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For Immediate Release November 27, 2007 |
Public Information Office 310 Owen Hall, Campus PO 1820 Asheville, NC 28804-8507 828/251-6526 - FAX: 828/251-6677 web: http://www.unca.edu/news e-mail: pubinfo@unca.edu |
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UNC Asheville to Host Talk by Noted Human Rights Activist;
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In observance of International Human Rights
Day, UNC Asheville will host a talk on "Restoring America's
Credibility: Human Rights in a Post-9/11 World" by renowned human
rights advocate William Schulz. Schulz will speak at 7 p.m. Sunday,
Dec. 9, in UNC Asheville's Highsmith University Union Grotto. The
event is free and open to the public.
Schulz has traveled the globe in pursuit of human rights. As
executive director of Amnesty International USA from 1994-2006,
Schulz visited refugee camps in Darfur, Sudan; prison cells in
Monrovia, Liberia; Hong Kong board rooms; and other locations from
Northern Ireland to Cuba examining human rights violations. Schulz
also traveled more than 10,000 miles in the United States, spreading
the human rights message and appearing on nearly every national
television news program.
Schulz has received numerous awards for his work with Amnesty
International USA, including Vanity's Fair's 2002 Hall of Fame of
World Nongovernmental Organization Leaders and the Cranbrook Peace
Award. The N.Y. Review of Books said, "William Schulz… has done more
than anyone in the American human rights movement to make human
rights issues known in the United States."
An ordained Unitarian Universalist minister, Schulz joined Amnesty
after serving 15 years with the Unitarian Universalist Association
of Congregations, the last eight as president. From 1985-93, he also
served on the Council of the International Association for Religious
Freedom, the oldest international interfaith organization in the
world.
Currently, Schulz is a senior fellow at the Center for American
Progress in Washington, D.C., where he works in the area of religion
and public policy and oversees a project designed to provide a
blueprint for human rights policy for the next U.S. administration.
Schulz holds a master's degree in philosophy from the University of
Chicago as well as a master's in theology and a Doctor of Ministry
from Meadville/Lombard Theological School in Chicago. He is the
author of several books, including "In Our Own Best Interests: How
Defending Human Rights Benefits Us All" and "Tainted Legacy: 9/11
and the Ruin of Human Rights."
The event is sponsored by UNC Asheville's chapter of Amnesty
International, UNC Asheville's Political Science Department and the
American Civil Liberties Union of Western North Carolina.
For more information, call UNC Asheville's Political Science
Department at 828/251-6634.
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