Before her service in government, Guthrie spent seven years as a television news producer for multiple network affiliate outlets in Washington DC, Baltimore, and Birmingham. AL

Roman Haken

Director of the Centre for Community Organizing Central Moravia

Czech Republic

Member of the EESC – European Economic and Social Committee, Brussels. Rapporteur for the opinion on Community Led Locla Development. Czech expert on local development and public participation in decision making processes. External lecturer in Charles University, Prague. Co-founder of the NGO Center for Community Organizing. Member of the Czech Government Council for NGOs.

Greg Halseth

Professor University of Northern British Columbia

Canada

Greg Halseth is a Professor in the Geography Program at the University of Northern British Columbia, where he is also the Canada Research Chair in Rural and Small Town Studies and Co-Director of UNBC’s Community Development Institute. His research examines rural and small town community development, and community strategies for coping with social and economic change. Greg has served on the governing council of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, the Advisory Committee on Rural Issues for the Federal Secretary of State for Rural Development, and various other Provincial Government advisory committees. Greg’s books include “Building Community in an Instant Town” and “Building for Success”, as well as an edited volume on the “Next Rural Economies” which includes contributions from 12 OECD countries. His most recent book is “Investing in Place: Economic Renewal in Northern British Columbia” which is published by UBC press.

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Raúl Hernández Garciadiego

General Director Alternativas y Procesos de Participación

Social A.C.

Mexico

Raúl Hernández graduated with degree in Philosophy, Universidad Iberoamericana; title of thesis: “Additional Principles Required in the Theory of Justice as Fairness”; Doctor Honoris Causa in Social Sciences and Humanities, Universidad Iberoamericana-Puebla. General Director of Alternativas y Procesos de Participación Social A.C., a civil development organization. Together with his wife, Gisela Herrerías Guerra, since 1980 he has promoted a process of sustainable regional development that benefits the poorest families and towns in the semi-arid region of the Mixteca, with the support of an interdisciplinary team of approximately 200 people. His principal projects are: 1)“Water forever”, ecological regeneration of watersheds to obtain water and enrich soil; 2) “Quali-Cooperative Group”, made up of 88 cooperative organizations that operate an agroindustrial chain of nutritive food products elaborated with organic amaranth, in which some 1,100 peasant and indigenous families participate; 3)“Development Finance”; and 4) “Development of Social Enterprises”. In three and a half decades, the levels of hydric, alimentary, economic and ecological security of the families located in towns in one of the poorest regions of Mexico have been raised. The work of his team has been recognized through its reception of several prestigious awards:

Stephen Hockins

Project Manager New Choctaw Health Center

Construction Project Mississippi Band of Choctaw

United States

Stephen Hockins has been working with the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, as a contractor or employee, since 2004. He works for the Tribe as an employee in the Tribal Planning Department as a Health Systems Planner, and Project Manager. In this capacity, Mr. Hockins has guided the development of a new Choctaw Health Center to provide comprehensive Inpatient and Outpatient direct care services for the approximately 10,800 Tribal members residing on the Choctaw Indian Reservation in East Central Mississippi. Through the efforts of both the Regional and Mississippi State USDA Offices, the Tribe was able to develop a partnership with the USDA Rural Development, Community Facilities Division to successfully negotiate a combined Direct and Guaranteed Loan to improve healthcare delivery to all Tribal members. After years of trying to replace a Health Center designed and built in 1976 for a population of 4,000, the Tribe and USDA successfully paved the way for improved health status with the construction of a state of the art facility capable of meeting the expected health care demand of the expanding population. Mr. Hockins holds a Master’s Degree in Healthcare Administration from the University of Colorado. His 40 year career in healthcare includes Executive Hospital Administrative operational experience, Health Care Capital Program Management, as well as extensive experience in the area of Health Systems Planning.

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William Hohenstein

Director Climate Change Program Office Office of the Chief Economist &

Acting Director, Office of Environmental Markets, Office of the Chief Economist

USDA

United States

William Hohenstein is the Director of USDA’s Climate Change Program Office, within the Office of the Chief Economist. The Climate Change Program Office provides coordination and policy development support for the Department’s climate change program. It serves as the focal point for all support to the Secretary of Agriculture on the causes and consequences of climate change, as well as strategies for addressing them. Mr. Hohenstein is also currently serving as the Acting Director of the USDA Office of Environmental Markets, also within the Office of the Chief Economist. The Office of Environmental Markets (OEM) was established in direct response to provision of the 2008 Farm Bill. OEM’s central mission is to facilitate the participation of farmers, ranchers, and forest land owners in emerging environmental markets. Before arriving at USDA, Mr. Hohenstein served as a Division Director in EPA’s National Center for Environmental Economics. Mr. Hohenstein has a B.S. in Natural Resource Management from Cook College, Rutgers University and a M.E.M. in Resource Economics from Duke University’s School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.

Emilia Istrate

Research Director National Association of Counties

United States

Before joining NACo, Ms. Istrate was with the Brookings Institution - a prominent Washington think-tank — where she was an associate fellow and a senior research associate. She holds a doctorate in public policy from George Mason University, focusing in regional economic development. She has also studied at the University of Vienna and Johns Hopkins University from which she earned master’s degrees in international studies.

Diana Jedig

Secretary/Treasurer Community Futures Network

Canada

Diana Jedig has served as a volunteer on the Board of the Community Futures Network of Canada since its inception in 2002. She has been involved with the Community Futures Program for more than 27 years, first as a manager of a local Community Futures Organization and for the past 21 years as the Executive Director of the Provincial Association representing the 61 Community Futures Organizations in Ontario. During this tenure, Diana has been an outspoken proponent of the value of community based decision-making, particularly on rural development issues. In her role with the provincial association, she has administered both a $15 M Community Development Fund for the Federal Agriculture Department and a $15 M Community Economic Development grant program for the Provincial Rural Affairs Ministry. Over the years, Diana has nurtured relationships with many community organizations across Canada and is currently the President of the Canadian Community Economic Development Network. She was recognized in 2003 for her contributions to rural CED as the co-winner of the Mary Robertson Rural Distinction Award. She has an undergraduate Honours Bachelor of Commerce Degree (‘82) from McMaster University, a Masters in Business Administration (‘84) from the Richard Ivey School of Business at Western University, and is a Certified Association Executive (CAE), an internationally recognized professional designation.

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Phil Karsting

Administrator USDA

United States

Phil Karsting was appointed administrator of the U.S. Department of Agriculture's Foreign Agricultural Service (FAS) in May 2013. He previously served more than 22 years on Capitol Hill, most recently as Chief of Staff to Senator Herb Kohl (D-Wis.), then-chairman of the Senate Appropriations Committee's Subcommittee on Agriculture, Rural Development, and Related Agencies. Karsting's previous Capitol Hill assignments included serving as senior analyst on the staff of the Senate Budget Committee where he handled issues relating to agriculture, rural development, housing, telecommunications, energy and the environment. He also served as legislative assistant to the late Senator Jim Exon (D-Neb.) and as a member on the Senate Bi-partisan Chiefs of Staff steering committee. In 2013, Karsting travelled to Liberia on behalf of the National Democratic Institute to lead training seminars for Liberian congressional staff. Concurrent with his duties as FAS administrator, Karsting serves as vice president of the Commodity Creditor Corporation (CCC), chair of USDA’s Interagency Coordinating Committee on International Agriculture, and as an advisor to USDA’s Task Force on Historically Black Colleges and Universities. Karsting began his association with American agriculture working in his family's farm supply business in rural Nebraska. He received a Bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Economics from the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. He is also a graduate of the International Culinary Center in New York.

Taebyung Kim

Director for Regional Policy Division Ministry of Land Infrastructure

and Transport Republic of Korea

Kim, Taebyung received a Bachelor's Degree in Civil Engineering from Seoul National University. In 1998, He received a Master's Degree in Civil Engineering from the same school. He also obtained a Ph.D. in Urban and Regional Studies from the University of Birmingham in the USA. Ever since being appointed as Director at the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport, he has played pivotal roles in various fields within the Ministry, including general services, creative administration, and metropolitan transport. Through strenuous endeavours aimed at achieving balanced regional growth in Korea, he has contributed significantly to the goals of balancing urban and rural development and creating new towns in key regions. Currently, he is serving as Director of Regional Policy Division, and continues to make efforts to develop rural areas in his relevant expertise areas.

Rhonda Koster

Director School of Outdoor Recreation Parks

and Tourism

Canada

Dr. Koster is currently the Director of the School of Outdoor Recreation Parks and Tourism. Her research focuses on the contribution of tourism towards rural sustainability in resource-based regions, with expertise in the areas of determinants of success in rural tourism planning; building capacity for tourism development with First Nations communities; experiential tourism development; the role of Appreciative Inquiry in tourism development; gateway communities and protected areas; rural tourism in the Canadian urban fringe; and, frameworks for evaluating tourism as a community economic development endeavour.

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Patrice A. Kunesh

Deputy Under Secretary of Rural Development, USDA

United States

On May 22, 2013, Patrice H. Kunesh began her tenure at USDA as the Deputy Under Secretary of Rural Development. Among Patrice’s responsibilities are overseeing Operations & Management and the Office of Civil Rights and working with the State Directors. Prior to joining USDA, Patrice, of Standing Rock Lakota descent, served as the Deputy Solicitor for Indian Affairs at the U.S. Department of the Interior, where she supervised the work of the Solicitor’s Office on a breadth of matters concerning American Indian tribes and individual Indians, Indian lands, and Indian gaming. Before joining DOI, Patrice was a member of the faculty of the University of South Dakota School of Law where she taught in the areas of Federal Indian Law, Legislation, Property Law, and Children & the Law, and also directed the University’s Institute of American Indian Studies. Patrice began her legal career at the Native American Rights Fund as a Skadden Public Interest Fellow and then as a Staff Attorney, where she litigated cases involving tribal sovereignty and natural resources and provided legal and policy advice to tribes on a wide variety of Indian law and tribal governance issues. In 1995, she became in-house counsel to the Mashantucket Pequot Tribe of Connecticut, where she continued her legal and policy work in the areas of tribal law and governance and economic development. Patrice received a Master of Public Administration from the Harvard Kennedy School of Government and a law degree from the University of Colorado School of Law, where she was an editor of the Colorado Law Review.

Ibrahim Kuzu

Director Local and Rural Development

Ministry of Development

Turkey

Ibrahim Kuzu is the Director of Local and Rural Development at the Turkish Ministry of Development since 2011. His unit designs national rural development policies and allocates the investment budget for rural development, mainly infrastructure, including village roads, drinking water networks, village renewals and resettlements. His duties also include supervision of Regional Development Agencies and several local development and social policy initiatives. Ibrahim started his career as a Customs Officer and later joined the Ministry of Development as a Junior Specialist. He was later promoted to Senior Specialist, left the Ministry to study abroad, worked for UNICEF as a Social Policy Specialist and served as advisor to the Minister of Family and Social Affairs. He returned back to his home organization as Director. Ibrahim continues his Ph.D. in Social Policy at the Yildirim Beyazit University in Ankara. He holds a Master of Public Policy from Harvard University Kennedy School of Government, where he was also the Vice President for Finance of the Student Government, an M.S. in Social Policy and a B.S. in International Relations from Middle East Technical University in Ankara.

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Julia Latto

Project Manager Socttish Enterprise

United Kingdom

Julia is a Project Manager with Scottish Enterprise and has a range of business, economic and rural skills spanning a 20 year career which include project management, leadership development, business coaching, rural innovation, stakeholder/relationship management, event management and PA/office management. She has developed international linkages to share knowledge, best practice on rural leadership development with America, Canada, Australia, Sweden and Finland. During 2013/14 Julia was a visiting Researcher at Edinburgh University undertaking research on rural collaboration and rural entrepreneurship. Julia is a member of the International Association of Programmes for Agricultural and Rural Leadership and various other networking groups relating to rural economic development.

Frederic Laurin

Professor Université du Québec

Canada

Frédéric Laurin is a professor in economics at the Université du Québec à Trois-Rivières. His primary interests focus on the analysis of international trade, economic integration, regional economic development, European economics and affairs, and economics of wine distribution. He is also a member of the Research Institute for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), which focuses on the advancement of knowledge for these types of enterprises to contribute to their development.

Juan Antonio Leos-Rodríguez

Head of Graduate Studies. CIESTAAM/Chapingo

Mexico

Undergraduate on Agriculture from National School of Agriculture, 1969. Chapingo, México. Master of Science on Agriculture and Resource Economics. 1977. University of California at Berkeley. Ph.D on Agriculture and Resource Economics. 1980. University of California at Berkeley. Faculty member of University Chapingo since 1973, teaching Macroeconomics, Economics Development, Economics of Natural Resources, and International Trade and Food Safety. Research topics related to evaluation and design of agricultural policies for rural development. Member of the National Researchers System (CONACyT), 2014-2017. Head of Graduate Studies. CIESTAAM/Chapingo, 2014-2017.

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Karen Maguire

Counsellor Regional Development Policy Division

OECD

Ms. Maguire is a Counsellor in the OECD’s Regional Development Policy Division and Project Manager for Regional Development and Innovation. In addition to research on a wide range of regional development issues, she has a particular focus on policies to promote regional economic development, innovation systems and clusters. She co-ordinates the biennial OECD Regional Outlook and is the main author of several other OECD publications, including Regions and Innovation: Collaborating Across Borders; Regions and Innovation Policy and Competitive Regional Clusters: National Policy Approaches. She manages the series of OECD Regional Innovation Reviews conducted in numerous OECD regions. Prior to joining the OECD, Ms. Maguire worked as an investment banker for UBS in New York, an international consultant in economic development and a research analyst for the Urban Institute in Washington, D.C. She holds a Bachelor’s degree in economics and sociology from the University of Chicago and a Master in Public Policy from Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government.

Francesco Mantino

Senior Researcher National Institute of Agricultural

Economics (INEA)

Italy

Francesco MANTINO is senior researcher at the National Institute of Agricultural Economics (INEA). He has worked on research projects in the broad field of rural and regional development: structural changes, policy design and delivery, local development strategies and plans, lagging regions and development of mountain areas, evaluation of EU programmes, etc. He has carried out research funded by several international organisations including the European Commission, OCDE, FAO and IFAD. At national level he has led the INEA’s work on the reform of the EU Rural Development Policy and its implementation in Italy since 1994. He was responsible of the team of the Italian Networks for Leader II and Leader+. He has worked as consultant of a broad range of Italian institutions: the Ministries for Agricultural and Forestry Policies, Budget and Economic Planning, Department of Tourism, and finally many Regional Authorities. He is currently leading several research projects in the field of rural development policies, both at national and European level, in particular in fields as rural governance, development of mountain areas, territorial competitiveness of rural areas, competitiveness of food chains, etc. He is author of many scientific publications.

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Mal McGhee

Poarch Band of Creek Indians

United States

Mal McGhee earned a bachelor’s degree in aviation maintenance technology at Alabama Aviation and Technical College and at 19 was the youngest to serve as a Tribal Council member. He served on the board of directors and was president and CEO for tribally owned manufacturing company Muskogee Technology. His influence helped the company’s growth and improved business relationships. McGhee worked to get customers to his business. His first success was The Boeing Co., and soon others followed, including Lockheed Martin Corp., BAE Systems, Siemens, the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Army, among others. McGhee recently spearheaded the effort to gain a partnership with GKN Aerospace, another international company. Today, Muskogee Technology, through McGhee’s leadership, manufactures all parts for GKN aircrafts and GKN’s customers. This also has allowed the company to expand into carbon composite and heavy metal fabrication and also open a new facility in Atmore, Ala. McGhee’s passion is evident, and he’s not done yet. To him, this is only the beginning. He currently is the director of marketing for Creek Indian Enterprises Development Authority — the economic arm of the Poarch Band of Creek Indians — and he is also director of marketing for Muskogee Technology. McGhee has been with Muskogee Technology for 23 years and was the first employee of the company. Muskogee Technology successfully completed Mentor Protégé Program under Boeing and through McGhee’s determination, the company also has won a vast amount of business awards, including the 2014 GKN Lean & Innovation Award, the 2013 Boeing Performance Excellence Award, the 2012 Lockheed Martin Top Supplier Award among many others. McGhee also was recognized in Minority Business Entrepreneur Magazine, highlighting his accomplishments and influence to make a difference.

Diego Mora García

Political Scientist University of Los Andes

Colombia

Political Scientist from University of Los Andes with studies in economics and with master degree in development, social policies and poverty of the Institute of Social Studies at the University of Rotterdam. Deputy Director of Rural Development of the National Planning Department of Colombia, with 10 years of experience in the public sector on rural development, public policy and implementation of development programs.

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Andres Moran

Manager Public Affairs Antofagasta Minerals S.A.

Chile

Andres Moran is a journalist by training. He has made public affairs and community engagement his main areas of expertise: He worked in the Presidential Communications Office under Chilean President Lagos. He was in charge of community relations for one of the country’s leading forest companies before becoming Corporate Affairs Manager for Xstrata Copper Chile. He joined Antofagasta Minerals in 2012 as the Public Affairs Manager for Los Pelambres, from where he pushed for a new approach to community engagement. In September 2014 he became the Corporate Public Affairs Manager.

Fildelma Mullane

Board Member Heritage Council

Ireland

Dr. Fidelma Mullane is a geographer with a Masters Degree in Geography on the topic vernacular building (National University of Ireland, Galway). She was awarded an Advanced Masters Degree in Rural Landscapes and Planning (Paris-Sorbonne) and a PhD (also from Paris-Sorbonne) on the culture, context and representation of local building practices and traditional environmental knowledge. Living in France for over ten years, she worked on many rural projects there, as well as working at the National Museum of Traditional Arts and Culture. An advocate for a better understanding of Rural Culture, she currently advises on Public Policy, teaches and researches as a university lecturer, and acts as project advisor to state agencies, government departments and local development companies with a rural development brief. She also works in private practice on the documentation, study and conservation of historic rural buildings, and on the promotion of a culturally appropriate contemporary rural architecture. In 2012, she was appointed by the Minster for Arts and Heritage to serve as a Board Member of the Heritage Council, the national state agency for the promotion and protection of Ireland's heritage.

Tom Murphy

Director Marcellus Center for Outreach

and Research Pennsylvania State University

United States

Tom Murphy is Director of Penn State’s Marcellus Center of Outreach and Research with 29 years of experience working with public officials, researchers, industry, government agencies, and landowners during his tenure at the University. His work has centred on educational consultation in natural resource development, with an emphasis specifically in natural gas exploration and related topics for the last nine years. He lectures globally on natural gas development from shale, the economics driving the process, and its broad impacts including landowner and surface issues, environmental aspects, evolving drilling technologies, critical infrastructure, workforce assessment and training, local business expansion, resource utilization, and financial considerations. In his role with MCOR, Tom provides leadership to a range of Penn State’s related Marcellus research activities and events. Mr. Murphy is a graduate of Penn State University.

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Peter Nelson

Chairman and CEO Agricultural Innovation

Development Group

United States

Pete is the cofounder and CEO of Ag Innovation Development Group a diverse and dynamic organization which is commercializing university and government research to improve the efficiency and sustainability of agriculture. He likes be engaged on the farm level, is a prolific networker and a tireless advocate for new approaches and ideas within the agriculture industry. Pete began experimenting with alternative crops on a small farm in Tennessee in 1997 and has been involved in the formation of numerous startups and initiatives involving innovative farmers and strategic partnerships across the value chain. Pete’s startup experience includes companies that are producing alternative rotation crops within traditional row crop systems, specialty crops, biobased products, and technologies such as precision agriculture and biological-based crop protection. He has been involved in the development of incubators, accelerators, and others strategies to assist in growing new agricultural-based startups. Pete is a consultant with Memphis Bioworks Foundation where he has led efforts in developing a 5 state economic development strategy for agriculture, developed venture funding options for agritech companies, and is currently leading the effort to position Tennessee as a leading innovation site for agritech through the AgLaunch initiative. His work at Bioworks has also included implementing an entrepreneurial farm group and the development of a world class acceleration model for agriculture. Pete is a participant on numerous boards and advisory groups. He is currently the Chairman of the Agricultural Innovation Committee of Life Science Tennessee, a statewide membership organization dedicated to growing the life sciences industry in the state. He is a member of the Agriculture, Food and Natural Resources (AFNR) Advisory Council for the Tennessee Department of Education, offering input on curriculum and course standards for career track education. Pete serves on the Ag, Food & Bioenergy Selection Committee for Invest Midwest Venture Forum to help bring the best agritech companies in front of leading investors on an annual basis. He is a member of the Program Committee for the Biotechnology Industry Organization World Congress on Industrial Biotechnology an annual conference to be held in 2015 in Quebec. He serves as a director or advisory board member on several startup companies related to agri-tech and value-added agriculture.

Andrew F. Noseworthy

Senior Advisor to the President (Energy) Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency

Canada

Andrew Noseworthy joined the federal public service in July 2003, as Senior Advisor to the President ACOA responsible for energy sector development. In this capacity, Mr. Noseworthy is also responsible for the operations of the Atlantic Canada Energy Office, a partnership initiative between ACOA and Natural Resources Canada, based in St. John's with additional staff elsewhere in the Atlantic region. Prior to joining the federal public service, Mr. Noseworthy had an 18-year career with the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador and held a number of senior appointments, including Deputy Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, Deputy Clerk and Associate Secretary to Cabinet, and Assistant Secretary to Cabinet (Economic Policy). In 2001, he was seconded by the Province to the Commission on the Future of Health Care in Canada (Romanow Commission), where he held the position of Executive Director. Since joining ACOA, he has also led a federal task force on the establishment of a Canadian Public Health Agency. Mr. Noseworthy lives in St. John’s.

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Joaquim Oliveira Martins

Head Regional Development Policy Division

OECD

Joaquim Oliveira Martins is the Head of the OECD Regional Development Policy Division. Current projects cover regional growth, urban development, regional governance issues, and the determinants of health expenditures. He was former Head of the Structural Economic Statistics Division, focusing on Trade & Globalisation indicators, Productivity measurement and Business statistics. Previously, he was Senior Economist at the Economics Department heading projects on the Economics of Education, Ageing and Growth, and Health Systems. He was also Head of Desk for emerging markets, where he was in charge of the first Economic Surveys of Brazil, Chile and several transition countries. Other OECD monographs focused on Competition, Regulation and Performance and Policy Response to the Threat of Global Warming. He was also Research Fellow at the CEPII (Centre d’Etudes Prospectives et d’Informations Internationales, Paris). He is Associate Professor at the University of Paris-Dauphine. He holds a PhD in Economics from the University of Paris-I, Panthéon-Sorbonne.

Julian Pace

Director of Rural Operations Scottish Enterprise

Scotland, United Kingdom

A graduate of Essex, Cranfield and Stirling Universities his PhD looked at the strategic planning practices of Scottish SME’s. Julian has been with Scottish Enterprise and its predecessor, the Scottish Development Agency for 25 years and is currently responsible for leading SE’s approach to rural economic development, the delivery of its rural initiatives and business leadership development. Julian chairs the Scottish Enterprise Rural Group and works with a number of private and public sector partners across Rural Scotland and beyond. He is currently on the

- Scottish Government’s Scottish Rural Development Programme Monitoring Committee;

- BBC Scotland’s Agriculture and Rural Advisory Committee; - The Rural Advisory Committee of the Scottish Rural

University College; and - The International Association of Agricultural & Rural

Programmes for Leadership He has worked with the Rural Development Team of the OECD on its reviews of Scotland and Southern Sweden. Was a member of the Scottish Land Fund Committee from 2001 until 2006 and as Chairman of the Borders LEADER II Local Action Group has been involved in the design and delivery of LEADER. Julian is married with a son and daughter and enjoys cricket, fencing and fly fishing.

Risto Poutiainen

Director Regional development Regional Council

of North Karelia Finland

Mr. Poutiainen has graduated from the Helsinki University of Technology with a degree in Engineering (Master of Science) in 1984. Mr. Poutiainen has a long work experience at the regional level in Northern Ostrobothnia and North Karelia (Finland). Mr Poutiainen has had the responsibility for regional strategies and international activities in the Regional Council of North Karelia since 1994. He has worked with EU-affairs since 1995 (when Finland became the member of the European Union) with structural fund programmes and rural funds. He is also Deputy Region Mayor.

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Lori Ries

President Community Futures Network

Canada

Lori Ries is the current president of the Community Futures Network of Canada, a network of non-for-profit organizations which foster economic development. Ms. Ries resides in Eston, Saskatchewan and has been involved in all levels of the Community Futures Organization, starting in 2003 at the local and provincial level. Her experience working with and aiding in the development of entrepreneurs and small and medium sized enterprises in rural Saskatchewan and Canada gives her a unique perspective on the rural economy.

José Antonio Rojo García de Alba

Federal deputy for the Tula, Hidalgo. President of the Committee on

Agriculture and Irrigation System of the Congress

Mexico

José Antonio Rojo García de Alba is Federal deputy for the Tula, Hidalgo. President of the Committee on Agriculture and Irrigation System of the Congress. Technical Secretary of the National Political Council and Rural Development of the National Peasant Confederation (CNC, Confederación Nacional Campesina) Jose Antonio Rojo García de Alba studied law in the Autonomous University of Hidalgo. With a vast experience in regional development, Mr. Rojo worked as a General Coordinator of Regional Development and General Coordinator of the Planning Committee for the Development of the State of Hidalgo. In 1994 he was the Minister of Regional Development in the State of Hidalgo and in 1999 he was appointed Minister of State also in the State of Hidalgo. In congress he has not only been a federal deputy but also a Local Deputy and Chairman of the Governing Board of the Congress of the State of Hidalgo. In the National Peasant Confederation (CNC, Confederación Nacional Campesina) he was the Secretary of Labor and Organizational Planning from 1995 to 1998 and Organising Secretary of CNC from 2011 to 2014.

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David Shabazian

Rural-Urban Connections Strategy Program Manager

Sacramento Area Council of Governments

United States

David Shabazian was raised on a small farm in the Central Valley of California where his family grew hay and grain, and operated a small fruit and vegetable plot that supported a family farm stand. That farm helped pay for David’s bachelor’s degree in Agricultural Economics from UC Davis, which he received in 1989. He then spent three years as a land use planner for the City of Davis and lived in Japan three years teaching English before returning to UC Davis in 1996 to earn a master’s degree in Transportation Technology and Policy. His thesis focused on linking land use and transportation plans. While at UC Davis, he also built UPlan, a software-based urban growth model used throughout California. Fifteen years ago, David joined the Sacramento Area Council of Governments as key staff for the pivotal Blueprint: Transportation/Land Use Study. In 2007, SACOG launched its next major initiative, the Rural-Urban Connections Strategy, and named David as the Program Manager. This unprecedented program strives to enhance rural economic viability and environmental sustainability through strategies that expand the region’s food system and ecosystem services. David is also SACOG’s lead on flood and water resource issues. His work was recognized by Harvard University’s Ash Center as a “Top 25” program in the 2015 Innovations in American Government Awards competition. David serves on the boards of the Center for Land-Based Learning and the Sacramento Food Bank & Family Services. He is a former member of the Delta Vision Stakeholders Coordination Group, the California Healthy Food Financing Initiative Advisory Group, and the External Advisory Committee to select the Dean of the College of Agricultural and Environmental Science at UC Davis. David is also an alumnus of the California Agricultural Leadership Foundation.

Mikitaro Shobayashi

Professor Gakushuin Women’s College

Japan

Dr. Shobayashi, with his 25-year working experiences in working for a wide range of public organizations including Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries of Japan, the World Bank, and OECD before he joined Gakushuin Women’s College in 2007, is interested in contributing to policy making on efficient allocation of natural and agricultural resources as well as rural development. His professional interests range from multifunctionality of agriculture and its policy and trade implications, agri-environmental policies, agricultural water resources policies, global warming and agriculture, agriculture in emission trading, rural development policy, and agricultural policy system. He was the main author of OECD’s reports on multifunctionality of agriculture and its policy implications. After quitting from MAFF in 2007, he has been a member of several governmental committees, including the Planning Committee for Rebuilding the Area Affected by the Earthquake and Tsunami on March 11, 2011, which was established by the Prime Minister. He graduated from University of Tokyo, and obtained his master’s degrees from both University of Tokyo and the Johns Hopkins University. He received his Ph.D. in agricultural economics from University of Tokyo.

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Reginald Shumaker

Director Public Works and Roads MBC

United States

Reginald (Reggie) Shumaker works for the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians, where he serves as the Director of the Tribe’s Office of Engineering Services & Utilities Management. In this capacity, Mr. Shumaker is responsible for oversight of the tribe’s potable water and wastewater utility operations. He has been and continues to be involved in numerous USDA/RUS-funded infrastructure projects located throughout the tribe’s reservation lands. Mr. Shumaker has seen firsthand the critical role that USDA/RUS has played in providing funding for much-needed water and wastewater infrastructure serving tribal members living in some of the most rural areas of Mississippi. He holds a B.S. degree in Civil Engineering from Mississippi State University and has more than twenty-three years of experience in the planning, design, and construction of infrastructure projects. He is a registered professional engineer in the State of Mississippi. Prior to employment with the tribe, he was a consulting civil engineer in a private firm.

Alvin Simms

Memorial University of Newfoundland

Canada

Alvin Simms is a Geographer who utilises spatial modelling and regional analytic methods to develop decision support systems (DSS) that can be used for regional economic impact analysis and planning. His undergraduate studies were competed in quantitative Economic Geography at Memorial University. Graduate studies, with a focus on Quantitative Geography and GIS/Spatial Analysis, were completed at the University of Calgary.

José Ramón Sobrón Perea

Managing director Kaleidos.red

Spain

Kaleidos.red is an open network of city councils that undertake R&D+i in the proximity policies, facilities and services for the citizens regarding the development and positioning of the city. There are three key aspects of this network: action-research action; knowledge transfer and experience; integration of responsible politicians, technical directors and specialised consultants. From the point of view of their subject matter, they tackle proximity policies and civic participation; ethics and transparency as management tools; public/private collaboration as a strategy for the positioning and development of the city; and local government as the driving force behind social innovation.

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Thom Stubbs

President Headwater Group

Canada

Thom Stubbs has spent 30 years working with people, industry, communities and governments around natural resource management questions, 15 years inside government as a senior official and Deputy Minister. Thom currently operates the Headwater Strategy Group, a Calgary based consultancy focusing on environmental, social and economic management of natural resource projects. Thom has extensive northern Canadian rural development experience and was appointed as the lead socio-economic and aboriginal expert on the eight country Arctic Council Strategic Oil and Gas Assessment and provided advice on the Arctic Shipping Assessment. He has also worked in Asia and Eastern Europe. Thom is formally trained as a land use planner and mediator and holds a Masters of Regional Planning degree from the University of British Columbia and is a Registered Professional Planner provincially and nationally. He is based in Calgary, Alberta with his family.

Raffaele Trapasso

Economist, Co-ordinator Open Government at Local Level

Regional Development Policy Division

OECD

Raffaele Trapasso is an economist and international civil servant concerned about with public governance and territorial development. He is currently working at the OECD, where he provides technical leadership to on national territorial reviews and contributes to the OECD rural development programme. Trapasso has over ten years’ experience in the field of regional development policy. In particular, he has served as a policy advisor to national and local governments with a focus on both urban and rural areas. He has published in peer-reviewed journals and co-authored several OECD reports including the Territorial Review of Colombia, “Linking Renewable Energy to Rural Development”, the rural policy reviews of Italy and Québec, Canada, and the Urban policy Policy Reviews of Milan, Madrid and Cape Town. He also contributed to OECD works assessing urban-rural linkages and Open Government functioning in MENA countries. He holds a Ph.D. in economic policy from the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart of Milan, and a degree in economics from the University Federico II of Naples. A native of Catanzaro, Calabria, Raffaele is married and based in Paris. [email protected].

Maria José Uribe

Advisor Department for Social Prosperity

Colombia

Maria José Uribe is an advisor for the direction of the Department for Social Prosperity – DPS from Colombian government. Currently she is a member of the team for public policy, which holds the responsibility of reviewing, designing, evaluating and coordinate the strategy of the entity. In particular, she is in charge of rural development and poverty. She has also worked at the National Agency for Overcoming Extreme Poverty – ANSPE, as advisor on the orientation of public services to extreme poverty. Before that, she was a consultant and academic researcher at Fedesarrollo, ECON ESTUDIO and at CEDE - Universidad de los Andes. She has worked in evaluation and design of public policies, oriented to development in the areas of: financial inclusion, microfinance, global production networks, foreign investment, security, policies against illicit drugs, and health. Maria José has a degree in Economics, and also has MA in Economy from Universidad de los Andes.

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Jesús Rodolfo Valenzuela García

Rector Autonomous Agrarian University

Mexico

Jesús Rodolfo Valenzuela García is the Provost of the Universidad Autónoma Agraria Antonio Narro (UAAAN, Autonomous Agrarian University Antonio Narro). He studied Agricultural Engineer in Agricultural Machinery, has a Master of Business Administration and Ph.D of Business Administration. He is a full-time Research Professor, lecturing and conducting research in areas of knowledge management and farm equipment, in the Autonomous Agrarian University Antonio Narro. He has participated in the following projects: Equipment development, sensors and instruments for precision agriculture and conservation tillage; Evaluation of the Rural Development Programme in southeastern Mexico state of Coahuila, his work has been published in specialized national and international journals. He has been president of the Mexican Association of Agricultural Engineering, Member of the Joint Evaluation Committee of the National Center Project Testing and Evaluation agricultural machinery and equipment (CENEMA, Centro Nacional de Pruebas y Evaluación de Maquinaria y Equipo Agrícola) and the International Cooperation Agency of Japan (JICA, Agencia de Cooperación Internacional Del Japón). He is a member of the National Technical Committee of Standardization Machinery, Agricultural Equipment and Accessories (COTENNMAEA, Comité Técnico Nacional de Normalización de Maquinaria, Accesorios y Equipo Agrícola) for the development of the Mexican Standards (NMX) of the Agricultural Machinery marketed in Mexico.

Jay Wesley

Cultural Director Chata Immi Program

MBC

United States

Jay Wesley is a member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and he is also the Director for the Department of Chahta Immi which entails the following programs: the Choctaw Tribal Language Program, the Cultural Affairs Program, the Special Projects/ Media Program, and the Chahta Immi Cultural Center. Jay graduated from Choctaw Central High School in 1993. After graduation, Jay enlisted into the United States Marine Corps for 8 years. He has traveled extensively around the world due to his military service. This experience has allowed him to be immersed in different languages and cultures in such places as Japan, Mexico, and Hawaii. He has been the manager of training operations for Nuclear, Biological, and Chemical Defense at different Marine Bases for over 6 years. After his military service, he received an A.A. degree in General Studies, an A.A.S. degree in Advanced Water Treatment from the Arizona Western College, a B.S. degree in Human Services from the University of Phoenix – Yuma Campus, and currently working on his Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Belhaven College. As a cultural tradition bearer, Jay has had the privilege of representing the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians around the Southeastern Region and also at an International Folk Festival in Confolens, France in 2012 as a part of a performance group.

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Tim Wojan

Regional Economist Rural Economy Branch

Resource and Rural Economics Division USDA

United States

Tim Wojan joined USDA’s Economic Research Service in 1999 and is currently a regional economist in the Rural Economy Branch, Resource and Rural Economics Division. His current research focuses on rural innovation, industrial and human resource development in rural areas, location and impact of the "rural creative class," the impacts of globalization on rural development, and assessing place-based alternatives to rural and agricultural development policy. His research has been published in the Journal of Economic Geography, Regional Studies, Industrial Relations, American Journal of Agricultural Economics, Applied Economic Perspectives and Policy and Growth and Change and presented at venues such as the Harvard Business School and the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. During a two-year appointment to the OECD (2000 - 2002), Tim coordinated reviews of regional development policy in member countries. Tim received a PhD in Agricultural and Applied Economics from the University of Wisconsin and a BA from Oberlin College.

Katsuhiko Yamauchi

Deputy Director-General Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry &

Fisheries

Japan

Most Mr Yamauchi’s career has been made through the works related to agricultural/irrigation development projects, which include policy making/budget allocation at MAFF headquarter, project planning and coordination with local governments/beneficiaries at Regional Offices, and implementation of individual projects at National Project Offices. As to the international experience, he was in charge of OECD related works at International Economic Affairs Division, particularly those related to Committee for Agriculture and its subsidiary working groups, including the preparation of Agricultural Ministerial Meeting in 1998, development of analytical tools such as Producer Subsidy Equivalent (PSE), Environmental Indicators for Agriculture, etc. At the embassy of Japan in the Philippines, he was in charge of economic affairs as well as Japanese ODA projects in agriculture, forestry and fisheries sector. At the Mekong River Commission Secretariat, he participated in research activities related to climate change, agriculture and irrigation in the lower Mekong Basin in cooperation with four MRC member countries.

Aleksandra Zakrzewska

Head of Unit for Cohesion Policy and European Affairs Department for Co-ordination of Development

Strategies and Policies Ministry of Infrastructure and

Development Poland

Aleksandra Zakrzewska is a Head of Unit for Cohesion Policy and European Affairs in the Department for Coordination of Development Strategies and Policies at the Polish Ministry of Infrastructure and Development. She has been employed at the Ministry since 2003. She graduated from the Warsaw School of Economics, where she defended the PhD thesis in 2009. She also completed postgraduate studies in the field of European Affairs (College of Europe) and regional development. In her daily duties Aleksandra Zakrzewska is involved in the EU cohesion policy planning and management as well as regional development policy agenda. As a Polish delegate she contributes to the works of OECD Regional Development Policy Committee (RDPC) and its Working Parties for rural and urban policies.

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WORKSHOPS

USDA Workshop

Building Strong Rural Economies through Local Food Systems

Tuesday, May 19, 2015 10:00 a.m. –12:00 noon

Jackson Room – Sheraton Memphis Downtown Hotel

Summary

Consumer interest in “buying local” and supporting the local economy through food purchases is creating opportunities in rural areas for job creation, economic development and stronger rural-urban connections. This session will focus on lessons learned from a federal partnership between the U.S. Department of Agriculture, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Department of Transportation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the Appalachian Regional Commission, and the Delta Regional Authority to support rural regions that are using food systems as a strategy to create more economically vibrant, liveable communities. To date, the Local Food, Local Places initiative has supported 34 communities around the country in this work. This session will delve into the value of multi-stakeholder engagement and community-led economic development strategies while providing insight into the role that food and agriculture can play in rural growth through engagement with an increasingly consumer-driven marketplace.

Speakers: Elanor Starmer, U.S. Department of Agriculture

Ed Fendley, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Guy Land, Appalachian Regional Commission

Bill Triplett, Delta Regional Authority

Speaker biographies

Elanor Starmer

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Elanor Starmer is a Senior Advisor to Secretary Tom Vilsack at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. She coordinates the Department's work on local and regional food systems and small and midsized farms and heads up the Know Your Farmer, Know Your Food initiative. Prior to joining USDA in 2011, she worked on agriculture and rural development policy for over a decade in Iowa, California and Washington, D.C. She is from a town of 700 in the White Mountains of New Hampshire.

Ed Fendley

U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Ed Fendley has worked for the federal government for nearly 30 years, specializing in climate change and sustainable development. Since 2011, Ed has worked in the EPA’s Office of Sustainable Communities, currently managing the Local Foods, Local Places program. Prior to that, Ed worked at the Department of State. As a Foreign Service officer, he served in Barbados, Belgium, and Indonesia. For twelve years, he worked as a U.S. climate negotiator under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. During the first Obama Administration, Ed served as the Director for Environmental Affairs on the National Security Council staff. Ed has been an active member of the community in Arlington, Virginia. He served as an elected member of the Arlington School Board, and has chaired the Arlington Transportation Commission and the Pedestrian Advisory Committee. He has led efforts to make Wilson Boulevard walkable and to legalize backyard hens.

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Guy Land

Appalachian Regional Commission

Guy Land is Chief of Staff to the Federal Co-Chair of the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), where he directs the agency’s legislative work and serves as a senior policy advisor on economic development issues. He is ARC’s staff representative to the White House Rural Council. In 2013-2014 Land coordinated a 13-state local food systems tour, with visits to over 120 sites examining strategies for capitalizing on the local food economy. Land came to ARC in 1994 after five years in the private sector working on economic development and education issues and seven years on Capitol Hill. As president of a civic association representing 7500 residents, he successfully championed the creation of a community farmers market in Arlington, Virginia that launched earlier this spring. Originally from rural Mississippi, he has a master’s degree in history from the University of Georgia and received his law degree from Harvard, where he was Editor-in-Chief of the Harvard Journal on Legislation.

Bill Triplett

Delta Regional Authority

William S. Triplett has been with the Delta Regional Authority (DRA) -- an independent federal agency created by Congress in 2000 -- since February 2002, having served in a progression of positions from consultant, to Director of Policy, to the Senior Advisor to the Federal Co-Chairman, and now as Chief of Staff, a position from which he guides the policy development and day-to-day operations of the Authority. Additionally, he has directed several strategic initiatives: the “Delta Development Highway System”, “iDelta: Information Technology Plan for the Region”, “A Report to Congress: Multimodal Assets, Needs and Recommendations”, DRA's second "Regional Development Plan", and its "Growing a Healthy Workforce in the Delta" action plan. While overseeing DRA's day-to-day work and processes, Mr. Triplett also prepares, reviews and approves all external communications, including those to Congress, the Administration and executive agencies. He has had more than 1,400 policy meetings on Capitol Hill and serves as DRA's policy lead to the White House Rural Council, since its inception in 2011. From 1982 to 1990, during three Administrations, Mr. Triplett served as senior staff in the Mississippi Governor’s Budget Office, specializing in quantitative policy analysis and econometric modeling of revenue issues. Additionally, from 1984 to 1987, Mr. Triplett served as an Adjunct Professor at Jackson State University, teaching graduate courses in economics and public finance. From 1990 to 1992, Mr. Triplett was Director of the Governor Ray Mabus’s Policy Office, and in 1991, he was recognized by the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO) as “the nation’s outstanding budget/management professional” for his work in creating Mississippi’s first, formal capital improvement program. From 1992 to 1996, Mr. Triplett served as Director of Policy (non-accounting) for the Office of the State Auditor, where his work in performance-accountability systems helped “re-invent” Mississippi’s budget and planning processes and was used as the primer for the state of Florida’s reform processes. From 1996 to 1999, he worked in the private sector as the CEO of a medical bill review company and CFO of a medical case management company. In 1999, Mr. Triplett re-entered government service as a Business Development Officer with the state’s housing finance agency, the Mississippi Home Corporation (MHC) and was quickly promoted to Vice President of Business Development. After six months in that position, he was elevated to Chief of Staff. Mr. Triplett’s major initiative at MHC was the creation of the nation’s first, statewide “lease-to-own” housing program, a $25 million program. Mr. Triplett is a resident of Ridgeland, MS and is married to Linda Dieth Triplett. They have two children: Taylor, a graduate of the University of the South and gainfully employed, and Jennifer, a senior at Tulane University (Honor Scholar, varsity athlete, and cancer survivor). Both Linda and Bill serve on the Tulane University Parents Council. The family members are communicants at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Cathedral. Mr. Triplett’s education includes a BSBA from Mississippi College and an MBA from Millsaps College, and an executive program at Duke University.

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USDA Workshop

Building on First Generation Biofuel towards the Advanced Bioeconomy Tuesday, May 19, 2015 10:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon

Nashville Room, Sheraton Memphis Downtown Hotel

Summary

The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 was passed and set the United States towards a number of goals, among them energy security through increased production of biofuels. This effort brought together a diverse set of stakeholders with multiple missions such as economic development, clean air, and greater energy independence. After nearly a decade of success, changing discussion reminds us that we need to continue to tell the beneficial story of biofuels to build upon the first generation of technologies into an advance bio-economy that can create jobs, reduce emissions, and strengthen resource security in all regions. In this session we will hear from a panel highlighting stories from the ground of community and global impacts from production and products, as well as insight into new, cutting edge technology deployment taking place today.

Speakers: Doug Durante, Executive Director, Clean Fuels Development Coalition

Lillian Salerno, Administrator, Rural Business-Cooperative Service, USDA

Andrew Held, Senior Director, Deployment and Engineering, Virent, Inc.

Kelly Tiller, President & CEO, Genera Energy Inc.

Nadeem Afghan, President & CEO, BIOFerm

Speaker biographies

Doug Durante

Executive Director Clean Fuels Development

Coalition

Douglas A. Durante serves as the Executive Director and Washington Representative of the Clean Fuels Development Coalition (CFDC), a non-profit organization he assisted in forming in 1987. The CFDC has a broad-based membership including automotive, agricultural, and other alternative energy interests. Mr. Durante has been working in the fields of energy, transportation, and the environment since 1977. He was the Director of Public Affairs for the National Alcohol Fuels Commission and also served as a Special Assistant in the Office of Alcohol Fuels at the U.S. Department of Energy. Mr. Durante has been involved in the development of several ethanol projects throughout the U.S. on behalf of his member companies and other clients. Mr. Durante has served on numerous state and federal advisory committees, including Chair of the Fuels Subcommittee of the Federal Biomass Advisory Committee and on the Governors’ Ethanol Coalition’s Biomass Advisory Committee. He also served on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Clean Fuels Advisory Committee, and the Department of Energy's Business Roundtable Advisory Group. He has served on fuel and pollution control commissions in Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Kentucky, and New Mexico. He holds a B.A. degree in English and Journalism from Elon University (North Carolina) and has completed a number of graduate courses and programs in business and government affairs.

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Lillian Salerno

Administrator Rural Business-

Cooperative Service USDA

On July 1, 2013 Lillian Salerno became the Administrator for the Rural Business and Cooperative Services Agency where she has been Acting Administrator since 2012. As Acting Administrator, Ms. Salerno has worked to increase access to capital and capacity for small businesses to create jobs and grow the local economy in rural communities. Administrator Salerno has supported Secretarial priorities to strengthen the bio economy and focus Rural Business programs on the promotion of local and regional food systems. As a former entrepreneur in the manufacturing sector, Administrator Salerno brings a wide range of experience to her position. She has played the role of grant applicant, entrepreneur, attorney, and small business advocate, and through these experiences she has gained strong compassion for those working to promote economic growth and prosperity for others. She has made it her mission to support entrepreneurship and job creation in rural communities. Administrator Salerno grew up in rural Texas, where her start-up business and family currently reside. She attained a B.A. in Latin American Studies from The University of Texas, her Master's Degree in Sociology and Criminal Justice from The University of North Texas, and her J.D. from Southern Methodist University in Austin, Texas.

Andrew Held

Senior Director Deployment

and Engineering Virent, Inc.

Andrew Held has ten years of operations and R&D experience at Cargill, an international provider of food, agricultural and risk management products and services, where he played instrumental roles on technical, engineering, and operations management teams scaling production processes for commercialization. His work has included the manufacture of organic acids and edible polyols by fermentation, lactic acid for polymers, and natural polyols for polyurethanes. Andrew specializes in the integration of biological and chemical processes and has worked extensively with natural feedstocks and biocatalytic conversion methods. He earned his BS in Chemical Engineering from the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities and an MS in Chemical Engineering from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.

Kelly Tiller

President & CEO Genera Energy Inc.

Dr. Kelly Tiller founded Genera Energy in 2008 and has led Genera to become the country’s leading commercial biomass feedstock supply solutions company. Engineering a $70.5 million biofuels investment from the State of Tennessee, Dr. Tiller led the establishment of the country’s largest energy crop acreage, a partnership with DuPont to construct and operate one of the country’s first cellulosic ethanol biorefineries, and development of a unique research campus focused on the biomass supply chain. Dr. Tiller received a BA in economics and MS and PhD degrees in agricultural economics from the University of Tennessee, where she was a faculty researcher and administrator for 15 years. She is widely recognized as an industry expert, having been called on more than a half dozen times to testify before Congress and frequently providing agency briefings and analyses.

Nadeem Afghan

President & CEO BIOFerm

Nadeem Afghan is the President and CEO of BIOFerm Energy Systems. He received his Bachelors of Science degree and Master in Electrical Engineering at San Diego State University; he remained in the area for several years after graduation in various engineering and sales managing positions. Although he grew up in San Diego, his passion for renewable energy eventually led him to relocate to Madison, Wisconsin. There, he has been able to pursue his current career at BIOFerm Energy Systems, and now lives happily with his wife and two children. Under Mr. Afghan’s leadership, BIOFerm successfully employed North America’s first commercial-scale Dry Anaerobic Digestion system—the facility processes food waste from Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Also during this time, BIOFerm continues to push limits through the installation of the industry’s first small-scale digester at the family dairy, Allen Farms, and has been able to offer AD to process biosolids for the City of Akron. BIOFerm continues to flourish and successfully follow in the footsteps of Viessmann with his guidance.

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PRACTICAL INFORMATION

Memphis Cook Convention Centre - layout

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Sheraton Memphis Downtown Hotel -layout

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Map of Memphis

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Useful contacts

Hotel - Sheraton Memphis Downtown Hotel (****) 250 North Main Street Memphis TN, 38103 United States

Phone: +1-901-527-7300

www.sheratonmemphisdowntown.com

Hotel - Peabody 149 Union Avenue Memphis, TN 38103

Phone: +1-901-529-4000

www.peabodymemphis.com/

Airport - Memphis International (IATA: MEM) www.mscaa.com

Taxi - Yellow Cab Memphis Phone: +1 901-577-7777

www.yellowcabofmemphis.com/

Taxis - Metrocab Phone: +1-901-322-2222

www.ridememphis.com/

Bus - Greyhound www.greyhound.com

Bus – Megabus Low-cost carrier offers service to Memphis from Chicago, Champaign, St. Louis, Atlanta, Birmingham, Knoxville, Nashville, Little Rock, and Dallas

http://us.megabus.com

Tourist information – Memphis travel www.memphistravel.com/

National Civil Rights Museum 450 Mulberry Street Memphis, TN 38103

Phone: +1-901- 521-9699

http://civilrightsmuseum.org/

Wifi access codes

Memphis Convention Center Network Name: tennessee

Password: conference

Sheraton Memphis Network Name: Sheraton Conference

User Name: usda

Password: usda


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