Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs is delighted to announce the winners of its 2017 International Student/Teacher Essay Contest.
ESSAY TOPIC: In your opinion, what is the greatest ethical challenge facing the world today?
The five winning essays address sexual exploitation, geoengineering, artificial intelligence, genetic engineering, and the universal right to education. There were no winners in the graduate/teacher category this year.
Thank you to all those who submitted essays. We received entries from 31 countries: Algeria, Bangladesh, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Canada, China, Ghana, Greece, India, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Kenya, Nigeria, Oman, Pakistan, the Philippines, the Republic of Korea, Russia, Serbia, Singapore, Somalia, Sri Lanka, Tanzania, Turkey, Ukraine, the United Kingdom, the United States, Uzbekistan, and Zimbabwe.
And the winners are:
HIGH SCHOOL
First PrizeSexual Exploitation: The Dynamics of Gender and Power Katherine Yoon, age 16, Yongsan International School of Seoul (YISS), South KoreaSecond PrizeInternational Regulation of Genetic Engineering: Ethical Considerations in the 21st Century Soo Hyun Kim, age 18, St. Paul's School, New Hampshire, USA
Third PrizeEducation: A Last ChanceAndrew Sunghyun Yoon, age 15, Seoul International School (SIS), South Korea
UNDERGRADUATE
Joint First PrizeErrors of Omission, Commission, and Emission: Moral Culpability in Climate Change and Considerations of Solar Radiation Management Katherine Culbertson, age 21, Harvard College, Massachusetts, USA
Joint First PrizeArtificial Intelligence's Ethical Challenges Lily Zacharias, age 21, Bard College, New York, USA