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Sponsors and supporters

Sponsors

Alvin and Harriet Saperstein Fund for Science, Technology, Peace and Public Policy

The Saperstein fund can develop into a permanent endowment for center operational expenses and program development in the science and peace area if partners are identified who wish to join in sponsorship.

Bernard and Norma Goldman Scholarship in Conflict Resolution

The Goldman Scholarship supports active students practicing or studying conflict resolution in the Detroit community or globally. 

Beverly and Robert O. Hacker Student Internship

Robert O. Hacker was a successful insurance executive who, because of his disability and that of his wife, Beverly, was a strong advocate for the rights of the disabled. The internship will support full or part-time, graduate or undergraduate students. Although selection cannot be limited to any one specific demographic group, it is the donor's intention that preference be given to physically challenged students to intern at the Wayne State University Center for Peace and Conflict Studies.

Douglas Ross Fellowship for Graduate Study on the Israeli-Palestinian Dispute

The Douglas Ross Fellowship is awarded to Ph.D. students doing research or writing dissertations on aspects of Middle East peace and in need of support to do fieldwork.

Eugene Perrin Memorial Lecture

The family of the late Dr. Eugene Victor Perrin, peace activist, longtime member of the Center Executive Committee and Professor of Pathology in the Wayne State School of Medicine, established the Eugene Perrin Endowed Lectureship in Health Science and Peace. In collaboration with the Saperstein Science and Peace Initiative, the Perrin lecture attracts some of the most prominent global figures dealing with aspects of health as related to peace and conflict resolution. 

The first Perrin lecture was held in 2013 and featured Dr. Sarah Tishcoff, David and Lyn Silfen from the University of Pennsylvania, Departments of Genetics and Biology and presented on the topic of "African Genomic Variation: Implications for human evolution and disease." In 2014, Henry N. Pollack from the University of Michigan, Professor of Geophysics from the Earth and Environmental Sciences Department spoke on "The Implications of Vanishing Global Ice." 

The most recent Eugene Perrin Memorial Lecture in Health Sciences and Peace featured Rashida Tlaib, the first Muslim woman elected to the Michigan Legislature, the community partnerships and development director for the Sugar Law Center for Economic and Social Justice, and manager of the Take on Hate campaign, who spoke on "Environmental Challenges in the Urban Context: A Legislative Perspective."

Jacob and Helen Warratt Graduate Fellowship in Dispute Resolution

The Warratt Graduate Fellowship is awarded to graduate students working on dispute resolution issues.

Joella Gipson Endowed Scholarship for Peace and Human Rights Education

This scholarship fund was established to recognize scholastic achievement and support the student's service of fostering international understanding, goodwill and peace, in tandem with their studies in peace and conflict. This scholarship was created to encourage continued progress and to provide assistance to students in financing their education within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences while positively contributing to their community. It is Dr. Gipson's wish to support student experiences with community or international action programs that strive to improve quality of life.

Full-time and part-time graduate and undergraduate students co-majoring in and accepted for study in the area of peace and conflict studies will be given preference. Applicants must show that they are or have been active members of a community service organization, such as but not limited to City Year, AmeriCorps or Rotoract. A minimum 3.0 GPA is required. Applicants need not demonstrate financial need, but this may be a consideration for selection. Recipients may use awards for tuition and other educational expenses.

Oscar and Lillian Genser Endowed Peace and Human Rights Internship

Lillian Mellen Genser was an internationally known peace educator and former director of the Center for Peace and Conflict Studies at Wayne State University. She pioneered the study of human rights issues and global education. She introduced conflict resolution into school programming and curriculum. She also preserved the center and its Detroit Council for World Affairs through some of the most difficult political and financial conditions of the late 1960s, 70s and 80s. In 1986, Lillian established an ongoing "Visions of Peace" Children's Art Exhibit, celebrating the International Year of Peace and the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. Thousands of students, teachers and citizens have been informed about crucial world issues through programs she initiated.

The internship has been created to support the work of peace educators, such as Lillian Genser, in perpetuity. Students in good standing, full or part-time, undergraduate or graduate and seeking to promote and progress achievements while working at the Wayne State University Center for Peace and Conflict in fields related to human/children's rights, peace education and/or conflict resolution.

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