Interview with Janine Händel, CEO of the Roger Federer Foundation
If you empower every person in this strength, he/she can reach his/her potential.
If you empower every person in this strength, he/she can reach his/her potential.
That was the moment we knew she was opening a door to us to make a documentary, and we just took it from there.
Geostrategically, we’re showing that we’re a country that is solving problems and not creating problems in an area that has enough problems to be getting on with.
People have the right to make decisions about their own lives but that necessarily implies they have the responsibility.
We believe we exist to hold power accountable.
“I think a lot of my [writing] is aimed at pulling the curtain back and showing that these judges and their clerks–in addition to being great legal minds–are also people too, and are subject to all of the frailties and biases that all of us are subject to as human beings.”
“The usual idea, especially in the context you’re asking about – prisoners’ dilemmas – is to start with the maximal credible punishment right at the beginning, because the idea is that that will be the most severe threat and so will illicit the best cooperation. But in reality, everybody who’s looked at the way punishments are designed finds that the successful ones are done in a graduated way.”
“I think in a world where it’s not a choice between the perfect and the awful, but a choice between the flawed and the terrible… if you’ve got a choice between nationalism and multiculturalism, of course you go with nationalism.“