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SCRIPS Faculty Advisors

Faculty Advisors

Andrew Reed - BYU Council for Interfaith Engagement

November 30, 2022 02:31 PM
Andrew C. Reed (PhD, Arizona State University) is the Chair of BYU Council for Interfaith Engagement. He holds Masters degrees from Oxford University (Slavonic Studies) and Cambridge University (Jewish- Christian Relations). He focuses on the history of relations among Jews, Christians, and Muslims, and recently did research in St. Petersburg, Russia on human rights and religious freedom in Eastern Europe. At BYU, he teaches comparative religion and church history. In 2023 he was awarded an Arthur Vining Davis Foundations Grant for “Interfaith Leadership and Religious Literacy” to build interfaith student leaders that have a greater understanding of the world’s faith traditions and capacity to be bridge builders.

Eva M. Witesman - Ballard Center for Social Impact BYU Marriott School

Eva M. Witesman (MPA and PhD, School of Public and Environment Affairs at Indiana University) is a professor in the Marriott School of Business at Brigham Young University and serves as Academic Director of the Ballard Center for Social Impact. Her research explores corporate social strategy, public values, and perspectives on the nonprofit sector. Her research has appeared in top public and nonprofit administration journals. She is currently a research fellow at the Center for Organization Research and Design at Arizona State University. She is the division chair for the Public and Nonprofit Division of the Academy of Management.

James Patton - International Center for Religion and Diplomacy

November 30, 2022 02:15 PM
James Patton (MALD, The Fletcher School at Tufts University; MDiv, Harvard Divinity School) is President and CEO at the International Center for Religion & Diplomacy (ICRD). He has conducted international development, conflict transformation and social reconciliation for over two decades in more than a dozen countries, building collaborative networks and programs with the entire range of social and political actors in complex conflict environments. He explores the relationship between religious motives, religious actors and key areas of instability around the world, seeking ways in which this key source of identity and motivation can be incorporated into strategies for reducing violent conflict.

Kevin den Dulk - Calvin University

November 30, 2022 02:35 PM
Kevin R. den Dulk (PhD, University of Wisconsin) is the Associate Provost of, and the Paul B. Henry Chair in Political Science at, Calvin University. He is the former Executive Director of the Henry Institute for the Study of Christianity and Politics at Calvin College. An award-winning teacher, his scholarly work focuses especially on
how religion works through civil society to foster democratic citizenship, both in the United States and abroad.

Paul Lambert - BYU Wheatley Institute

November 30, 2022 02:28 PM
Paul Lambert (DLS, Georgetown University) is the initiative director for Religion and Society at the BYU Wheatley Institute. Before this he ran his own consulting practice in addition to his roles as Senior Business Fellow at the Religious Freedom & Business Foundation and Visiting Fellow for faith and religious freedom in business at the Marriott School of Business at BYU. Previously he was Assistant Dean at Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business and was Academic Director and Assistant Professor at the National Defense University, where he received the highest award available for civilian service from the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He also served on the executive education advisory board for the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy. His work has focused on religious diversity, equity, inclusion, and pluralism in the workplace and First Amendment issues.