Anita Ramasastry – 91探花News /news Thu, 14 Nov 2024 22:38:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Estate of Stan and Alta Barer makes transformational gift to 91探花School of Law to support global sustainable development program /news/2024/10/29/barergift/ Tue, 29 Oct 2024 16:00:22 +0000 /news/?p=86677 Couple posing for photo
The 91探花School of Law has received a transformational gift from the estate of Stan and Alta Barer, pictured here, to expand what will now be called The Barer Institute for Leadership in Law & Global Development. Photo: 91探花

The 91探花 on Tuesday announced a transformational gift from the estate of Stan and Alta Barer to the School of Law, expanding the couple鈥檚 namesake institute: The Barer Institute for Leadership in Law & Global Development. The gift will support the recruitment of additional international fellows, increase scholarships, endow faculty positions and create more global impact.

The $45 million gift, one of the largest bequests in 91探花history, will cement the 91探花School of Law鈥檚 reputation and impact as an internationally known center for excellence in global sustainable development. The gift will allow the Barer Institute to expand its work with mid-career attorneys from developing countries, enabling them to come to Washington state and then return to their homes to improve health outcomes, advocate for law and justice, boost education and spur economic development. Building on previous gifts the Barers made to the School of Law, the total endowment for the Institute is more than $50 million. The gift also renames the Institute, formerly known as the Barer Institute for Law & Global Human Services.

鈥淲e are honored to extend Stan and Alta鈥檚 inspiring legacy of global leadership development with the help of this transformative investment,鈥 said 91探花President Ana Mari Cauce. 鈥淭he work of the Barer Institute to cultivate talented mid-career attorneys for the benefit of their home countries and the world is one of our law school鈥檚 most innovative and effective programs, and we are delighted to be able to expand its reach.鈥

Since its founding in 2010, the Barer Institute has contributed to the UW鈥檚 commitment to global engagement and impact, and upheld the University鈥檚 core value of educating a diverse student body to become responsible global citizens and future leaders.

In 2008, the Barers gave $4 million to establish an institute that would improve outcomes in governance and multi-dimensional development in low and lower-middle income countries and countries in political transition. Each year, the Institute brings three to four fellows to the 91探花鈥 there have been nearly 50 fellows since inception 鈥 where they earn a Master of Laws degree in Sustainable International Development.

Group photo of law school fellows
This year鈥檚 cohort of Barer Institute fellows, from left to right, Cyrus M. Maweu, Kassama Dibba, Kalenike Uridia and Justice Victoria Katamba. Photo: 91探花

鈥淩eceiving this gift during the School of Law鈥檚 125th anniversary is special as we celebrate the transformative power of our graduates,鈥 said Tamara Lawson, the Toni Rembe Dean of the School of Law. 鈥淭hanks to Stan and Alta鈥檚 generosity, the Institute will continue robust engagement and meaningful collaboration. 91探花Law is furthering the life鈥檚 work of Stan Barer and his aim to impact law around the world.鈥

The new gift will build upon the Barer Institute鈥檚 original mission in several ways, including:

  • Increasing support for fellowships and scholarships to recruit more students to the Institute and hire post-doctoral research fellows focused on human rights, global business and climate issues.聽The gift also will help pay for international travel to support the fellows and other Institute participants.
  • Funding to recruit Juris Doctor students to the Barer Fellows Program.
  • Reinforcing 91探花School of Law鈥檚 impact on sustainable development while expanding its work on the rule of law, the global climate challenge and sustainable business in a changing world.
  • Endowing a faculty appointment for a Barer Chair to lead the Institute and participate in cross-disciplinary and global conferences, symposia and networking events. Anita Ramasastry will be the inaugural chair.
  • Providing critical program and operating support to develop the Institute into a robust and renowned hub known internationally for promoting global leadership and the rule of law. This will include hiring an executive director to develop and implement programming, as well as an assistant director to help manage programming, and recruit and provide support to the students interested in careers focused on global issues in government, public service and sustainable business.聽Jennifer Lenga-Long was tapped to serve in the inaugural executive director role.

鈥淪tan鈥檚 impact on our state, region and the world cannot be overstated. One of his significant contributions as a leader was his work re-opening trade between the U.S. and China, and his dedication to finding shared values and connection in our global world. Stan鈥檚 lifelong work will continue to be felt around the world as this generous gift will empower global leaders and citizens to find innovative solutions to the world鈥檚 most pressing problems,鈥 said former U.S. Ambassador to China and former Washington Gov. Gary Locke, a friend and colleague of Barer鈥檚.

Stanley H. Barer, who went by Stan, was a world-renowned Seattle attorney, 91探花Regent and 91探花alumnus (Class of 1963), who died in 2021. He received the 2021 Gates Volunteer Service Award, the University鈥檚 highest honor for volunteer service, prior to his passing. His wife, Alta, preceded him in death in 2019.

The son of immigrants, Stan Barer grew up in Walla Walla before attending the UW, where he earned his undergraduate degree and then his Juris Doctor. Barer experienced bigotry, antisemitism and discrimination growing up and in the workplace when law firms wouldn鈥檛 hire Jews. He went to Washington, D.C., to work for Washington Sen. Warren G. Magnuson, eventually becoming his chief of staff. Barer learned that he could combat prejudice using the power of the law and he served as the U.S. Senate lawyer for the enactment the landmark 1964 Civil Rights Act, helping to write the legislation. He also discovered that he needn鈥檛 be constrained by national borders, and that he could craft policy that supported global development. Barer was instrumental in re-establishing trade with China in 1979 and securing Seattle as a significant port-of-call.

Barer brought his years of experience to the UW鈥檚 highest levels of volunteer leadership, serving as a Regent from 2004 to 2012 and as a member of the 91探花Foundation Board. He also held volunteer roles with 91探花Law, 91探花Medicine and the Burke Museum. Alta Barer also advocated for the transformative power of education and research. At the UW, she served on the Law Committee during a 91探花fundraising campaign and, together with her husband, hosted numerous events at their home.

鈥淭his bequest exemplifies Stan and Alta鈥檚 belief in the power of education, the rule of law, and in the critical importance of focusing on what we have in common across cultures instead of what separates us,鈥 said their daughter Leigh K. Barer. 鈥淲e look forward to seeing the Institute expand and flourish because of their visionary gift.鈥

Together, Stan and Alta Barer left a decades-long legacy of philanthropy at the UW. They played central roles in the construction of William H. Gates Hall, the School of Law鈥檚 home. Across campus, the couple also endowed faculty positions in the College of the Environment, sponsored cancer research at 91探花Medicine and supported graduate education in the sciences.

鈥淭he expanded Barer Institute will serve as a hub for graduate students interested in international careers in service of the global common good, including the advancement of human rights, global justice and the rule of law, and indigenous people鈥檚 rights. True to Stan鈥檚 vision, it will recognize and build upon multidisciplinary approaches to tackling the world鈥檚 greatest challenges by engaging with scholars and practitioners within and beyond the UW,鈥 said Anita Ramasastry, director of the Barer Institute and the Henry M. Jackson Endowed Professor of Law.

For more information about The Barer Institute for Leadership in Law & Global Development, click .

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91探花law professor named to United Nations working group on business and human rights /news/2016/09/06/uw-law-professor-named-to-united-nations-working-group-on-business-and-human-rights/ Tue, 06 Sep 2016 19:02:34 +0000 /news/?p=49267 When law professor began teaching at the 91探花 in 1996, she was working on an article about banks鈥 responsibilities around human rights, to the bemusement of her peers.

The groundbreaking piece focused on the role of Swiss banks during World War II and the dormant accounts of Holocaust victims and their heirs 鈥 unusual territory for a law professor then.

Anita Ramasastry
Anita Ramasastry

“At that time, this wasn’t a field of research and people thought it was a little bit off the map in terms of my scholarship,” she recalled.

But Ramasastry’s decades-long focus on the intersection of commerce and human rights paid off. In July, she was appointed to serve on the United Nations Working Group on Business and Human Rights. Ramasastry will represent all of Western Europe, North America and Australia-Pacific, one of five UN regions and arguably the most competitive. She was selected out of a field of 22 applicants.

“I am honored and delighted to be appointed,” Ramasastry said. “This is a field I’ve worked in for a long time, but it feels great to be wearing a different institutional hat to try to carry this work forward.”

Ramasastry and the working group鈥檚 four other members will meet with government entities, businesses and communities to further the UN’s on Business and Human Rights for how nations and business entities 鈥 particularly transnational corporations 鈥 can uphold human rights. The group receives reports about alleged human rights violations; engages with other UN bodies and key stakeholders from government, civil society and the private sector; and undertakes two trips annually to examine business and human rights challenges in different countries.

Formed in 2011, the working group reflects evolving views about who has responsibility for respecting human rights, Ramasastry said. That question was brought into sharp focus during the 1999 protests of the World Trade Organization conference in Seattle, when thousands took to the streets to decry the impact of globalization on human rights. The event was emblematic of a new era of thinking about the role of both corporations and governments in addressing human rights around the world.

Those issues have evolved in the ensuring years, Ramasastry said, and new ones constantly arise. Global supply chains are now a big focus for governments and human rights advocates. Ramasastry pointed to Apple鈥檚 adverse publicity over its factory operations in China, and a lawsuit filed against Costco last year for selling farmed shrimp from Thailand, where slave labor and human trafficking is common in the fishing industry. The suit was later . New questions have now arisen about what responsibilities businesses have to LGBTQ employees in different parts of the world.

“We think of governments as our watchdogs,” Ramasastry said. “But now we ask, do corporations have an obligation to deal with human rights and respect the same standards, regardless of where they are in the world? The answer is yes.”

Ramasastry succeeds Margaret Jungk, the founder and director of the Human Rights and Business Department at the Danish Institute for Human Rights, who from the working group in March to take another position. , dean of the , said Ramasastry is a “thoughtful innovator” in bridging the fields of business law and human rights.

“She is one of the most sought-after scholars and consultants in the world in this field, one that is critical to the advancement of both justice and human prosperity,” Testy said. “I could not be more pleased to see her being recognized through this distinguished appointment.”

Ramasastry previously served in the Obama administration as a senior adviser in the U.S. Department of Commerce, directing the International Trade Administration鈥檚 anti-corruption and trade efforts. In that role, she also coordinated strategies with emerging markets such as Vietnam, Colombia and South Africa, and developed a new business and human rights curriculum for U.S. trade officers in embassies worldwide.

Ramasastry has advised organizations ranging from the World Bank to Amnesty International, co-authored several seminal research studies, written many articles and reports, and won numerous accolades, including the 1998 91探花Distinguished Teaching Award and the 91探花Outstanding Public Service Award for her work with immigrant women and children who are domestic violence victims. 聽She is also a founding editor in chief of the , a scholarly journal published by Cambridge University Press.

On top of her UN appointment, Ramasastry, who has two children with her husband 鈥 also a 91探花law professor 鈥 will continue teaching a full course load at the university. It’s a challenging schedule, she admits, but she said she鈥檚 happy to be put to the task.

“I will be busy,鈥 she said. “But this post allows me to move from theory to practice and I am excited by this challenge.”

For more information, contact Ramasastry at arama@uw.edu or 206-616-8441.

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Law student David Camps thought to be first Cuban resident to attend 91探花in half a century /news/2016/06/23/law-student-david-camps-is-the-first-cuban-to-attend-uw-in-half-a-century/ Thu, 23 Jun 2016 20:03:40 +0000 /news/?p=48632
Law student David Camps is the first Cuban fellow in the Barer Institute for Law and Global Human Services.

In the fall of 2014, Cuban tour guide led a group from the 91探花 on a serendipitous bus tour around his native country.

The group seemed to ask a lot of questions, but Camps聽鈥斅燼 former attorney and top diplomat turned tour guide聽鈥 thought little of it; clients were often curious about his life in Havana. So he was caught off-guard by the phone call more than a year later that led to him becoming one of the first Cubans to attend聽the 91探花as an international student in more than half a century.

鈥淚 was very surprised,鈥 Camps said. 鈥淵ou never think someone will remember you and call you a year or two later.鈥

The 38-year-old is studying at the聽聽as one of three 2015 fellows 鈥 and the first Cuban聽鈥 in the聽. Launched in 2012 by retired attorney and 91探花law alumni聽, the program pays for attorneys from developing countries to spend an academic year studying issues related to health, education and economic development in their home countries through the university鈥檚聽听辫谤辞驳谤补尘.

Camps is聽believed to be the first Cuban student enrolled at the 91探花while living in Cuba since the U.S. embargo against the island nation in 1960. In the 2014-15 academic year, there were 94 Cuban international students studying in the United States, according to the Institute of International Education. Those include聽Gerandy Brito, a doctoral student in math who completed a master’s degree in Brazil before coming to the 91探花in 2012.

Camps met Barer on the tour, part of a 91探花learning trip organized by then-provost and now 91探花President聽, a native of Cuba. Barer chatted with Camps as the bus rolled through the streets and discovered he had previously worked as an attorney in Cuba. Barer was struck by his intelligence and resourcefulness.

鈥淗e was just a dynamite guy,鈥 said Barer, a former 91探花regent. 鈥淚 was very impressed by him.鈥

Barer is considered a key figure in Seattle鈥檚 international trade community. A founder of the Washington State China Relations Council, he played an integral role in opening ocean trade between China and the United States in the 1970s. When President Obama announced in June 2015 that the U.S. would re-establish diplomatic relations with Cuba after 54 years, Barer absorbed the news with keen interest聽鈥斅燼nd thought about the bright former attorney he鈥檇 met in Cuba.

He tracked down Camps, called him and asked if he might be interested in the fellowship. He also asked Camps to send his resume.

鈥淲hen I got it, I was stunned,鈥 Barer said. 鈥淚 thought, he shouldn鈥檛 just be a student. He should be a professor.鈥

A difficult decision

Camps, who grew up in the city of Guant谩namo, worked as an attorney for five years before returning to school to complete a master鈥檚 degree in international political relations. In a decade with Cuba鈥檚 foreign service, he served as a diplomatic attach茅聽in Syria and deputy chief of missions in Saudi Arabia and Equatorial Guinea, among other positions. His research has focused on areas including the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 and the Guant谩namo Naval Base. He is fluent in English, French and Arabic.

Despite his accomplishments, Camps left foreign service for a more lucrative career as a tour guide. For five years, he led tours for a New York-based company with some high-profile clients (Beyonc茅聽was on one of Camps鈥 tours). The hours were long, but Camps was making enough money to support his family and a decent wage by Cuban standards.

So when the call came from Barer, Camps was intrigued but hesitant. His father died when he was 6, and Camps was reluctant to leave behind his wife and then 1-year-old son, Alberto.

鈥淚t was a very hard decision,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 grew up without a father. When that happens to you, you don鈥檛 want to that to happen to your son.鈥

And when the call came, Camps was a bit distracted.

鈥淭here was a meter and 20 inches of water in my house because it was raining聽鈥斅爐he rain in Cuba is very heavy聽鈥斅燼nd I was in聽the middle of an operation to evacuate my family,鈥 Camps said, laughing.

Camps soon decided to accept the offer, but there were hurdles ahead. The U.S. State Department initially denied his visa application, prompting Barer to write numerous letters to the government on his behalf. Other Cuban students have secured visas more easily, Barer said, but Camps鈥 background made him unique.

鈥淚 think the problem was that he had been a top diplomat for Cuba in the Middle East. And at that time, Cuba鈥檚 diplomatic missions in there were pursuing a different foreign policy than ours,鈥 he said.

Camps鈥 visa was finally granted in November 2015, three months after the other two fellows began their studies. He immersed himself in studies on U.S. corporate and trade law, areas he believes will offer significant opportunities as renewed relations with Cuba strengthen and evolve.

鈥淣either Americans know about Cuban law, nor Cubans know about U.S. law,鈥 said Camps, whose studies at the 91探花will wrap up in December. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a gap. The majority of Cuban lawyers, for example, don鈥檛 have a clue how complicated shareholder agreements can be, because most of the big companies that have shares belong to the state.鈥

The fellowship, Camps said, is 鈥渢remendously important鈥 and unique.

鈥淚t provides private resources for the public interest of other countries,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know of anyone else doing this in the way that the Barer Institute and the 91探花School of Law are doing.鈥

, director of the 91探花Sustainable International Development LL.M. program, said Camps and the other fellows聽鈥斅爓hich include a judge from Uganda and an anti-corruption activist and professor in Nepal聽鈥斅燾ome to 91探花at critical junctures in their countries鈥 histories.聽Previous fellows have included judges, human rights activists and attorneys from Indonesia, Mongolia and Myanmar, among other nations.

鈥淭hese scholars are change-makers in countries in great transition,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are a trade-dependent state, so if we think about Washington鈥檚 future, it鈥檚 people like David who are going to go home and really help us build important bridges between our economies.鈥

The law school and the Barer Institute, Ramasastry said,聽aim to use law to create a framework for greater human prosperity and leaders for the global common good. The Sustainable International Development Program and the Barer fellowship, she said,聽are clear examples of that goal.

鈥楾he same feeling鈥

Camps arrived in the United States for the first time in December, landing in Seattle to fill out paperwork before taking a bone-chilling trip to Chicago to visit his brother-in-law. He was expecting cold in Seattle too聽鈥斅爊ot in terms of weather, but people聽鈥斅燽ut said he鈥檚 been surprised at how friendly Seattleites are.

As someone who鈥檚 spent most of his life on an island, Camps likes the city鈥檚 soul-soothing proximity to water. And though Seattle architecture may arguably pale in comparison to Havana鈥檚 crumbling colonial splendor, Camps also appreciates the 鈥渂eautiful鈥 91探花campus and the convenience of his temporary digs in a nearby apartment. He misses Cuban food, especially tropical fruits, but has been consoling himself by dining at some of the neighborhood鈥檚 ethnic restaurants.

Mostly, Camps said, he鈥檚 struck by the cultural similarities between Cuba and the U.S., nations just 90 miles apart but ideologically separated by a generations-old cold war. Camps went to the Mariners season opening game in April and sat in the stands marveling at how far away, and how close, his homeland seemed.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the same feeling, the same reaction, in a ballpark in Havana and here in the U.S.,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing how different we are in some areas, but how close we are in our point of view.鈥

Note: This story was updated on 6.29.2016 to clarify that at least one other Cuban international student has enrolled at the 91探花 since the U.S. embargo against Cuba was聽imposed in 1960.

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