Monday, October 7, 2013 06:08pm
Press Releases
April 14th, 2010

‘Social conscience of sport’ Richard Lapchick to give Lewis Lecture April 20

Writer: Genevieve di Leonardo, 706/542-5889, gedileon@uga.edu
Contact: Kirk Cureton, 706/542-4387, kcureton@uga.edu

Published in Press Releases

Internationally recognized expert on sports issues and racial inequities within sports Richard Lapchick will present the 21st annual Clifford Lewis Scholar Lecture on Tuesday, April 20.

Lapchick will present a lecture titled, “Sport: A Bridge Across the Racial Divide,” at 4 p.m. in Master’s Hall at the Georgia Center for Continuing Education.

Often described as the “the social conscience of sport,” Lapchick is the DeVos/Orlando Magic Sport Business Management Eminent Scholar at the University of Central Florida, where he established the DeVos Sport Business Management Program, ranked one of the nation’s top five such programs by the Wall Street Journal, The Sports Business Journal and ESPN The Magazine.

He is also founder and director of The Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, which serves as a comprehensive resource for issues related to gender and race in amateur, collegiate and professional sports.

Lapchick is the author of the internationally acclaimed Racial and Gender Report Card which tracks the hiring practices of professional and college sports. The Institute also publishes annual studies on student-athlete graduation rates and racial attitudes in sports. The Institute also monitors other critical ethical issues in college and professional sport such as potential for the exploitation of student-athletes, gambling, performance-enhancing drugs and violence in sport.

The son of former Boston Celtics player and New York Knicks coach Joe Lapchick, he founded the Center for the Study of Sport in Society (CSSS) in 1984 at Boston’s Northeastern University. He served as director for 17 years and is now the director emeritus. The Center has attracted national attention for its pioneering efforts to ensure the education of athletes from junior high school through the professional ranks. The Center’s Project TEAMWORK was called “America’s most successful violence prevention program” by public opinion analyst Lou Harris. It won the Peter F. Drucker Foundation Award as the nation’s most innovative non-profit program.

He is also the president and CEO of the National Consortium for Academics and Sport (NCAS). For 25 years, the NCAS has been “creating a better society by focusing on educational attainment, using the power and appeal of sport to positively affect social change.” It is a group of more than 230 colleges and universities that created the first of its kind degree completion and community service programs.

To date, 29,856 athletes have returned to NCAS member schools. More than 13,700 have graduated. Nationally, NCAS athletes have worked with more than 18 million students in the community service program, which focuses on teaching youth how to improve race relations, develop conflict resolution skills, prevent gender violence, and avoid drug and alcohol abuse. They have collectively donated more than 19 million hours of service while member colleges have donated more than $320 million in tuition assistance.

Lapchick has written 14 books and is a regular columnist for ESPN.com<.em> and The Sports Business Journal. He regularly contributes to the op-ed page of the Orlando Sentinel and has written more than 450 articles and given more than 2,700 public speeches. He has appeared numerous times on Nightline, Good Morning America, Face The Nation, The Today Show, ABC World News, NBC Nightly News, the CBS Evening News, CNN and ESPN.

The lecture is sponsored by the UGA College of Education’s department of kinesiology in honor of the late associate dean and physical education professor Clifford Lewis. It is free and open to the public.

Lewis was an outstanding teacher, administrator and scholar as a faculty member at UGA from 1946 until her retirement in 1984. Her career reflected a dedication to enhancing the quality of life for others and in particular those involved in physical education and physical activity.

The lecture will be preceded by a reception in the lobby at 3:30 p.m.

Lapchick will present a lecture titled, Sport: A Bridge Across the Racial Divide at 4 p.m. in Master’s Hall at the Georgia Center.

Comments are closed.