The Dodd Center for Human Rights (formerly the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center) is a University of Connecticut center which supports programming, educational initiatives, and events dedicated to the theme of human rights. The Dodd Center also houses several University of Connecticut departments and centers, including Archives & Special Collections, a unit of the University of Connecticut Library, the Human Rights Institute, and the Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life. The John P. McDonald Reading Room is the public access point for the university archives and special collections.
Architecture
The facility, designed by Jeff Sells of the Connecticut-based architectural firm Fletcher-Thompson, varies from one to three stories, comprising approximately 60,000 square feet of space. [1]The curved entrance facade defines a circular arrival plaza, set along an established pedestrian path, which in turn accesses the main plaza of the Babbidge Library, situated near the center of the campus.
The low red brick building, modern in design, but with references to classical form, provides an essential “layering” of access and physical security, ranging from welcoming visitors’ areas to sequestered, environmentally monitored and highly secure vault spaces, housing primary research media and irreplaceable documents.
The Dodd Center won the “American School and University” Architectural Award, Gold Citation, and has subsequently served as a successful model for archival research, and public programming facilities.[2]
History
Ground was broken for the Thomas J. Dodd Research Center on October 10, 1993, and the finished building was dedicated by President Bill Clinton on October 15, 1995. It is named for the late Senator Thomas Joseph Dodd whose son, Senator Christopher J. Dodd, played a crucial role in the center's development. The dedication ceremony inaugurated "The Dodd Year", a year-long series of special events, speakers, exhibits, and colloquia. Devoted to the theme of human rights, The Dodd Year recalled Thomas Dodd's participation as a senior prosecutor in the International Military Tribunal, the first of the Nuremberg War Crimes Trials.
In August 2021, the University of Connecticut Board of Trustees voted to rededicate the center as the Dodd Center for Human Rights. President Joe Biden, accompanied by Connecticut governor Ned Lamont, former senator Christopher Dodd, and other political dignitaries rededicated the center in a ceremony on October 15, 2021, exactly 26 years after its original iteration's dedication.[4]
Programs
The Dodd Center for Human Rights hosts a number[quantify] of ongoing programs and events.
The Edwin Way Teale Lecture Series brings a variety of distinguished speakers to the University of Connecticut to speak on various aspects of nature and the environment.