Led by Dr. Sherry Magill, Duke and UNC-CH will explore our most persistent problems, highlight emerging challenges, and examine promising solutions. We will connect the principle concerns of philanthropic foundations, higher education institutions, and southern communities. What are the missed connections and possibilities between these participants and institutions? What can we build if we work together?
Read more about the Southern Summit and the events and conveners involved here.
Schedule of First Residency Events (Sept 9-20)
All events are open to the public; please note where RSVP is requested
Week One– Unfinished Business: The Past and Future of the South
+ Wednesday, Sept 11, 9 am: Public Forum: 25 years in Southern philanthropy
Donovan Lounge, Greenlaw Hall, UNC-Chapel Hill
- Presenter:
- Sherry Magill
Breakfast provided
+ Wednesday, Sept 11, 4-5:30 pm: Public Panel: The Unfinished Business of the South
Institute for the Arts and Humanities University Room, Hyde Hall, UNC-Chapel Hill
- Presenters:
- Sherry Magill
- David Dodson
Reception: 5:30-6:30, Hyde Hall
Suggested Resources:
- MDC, “Facing South,” 50th Anniversary Report (2018)
- C. Vann Woodward, The Strange Career of Jim Crow (1955)
- Michelle Alexander, The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness (2012)
+ Thursday, Sept 12, 4-5:30 pm Public Panel: Persistent Poverty and Persistent Racism
Institute for the Arts and Humanities University Room, Hyde Hall, UNC-Chapel Hill
- Presenters:
- Sherry Magill
- Bill Bynum
- Karl Stauber
- Carolyn Barnes
Suggested Resources:
- Toni Morrison, Beloved (1997)
- James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time (1963)
- Ta-Nehisi Coates, “Letter to My Son.” The Atlantic Monthly 316 (2): 82-91 (2015).
+ Friday, Sept 13, 12-1:30 pm Public Forum: Journalism, Law, and Storytelling
Center for the Study of the American South, Love House and Hutchins Forum, UNC-Chapel Hill
- Presenters:
- Steve Suitts
- Hodding Carter
- Tom Rankin
Lunch Provided—please RSVP to Terri Lorant (tlorant@email.unc.edu)
Suggested Resources:
- The Editor and the Dragon: Horace Carter Fights the Klan
- Hodding Carter, “A Loyal Son of the South” (2013)
- Steve Suitts, Hugo Black of Alabama (2005)
- Tom Rankin, Trudy Wilner Stack, and Ray Suarez, Local Heroes Changing America: Indivisible (2001)
Week Two—EMERGING ISSUES: Climate Change and Human Trafficking
+ Tuesday, Sept 17, 4-5:30 pm Public Panel: Vulnerability and Resilience: Place
Institute for the Arts and Humanities University Room, Hyde Hall, UNC-Chapel Hill
- Presenters:
- Sherry Magill
- Maria Estorino
- Dawn Shirreffs
- Maria DeGuzman
Suggested Resources:
- PBS, Sinking Cities, Episode 4: Miami (2018)
- Spike Lee, When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts (2006)
+ Thursday, Sept. 19, 4-5:30 pm: Public Panel: Vulnerability and Resilience: People
Morehead Lounge, Graham Memorial Hall, UNC-Chapel Hill
- Presenters:
- Sherry Magill
- Lawanda Ravoira
- Alyssa Beck
- Charlene Fletcher
Suggested Resources:
- American Historical Review, “Charlene Fletcher and Elizabeth Hinton on Carceral Studies and Academic Activism” (2018)
- Charlene Fletcher, “Early Stories of Domestic Violence Raise Awareness, Foster Healing” (2016)
- CBS News, “48 Hours Live to Tell: Trafficked” (focusing on Alyssa Beck’s experience) (2018)
- United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime, Global Report on Trafficking in Persons (2018)
About Sherry Magill, Ph.D.
Sherry Magill served as President/Executive Director of the Jessie Ball duPont Fund, a private grantmaking foundation located in Jacksonville, Florida, from 1993-2018. During her tenure, Magill led the Fund’s court effort to increase the number of the Fund’s trustees and spearheaded development of the Jessie Ball duPont Center, a nationally recognized retrofitting and repurposing of the defunct Haydon Burns Library into a nonprofit and philanthropic center.
Prior to joining the Fund’s staff in 1991 as Program Officer for Education, Dr. Magill served as Vice President and Deputy to the President of Washington College, a small private liberal arts college located on Maryland’s Eastern Shore where she also taught courses in American Studies and on the American South.
She holds a bachelor’s and a master’s degree from the University of Alabama and a doctorate in American Studies from Syracuse University. She has served as a senior moderator for the Aspen Institute, and is the founding executive director of the Wye Faculty Seminar, a nationally recognized enrichment program for professors teaching in the nation’s small colleges. Dr. Magill is recipient of numerous honors and awards recognizing her philanthropic and community service.
She has also served on numerous nonprofit boards, and currently serves as vice-chair of the Local Initiatives Support Corporation-Jacksonville (LISC) advisory committee, and as member of the Charles F. Kettering Foundation, Delores Barr Weaver Policy Center, and Virginia Community Capital boards.