Registration and Fees: http://www.citadel.edu/symposium
Direct questions to The Krause Center for Leadership & Ethics: 843.953.5815
Ethics in Business Ethics in the Military Ethics in Healthcare and Research
General Peter Pace
USMC (Ret.)
16th Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff
Presidential Medal of Freedom
Recipient
“Moral Courage in Life, the Military,
and Business”
Joseph Riley, Jr.
Mayor of Charleston
Citadel Class of 1964
Recipient of the Krause Center Award
for Distinguished Service, Leadership,
and Ethics
“Contemporary Ethical Issues
Facing Communities”
Rear Admiral Margaret “Peg” Klein
United States Navy
Senior Advisor to the Secretary of
Defense for Military Professionalism
“Ethics in the Profession of Arms”
College Honor Codes Lessons From Ferguson, MO Torture in Interrogation Global Outreach The Citadel Experience
Principled
Leadership
Symposium
March 12-13,
2015
Principled Leadership as Honor:
The Code, the Medal, the Ethos
Welcome
Welcome to Charleston, South Carolina and The Citadel campus for our 8th Annual Principled Leadership Symposium. Over the next two days, you will hear from prominent speakers, panelists, and presenters on contemporary leadership and ethics issues. The theme of this year’s symposium is “Principled Leadership as Honor: The Code, The Medal and The Ethos.” You will have the opportunity to examine these and other leadership topics as you interact with fellow student delegates, faculty and staff, members of The South Carolina Corps of Cadets, distinguished Citadel alumni, and members of the Charleston community.
The events of this year’s symposium include speeches by military leaders, public service leaders, and presentations on current issues of national importance. A diverse audience of educators and practitioners will lead discussions on ethical principles in business, the military, and in the healthcare and research fields of expertise. I encourage you to participate in each event and take advantage of this unique opportunity to learn from symposium participants and your peers from other colleges. Please take time to explore The Citadel campus, enjoy downtown Charleston, and don’t miss the weekly dress parade that closes the symposium. On behalf of The Citadel family, The Corps of Cadets, and the faculty and staff, thank you for attending The Citadel’s 8th Annual Principled Leadership Symposium.
John W. Rosa ‘73
Lieutenant General, USAF (Retired)
President
Schedule Thursday, March 12
8:00-8:30 Registration & Breakfast (Buyer Auditorium)
8:30-9:00 Opening Remarks (Buyer Auditorium)
9:00-9:45 Roundtable (Mark Clark Hall)
9:45-10:00 Break
10:00-10:45 “The Citadel Experience” (Buyer Auditorium)
11:00-11:45 “Moral Courage in Life, the Military, and Business” (McAlister Field House) General Peter Pace, USMC (Ret.) Greater Issues Address and Class of 1969 Keynote Speaker
12:00-1:00 Delegate and Host Lunch (Mark Clark Hall Lounge)
1:00-3:30 Panels (Choose one)
Ethics in the Military (Buyer Auditorium) COL Tom Clark, USMC, Professor of Naval Science (Moderator) Rear Admiral Margaret “Peg” Klein, USN MG Tony Taguba, USA (Ret) Mr. Alberto Mora
Ethics in Business (Bond Hall 165) Dr. Bill Trumbull, Dean of the School of Business (Moderator) Dr. Harvey Schiller Mr. Doug McMillon Dr. Richard Ebeling Dr. Clemson Turregano Ms. Nancy Mace
Ethics in Healthcare & Research (Duckett Hall 101) Dr. Kathy Zanin, Professor, Department of Biology (Moderator) Ms. Judy Davis Dr. Virgil Alfaro Dr. James Bearden Dr. Thomas Blackwell
4:00-4:50 “Ethics in the Profession of Arms” (McAlister Field House) Rear Admiral Margaret “Peg” Klein, Senior Advisor to the SECDEF for Military Professionalism
5:00 Service Learning Showcase (Daniel Library)
6:30 Dinner for delegates in Coward Hall (Optional)
Friday, March 13 8:00-8:45 Breakfast (Buyer Auditorium)
8:45-9:00 Opening remarks
9:00-10:45 Special Topics Sessions (Choose one) “Crime Scene Reconstruction: How Ferguson, Missouri became a Crucible in Public Service Leadership” (Buyer Auditorium) Ed Lugo, Department of Criminal Justice Honor Committee Panel with student representatives (Bond Hall 295) Moderated by Col Doug Fehrmann
11:00-12:00 Special Topics Sessions (Choose one) “Leading with Character: Lessons from Ferguson” (MCH 228) Joan Vestrand, Dean, The Thomas Cooley School of Law
“Ethics Of Detainee Interrogation” (Jenkins Auditorium) MG Tony Taguba & Mr. Alberto Mora “Ethics in the Global Outreach Programs” (MCH 230) Dr. Cynthia Swenson, Medical University of South Carolina
12:00-12:45 Delegate lunch (Reception Room and Patio, Mark Clark Hall)
1:15-2:30 “Ethical Issues Facing Communities” (McAlister Field House) Mayor Joe Riley, ‘64 Krause Award Presentation
2:30 Principled Leadership Symposium Closing Remarks by Lt Gen Rosa
3:45 Washington Light Infantry Review to commemorate the 172nd anniversary of the Corps (Summerall Field)
Roundtable Notes
Sponsored by BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina
Headlines and stories abound based on honor and dishonor, ethical and unethical decisions and resulting outcomes. Honor, duty, and respect are the core values of
The Citadel and each term is defined to ensure continuity and clarity. Throughout the Principled Leadership Symposium, terms like ethics, moral
courage, and internal compass will be used by speakers, panelists, and delegates. The space below will allow you to think about these words and how they apply to
you, both professionally and personally.
Define the term “ethics” and its importance in your life:
What do you hope to gain from the symposium, and how might the topic of ethics change your perspective from listening and interacting with others?
After reviewing the program, what presentation or speaker sounds most interesting? Why?
Given the opportunity, what would you ask or discuss with the presenter or speaker?
The Citadel Experience (Thursday 10:00)
Tweet what you’ve learned
Cadet Kevin Gess, Class of 2015, Beaufort, SC
Cadet Jessica Loya, Class of 2015, Atlanta, GA
Cadet Timothy Hornbeck, Class of 2015, Akron, OH
Cadet Abdulrahman Muhammad, Class of 2015, Gadsden, AL
In this session, Citadel cadets will describe the Citadel experience from day
one as a freshman through their current status as upper-class cadets. Cadets
will describe a typical day in the life of a cadet as well as atypical events on
their journey. Topics will include the various uniforms, Citadel symbols and
traditions, academics, athletics, military requirements, barracks life, and the
Leader Development Program. Attendees will have the opportunity to ask
questions about The Citadel and cadet life.
@CitadelLEAD
#CitadelLEAD
General Peter Pace USMC (Ret.)
Greater Issues & Class of 1969 Keynote Address (Thursday 11:00)
General Peter Pace retired from active duty on October 1, 2007, after more than 40 years of service in the United States Marine Corps.
Pace was sworn in as sixteenth Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff on Sep. 30, 2005. In this capacity, he served as the principal military advisor to the President, the Secretary of Defense, the National Security Council and the Homeland Security Council. Prior to becoming chairman, he served as vice chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Pace holds the distinction of being the first Marine to have served in either of these positions.
During his distinguished career, Pace held command at virtually every level, beginning as a rifle platoon leader in Vietnam. He also served as commanding officer of 2nd Battalion, 1st Marine Regiment; commanding officer of the Marine Barracks in Washington, D.C.; Deputy Commander, Marine Forces Somalia; Deputy Commander, Joint Task Force Somalia; Director of Operations for the Joint Staff; Commander, U.S. Marine Forces Atlantic/Europe/South; and Commander in Chief, US Southern Command.
In June, 2008, Pace was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor a President can bestow.
Pace is currently serving on the board of directors of several corporate entities involved in management consulting, private equity and IT security. He served on the President’s Intelligence Advisory Board and on the Secretary of Defense’s Defense Policy Board. Pace served as leader-in-residence and the Poling Chair of Business and Government, at the Kelley School of Business, Indiana University. He is a distinguished visiting research scholar for Fordham University and an adjunct faculty member of Georgetown University.
Pace is associated with a number of charities focused on supporting the troops and their families, to include: chairman of the board for Wall Street Warfighters Foundation, an organization that provides training support and job placement services for disabled veterans interested in careers in the financial services industry. He is a long-standing member of the board of directors for the Marine Corps Law Enforcement Foundation—a charity that provides scholarship bonds to children of Marines or federal law enforcement personnel who were killed while serving our country. He is a member of the USO World Board of Governors and serves on the advisory board for Snowball Express, a charity focused on providing positive activities for children of our fallen military members.
“Moral Courage in Life, the Military, and Business”
Colonel Thomas S. Clark III ‘85 (moderator) graduated from The Citadel in
Charleston, South Carolina where he earned a BS degree in Computer Science and
was commissioned through NROTC in 1985. After completing The Basic School,
Second Lieutenant Clark reported to Pensacola Naval Air Station in Florida for pilot
training and was designated a Naval Aviator in 1987 in Meridian, Mississippi. He
reported to Naval Air Cecil Field in Jacksonville, Florida for transition training to the
F/A-18 Hornet.
First Lieutenant Clark joined his first operational squadron VMFA-451 at Marine
Corps Air Station Beaufort in South Carolina in September 1988 where he served as
the Quality Assurance Officer and Air Frames Officer. He deployed to the
Mediterranean aboard USS Coral Sea in June 1989 and to Shaikh Isa, Bahrain for
Operations DESERT SHIELD / STORM in August 1990.
Returning to The Citadel in July 2011, he assumed command of the Navy ROTC unit
and is currently serving as the Professor of Naval Science.
During his 27-year career in the Marine Corps, Col Clark has accumulated 4,000
hours flight time and flown 115 combat missions.
Ethics in the Military Panel
Major General Tony Taguba served as Deputy Commanding General for
Support, Coalition Forces Land Component Command/Army Central Command/
Third U.S. Army, forward deployed to Kuwait and Iraq. He was responsible for
overseeing the logistical and support services to U.S. and Coalition Forces totaling
over 150,000 troops conducting combat operations. His duty included the
coordination of host nation support from the Government of Kuwait, and security
cooperation and training requirements with Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, and Qatar.
Upon his redeployment, he served as Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for
Reserve Affairs, Office of the Secretary of Defense, Pentagon. He was later assigned
as Deputy Commanding General for Transformation, U.S. Army Reserve Command
in his final assignment on active duty.
He received numerous military awards to include the Army Distinguished Service
Medal (2 awards), the Legion of Merit (4 awards), the Bronze Star Medal,
Meritorious Service Medal (6 awards), the Office of the Secretary of Defense
Identification Badge, and the Army Staff Identification Badge.
Rear Admiral Peg Klein is the Senior Advisor to the SECDEF for Military
Professionalism. In addition to serving as a panelist, she is a Core Values speaker for
the 2015 Principled Leadership Symposium. Her full biography can be viewed on the
“Core Values Speaker” page.
Alberto Mora retired in August 2013 from Mars, Incorporated where he joined
in 2008 as Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel. He served as a senior
legal advisor to the Board of Directors, the CEO, and the other members of the
CEO’s corporate leadership team and had oversight and management responsibility
for all Mars legal strategies, issues, matters, services and resources.
Mora’s career prior to joining Mars includes broad experience in the law, industry,
and government. From 2001 to 2006, Mora served as the General Counsel of the
Department of the Navy. As the chief legal officer for both the Navy and Marine
Corps, he managed more than 640 attorneys and personnel across 146 offices
throughout the United States and overseas and supervised the Navy’s Judge
Advocate General Corps and the Marine Corps Staff Judge Advocates. Additionally,
he served as the Reporting Senior of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, as the
Department’s Chief Ethics Officer and, on occasion, as Acting Secretary of the Navy.
Earlier in his career, Mora also served in the U.S. State Department as a Foreign
Service Officer and as General Counsel of the United States Information Agency in
the George H.W. Bush administration.
In 2014, Mora attended Harvard University as a Fellow in the University’s Advanced
Leadership Initiative program.
Sponsored by Spider Management Company, LLC
Thursday 1:00
Ethics in Business Panel
Doug McMillon is the president and chief executive officer of Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.
(Walmart). As CEO, Doug leads a strong management team that is working to deliver
Walmart’s mission of “saving people money so they can live better.” Under his
leadership, Walmart is bringing together its stores, logistics network and digital
commerce capabilities in new ways to empower customers to shop whenever, wherever,
and however they want.
From February 2009 to February 2014, Doug served as president and chief executive
officer of Walmart International, a fast-growing segment of Walmart’s overall operations,
with more than 6,400 stores and nearly 800,000 associates in 26 countries outside the
United States. From 2006 to 2009, he served as president and chief executive officer of
Sam’s Club, an operating segment of Walmart, with sales of more than $46 billion
annually during his tenure.
Dr. William "Bill" Trumbull (moderator) became the Dean for The Citadel School
of Business and Robert A. Jolley Chair on July 1, 2013. Dean Trumbull came to The
Citadel from West Virginia University where he had been a faculty member since 1983.
During his tenure at West Virginia University, he served as chairperson of the
Department of Economics, director of the Division of Economics and Finance, and as
interim dean of the College of Business and Economics. He received his Bachelor of
Science in business administration from the University of Miami and his PhD in
economics from the University of North Carolina. During the fall of 2012, he served as a
Fulbright Scholar at the University of Pecs in Hungary.
Dr. Harvey Schiller ‘60 is Chairman of the Board and CEO of Global Options
Group, an international risk management and business solutions company. In addition,
Dr. Schiller serves as Vice Chairman and President of the Sports and Entertainment
Practice of Diversified Search, one of the top executive search firms in the U.S. He
recently served as President of the International Baseball Federation, the international
governing body for baseball, and is a member of the board of the World Baseball
Classic, and America’s Cup 34.
Schiller served as chairman and CEO of YankeeNets, an integrated sports-based media
company with ownership of the New York Yankees, New York Nets, and New Jersey
Devils. Until December 1999 Dr. Schiller served as president of Turner Sports, Inc., a
division of Time Warner; and President and Governor of the NHL franchise, the Atlanta
Thrashers.
Clemson Turregano ‘83 is responsible for the full spectrum of Center for Creative
Leadership’s (CCL) Leadership Solutions across the Europe, Middle East, and Africa
(EMEA) region. This includes design, delivery, coaching and senior level
organizational solutions. Leading a diverse international team of faculty, coaches, and
associates, the EMEA team leverages the unique abilities of CCL research, content,
client outcomes, and strength of faculty to deliver a wide variety of leadership
development experiences. Prior to joining CCL, Clemson served in a global capacity as
a strategic planner and mentor. As the leader of a strategic planning team, he
developed international agreements, created organizational training and partnership
programs, and mentored senior government officials. A practicing scholar, he has won
awards for teaching strategic leadership to senior government and corporate officials.
He is heavily influenced by his background in public administration, his four years as
CCL’s Director for Government Programs, and his experience as a CCL Coaching
Practice Leader.
Nancy Mace ‘99 is a commercial realtor, author and former marketing executive.
Nancy's commercial focus is in Medical Office Building, Convenience Store, and
Restaurant verticals.
After her experience at The Citadel, she published In the Company of Men: A Woman
at The Citadel with Simon and Schuster in 2001. Pat Conroy dubs her work the "best
book about The Citadel ever written..."
In 2008 Nancy started a marketing and public relations firm, The Mace Group. She is
also a former candidate for the U.S. Senate.
Dr. Richard M. Ebeling is the recently appointed BB&T Distinguished
Professor of Ethics and Free Enterprise Leadership at The Citadel. He teaches
courses such as "Leadership, Entrepreneurship, and Capitalist Ethics" and "The
Morality and Economics of Capitalist Society."
Dr. Ebeling is recognized as one of the leading members of the Austrian School of
Economics and the author of Political Economy, Public Policy, and Monetary
Economics: Ludwig von Mises and the Austrian Tradition (Routledge 2010). He is
currently editing a forthcoming volume in the Collected Works of F.A. Hayek
(Univ. of Chicago Press), the noted Austrian economist and Nobel Laureate.
Thursday 1:00
Ethics in Healthcare & Research Panel
Dr. Kathy Zanin (moderator) is an Associate Professor of Immunology, Cell, and
Developmental Biology at The Citadel. Her current research interests include exploring
histone proteins in the mitochondria and seeking a cure for HIV infection. Dr. Zanin is
active in promoting stronger pre-college education in the STEM fields and is a member
of CASTLE, a faculty group dedicated to improving teaching and learning at The
Citadel. She was the 2009 recipient of The Citadel’s Clinton A. Medbery Award for
Dedication in Teaching. She is also the Pre-Health Advisor, the Chair of the Pre-Health
Committee, the administrator of the Pre-Health Mentorship Program, and she serves
on the Online Education Advisory Board.
Dr. Virgil Alfaro, ‘84 founder of Retina Consultants of Charleston, graduated
from The Citadel. He received his medical degree from Cornell University Medical
College and then performed an internship in general surgery at UCLA, Harbor
General Hospital. After completing an ophthalmology residency at the Los Angeles
County Hospital, Doheny Eye Institute, Dr. Alfaro trained in vitreoretinal diseases
and macular diseases at the Yale Universtiy School of Medicine.
Dr. Alfaro served in the United States Air Force Medical Corps and was promoted to
the rank of major prior to an honorable discharge. During his active duty tenure he
was posted as a full-time faculty member of the Uniformed Services University, the
military medical school of the Department of Defense. He directed a research
laboratory dedicated to the treatment and management of endophthalmitis and
ocular trauma.
Ms. Judith “Judy” M. Davis is Executive Vice President and Chief Legal Officer at
BlueCross BlueShield of South Carolina (BCBSSC). Ms. Davis also serves as Corporate
Secretary and in addition to directing the company’s law department, she manages
public affairs, corporate communications and charitable giving. Ms. Davis also oversees
three ancillary businesses that generate over $1.75 billion in revenue: Companion Life &
Health Insurance Company and UCI Medical, the management company for the
multistate network of Doctors Care offices. Judy currently serves as a board member of
Engenuity SC, SC Launch, United Way of the Midlands, Central Carolina Community
Foundation, Columbia College and Palmetto Conservation Foundation.
Dr. James Bearden III, ‘65 is the Vice President of Clinical Research for
Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System; Managing Physician for the nationally
recognized Gibbs Cancer Center; and Director of the Bearden-Josey Center for Breast
Health. He is board-certified in Internal Medicine, Clinical Oncology and Hematology,
and is the first Board-certified oncologist in South Carolina.
Only one of two community physicians on the National Cancer Institute’s steering
committees for Multiple Myeloma and SX-QOL, Bearden has served as a member of the
American Society of Clinical Oncology Cancer Prevention Committee, as well as a
member of the executive committees of both the Southwest Oncology Group and the
Alliance Oncology Group, for which he also serves as Co-Chair of Conflict of Interest.
Bearden is a research affiliate of Hollings Cancer Center and was Chairman of the
Cancer Care Committee at Spartanburg Regional from 1976 to 2010. A former member
of the Spartanburg Regional Healthcare System Board of Directors, Bearden is a charter
founding member of Carolina Alliance Bank.
Dr. Thomas H. Blackwell, ‘81 graduate of The Citadel and resident of
Greenville, SC, currently serves as a Professor of Emergency Medicine, Director of the
EMT Training Program, and Assistant Dean at the USC School of Medicine Greenville.
Prior to this appointment, he served as a Professor in the Department of Emergency
Medicine at Carolina Medical Center in Charlotte where he created one of the largest
post-graduate EMS fellowship programs in the United States. Dr. Blackwell completed
his medical training at Creighton University School of Medicine.
In 2004, Dr. Blackwell invented and patented the world's first comprehensive mobile
emergency hospital. He currently serves as the CEO of MED-1 Partners which
manufactures the facilities. The MED-1 mobile hospitals include surgical, critical care,
and emergency medical capabilities. These units were deployed to storm-ravaged
Mississippi days following Hurricane Katrina and treated over 7500 patients. MED-1 has
been deployed across the United States to serve other communities where local disasters
have affected healthcare delivery. The MED-1 units have now been placed in developing
countries to improve access to health care. Over 1.5 million patients have received care in
these facilities.
Thursday 1:00
Core Values Speaker (Thursday 4:00)
Rear Admiral Margaret “Peg” Klein United States Navy
“Ethics in the Profession of Arms”
A native of Weymouth, Mass., Rear Adm. Klein was commissioned in May 1981 upon graduation from the U.S. Naval Academy. She earned her Master of Education from the University of Southern Maine in 1999. A naval flight officer, Klein's operational assignments include multiple tours with the "Ironmen" of Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron Three; forward-deployed USS Kitty Hawk Battle Group Staff as N6 during
Operations Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom; and chief of staff for the USS Dwight D. Eisenhower Strike Group. Command and leadership assignments include command of Fleet Air Reconnaissance Squadron Three; Commander, Task Force 124 and Strategic Communications Wing One; and 82nd Commandant of Midshipmen at the U.S. Naval Academy. She commanded forward-deployed Expeditionary Strike Group Five as well as Task Force 64 providing strike assets during Operation Odyssey Dawn. Klein’s staff assignments include Naval Air Forces, U.S. Atlantic Fleet; Naval Military Personnel Command; White House Military Office; Brookings Legislative Fellow for Senator Olympia Snowe; operations director, Naval Network Warfare Command, Chief of Staff, U.S. Cyber Command; and most recently as Chief of Staff, J5, on the Joint Staff. Klein currently serves as Senior Advisor to the Secretary of Defense for Military Professionalism. Klein has over 4,500 flight hours in the EC-130 and the E-6. Her decorations include the Defense Superior Service Medal, Legion of Merit, Meritorious Service Medal, and other personal, unit, and campaign awards.
Honor Committee Panel (Bond 295)
In this session, members of The Citadel’s 2015 Honor Committee will lead a
discussion on issues confronting students at colleges with honor systems. Student
delegates attending the symposium will join Citadel cadets to provide a brief
overview of honor systems, school policies, and current challenges at their colleges.
Topics of interest will include social media and honor, faculty and staff support,
plagiarism, due process, appeal procedures, and single sanction punishment.
Special Topics Sessions (Friday 9:00)
Choose One Session to Attend Crime Scene Reconstruction: How Ferguson, Missouri became a
Crucible in Public Service Leadership (Buyer Auditorium) **
On the Morning of August 9th, 2014, Michael Brown was fatally shot by Ferguson
Police Officer Darren Wilson. Although a tragic incident that ended with the death
of an 18 year old, it would quickly became a catalyst for far deeper community issues.
Visiting Professor Ed Lugo, with the support of the Criminal Justice department and
in conjunction with the Krause Center, will reconstruct the crime scene and events
that occurred in Ferguson, Missouri. The exhibit will be on display starting Friday
morning in Buyer Auditorium. The focus of the exhibit will be to discuss from a
point of intellectual honesty, key issues concerning the actual crime scene and public
service leadership responsibilities to include understanding community reaction.
Cadets and guests will visually experience and discuss the magnitude of the scene
and the volatility of the situation. The exhibit is intended to be an intimate
leadership learning experience. Scene reconstruction and discussion will be based on
evidence, images and witness statements as presented to the Ferguson grand jury.
With over twenty five years of federal criminal investigative and administration
experience, Lugo concentrates on utilizing science, logic and the law when teaching
cadets committed to public service.
**Due to limited space, this session is not open to the public.
Sessions Sponsored by Class of 1999
Special Topics Sessions (Friday 11:00)
Choose One Session to Attend
Ethics of Detainee Interrogation (MCH 228) In this session, Mr. Alberto Mora
and Major General Tony Taguba, US Army (Retired) will discuss the costs and
consequences of using torture in detainee interrogation. Mr. Mora serves as a Senior
Fellow at The Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Harvard’s Kennedy School of
Government and also sits on the Board of Directors of Human Rights First and Freedom
House. In 2006, Mora was awarded the John F. Kennedy Memorial Foundation’s Profile
in Courage Award in recognition of his opposition—while serving as the General Counsel
of the US Navy—to the cruel interrogation of detainees in the post-9/11 period. MG
Taguba was the author of the Taguba Report: The Investigation of Iraq Prisoner Abuse
at Abu Ghraib Prison. He currently lectures on this subject at colleges and universities
around the country as well as at the U.S. Senior Service Colleges.
Leading with Character: The Lessons from Ferguson (Knob Lounge) In this
session, Law School Dean Joan Vestrand will explore with the audience the role of
character in the events in Ferguson and what the incident teaches us as future leaders
interested in affecting positive social change. Dean Vestrand will introduce a different
approach for tackling difficult social problems - one that seeks to identify root issues and to
repair human relationships, in stark contrast to our current punishment-based
system. The audience will consider with Dean Vestrand whether, as future leaders of
character, there isn't a better way. Joan Vestrand is the Associate Dean of Western
Michigan University Cooley Law School's Auburn Hills campus and teaches Personal and
Professional Responsibility.
Ethics in Global Outreach Programs (MCH 230) In this session, clinical research
psychologist Dr. Cynthia Swenson will look at cross-cultural outreach and collaboration,
which require particularly sensitive and sophisticated ethical reasoning and leadership.
Dr. Swenson’s long-term partnerships with challenged communities in the United States and
Ghana, along with her psychological expertise in multi-systemic intervention, make her the
perfect person to guide participants through logistical and ethical issues surrounding
cross-cultural work. Illustrations and case studies from Project OKURASE: (Opportunity,
Knowledge, Understanding, Renewed Health, Arts-Based, Skills Training and Education), a
community development and health project in a rural village in Ghana, West Africa, will
make this a particularly rich and engaging session.
Krause Center Award for Distinguished Service, Leadership, and Ethics (Friday 1:15)
“Ethical Issues Facing Communities”
Mayor Joseph Riley, Jr., ’64 Mayor of Charleston
Joseph P. Riley, Jr. was first elected as Mayor of the City of
Charleston, SC in December 1975. He is now serving his
40th year as mayor, in an unprecedented tenth term.
During his service as mayor, he has been widely considered
one of the most visionary and highly effective governmental
leaders in America. He was appointed by President Ronald
Reagan to the Advisory Committee on Governmental
Relations in 1981.
Under his leadership, Charleston set a standard for its
commitment to racial harmony and progress and
experienced a remarkable revitalization of its historic downtown business district. He
created the first Tourism Management Award, fostered the rise of the acclaimed
Spoleto Festival, USA and doubled the number of public parks in the city, adding the
beloved Waterfront Park.
A national leader in the area of urban design and livability issues, Riley has put
Charleston in the forefront as an example of high quality urban design. The City of
Charleston is recognized as one of the most livable and progressive cities in the United
States. Mayor Riley created The Mayors Institute on City Design in 1986 to help
Mayors transform their communities through design by preparing mayors to be the
chief urban designer of their cities. President Barack Obama presented Mayor Riley
with the 2009 National Medal of the Arts at the White House for cultivating
Charleston’s historic and cultural resources to enhance public spaces, and for
revitalizing urban centers throughout our nation as founder of the Mayors’ Institute on
City Design. The American Architectural Foundation and the U. S. Conference of
Mayors in February 2010 created The Joseph P. Riley, Jr. Award for Leadership in City
Design in his honor.
He served as President of the U. S. Conference of Mayors 1986-87 and currently serves
on the USCM’s Executive Committee. He served as Chairman of the Cities Task Force
of the Southern Growth Policies Board and was President of the National Association
of Democratic Mayors (1988-92).
Thank you to our sponsors:
Pam & Jim Allen
Ginger & Andy Anderson
Jane & Les Bergen
Jeanette & Steve Bloss
Jeannie & Furman Brodie
Marsha & Bud Bryant
Sylvia & Bruce Butler
Kathleen & Pat Dougherty
Lynn & Sam Dusenbury
Sarah & Greg Dyson
Lynette & John Fairlamb
Beth & Skip Garrett
Harriet & Jim Gettys
Phyllis & Frank Gibson
Teresa & Al Jacobs
Dorothy & Donnie Johnson
Jane & Dean Kubler
Janice & Dennis McConnell
Janet & Greg Olney
Linda & Russ Olson
Joe Owens
Earlene & Garry Parks
Amie & John Ritner
Charles Small
Gail & Ira Stern
Carmela & Joe Trez
Sharon & Rich Vernon
Karen & Bill Wessinger
Harold Wilcox
Gail & Ed Woodson
Ella & Sam Young
Special Thanks
In Memory of: Chris Clearwaters, Joe Eubanks, and Rick Repole
Gay and Bill Krause, ’63 Mills B. Lance Memorial Foundation
Thomas Mikell, ’64 Rita and Steve McManus, ’64
The Principled Leadership Committee of the Class of ’69
...and to all the other members of the Class of 1969 whose donations and pledges were made to the Symposium Fund.
Contact Us
Public Safety
843.953.5114
Krause Center
843.953.5815
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Parking
Registra on Opening Remarks
Roundtable Discussions “The Citadel Experience” Ethics in the Military Panel
“Crime Scene Reconstruc on” “Leading with Character”
“Ethics in Global Outreach Programs” Lunch “Moral Courage in Life, the Military, and Business”
“Ethics in the Profession of Arms” “Ethical Issues Facing Communi es”
Ethics in Business Panel Honor Commi ee Panel
Ethics in Healthcare & Research Panel
Service Learning Showcase 1
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“Ethics of Detainee Interroga on” 2
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