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  • -standing human issues addressed in the civic traditions of the Greek city-state and in biblical Israel. Justice is not the right of the stronger nor the contemporary whim of global markets. Ideas that shape deep understandings of human being and doing, as well as social and civic betterment, must forever have critical free play in the pursuit of justice. The musical heritage of Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn, whose combined efforts inspired the Civil Rights Era from the late 1930s onward, continue

  • , Health and Social Justice, Business Ethics, Human Rights, and The Nature of Human Well-Being. He also served Pacific Lutheran University in various administrative positions, including Provost.  He retired to Professor Emeritus in summer 2012.

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  • philosophy and psychology principles to wealth management. VIEW STORY Global policy, politics and partnerships Emily Peterson ’14 works with partners around the globe at a NYC-based public affairs agency. VIEW STORY Fighting for voters’ rights Dayton Campbell-Harris ’16 serves as a staff attorney for the ACLU’s Voting Rights Project. VIEW STORY THE SCIENCE OF CARE A great caretaker understands science. A great scientist cares for people. These Lutes exemplify this balance in their academic inquiry

  • their environments and uniquely capacitated by their culture. Applied Anthropology attempts to address contemporary social concerns through the application of anthropological principles.  Often, the applied anthropologist develops specifically designed reform programs focusing on matters such as the recognition of human rights, language revival, preservation of natural resources, or international business negotiations.  Generally, the applied anthropologist works from within his or her own culture

  • workers. If you’ve read about Jane Addams, founder of Hull House; Frances Perkins, first Secretary of Labor; Harry Hopkins, force behind the Social Security Act; or Whitney Young, civil rights activist, you’ve read about social workers. Today social work is a dynamic, growing profession grounded in the social sciences and liberal arts as well as its own knowledge and research base. Social workers are intricately involved in the community, knowing the people, the services and how things get done. Yet

  • areas. The board shall be sufficiently qualified through the experience, expertise, and diversity of its members, (including consideration of race, gender, and cultural backgrounds and sensitivity to such issues as community attitudes), to promote respect for its advice and counsel in safeguarding the rights and welfare of human subjects. In addition to possessing the professional competence necessary to review specific research activities, the board shall be able to ascertain the acceptability of

  • MarquezSarah SaavedraArianna Tunstall-McKinney “Homeless Rights are Human Rights: The Need for Accessible Public Restrooms” Karen Marquez “A Refugee Crisis: The Lack of Resources for Refugees During Resettlement” Sarah Saavedra “La Familia es Todo: The Harmful Effects on First-Generation Latinx Youth” Block Three 11:00 - 12:15 PMStephanie HallAriana SchieberAshley JohnsonLena FlanaganStephanie Hall “The Social Work Impact on Veterans and Their Mental Health” Ariana Schieber “Complexities Within Transracial

  • Why Water?To begin with, water is the world’s most essential resource. Every living being needs water; not one species can survive without it. Yet water is frighteningly finite, becoming increasingly precious, and contested. As the global population passes seven billion, it is estimated that two-thirds of the worlds’ population – about 5.5 million people – will live in areas facing moderate to severe water shortages by 2025. Globally, coral reefs are vanishing and ice shelves in Antarctica and

  • Called We are called by new knowledge and experience, by other people, by pressing need, by global events and crisis, and-for many-by the universe, a higher power, by God, into awareness that life is more than securing a comfortable existence for oneself. With Others We are called into relationships, into communities both temporary and life-long marked by diversity in life and thought, where we live into mutual responsibility for each other, trusting that we can be and do more together than

  • Course Title ANTH 102 Introduction to Human Cultural Diversity - ES, GE ANTH 103 Introduction to Archaeology and World Prehistory - ES, GE ANTH 203 Great Discoveries in Archaeology - ES, GE ANTH 335 The Aztecs, Mayans, and Their Predecessors - ES, GE ANTH 343 East Asian Cultures - ES, GE ANTH 368 Edible Landscapes: The Foraging Spectrum - ES, GE ANTH 370 The Archaeology of Ancient Empires - ES, GE DANC 301 Dance and Culture - ES, GE ECON 101 Principles of Microeconomics - ES ECON 102 Principles