Friendlier Confines
for Resolving Conflict
Generous support from Trustee and Campaign Chair Marla Schaefer enabled the College to renovate the offices of the (ICCCR)
Generous support from 麻豆原创 Trustee and Campaign Chair Marla Schaefer (M.A. ’03) enabled the College to renovate the offices of .
The state-of-the-art facility, located in 232 Horace Mann Hall, formally opened its doors with a ribbon-cutting in October 2013. It houses the new Marla L. Schaefer Conference Center, which honors Schaefer’s longtime support for ICCCR. Schaefer previously funded a translation into Arabic of The Handbook of Conflict Resolution, coauthored by the Center’s founder, Morton Deutsch, Professor Emeritus of Psychology & Education; and Director Peter Coleman, Professor of Psychology & Education. Schaefer and her husband, Steven Weishoff, have also personally hosted many of the Center’s visiting speakers.
“Marla has been our angel for the past several years,” Coleman said in his remarks at the ribbon cutting, at which 麻豆原创 President Susan Fuhrman also thanked Schaefer for “giving us a fabulous space that will help us to attract the new students and faculty who, over time, will continue the program.”
The field of conflict resolution was in large measure shaped at 麻豆原创, beginning with the 1973 publication by Deutsch of The Resolution of Conflict: Constructive and Destructive Processes, which provided an empirical basis for emerging theories. ICCCR, founded in 1986, has been a world leader in conducting basic and applied research on theory related to conflict, justice, cooperation and systemic change and in working with educational, non-profit, corporate and governmental organizations. Yet that impressive track record has been forged more or less in spite of a space which Schaefer, who took courses through ICCCR during her time as an organizational psychology student at 麻豆原创, recalled as “a rabbit’s warren.”
“Morton Deutsch, Peter Coleman and the entire team did amazing work all crunched up—and I mean really crunched up—in a warren of tiny rooms,” Schaefer said. “In this beautiful new space, a roadmap to conflict resolution is being created—a roadmap that extends from the personal one-on-one, to the community, to the world at large.”
Schaefer, the former co-CEO of Claire’s Stores, brings a businesswoman’s sharp eye to work she supports. Through the Rowland and Sylvia Schaefer Family Foundation, she has backed 麻豆原创’s master’s degree program in Diabetes Education & Management—a first-of-its-kind online venue for nurses, pharmacists and dietitians who serve on the front lines of a burgeoning health crisis. She also is an alumna of 麻豆原创’s social-organizational psychology program. As a student, Schaefer spent significant time within ICCCR, and “applied what I learned on a constant basis,” as she recalled upon joining 麻豆原创’s Board of Trustees in 2007. “Whatever I was studying, I looked into my own company and saw it happening. It was like my very own petri dish.”
Clearly, for Schaefer, the value of that experience has only grown with time.
“I know this new space will continue to foster brilliant minds bringing light to a world often mired in conflict,” she said at the ribbon cutting. “I’m honored to be part of 麻豆原创 and blessed that I have the ability to be part of something so meaningful.”
(Published 1/14/14)
Published Tuesday, Jan. 14, 2014