––––––––––––––––––––
Subscribe to the Legal News!
https://legalnews.com/Home/Subscription
Full access to public notices, articles, columns, archives, statistics, calendar and more
Day Pass Only $4.95!
One-County $80/year
Three-County & Full Pass also available
- Posted July 22, 2014
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Summer institute focuses on conflict resolution for high school students
Wayne State University's Center for Peace and Conflict Studies and the Damon J. Keith Center for Civil Rights are hosting the Ralph Bunche Summer Institute 2014 this week on the main Detroit campus.
During the event, high school students will focus on topics of conflict resolution, diversity, civil rights, negotiation, bullying, environmental science, social justice, international affairs and how to individually foster peace within their own communities.
The skills that high school students will gain from this year's summer institute will enable them to establish creative mechanisms of non-violent solutions where conflict and violence may exist. Students also will spend an overnight in the residence halls on Wayne State's campus, supervised by staff.
The institute's purpose is to inform students about Bunche's life and peacemaking legacy in the Middle East, Africa and at the United Nations, while also imparting multicultural skills for promoting harmony and strengthening relationships in their own lives, in communities, and with each other and the world as a whole.
Following a career in higher education, and pioneering in the U.S. civil rights struggle, Bunche, a native Detroiter, mediated the first Arab-Israeli ceasefire accords in 1949. He also represented the United Nations as Under Secretary General in crises emerging from the de-colonization process, including the Congo.
In honor of his Middle Eastern diplomacy, Bunche was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, which he accepted on behalf of the United Nations. He was the first person of color to receive the Nobel Peace Prize.
Additional sponsoring partners of the Ralph Bunche Summer Institute 2014 include: The Detroit Youth Violence Prevention Initiative, Rotary International, Detroit Rotary, Jewish Community Relations Council and Presbytery of Detroit.
Published: Tue, Jul 22, 2014
headlines Oakland County
- Attorneys sharpen courtroom skills at inaugural program
- Michigan tax preparers indicted for conspiring to defraud the United States and preparing false tax returns
- Woman pleads no contest on multiple cases, including embezzlement of $90K from her father
- As the country turns 250, retired judges hit the road to defend judicial independence
- Private mobile home water services provider, president sentenced for falsifying water safety, discharge tests
headlines National
- ABA connects death row inmate to pro bono attorneys who help free him
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- 2 judges suspended in separate cases after being indicted on criminal charges
- Convicted ex-judge gets $5K fine but no prison time in immigration case
- Ohio governor signs bill prohibiting foreign litigation funding
- Many small firms collect payments faster than BigLaw counterparts, new data shows




