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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. – The University of Alabama has established
a new campus initiative to address issues related to ethics and
social responsibility and to help prepare students to serve as
effective, engaged ethical citizens.
The new Initiative for Ethics and Social Responsibility (IESR)
will be directed by Stephen Foster Black, a newly appointed member
of the UA faculty. The initiative is aimed at making the values
and skills of citizenship a hallmark of a UA education.
“The University of Alabama has a critical role to play
in preparing students to serve as effective, engaged and ethical
citizens,” said UA President Robert E. Witt. “This
new initiative will assist students in developing the qualities
that define citizenship, and will provide a large number of student
volunteers to address quality of life, education and economic issues
in our community and our state.”
Black said IESR will seek to better connect social responsibility
and ethical development to the academic mission of the University. “The
initiative has the significant goal of linking curriculum and the
campus culture by establishing multiple sites through which students
can engage in meaningful service for academic credit and thoughtful
consideration of the ethical obligations they have toward their
fellow citizens,” he said.
IESR is supported by a gift from Mignon C. Smith, an Alabama resident
who also resides in Washington, D.C., in honor of the lives and
accomplishments of Alabama business and civic leader J. Craig Smith
and his wife, Page T. Smith. In addition to funding the initiative,
the gift also established the J. Craig Smith Endowed Chair for
Integrity in Business. The gift built upon a family legacy of supporting
education at UA that began in 1923 when the family of J. Craig
Smith’s grandfather, B.B. Comer, a former governor of Alabama,
provided an endowment in his honor to award a medal of excellence
in mathematics.
IESR’s programs will include
- Assisting with the development of service-learning courses
for academic credit across all academic disciplines
- Implementing a “Moral Forum” University-wide debate
competition
- Developing a multi-disciplinary ethics/social responsibility
minor
- Incorporating ethical discourse into freshman orientation
- Developing a justice-based anthropological documentary filmmaking/journalism
class
- Offering fellowship opportunities
- Sponsoring public lectures
- Providing opportunities for visiting scholars to affiliate
with IESR
Black earned his bachelor’s degree at the University of
Pennsylvania in 1993 and his law degree from Yale Law School in
1997. Following law school graduation, he joined the Birmingham
law firm of Maynard, Cooper and Gale. He spent a year serving as
an assistant to the governor in 2000-2001, where he researched
policy issues and worked on economic development projects.
He also created Impact: An Alabama Student Service Initiative,
the state’s first non-profit organization dedicated to developing
and implementing substantive service-learning projects in coordination
with select universities and junior colleges throughout the state.
For example, under this initiative, since November 2004, more than
200 trained student volunteers representing 10 universities screened
more than 4,400 preschool children for vision problems in 24 Alabama
counties. Some 600 of these children failed the screenings and
are currently receiving free follow-up care.
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