Building Peace Through Justice
KRO C S C HO O L
The Kroc School prepares and supports people to develop solutions to today’s complex issues of violence, injustice, poverty and inequality. We use an applied-peace learning model where participants of our programs truly integrate theory and practice. Our research generates relevant knowledge for understanding and problem solving in areas of human rights, conflict resolution, humanitarian crises, international security and development. We create change in communities worldwide by designing innovative methodologies for peacebuilding and working with diverse partners.
THE K R O C SC HO O L WAY
Get Involved. sandiego.edu/peace
PATRICIA MÁRQUEZ, PhD, DEAN, KROC SCHOOL OF PEACE STUDIES
CHRIS YANOV ‘03 MA JOHN PATTERSON ‘12 MA
MARKELLAELEONORA MANTIKA ’06 MA
T HEORY + P R AC TICE
The Kroc School Advantage Nation’s first stand-alone school focusing on peace and justice Theory + Practice: A one-of-a-kind applied-peace learning model Intense interdisciplinary program where students gain knowledge by participating in real-world projects and decision-making with exceptional opportunities to connect with top leaders in the field. Small class size with students from around the world The program draws a dynamic and globally diverse student population from more than 50 countries in six continents. Unique international border experience Our proximity to the U.S.- Mexico border provides real-time opportunities to engage in pressing peace and social justice issues. Students have direct access to a range of symposiums, workshops and events within our award-winning institutes: The Institute for Peace and Justice The Trans-Border Institute The Center for Peace and Commerce and its Social Innovation Challenge Degree Options: Master of Arts in Peace and Justice Master of Arts in Social Innovation JD/MA Peace and Law Dual Degree Undergraduate Minor in Peacebuilding and Social Innovation |2
In 2012, his Holiness the Dalai Lama visited San Diego for the first time and reminded our audience that:
“Others are like us, we are the same.” JOAN B. KROC DISTINGUISHED LECTURE SERIES
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STUD E NTPR O FILE
Global Diversity SISTER AGATHA OGOCHUKWU CHIKELUE TITLE / Student, MA in Peace and Justice program ORGANIZATIONS WORKED FOR / Catholic Archdiocese of Abuja Liaison/Interreligious Dialogue Office & Women of Faith Peacebuilding Network Nigeria LOCATIONS / Abuja, Anambra, Kogi & Ondo states in Nigeria
“I am a Nigerian Catholic nun from the Congregation of the Daughters of Mary Mother of Mercy. I hold a bachelor’s degree in public administration and a master’s degree in international affairs and diplomacy. Within the context of my interreligious dialogue work and through committed effort, I have been able to set up a network of Christian and Muslim women who would stand up against violence in their communities. This network is called Nigeria Women of Faith Peacebuilding Network and I serve as the cochair there. Furthermore, I am the director of the Catholic Archdiocese of Abuja Liaison and the Interreligious Dialogue Office. I have been blessed enough to have had the opportunity to travel widely across the world to attend various international peacebuilding events while receiving several trainings in interreligious dialogue in Africa, Europe and the United States. I have received an award from the International Women’s Peace Group as a Woman Peace Ambassador in recognition of my tireless efforts in building lasting peace in Nigeria. In my studies at the Kroc School, I am focusing on conflict resolution and interfaith peacebuilding.”
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We guide our students toward professional fulfillment and success. From the start, students encounter career guidance, counseling and workshops. We promote professional networking and connectedness through a mentoring alliance that matches individual students with experienced professionals.
The two-year Master of Arts in Peace and Justice includes an internship experience allowing students a deeper exploration of changemaking organizations.
Students come from more than 50 countries to become peacebuilders & changemakers. |5
P EAC E BUIL DERS U N ITE
Global Impact
Tim Walsh ‘03 (MA) Chief of Staff— Representative Vargas
Since 2003 the University of San Diego has awarded degrees to a growing number of students who work to further the school’s vision of fashioning a more humane world. From creating policies that support women and children in Uganda to helping at-risk CANADA
youth at home in San Diego, our alumni focus on finding sustainable solutions to issues that threaten peace and human security.
UNITED STATES
Ryan Dempsey Argentieri ‘03 (MA) Silver Mountain Solutions MEXICO
GUATEMALA EL SALVADOR
HAITI DOMINICAN REPUBLIC
VENEZUELA COLOMBIA ECUADOR
ALUMNI and STUDENT IMPACT Where Kroc School alumni work and students come from (2017) WOMEN PEACEMAKERS Network of women who have participated in our Women PeaceMakers program
PERU BRAZIL
Dr. Ami Carpenter Kroc School PARAGUAY
ARGENTINA
INTERNSHIP PLACEMENTS Internship locations from 2010-2017
Ben de Los Reyes ‘07 (MA) Mater Dei High School
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Grace Michel ‘13 (MA) Center for Peace and Commerce
2 7 6 Pea c em ak ers in 89 Countr ies and Grow i n g
LATVIA SWEDEN IRELAND UNITED KINGDOM
NETHER LANDS
RUSSIA
LITHUANIA
POLAND CZECH SERBIA REPUBLIC UKRAINE MOLDOVA HUNGARY FRANCE BOSNIAHERZEGOVINA SWITZERLAND SOUTH OSSETIA KOSOVO ITALY AZERBAIJAN
KAZAKHSTAN JAPAN
KYRGYZSTAN CHINA
Markella-Eleonora Mantika ‘06 (MA) United Nations Peacekeeping Operations
SOUTH KOREA
GREECE PALESTINE MOROCCO EGYPT
IRAN IRAQ ISRAEL JORDAN KUWAIT
WESTERN SAHARA
GUINEA
SAUDI ARABIA
BANGLADESH INDIA
SOUTH SUDAN
CAMEROON
ERITREA
GUAM
LAOS
SUDAN
NIGERIA
LIBERIA IVORY COAST
NEPAL PAKISTAN
THAILAND
BURKINA FASO
SIERRA LEONE
AFGHANISTAN
VIETNAM PHILIPPINES
SOMALIA
ETHIOPIA
SRI LANKA
CAMBODIA
YAP MICRONESIA
MARSHALL ISLANDS
KENYA
GHANA
UGANDA DEM.REP OF CONGO
INDONESIA
RWANDA BURUNDI
NEW GUINEA
TANZANIA
ZIMBABWE NAMIBIA
SOUTH AFRICA
John Patterson ‘12 (MA) USAID — Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance
Christopher Yanov ‘03 (MA) Reality Changers Sister Agatha Ogochukwu Chikelue MA Student
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KR O C INS T ITU TE FOR PEACE AN D JUSTICE
A Hub For Peacebuilding The Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice (Kroc IPJ) identifies, employs and disseminates best practices in peacebuilding. Through its work on the ground, Kroc IPJ both teaches and learns from effective strategies and techniques used by local community peacebuilders as well as practitioners. In the field and on the USD campus, the institute promotes dialogue across political, ethnic, gender, religious and socioeconomic divides and encourages inclusive approaches to conflict prevention, conflict resolution and post-conflict reconciliation and justice. The Kroc IPJ conferences and lectures – about critical issues such as conflict prevention, human security, transitional justice and
Pietro Ameglio
international human rights law – serve as a global resource for
Faculty, National Autonomous University of Mexico
the rapidy developing field of peacebuilding.
sandiego.edu/peace/krocipj |8
Social Activist, Mexico Peace and Justice Service and the Movement for Peace with Justice and Dignity
Distinguished Lecture Series LEARNING FROM LEADERS
The Joan B. Kroc Distinguished Lecture Series is a forum for high-level national and international leaders and policy makers to share their knowledge and perspectives on issues related to peace and justice. Designed to broaden our understanding and thinking about how to prevent and resolve conflict and promote peace with justice, the series is made possible by a generous endowment from the late Joan B. Kroc.
Leymah Gbowee 2011 Nobel Peace Laureate Founder and President of Gbowee Peace Foundation Africa Former Executive Director of Women Peace and Security Network Africa "Transforming Conflict through Nonviolent Coalitions" Asma Jahangir Former Chair of the Human Rights Commission of Pakistan Former President of the Supreme Court Bar of Pakistan "Walking Together for Freedom"
Senator George J. Mitchell U.S. Senate Majority Leader (1989-1995) Independent Chairman of the Northern Ireland Peace Talks (1996-2000) U.S. Special Envoy for Middle East Peace (2009-2011) "Negotiating in Business, Politics and Peace"
His Holiness the 14th Dalai Lama Spiritual Leader of Tibet 1989 Nobel Peace Laureate "Cultivating Peace and Justice"
WorldLink
C O N N E C T I N G YO U T H TO G LO B A L A F FA I R S
This year-round program inspires new generations of peacebuilders by annually reaching out to more than 2,000 high school students from the San Diego-Tijuana region. Students are invited to explore and engage with current global issues, and are supported to imagine and create solutions to pressing peace and social justice problems.
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WO MEN P EACEMAKERS PROG R AM
Networking for Impact Since 2003, the innovative, award-winning Women PeaceMakers program has been documenting the lives and work of women on the front lines of peacebuilding around the world. Each year, four exceptional women peacebuilders come to the Kroc School’s Institute for Peace and Justice for an eight-week residency. The creative solutions they develop in conflict situations are shared with students and the community through lectures, networking initiatives and conferences.
sandiego.edu/peace/krocipj
WO ME N P EAC EMA KER PR O F I L E
Galia Golan
(2015)
Galia Golan of Israel knows well the subjects of IsraeliPalestinian politics. She is a professor emerita who lectures internationally and is a recognized expert in international affairs and foreign policy. That Golan is also a grassroots activist with several decades of experience focused on advancing women’s roles in peacebuilding and a key strategist in parliamentary activism, speaks volumes about her considerable and multilayered contributions to peace and justice in Israel.
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Alice Nderitu of Kenya (2012)
Students have the exclusive
Alice previously served on the country’s National Cohesion and Integration Commission, and is a well-recognized and called-upon mediator across the African continent.
opportunity to learn from Women PeaceMakers for a full semester in the War, Gender and
Luz Mendez of Guatemala (2004)
Peacebuilding course. During the past
Luz is one of the only women who served on the peace negotiating team (for the opposition) to end the 36-year war in Guatemala. A sought-after speaker and consultant on gender equality in peace processes.
14 years, 56 women from 38 countries, ranging from grassroots activists to government ministers, have participated in the program, bringing
Glenda Wildschut of South Africa (2015) Glenda began working with political prisoners, their families, exiles and orphaned returnee children in South Africa and Namibia in the early 1980s. In 1995, Wildschut was appointed by former president Nelson Mandela to serve as a commissioner on the Truth and Reconciliation Commission. She has since shared her expertise in peacebuilding and reconciliation in many countries, including Sierra Leone and Rwanda.
their expertise into the classroom and to community groups.
“
I especially appreciate the Women PeaceMakers program as a powerful tool to make the knowledge and experience of women engaged in peace processes accessible to a broader audience and, at the same time, provide these women with the opportunity to further enhance their skills. Michelle Bachelet Chile’s first woman president
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KR O C T R A N S -BORD ER IN STITU TE
Building Bridges Across Borders The Kroc Trans-Border Institute, founded in 1994, is one of the country’s leading centers for promoting cooperation and understanding along the U.S.-Mexico border. Together, the San Diego-Tijuana metropolitan region has a gross regional product of more than $200 billion. The institute recognizes the economic and cultural interdependency of our sister cities and is reshaping how we think about the border and issues such as economic opportunity, immigration, border enforcement and citizen peacebuilding. Our proximity to the border and long-term relationships with cross-border communities provide our faculty and students with a unique opportunity to reformulate and transform pressing peace and social justice issues in real time. Whether dealing with mass violence, refugee crises or economic development, they are able to experience these phenomena firsthand and turn theory into practice.
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KROC TBI SEMINAR SERIES The Kroc Trans-Border Institute seminar series is hosted in various locations throughout Mexico bringing together leading experts, practitioners and students in order to understand issues as they develop in real-time and discuss collaborative solutions. The goal: the construction of a shared language, new international collaborations and the creation of networks of civic leaders, all for the purpose of constructing a lasting peace in Mexico. • Two day seminars held in Mexicali, Sinaloa and Tijuana • Six-series program provides a TBI Certificate in Applied Peace Education
TRANS-BORDER OPPORTUNITIES CERTIFICATE Geared toward professionals and students, this unique program teaches how to engage with the cross-border community and take advantage of the border’s unique possibilities for entrepreneurship, business and activism. Interactive seminars are offered during the evenings and weekends from experts, practitioners and decision makers who are shaping the future of the border region.
AMI CARPENTER, PhD
P RO FP R OFI L E
TITLE / Associate Professor ORGANIZATION / Kroc School at the University of San Diego LOCATION / California USA Dr. Ami Carpenter orchestrated the Groundbreaking Research Project Measuring the Nature and Extent of Gang Involvement in Sex Trafficking in San Diego “We gathered and analyzed data from hundreds of current and former gang members in San Diego and across the border, schools, law enforcement agencies and victim service providers. In all, data was collected from over 1500 individuals, making this one of the largest, most comprehensive human trafficking case studies in the United States. There is more to be done...and we want students to participate. How do students get involved? They express interest and figure out how much time they can dedicate to this project. For example, in 2015, two students designed their capstones around this research; a win-win. That’s what it’s all about.”
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C E NT ER F OR PEACE AN D COMMERC E
Igniting Social Innovation The Center for Peace and Commerce (CPC) is a collaboration between the School of Business and the Kroc School to prepare new generations of changemakers. The CPC encourages students to develop effective solutions to complex environmental and social problems, and to exercise innovative approaches for making a positive impact on the four Ps: people, profit, planet and peace.
The nation’s only institutional partnership between a business school and a peace school | 14
Fredrick B. Frimpong 2015 SIC Winner Godfreds Foundation
S CIAL INNOVATION CHALLENGE
The Social Innovation Challenge (SIC) provides students with the opportunity to develop initiatives for peacebuilding and to compete for seed funding up to $75,000 annually. In the process, students engage with Changemakers from around the world and receive mentorship to sharpen their ideas and make them a reality.
A LU M P R OFI L E Brittany Becker 2015 SIC Finalist SmartyPants Wear LLC
GRACE MICHEL ’13 MA TITLE / Former Assistant Director ORGANIZATION / Center for Peace and Commerce, University of San Diego LOCATION / California USA
Managed the Center for Peace and Commerce’s programs and initiatives, including the Social Innovation Challenge, the Idea Labs series, the Women Innovators Initiative and the Social Entrepreneurship Program for the Hansen Summer Institute.
“I recently met a first-year student who told me that he came to USD because of the Social Innovation Challenge. It meant a lot to me to hear that, to see that there are students who are drawn to our university because we offer this opportunity for them to create and be the change they want to see in the world. Working with students in the Social Innovation Challenge has been an incredible privilege. It can be a risky thing for a student to put their idea out there, but these students take that risk, and they are relentless and curious and dedicated to creating change. I think about students like Fred Benneh, who won funding in the Social Innovation Challenge and went back to his home village in Ghana this summer and used the funding to complete the construction and train the teachers for a new school. The school is offering a completely innovative learning model. It is going to be a game changer for these kids, and I am sure that the students who grow up going to Fred's school are going to be future leaders in their communities, in their nation and around the globe.”
Peacebuilding on the front lines A LU M P R OFI L E
CHRISTOPHER YANOV ’03 MA TITLE / Founder & President ORGANIZATION / Reality Changers LOCATION / California USA
What are you responsible for? Getting low-income youth off the streets and into college; raising a $2.2 million budget every year — that’s basically $1,100 per hour if calculated over a typical workweek. What does a typical day include? Meeting with donors for lunch, being responsive to staff members’ needs in the afternoons, supervising student programs in the evenings, and then focusing on the work that I need to get done until midnight or later. Best day on the job?
If society truly wishes to cleanse the generations of bloodshed that have spilled onto our urban sidewalks, then we must flood these inner-city streets with an overflowing amount of positive options — so that youth living in such areas can become caught up in the rising current of leadership and opportunity.
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Every May, Reality Changers has its annual Scholarship Celebration where program graduates receive college sweatshirts that represent which universities they’ll be attending later that fall. In 2016, this event will feature Reality Changers’ graduates surpassing the $100,000,000 mark in scholarships from all sources. What made you decide to get a master’s degree in peace and justice? Other students may have come to the program to seek ways to become peacemakers around the world, but back in 2003, the struggle to keep young people alive was occurring just a few miles away from USD’s campus. Others had dreams of sitting around negotiating tables and hammering out peace deals. I was coming from the perspective of trying to figure out what to do when two gang members were on either side of me and my words might be the only thing preventing a street brawl from breaking out, and from me being that brawl’s first casualty.
A LU M P R OFI L E
JOHN PATTERSON ‘12 MA TITLE / Humanitarian Assistance Advisor ORGANIZATION / U.S. AID — Office of US Foreign Disaster Assistance LOCATION / Global What are you responsible for? I am the lead Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance (OFDA) advisor to U.S. Southern Command. I work to ensure that the Department of Defense’s (DOD) humanitarian efforts throughout Latin America are appropriate and coordinated. As part of this, I conduct training for DOD units, advise senior leaders, participate in the planning and execution of humanitarian exercises and deploy to disaster areas when DOD assets are requested by OFDA to support a United States Government (USG) disaster response. What does a typical day include? There really isn’t a typical day. I could be in my office meeting with DOD personnel, training military personnel or in a disaster area directing DOD response efforts. I do travel 75-80 percent of the time, so most days involve some combination of a hotel, airport or rental car. What made you decide to get a master’s degree in peace and justice? I have always been drawn to the idea of service and of trying to make my life about something bigger than myself. I was in the Navy for seven years and while I am proud of my military service and grateful for the many opportunities it gave me, I came to the realization that I didn’t want the central paradigm of my professional life to be violence. I want to serve through nonviolence, to pursue peace through peaceful means.
I want to serve through nonviolence, to pursue peace through peaceful means.
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A LUMP R OFILE
RYAN DEMPSEY ARGENTIERI ’03 MA TITLE / Founder & Principal ORGANIZATION / Silver Mountain Solutions LOCATION / Washington, D.C. USA
Silver Mountain Solutions is a global consulting and advisory firm that conducts comprehensive operational and strategic assessments of businesses, nonprofits and independent entities. The firm specializes in projects and initiatives that involve multiple stakeholders across a variety of locations and disciplines. It also runs online training programs for leaders and aspiring entrepreneurs. Previously, Ryan Dempsey Argentieri was responsible for International Government Affairs and Integrated Building Solutions in emerging markets and eco-cities for United Technologies Corporation (UTX).
SISTER AGATHA OGOCHUKWU CHIKELUE TITLE / Student - Kroc School Masters Program Why did you choose the Kroc School? ORGANIZATIONS WORKED FOR / Catholic Archdiocese of Abuja “After September 11 everything I thought I knew about the world Liaison/Interreligious Dialogue Office CAALIDO & Women of Faith Peacebuilding was shattered. I knew I had to learn more in a place that was Network Nigeria WFPN thinking differently about the world. Thankfully, I learned about LOCATIONS / Abuja, Anambra, Kogi, & Ondo States in Nigeria USD and was fortunate to be in the first class of MA in Peace and Justice students.” “To be a true agent of change or instrument of peace, one must As a Nigerian Catholic nun from the Congregation of the Daughters surrender of Mary Mother of all agendas or personal objectives. We can be of service Mercy (DMMM) I am part of the KAICIID and the IGE-CWFL. I hold a bachelor’s degree in and justice from so many different corners of to the cause of peace Public Administration and a master’s degree in International Affairs and the Diplomacy. world and walks of life. It’s similar to being the change. When Within the context of my interreligious dialogue work and through committed effort,with I we are at peace ourselves — who we are and what we are have been able to set up a network of Christian and Muslim womenhere whoto would stand do — we can be more effective at everything we do.” up against violence in their communities. This network is called Nigeria Women of Faith Peacebuilding Network and I serve as the Co-Chair there. Furthermore, I am the Director of the Catholic Archdiocese of Abuja Liaison and the Interreligious Dialogue Office. I have been blessed enough to have had the opportunity to travel widely across the world to attend various international peacebuilding events while receiving several trainings in interreligious dialogue in Africa, Europe, and the United States. I have received an award from the International Women’s Peace Group (IWPG) as a Woman Peace Ambassador in recognition of my tireless efforts in building lasting peace in Nigeria. In my current studies at the Kroc School of Peace Studies I am focusing on conflict resolution and interfaith peacebuilding.
National Journal Women 2020 conference: Celebrating Progress, How Women are Changing the World.
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A LU M P R OFI L E
TIM WALSH ‘03 MA TITLE / Chief of Staff ORGANIZATION / U.S. Representative Vargas LOCATION / California and Washington , D.C. “I manage the congressman's district and legislative offices in San Diego County, Imperial County and in Washington, D.C. while supervising all media relations, legislative strategy and constituent outreach.” Why did you choose the Kroc School? “Before applying to the Kroc School, I did a thorough comparison of other programs. However, having attended USD as an undergraduate, it quickly became apparent that other comparable programs could not offer the same level of student support and community feel. The team at the Kroc School uniquely merged top-ranked scholarship and teaching with a personalized touch.”
The MA in Peace and Justice permanently changed the prism through which I see the world. The program calls it a Changemaker's way of thinking, knowing, being and interacting.
BENJAMIN DE LOS REYES ‘07 MA TITLE / Teacher, Mater Dei High School
– Tim Walsh
LOCATION / Santa Ana, California USA “ The diversity of experience and shared wisdom were truly a highlight, especially the capstone project in a Tanzanian refugee camp. ”
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WOR L D -W IDE C AREER OPPOR TU NITIES
Transforming Ideas into Action for Impact Our graduates have unlimited local and global career opportunities. This is just the beginning: Take nothing for granted and British Embassy
have faith that nobody knows
World Bank
better than the local population
Children’s Peace Initiative
what type of approaches and
Deloitte
solutions to solving or
Global Peace Building Foundation
transforming a conflict are most
United Nations Global Compact
effective for them. International
The Amani Institute
organizations and institutions
United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (UNHCHR)
tend to forget the importance
Friends of Africa International
owned processes and
Justice and Security Network
sovereignty overall.
Joint Mission Analysis Centre, United Nations Operation in Cote d’Ivoire MIT Urban Planning Department Office of Senator Dianne Feinstein Ronald McDonald House Charities Royal Netherlands Embassy U.S. Agency for International Development, Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance The United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) | 20
of national ownership, nationally
A LU M P R OFI L E
MARKELLAELEONORA MANTIKA ’06 MA has been working in the field with United Nations Peacekeeping Operations since 2011. She served with the Rule of Law and Security sections as a disarmament, demobilization and reintegration officer with UNOCI, the UN peacekeeping operation in Côte d’Ivoire, then as a programme officer with the UN Mine Action Service in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) as part of MONUSCO, the UN peacekeeping operation there. A Greek national, Markella is currently based in Goma, in the eastern DRC, where she is responsible for the overall planning, implementation and monitoring of the UN Mine Action Programme for the DRC.
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A P L AC E F OR PEACE
Inspiring Surroundings Spanish Renaissance architecture. Breathtaking views of Mission Bay and the Pacific Ocean. Impeccably manicured landscapes. The perfect atmosphere for academic excellence and personal development.
#1
USD is ranked most beautiful campus in the United States
KROC SCHOOL BY THE NUMBERS AG E R A N GE
10-25 CLASS SIZE
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28 56
AV G UND ER G RA D G PA
AV G TOE FL
3.5
91
73 AV G TEMP
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S UNNY DAYS P ER Y EA R
Program Options Not every community is the same. Not every individual is the same. We design programs that leverage diversity, but recognize different stages of peacebuilding and changemaking leadership.
G R A D UAT E Master of Arts in Peace and Justice Designed for individuals seeking to acquire the fundamental knowledge and skills to become effective agents of peace and social justice. The MA in Peace and Justice is offered as a full-time two-year or part-time program.
Master of Arts in Social Innovation Designed for individuals with vision, leadership skills and an entrepreneurial mindset. The MA in Social Innovation is offered as a nine-month full-time or part-time program.
JD/MA Peace and Law Dual Degree The only one of its kind, our JD/MA program is an excellent fit for students interested in issues of immigration, human rights or mediation; those who wish to take a lawyer's route to influencing policy; and public interest lawyers seeking to tackle broader questions of social justice using both legal and policy frameworks. The JD/MA Peace and Law Dual Degree is offered as a full-time four-year program.
U N D E R G R A D UAT E Minor in Peacebuilding and Social Innovation
Scholarship Opportunities Approximately 80 percent of our students receive some type of scholarship funding, and Kroc School students are also eligible to receive an exclusive tuition discount. The Kroc School will continue to provide merit-based scholarship opportunities to all applicants, including international students from conflict-affected and underdeveloped nations, so they can acquire the skills they need to be Changemakers in any sector. Kroc School students and programs are supported by individual, foundation and corporate gifts. Learn more at www.sandiego.edu/peace/giving.
The minor is designed around the study of the sources of violence, oppression and injustice as well as innovative strategies for peacebuilding, which enable students to become effective agents of positive social change.
C E R T I F I C AT I O N t h ro u gh t h e Tr an s- Bo rd e r I n stitu te Applied Peace Education A series of six seminars organized around three broad problematics or analytical frameworks: human rights, citizenship and peacebuilding.
Trans-border Opportunities Certificate An interactive series of classroom and field seminars that focus on key perspectives on the politics, people, products, places and culture of the binational region.
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KROC SCH OOL
The Kroc School is housed in a beautiful, 90,000-square-foot Spanish Renaissance-style facility. It is an inspiring setting for work, study, dialogue and contemplation, and also serves as one of Southern California’s premier conference and special event venues. A separate residence offers temporary housing to visiting dignitaries and scholars. In addition to the school’s offices, classrooms and research facilities, the building also includes a 288-seat auditorium, 10 conference rooms, an executive boardroom and dedicated spaces for meetings and negotiations, conferences and lectures to support the school’s programs. The Garden of the Sea, overlooking Mission Bay and the Pacific Ocean, is a spectacular outdoor setting for receptions and events.
Kroc School students and programs are supported by individual, foundation and corporate gifts. Learn more at www.sandiego.edu/peace/giving
KROC SCHOOL
5998 Alcala Park San Diego, CA 92110-2492 (619) 260-7919 E-mail: peacestudies@sandiego.edu www.sandiego.edu/peace