Human Rights Faculty Support Student Internship

Everyone who teaches at the Human Rights Institute has made a donation toward student internships.

So often, donors give money to a cause, yet never see the impact of their gift. For faculty at the Human Rights Institute (HRI) at the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center, the possibility of having a human rights internship for UConn students expand as a result of their generosity inspired them to give.

But what made the HRI response different was the extent of the effort: Every last individual teaching as part of the institute stepped forward to contribute to the Close to Home campaign. Their efforts helped the institute provide money to send students abroad for a human rights internship.

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“People like to give money that will help students in a very tangible way,” says Professor Richard Hiskes, HRI’s associate director and a professor of political science in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. Hiskes and Eleni Coundouriotis, an associate professor of English in CLAS who was the acting director of the institute at the time, were instrumental in encouraging support of the campaign.

Says Coundouriotis, “We’re pretty proud of the support given this fund by the HRI faculty.”

UConn offers a minor in human rights, and Hiskes says it is moving toward establishing a major. The minor requires students to participate in an internship, and several students in the past have gone beyond the standard expectations. For example, a group of students founded a human rights journal, Namaste, for which they collected poems, papers, and photography from interested students. “It’s a rather stunning journal,” Hiskes says. The phrase Namaste – a Hindi greeting – essentially means ‘I bow to you.’

Students have worked with Lawyers without Borders, in local social service agencies, and abroad in Cape Town and Johannesburg, South Africa, with a student internship beginning in London soon.

“I believe all of them carry with them the importance of human rights activism in their lives,” Hiskes says. “They are really committed students.”

The faculty stepped up to help while HRI director Richard Wilson was on sabbatical, but Hiskes says Wilson’s influence was clearly present. Wilson, a professor of anthropology and of law, holds the Gladstein Distinguished Chair in Human Rights in CLAS. “He gets a lot of credit for this,” says Hiskes. “It’s the environment he established that led to the success of this effort.”

For more information on supporting the Human Rights Institute, please contact the Foundation’s development department.