Dodd Center to Host Bipartisan Conversation on Fostering Civic and Democratic Engagement

Two longtime members of Congress will bring their insights to UConn on September 26

The Dodd Center for Human Rights and its reflection on a rainy day on the Storrs campus on Aug. 6, 2024. (Sydney Herdle/UConn Photo)

Members of the UConn community and the general public are invited to join in a bipartisan conversation about fostering civic and democratic engagement at The Dodd Center for Human Rights at UConn Storrs on Thursday, September 26, 2024, when Congress to Campus comes to UConn.

The flagship program of the nonprofit organization FMC – a bipartisan, voluntary alliance of former U.S. Senators and Representatives who advocate for representative democracy at home and abroad – Congress to Campus offers a unique civic educational experience by engaging honest dialogue with bipartisan teams of former members of Congress, congressional staff, and American diplomats.

“We know from our own work at UConn on programs like Democracy and Dialogues just how powerful it can be to engage in meaningful and civil discussion on the most critical issues we, as a society, are facing,” says James Waller, the inaugural Christopher J. Dodd Chair in Human Rights Practice at UConn and director of Dodd Human Rights Impact Programs, which is hosting the Congress to Campus event.

“We hope that this event will showcase how civil discourse, and even disagreement, can be a productive and healthy part of our democracy,” Waller says.

Congress to Campus sessions have been held on 183 campuses in 43 states and seven countries, reaching more than 57,000 students in the last 10 years alone.

Loretta Sanchez.
Loretta Sanchez (contributed photo)

UConn’s Congress to Campus event will feature a discussion with the Honorable Loretta Sanchez (D-CA, 1997-2017), a former senior member of the Armed Services and Homeland Security Committees; and the Honorable Fred Upton (R-MI, 1987-2023), a former chairman of the Committee on Energy and Commerce and top Republican leader of the Subcommittee on Energy.

Their discussion will be moderated by NBC Connecticut anchor and reporter Amber Diaz ’11 (CLAS), and UConn President Radenka Maric will deliver welcoming remarks

While visiting UConn, Reps. Sanchez and Upton will also engage with members of the broader community in a series of workshops small group discussions, keynotes, and classroom visits on topics including civil discourse, messaging and disinformation, democracy and human rights, and participation and inclusion.

The event is co-sponsored by UConn’s Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute, School of Public Policy, Department of Political Science, Undergraduate Student Government, Department of Residential Life, Community Outreach, Office of Outreach and Engagement, and the Nancy A. Humphreys Institute for Political Social Work.

Fred Upton.
Fred Upton (contributed photo)

It’s supported by Citizen Travelers, the nonpartisan civic engagement initiative of Travelers.

“We’re so grateful for our many partners on this event, and we hope students as well as members of our UConn community and the greater public will join us for this important conversation,” says Waller.

The Dodd Center is home to robust academic programs and innovative external engagement in human rights, including the Gladstein Family Human Rights Institute, its Dodd Human Rights Impact Programs, the University Archives and Special Collections, and the Center for Judaic and Contemporary Jewish Life.

The outreach and engagement arm of human rights at UConn, Dodd Human Rights Impact works to develop and support programs and initiatives that seek to directly impact local and global communities by helping them meet their human rights challenges.



Space is limited. Please click here to register for this event.

For more information about Dodd Impact, visit humanrights.uconn.edu/dodd-impact-programs.