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Washington University in St. Louis News & Information > University Groups >

Center for the Study of Ethics & Human Values

Director: Ira Kodner

Telephone: (314) 935-9358
News Stories & Tip Sheets:

Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 5.  - Show Home
Getting Ahead at all Costs?

Creating a Culture of Integrity

Oct. 2, 2009 -- David Callahan, public policy activist and author of The Cheating Culture: Why Americans Are Doing Wrong to Get Ahead and The Moral Center: How We Can Reclaim Our Country from Die Hard Extremists, Rogue Corporations, Hollywood Hacks and Pretend Patriots, will present "Creating a Culture of Integrity." His talk, at 11 a.m., Thursday October 15 in Graham Chapel, is being hosted by the Center for Academic Integrity Conference, the Assembly Series and the Center for Ethics and Human Values. The event is free and open to the public.


A tale of two artists

A Challenge to Democracy explores legacy of Japanese internment camps

Sept. 17, 2009 --
Ansel Adams, *Smiling Girl (Oriental Type),* 1943
Ansel Adams, Smiling Girl (Oriental Type), 1943
In the 1930s, the photographer Ansel Adams struck up a friendship with California painter Chiura Obata. Yet the arrival of World War II would set these two celebrated artists on radically divergent paths — paths that would, in very different ways, lead both to the now-infamous "war relocation centers" at which the U.S. government forcibly interred approximately 120,000 Japanese-Americans. Next month their sons, Michael Adams and Gyo Obata, will explore the impact of internment on their respective families in a public dialog at Washington University.


Dancing Who I Am

Concert/panel discussion to examine dance and ethnic identity Sept. 12; film screening Sept. 13

Sept. 3, 2009 --
Rulan Tangen
Rulan Tangen
Around the world dance is often quite literally the physical embodiment of cultural identity and practice. Yet for individual dancers, the power of such traditions can give rise to certain expectations and even stereotypes based on perceived identity. On Sept. 12 the Dance Program in the Performing Arts Department in Arts & Sciences will explore the role of ethnicity in contemporary dance with "Dancing Who I Am," a panel discussion and informal concert featuring faculty members as well as leading critics and choreographers from around the country. The event comes as part of the semester-long series "Ethnic Profiling: A Challenge to Democracy," organized by the Center for the Study of Ethics and Human Values. Also as part of the series, the Kathryn M. Buder Center for American Indian Studies will screen Ancestor Eyes, an award-winning Native American short film, Sept. 13.


"A Challenge to Democracy"

Fall series to explore past and present of ethnic profiling

Aug. 12, 2009 --
*Passing Poston: An American Story* (2008)
Passing Poston: An American Story (2008)
Ethnic profiling is illegal in the United States, prohibited by the Fourth Amendment, which requires probable cause for searches and seizures, and by the Fourteenth Amendment, which calls for equal protection under the law. And yet as the recent arrest of Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates demonstrates, the issue remains far from settled. This fall Washington University in St. Louis will present "Ethnic Profiling: A Challenge to Democracy," a semester-long series exploring the history, impact and ethical issues surrounding ethnic profiling through lectures, readings, performances, panel discussions and other events.
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The ethical responsibilities of elected officials

Assembly Series presents Carl Bernstein on public ethics and elected officials

Oct. 10, 2008 -- One of the nation's most celebrated journalists, Carl Bernstein, will deliver the Elliot Stein Lecture in Ethics at 4 p.m. Thursday, October 23, in Graham Chapel. The Assembly Series lecture, titled "Public Ethics: The Responsibilities of Elected Officials," is free and open to the public and is being co-sponsored by the Center for the Study of Ethics and Human Values in Arts & Sciences.



Showing Stories 1 through 5 of 5.  - Show Home

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Revised:

Thursday, Oct. 4, 2007


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