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Crestview appoints Vice President, Head of Middle East, expanding Gulf presence
Crestview appoints Vice President, Head of Middle East, expanding Gulf presence

Campaign ME

time07-08-2025

  • Business
  • Campaign ME

Crestview appoints Vice President, Head of Middle East, expanding Gulf presence

Crestview, a leader in strategic communications and public affairs, has appointed Alexander M. Wegner, as Vice President and Head of Middle East, expanding its Gulf presence and continuing its global expansion. Headquartered in Canada, Crestview serves close to 100 clients with a team of more than 130 professionals from offices in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom — and now the UAE. A longtime partner to Gulf clients, Crestview is now supporting clients in the region, from the region, while taking on more regional mandates, focusing on three core areas: Strategic and executive positioning, stakeholder engagement, and market entry and access. Alexander M. Wegner brings more than 17 years' experience across the Middle East and Africa to the role. He has successfully built and scaled new practices, led international teams and worked with major corporate, government and philanthropic organisations in Bahrain, Nigeria, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. His clients have included Ministers, ultra-high-net-worth individuals, CEOs, sovereign wealth funds and Fortune 500 firms. He holds degrees from both The University of Chicago and Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. 'I'm delighted to lead Crestview's fast-growing business in the Middle East,' Alexander M. Wegner, Vice President, Head of Middle East, said. 'Crestview has a hard-earned reputation for consistent excellence and impact, and the caliber and commitment of colleagues throughout the firm is nothing short of exceptional. I can't think of a more capable group of people to write the next chapter of Crestview's global growth story with, and I'm excited about all we're going to achieve with and for our clients here in the Gulf.' Julian Ovens, a Partner and former resource executive and Chief of Staff to Canada's Foreign and International Trade Ministers, said, 'Gulf markets have always been key — during my time in government, resources and investment banking. With our world changing more profoundly and rapidly than anyone had predicted just a few years ago, the Gulf states' financial firepower and diplomatic leverage can make an outsized difference.' Ovens added, 'In Alexander, we have a trusted hand who knows the region inside out and can help clients in, or interested in, these markets navigate them successfully. We're glad to have him join our senior team.' Crestview counts Blackstone, McDonald's and Mastercard among its clients. It takes on mandates from the world's biggest brands, local not-for-profits and grassroots advocates to make change and have impact. In the Gulf, Crestview is already advising energy clients in Abu Dhabi — with a growing team that includes GCC nationals — and has done work in the UAE's telecommunications industry. Reflecting on Crestview's growth journey since its founding in 2004, Founding Partner Mark Spiro said, 'As a partner-owned firm that has grown organically, we have the freedom and agility to act on the opportunities we see, wherever they may be. Today, the Gulf states are leading the way — from AI to the energy transition — and I'm convinced our experience, people and networks will create value.'

University of Chicago under investigation as part of Trump's anti-DEI initiative
University of Chicago under investigation as part of Trump's anti-DEI initiative

Chicago Tribune

time14-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Chicago Tribune

University of Chicago under investigation as part of Trump's anti-DEI initiative

The University of Chicago is among over 50 universities under investigation for alleged racial discrimination as part of President Donald Trump's effort to end diversity, equity and inclusion programs, which his administration said excludes white and Asian American students. The new investigation was announced Friday by the U.S. Department of Education, comes on the heels of a memo issued Feb. 14 by the Trump administration giving universities two weeks to end programs that 'discriminate' on 'the basis of race, color, or national origin' or risk losing federal funding. This includes 'race-based preferences' in admissions, scholarships or any aspect of student life. 'Students must be assessed according to merit and accomplishment, not prejudged by the color of their skin,' Department of Education Secretary Linda McMahon said in a statement. 'We will not yield on this commitment.' The University of Chicago could not immediately be reached for comment. Of the schools under investigation, 45 face scrutiny due to partnerships with the PhD Project, a nonprofit that helps students from underrepresented groups get degrees in business to diversify the business world. Department officials said that the group limits eligibility based on race and that colleges that partner with it are 'engaging in race-exclusionary practices in their graduate programs.' Six other schools are being investigated for awarding 'impermissible race-based scholarships,' the department said, while another is accused of running a program that segregates students based on race. The department did not say which of the seven was being investigated for allegations of segregation. This investigation comes on the heels of Columbia University losing $400 million in federal funding on March 7, as the federal agency's Office of Civil Rights declared it had not done enough to quell anti-semitism on campus. A few days later, on March 10, the agency said 60 universities, including Northwestern, were under investigation for failing to adequately address anti-semitism and protect Jewish students on campus.

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