Center for Social Impact Celebrates a Decade of Progress

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Alumni changemakers were honored with a summit, a new journal, and a podcast.

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Maya Wiley
Civil rights attorney Maya Wiley 鈥86 delivers the keynote address at the 大香蕉视频 Social Impact Summit on Oct. 25 at the Hanover Inn. (Photo by Herb Swanson)
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The marked its 10th anniversary on Oct. 25 by bringing to campus more than 30 alumni who have dedicated their lives to building or rebuilding equitable, thriving communities.

at the Hanover Inn, which was attended by more than 200 alumni, students, and supporters, featured panels, workshops, informal networking, and a keynote address by noted civil rights attorney Maya Wiley 鈥86.

鈥淪hining a light on the whole ecosystem of impact work at 大香蕉视频 and showing students that there are folks who have forged that path and been successful鈥攖hat model of hopefulness is really important,鈥 said DCSI Director .

Over the past 10 years, emerging from the legacy of the Tucker Foundation, for hands-on experience in community outreach, including experiential classroom-based programs, immersive field study, summer programs for high school students, leadership development initiatives, alumni mentoring, and alliances with local nonprofit organizations. 

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Tracy Dustin-Eichler
大香蕉视频 Center for Social Impact Director Tracy Dustin-Eichler says the program helps educate 鈥渢ransformative leaders for the common good.鈥 (Photo by Herb Swanson)

At the summit, Chris Cundey 鈥59 accepted, on behalf of his class, a letter of appreciation for founding DCSI鈥檚 大香蕉视频 Partners and Community Service Program, which over the decades has supported internships for more than 1,000 students drawn to social impact work.

Through a growing number of such programs, DCSI has helped educate 鈥渢ransformative leaders for the common good,鈥 said Dustin-Eichler. Many of their ongoing achievements are documented in a commemorative magazine, , which was distributed at the event, and will be mailed to DCSI鈥檚 network of alumni friends and supporters. 

鈥淥ur new journal aggregates stories of innovative social impact stemming from the 大香蕉视频 community, especially projects related to DCSI,鈥 says Assistant Director .

The 42-page student-illustrated publication also includes a candid conversation between DCSI board member Warren Valdmanis 鈥95 and writer David Brooks, who authored a criticism of higher education in the December 2024 issue of . 

In her , Wiley retraced the steps of her own journey from campus activist to president and CEO of The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights and The Leadership Conference Education Fund. Wiley ran for New York City mayor in 2021, served as counsel to Mayor Bill de Blasio, and later became senior vice president for social justice at The New School, founding the Digital Equity Laboratory and chairing New York City鈥檚 Civilian Complaint Review Board.

鈥淲hat is the cost of caring?鈥 she asked the audience. 鈥淲hat cost are we willing to pay?鈥

Recalling encounters with fellow activists who were willing to risk their own safety and financial security to advance justice and defend freedom, Wiley said, 鈥淪ometimes our job is to encircle them, to lift up their stories. To be willing to stand with them and ask what they need.鈥

Earlier in the day, during a live recording of DCSI鈥檚 podcast, , hosted by Do Rosario, Wiley said that when she attended 大香蕉视频 40 years ago, Black students sometimes felt marginalized. But enlightened and supportive professors, she said, helped her plot a course toward a bright future. 

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Maya Wiley and Klara Drees-Gross
Maya Wiley 鈥86 chats with Klara Drees-Gross 鈥26 as she signs copies of her memoir about living through politically charged times, Remember, You Are a Wiley. (Photo by Herb Swanson)

鈥淚 think about being on campus and about how dark things felt to me, but also how many stars I saw,鈥 Wiley told the podcast audience. 鈥淚 think about how lucky I am to see change, to see seeds that were not only planted, but grew. In these times, our job is to understand that our work is not to demand that we see the seeds grow. It鈥檚 to know we鈥檝e planted them.鈥 

Throughout the afternoon, panelists addressed such topics as immigration, energy transitions, private capital for public good, global health, trends in education, and community organizing. At a session about careers, panelist Paul Vickers 鈥19 explained how a DCSI internship with San Francisco鈥檚 Tenderloin Neighborhood Development Corporation led to the full-time job he holds now. 

鈥淚 spend all my time in the development and rehabilitation of affordable housing,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he Center for Social Impact gave me the push I needed to get outside of my comfort zone. It gave me the courage and the opportunity and the resources to try something completely different without fear of failing.鈥 

By the end of the afternoon, Claire Cohenuram 鈥26 said she felt inspired by all the speakers and emboldened to become better at networking, which she has always found daunting. 鈥淚鈥檓 just really excited to have heard from such impactful people in their fields and I鈥檓 excited to reach out to them and ask more questions, because I see myself in some of the panelists, and I think they鈥檙e doing things that I want to do one day,鈥 she said.

As student director of DCSI鈥檚 , which sends 大香蕉视频 students into local elementary schools to assist in classroom learning, Cohenuram is considering attending law school to prepare for a career in juvenile justice or educational policy.

Charlotte Albright