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    <dcterms:title><![CDATA[Peace Facilitator And Scholar J. Bonner Ritchie<br />
To Present Last Class At UVU]]></dcterms:title>
    <dcterms:description><![CDATA[Archived Press release from UVU Marketing &amp; Communications website. Captured by Archive-it, 2017-04-16.<br /><strong><br /></strong> <br /><br /> <details style="border: 1px solid #ccc; padding: 10px; border-radius: 5px;"> <summary style="cursor: pointer; font-weight: bold;">Transcript</summary>
<p style="margin-top: 10px;">Peace Facilitator And Scholar J. Bonner Ritchie<br />To Present Last Class At UVU<br />13 APRIL 2012 NO COMMENT<br />April 12, 2012<br />For Immediate Release<br />University Marketing &amp; Communications: Mike Rigert (801) 863-6807<br />Written by: Cheryl Kamenski (801) 863-6351<br />J. Bonner Ritchie, who has worked to make the world a more humane place through peace building and has become an institution in the field<br />of international organizational behavior, will hold his last class at Utah Valley University on April 17 at 6 p.m. in the Sorensen Student Center<br />Ragan Theater. The event is free and open to the public.<br />“Bonner is a master teacher. He has the ability to draw students into a dialogue that encourages them to think about, and evaluate, their ideas<br />and positions on relevant issues of the day,” said Ian Wilson, UVU vice president for academic affairs. “Students have benefitted from his vast<br />knowledge and experience with organizations both nationally and internationally. He has broadened their understanding of key international<br />issues and helped them to see different perspectives on complex problems.”<br />In 2001, Ritchie came out of retirement to help build UVU’s Woodbury School of Business, which is now the largest business school in the Utah<br />System of Higher Education. Many of UVU’s alumni and faculty can trace their academic history through Ritchie’s teachings in leadership,<br />conflict resolution and organizational philosophy.<br />“Bonner Ritchie represents the best that academia has to offer. He is a scholar-activist whose work has not only advanced the frontiers of<br />knowledge, but also moved the frontiers of practice. In so doing, Bonner has made the world a better place,” said Norman Wright, dean of the<br />Woodbury School of Business. “We have been extremely fortunate that, as one of the brightest minds of his generation of scholars, Bonner<br />decided to spend the last few years of his full time career assisting the Woodbury School of Business and UVU in growing into our role as an<br />increasingly serious institution of higher learning.”<br />The 2012 UVU Presidential Award recipient for lifetime service, Ritchie helped mediate peace negotiations between Israel and Palestine and<br />has served as a consultant to some of the world’s largest organizations in order to create positive change.<br />Ritchie called upon his leadership skills in 1989 when he went to work at the BYU Jerusalem Center in efforts to build bridges to the<br />Palestinians. Ritchie spent more than six years in the Middle East and helped change the paradigm of thinking about the world from an “all or<br />nothing strategy” to a “reasonable negotiation and compromise.”<br />Ritchie’s teachings of conflict resolution and negotiation skills at Middle Eastern universities and organizations helped influence today’s leaders<br />who are working to influence perspectives in the Arab world.<br />Each spring, UVU’s Peace &amp; Justice Studies program hosts the J. Bonner Ritchie Dialogue on Peace and Justice. The conference was named<br />for Ritchie to honor him and his peace building efforts. Previous topics have included solutions to global calamities, international border issues<br />and history and prevention of genocide. Next year’s dialogue will be on the relationship between global climate change and violence.<br />Prior to joining UVU in 2001, Ritchie was on the faculty at BYU for 27 years and on the faculty at the University of Michigan for six years.<br />Before that he was involved in civil rights activism with several groups in Detroit.<br />A native of Heber City, Utah, Ritchie grew up in San Francisco and graduated from University of California, Berkeley with a bachelor’s degree<br />in economics and a doctorate in economics with an emphasis in labor issues on conflict negotiation and bargaining theory. He and his wife,<br />Lois, have been married for nearly 30 years and have four children and eight grandchildren.<br />J. Bonner Ritchie</p>
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    <dcterms:source><![CDATA[<a href="https://wayback.archive-it.org/3545/20170417031314/http://blogs.uvu.edu/newsroom/2012/04/13/peace-facilitator-and-scholar-j-bonner-ritchie-to-present-last-class-at-uvu/" title="Link to Resource">https://wayback.archive-it.org/3545/20170417031314/http://blogs.uvu.edu/newsroom/2012/04/13/peace-facilitator-and-scholar-j-bonner-ritchie-to-present-last-class-at-uvu/</a>]]></dcterms:source>
    <dcterms:date><![CDATA[2012-04-13]]></dcterms:date>
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