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  • The three concentration areas offered by the Global Studies Program help students personalize their degrees to make Global Studies work for them. Every student pursuing a major or minor is required to select a concentration area. A specific list of approved classes are set for each concentration area, and students are welcome to petition for the inclusions of other classes that meet the concentration theme and requirements. Click on the concentration area headings for more

  • diagnose problems and make effective recommendations 4. Develop a Global Perspective a. Student can recognize how local economic, political and cultural issues impact business b. Student can apply a global perspective in making business decisions Revised 2/19

  • and political contexts. Global Religious Traditions (RG) highlights PLU’s commitment to local-global education through analysis of diverse religions, both here and abroad.

  • Alina Boorse Global Ambassador Full Profile global.ambassadors@plu.edu

  • , tutor, and scholar lead/mentor for Washington state opportunity scholars. He’s also been a campus leader, serving as the Vice President of the PLU Habitat for Humanity chapter, At-large senator of ASPLU, and founding the university’s Global Medical Brigades/Pre-med Club. Global Medical Brigades is an international movement of students and medical professionals working alongside local communities and staff to implement sustainable health systems. The PLU chapter is a student-run organization that

  • Gretchen Howell Director of Human Resources Phone: 253-535-7329 Email: crosgrgm@plu.edu

    Contact Information
  • Gretchen Howell Director of Human Resources Phone: 253-535-7329 Email: crosgrgm@plu.edu

    Contact Information
  • Cross Today (Fortress Press, 2006).4:15 P.M.Dr. Seth Dowland, Assistant Professor of American Church History, “From Civil Rights to the Christian Right: King, Neuhaus, and Christian Political Action” – By the year 2000, one of Martin Luther King, Jr.’s most influential followers was Lutheran-turned-Roman Catholic Richard John Neuhaus, who founded the conservative journal First Things and became a close advisor to President George W. Bush. This presentation highlights one of the more unlikely

  • Our Story   In 2003, former PLU provosts Paul Menzel and Patricia Killen secured a $2 million grant from the Lilly Endowment to launch a program for the exploration of vocation at PLU.     What do we mean by vocation? Our understanding of this term is informed by Martin Luther’s view: a vocation is a calling to work with others for the good of others. In the Wild Hope Center for Vocation we speak of vocation as being called to promote human and ecological flourishing. This understanding aligns

  • February 7, 2008 Area leaders discuss fighting disease worldwide The Wang Center for International Programs tackled the issue of global health at the symposium, “Advances in Global Health by Non-Governmental Organizations,” in February 2008. As the name suggests, the two-day event highlighted the work of non-governmental organizations currently searching for global solutions to control disease in developing nations. These organizations, many from the Pacific Northwest, are stepping up to meet a