Bjørn Ihler
Jacobsen survived the attack on Utøya island in Norway in July 2011, when right-wing extremist Anders Behring Breivik shot and killed 69 people and injured 110 others. Bjørn is now working against extremism and hatred through a variety of means including writing, talks, filmmaking and theatre productions on related topics. “The core issue when dealing with violent extremism is recognizing that we all dehumanize each other”, says Bjørn.
Camiel Meiresonne
Meiresonne started as keyboard player in Soul Sister Dance Revolution and was lead singer of All Missing Pieces in his younger years. Son Mieux is now part of his mature life in which he gives his listeners a look through his music. As he prefers to write his songs in the middle of the night, it sounds intimate as well as exuberant. At TEDxMaastricht Camiel will treat us with an unplugged, acoustic version of his songs.
Clemens van Blitterswijk
Blitterswijk is a renowned name in the tissue engineering and regenerative medicine field due to his unique multidisciplinary approach. He is one of the most frequently cited Dutch scientists in Materials Sciences, the applicant and co-appli¬cant of over 100 patents and has co-founded multiple biomedical companies. Today, he combines his Professorship at Maastricht University with a Founding Partnership of the new LSP-Health Economics Fund (LSP-HEF) of the European healthcare investment group Life Sciences Partners (LSP).
Eddie King
King explains that as a student of the law, the idea that a sensory experience can be so accurately simulated that we consider it a ‘reality’ is fascinating. Virtual reality is the next frontier of legal exploration. It is incredibly important because it offers information and experience which has the potential to be very damaging.
Edith Bosch
As a former judoka, Dutch Champion, European Champion and World Champion Bosch proves there is no challenge too great for her. But do great achievements always equal happiness?
“I was the insecure overachiever who kept striving for a perfect picture. Despite all my achievements, I felt unhappy. I was forced to take a good look at myself. What I found, was a totally different person.”
Ernst-Jan Pfauth
Pfauth is the co-founder and publisher of De Correspondent, a Dutch journalism platform which raised 1.7 million dollars in a world-record breaking crowdfunding campaign allowing it to launch in 2013. Pfauth also has a love of art and culture and hosts talk shows for Frans Hals Museum and The Dutch National Opera & Ballet.
Frénk van der Linden
Frénk van der Linden is a journalist and writer who graduated from the School for Journalism in Utrecht in 1980. He has gone on to interview hundreds of people in the world of politics, sports and media for newspapers, television and radio and is regarded as one of the best interviewers in the Netherlands.
Illac Diaz
At 44 years old, Diaz is no ordinary entrepreneur. From Peru to the Philippines, his NGO Liter of Light has already helped 382,000 Filipinos, and 690,000 people throughout the world get out of energy poverty.Thanks to a clever and environmentally friendly innovation, Diaz has been able to help bring light to poor areas and prevent them from needing to rely on coal, nuclear and hydro plants.
Karin Bruers
Karin Bruers presents Social Sofas. A project that has now extended beyond a decade; a project which has become a company. Keep your eyes peeled for Social Sofas in Spain, Germany, Italy, Japan and Iraq because this concept is taking the world by storm.
Lisa Hu
Hu graduated in 2014 from Design Academy Eindhoven. She’s been a social designer ever since. Hu believes that awareness of social issues can start with kids at school. She has identified the classroom as a perfect setting for broadening and enriching perspectives due to the variety of cultures that often exist in one room. To encourage empathy and provoke opinions on these issues she has designed a citizenship game, enabling children to discuss societal issues and explore their own perspectives. In this way “we don’t just learn how society works, but we also get the chance to question it and look at our own rights and wrongs.”
Rachèl Louise
Rachèl Louise captivated the audience with a voice and lyrics that resonated far beyond the theatre. She shared melodic moments of tenderness that were heartfelt and mesmerising for our audience. Her powerful song ‘March’ written and performed for the Women’s March in Washington was an incredibly empowering part of the TEDx Maastricht event.
After her debut in 2012, Rachèl Louise developed her musical career as a songwriter for a variety of artists and as an important part of the band with whom Dotan has broken through. For her solo EP, she worked together with Norwegian producers Odd Martin Skålnes and Magnus Skylstad who gained their reputation in the band Aurora. Rachèl Louise toured the Netherlands together with Causes. You might know her songs ‘Keep your heart’ and ‘Far Away’ from her EP ‘Big Girls’.
Sander Heijne
Heijne is a research journalist, historian and entrepreneur. He worked for the editorial economy of the Volkskrant for five years, where he developed a fascination for the effect of bureaucratic systems on our everyday existence. His research into this area will be amalgamated into a book of the marketing and privatization of the public sector in the Netherlands, published in 2017.
Shannon Thrace
Thrace is a grad student, writer, IT professional and devotee of farm-to-table restaurants, summer festivals, all-night conversations and formidable philosophy texts.
Thrace shares a personal account of the tumultuous final eighteen months of her previously happy marriage.
Stefaan De Wildeman
Wildeman knows better than anyone how disastrous the impact of the present generation of fossil-based plastics is on the environment. As the current group leader of New Biobased Building Blocks at the University of Maastricht, he tries to bring about a social change towards sustainable products and habits. There’s one important message he wants to make clear to his audience: “There are a lot of eye-openers about our plastics industry and our plastics habits. Once you understand how unsustainable your behaviour is, you’ll find the energy for change in no-time.”