
|
Based here at Quinnipiac, the Albert Schweitzer Institute is a nonprofit organization that conducts US and international programs that link education, ethics and voluntarism.
A dynamic presence at Quinnipiac University, the institute has drawn notable humanitarians both to campus and to its board. Here are just a few of its many successes.
Our programs:
• Focus on health, humanitarian and peace efforts
• Support healthcare development in under-served areas
• Motivate young people to serve the community and the environment as a way of life
• Increase public awareness of Dr. Schweitzer's philosophy and its potential for a more peaceful and sustainable world
![]() | ![]() |
Former President Jimmy Carter delivered a lecture at Quinnipiac on Sept. 26 and received the first Albert Schweitzer Humanitarian Award. From left: President John L. Lahey, Carter and David Taylor Ives, executive director of the Albert Schweitzer Institute. Read more about the Carter visit... | The institute sponsored a peace conference at the U.N. in June. From left: Luis Alberto Cordero, executive director of the Arias Foundation for Peace and Human Progress, Ban Ki-moon, secretary-general of the United Nations, and Ives. Read more about the UN peace conference... |
![]() | ![]() |
|---|---|
| At the Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway, from left: Geir Lundestad, secretary of the Nobel Peace Prize Committee and director of the institute; Ole Danbolt Mjos, president of the committee; Christiane Engel, granddaughter of Dr. Albert Schweitzer; and David Taylor Ives. Ives delivered an address there to mark the 50th anniversary of Schweitzer’s call for an end to nuclear testing. | Ives with, from left, James T. Ranney, president of Global Constitution Forum, Inc., and former Soviet Union President Mikhail Gorbachev at a meeting in New York. |