Open Call | Global Spark 2026: Building Confidence in Collaboration

Global Spark 2026 is developed for ZHAW in coordination with Swissnex in India and Swissnex in China with contribution from Swissnex in Japan. It is open to ZHAW faculty and staff and is free of charge.

In today’s world, collaboration across borders, disciplines, and institutions—is no longer optional; it is essential. Yet many promising collaborations never take off because they start from a place of hesitation: a “yes, but” mindset that focuses on risks, uncertainties, or what might go wrong instead of the opportunities that may arise from this collaboration.

Global Spark 2026 invites participants to shift towards a “yes, and” mindset—one that embraces uncertainty as a starting point for learning, experimentation and trust-building. While international collaboration is a key focus, the programme also recognises that many of the same dynamics apply locally: within institutions, across departments and between disciplines. Global Spark creates a space to reflect on both.

Designed as an interactive learning journey rather than a traditional lecture series, Global Spark 2026 centres on real collaboration stories connected to India, China and Japan, as well as individual speakers with international mobility experience. Participants learn from lived experiences: how collaborations begin, where challenges arise, how trust develops over time and what helps partnerships gain momentum.

Each session combines short inputs with guided reflection and interactive elements. Insights are captured collectively on a shared Miro board and revisited across sessions through small reflective tasks. This approach encourages active participation and supports participants in gradually building confidence in navigating collaboration across borders, disciplines and institutions.

Each session follows a consistent format: a short thematic input or case-based contribution, followed by an interactive reflection and discussion. The programme is designed as a coherent learning journey, therefore participants are expected to attend all sessions.

Programme Structure & Dates (CET)

Monday, 9 March (8.00 am to 9.15 am)

  • 8:00am – Introduction Session - How Mobility Shapes Collaboration | Stefan Stevanovic & Johanna Seiwald, Zurich University of Applied Sciences (ZHAW) | In this session, participants will hear how international mobility experiences challenge assumptions, broaden perspectives, and influence how collaboration, trust, and openness are understood and practised across different cultural and disciplinary contexts.

Monday, 16 March (8.00 am to 9.15 am)

  • 8:00am – Japan - Building Collaboration at an Early Stage | Prof. Oliver S. Schilling, University of Basel & Prof. Kotaro Shirai, University of Tokyo | The speakers share insights from the early phase of a Swiss– Japanese research collaboration focused on water resources in complex volcanic environments. Working across Switzerland and Japan, they reflect on how international scientific collaboration begins: from first contact and shared research interests to aligning expectations across different academic cultures and institutional settings. In their Global Spark session, they will highlight the uncertainties and learning moments that shape collaboration in its early stages and lay the groundwork for future partnerships.

Monday, 23 March (8.00 am to 9.15 am)

  • 8:00am – India – Communication in Cross-Disciplinary Collaboration | Prof. Balaji Veeraraghavan, Christian Medical College & Hospital Vellore, Dr. Reety Arora, CrisprBits & Prof. Adrian Egli, University of Zurich | This session brings together a cross-disciplinary collaboration trio working at the intersection of clinical microbiology, molecular biology, and medical diagnostics across India and Switzerland. Drawing on their diverse institutional and disciplinary backgrounds, the speakers reflect on how communication shapes international and cross-disciplinary collaboration—from aligning scientific languages and expectations to navigating different research cultures, infrastructures, and timelines. In the Global Spark session, they will share how clear communication, openness, and continuous dialogue enable collaboration across boundaries, particularly in complex and high-stakes research fields such as antimicrobial resistance and biomedical innovation.

Monday, 30 March (8.00 am to 9.15 am)

  • 8:00am – China – Building Trust in Long-Term Academic Collaboration | Prof. Juan Shan, Shanghai University & Prof. Anna Lupina-Wegener, Zurich University of Applied Sciences | In this session, speakers will share how a common interest in cross- cultural management and international business education developed into a long-term academic collaboration between Shanghai University and ZHAW. Working across China and Switzerland, they will reflect on how trust was gradually built over time through continuous dialogue, joint teaching, and mutual learning across different academic cultures and institutional contexts. In their Global Spark session, they will highlight why process, reciprocity, and personal relationships are essential to sustaining meaningful and resilient cross- border collaboration.

Tuesday, 7 April (8.00 am to 9.15 am)

  • 8:00am – Reflection & Closing Session Participants revisit key insights, reflect on how their collaboration mindset has evolved and identify concrete next steps to apply what they have learned.

Event start time

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