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The 40th Annual Conference of Human Dignity and Humiliation Studies was held at the National University of Distance Education / Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED) in Madrid, Spain, and online, from 17th – 20th September 2024. The conference was titled 'Global Vulnerabilities – From Humiliation to Dignity and Solidarity'. The host of this conference was renowned Professor Saulo Fernández Arregui, who was introduced to Human Dignity and Humiliation Studies through eminent Professor Emeritus José Francisco Morales Domínguez. Their scholarship is a beacon of dignity in this world! In this video, Linda Hartling introduces the Dignity Dialogue Format that we use in all our conferences and workshops and call 'Dignilogues'. Linda Hartling is the Director of the Human Dignity and Humiliation Studies fellowship and the World Dignity University (WDU) Initiative, as well as Dignity Press. Please see her background at humiliationstudies.org/whoweare/linda.php. She is based in Portland, Oregon, where she and her husband have created the first HumanDHS Dialogue Home and are building our HumanDHS Library. Linda is also affiliated with the Jean Baker Miller Training Institute at Wellesley College near Boston, Massachusetts, of which she was the Associate Director in support of its founder pioneer thinker Jean Baker Miller. Saulo Fernández Arregui is renowned Professor of Social Psychology at UNED University in Spain. His current research interests focus on the study of humiliation as a distinct emotional experience, aiming to identify the particular situational determinants and cognitive appraisals that predict humiliation, as well as the consequences that the experience of humiliation has for the victims. He is also interested in the study of the experience of the social stigmatization and humiliation among people with dwarfism and on the moral perceptions and expectancies that majority group members develop toward minority group members. José Francisco Morales Domínguez is a distinguished professor of social psychology at the Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia (UNED) in Madrid, Spain, now retired. He has been in this position since 1987, showcasing a long and successful academic career. He holds a doctorate in Philosophy from the Complutense University of Madrid and has received several prestigious awards early in his career, including the Extraordinary Award for Degree in Psychology in 1973, the National End of Degree Award in Psychology in 1975, and the National Vocation Award from the National Vocation Foundation in the same year. Throughout his career, Professor Morales has made significant contributions to the field of social psychology, having published numerous articles in national and international journals, with over 100 publications to his name. His research interests are diverse and encompass a variety of topics, including emotional self-depletion, workplace harassment, emigration, social exclusion, gender differences and stereotypes, road safety, leadership, individualism, prejudices, and the role of psychology in international conflicts and peace. In addition to his academic achievements, Professor Morales is a founding member of the Spanish Academy of Psychology and serves as its Vice President. He is also a member of various professional organizations, including the European Association of Experimental Social Psychology, the International Society of Political Psychology, the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, and the Spanish Society of Social Psychology. Overall, José Francisco Morales Domínguez is regarded as one of the most influential figures in social psychology in Spain, having made substantial contributions to both the theoretical and applied aspects of the field. José Francisco Morales Domínguez was introduced to the work of Evelin Lindner by Susan Opotow in the early 2000s, and he brought Lindner's work to his students in Spain, among them Saulo Fernández, who now is the host of this 40th Dignity Conference! The first "Annual Round Table of Human Dignity and Humiliation Studies" (as we called it then) was convened by Morton Deutsch at the MC-ICCCR on July 7, 2003, with Peter T. Coleman, Beth Fisher-Yoshida, Janet Gerson, Andrea Bartoli, Michelle Fine, and Susan Opotow as participants. See more on: www.humiliationstudies.org www.humiliationstudies.org/whoweare/annualmeeting/40.php www.worlddignityuniversity.org