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PAINFUL PICTURE: What lessons
an be learned from scandals like Abu Graib?
Salah Malkawi/Getty Images |
two weeks after
photographs were published showing U.S. soldiers abusing
inmates in Iraq’s Abu Ghraib prison, Stanford’s
new Center on Ethics convened experts to look at the
checks and balances that were MIA—missing in action.
“What made denial or marginalization of the events
impossible were the constantly unfolding visual reminders
that we were perpetrating the kinds of abuses we had
entered the arena to prevent,” says law professor
Deborah Rhode, who directs the center and moderated
the panel discussion. “That hypocrisy, in a useful
sort of way, galvanized public opinion and focused on
the need for the United States to play by international
rules.”
Rhode, who specializes in legal ethics and professional
regulation, likes a rigorous intellectual tussle. At
various points in her 25 years on the Farm, she has
gathered like-minded ethicists around a timely topic,
such as the unraveling of Enron. Two years ago, Rhode
proposed a permanent center on ethics that would bring
legal scholars, physicians, engineers, environmentalists
and humanists to the same discussion table. She envisioned
collaborative teams who would guest-teach in one another’s
classes and develop ethics instruction that could be
adapted for courses all across campus.
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FALLOUT: Images from Abu Ghraib
have become part of the landscape in Gaza.
Getty Images |
University President John Hennessy and Provost John
Etchemendy, PhD ’82, liked the concept and offered
to fund it for three years, with matching monies from
deans of Stanford’s seven schools. Last year,
Rhode coordinated several workshops that demonstrated
how quickly faculty affiliated with the ethics center
could respond to front-page events. One session, with
law professor Lawrence Lessig, probed the ethics of
electronic file sharing. Another, with Knight Fellowship
journalists, looked at the ethical challenges of covering
cases with high-profile defendants, including Martha
Stewart, Kobe Bryant and Scott Peterson.
In February, the center’s public launch will be
marked with a conference on moral leadership, co-sponsored
by ethics centers at Harvard and Princeton. “I
truly believe that the central moral challenges of our
times involve issues that run across disciplinary boundaries,”
Rhode says. “We are a kind of feudal structure,
and people don’t cross each other’s turf
often enough. There needs to be a broker, which is a
role I think the ethics center is well positioned to
play.”
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DAILY LIFE: Images from Abu
Ghraib in Tehran.
Behrouz Mehri/Getty Images |
Stanford’s Center on Ethics is one of more than
80 university-based centers nationwide. Many were formed
in the late 1980s or early 1990s, with a few dating
from the 1960s. Associate director Lawrence Quill, who
also leads Stanford’s undergraduate honors program
in ethics in society, hopes to strengthen links between
campus research on ethics, seminars, workshops and public
service. Down the road, the honors program and the ethics
center hope to share staff, programs and office space.
As Rhode says, “We’re toilers in the same
vineyard.”
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