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| [January 29, 2013] |
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University of Utah's David Eccles School of Business Announces Creation of the James Lee Sorenson Center for Global Impact Investing
SALT LAKE CITY --(Business Wire)--
The David Eccles School of Business at the University of Utah today
announced the creation of the James Lee (News - Alert) Sorenson Center for Global
Impact Investing. Created through a $13 million personal gift from James
Lee Sorenson, the new Center will engage students at the University of
Utah and partner universities in creating sustainable change on regional
and global levels through high-impact social investment, innovative
curriculum and research.
"The James Lee Sorenson Center for Global Impact Investing will provide
unparalleled experiences for our students and faculty to participate
directly in solving some of the world's thorniest and most persistent
societal problems," said David Pershing, president of the University of
Utah. "The Center will be a global leader in the creation of new
knowledge of how to solve widespread structural problems, while training
a generation of transformative leaders in social impact investment." To
reflect these changes, the current James Lee Sorenson Leadership
Pavilion at the David Eccles School of Business will be renamed the
James Lee Sorenson Center for Global Impact Investing.
The James Lee Sorenson Center for Global Impact Investing will serve as
a growth platform for the University Impact Fund, a joint venture
launched in 2010 by the David Eccles School of Business, the Melvin J.
Ballard Center for Economic Self-Reliance at Brigham Young University,
James Lee Sorenson and global impact investor Geoff Woolley. The Center
will accelerate the work of the University Impact Fund, which cultivates
impact investment expertise in students through real-world experience,
while providing consulting and advisory services in the social
entrepreneurship and impact investment sector. The Center will continue
to focus on servicing the growth of the rapidly expanding impact
investing sector through research and thought leadership activities.
Lewis Hower, managing drector of the University Impact Fund, will act
as interim director for the new Center.
The problems the Center will address run the societal gamut, from
healthcare and education to housing, sustainable and green energy,
agriculture, and entrepreneurial livelihood training and development. In
addition to its investment involvement, the Center will focus on
research that fosters greater understanding of how free enterprise can
be employed to create large-scale societal change; curriculum
development, including a proposed minor in Impact Investing, to teach
and train students; and applied market research that will disseminate
the knowledge developed at the Center to a global audience. For both
undergraduate and graduate students, the Center will provide a rich
array of fellowship opportunities in social impact throughout the world.
"The University Impact Fund has been an indispensable part of my
graduate education," said Preston Robinson, a graduate student at the
University's David Eccles School of Business working toward a dual MBA
and MHA. "I have benefited immensely from the opportunity to work on
real-world projects that have allowed me to apply classroom concepts and
develop my skills. I have enjoyed the work environment and the diverse
projects and people I am exposed to. This experience has been
instrumental in guiding me in identifying a career path once I graduate."
The Center will sponsor two endowed faculty chairs: a business chair
that will be held by an academic scholar with international prominence
in social entrepreneurship research and scholarship, and an applied
research chair focused on direct application of innovative research in
field work.
James Lee Sorenson will play an active role in setting the direction for
the Center and mentoring its student participants. A globally recognized
entrepreneur and multifaceted business leader, Sorenson has built highly
successful companies in industries ranging from technology and life
sciences to real estate and private equity investment. He helped develop
several new industry categories, including digital compression software
that helped usher in the online video revolution at Sorenson Media, and
video relay services that transformed opportunities for deaf and hard of
hearing individuals through Sorenson Communications.
"It is an honor to participate in this venture, which has the potential
to effect genuine societal change and improve the quality of life for
countless individuals throughout the world," said Sorenson. "On a
personal level, this Center is an opportunity to apply on a greater
scale the lessons I learned about high-impact societal change at
Sorenson Communications, where the major risk we made in time, energy
and money yielded extraordinary returns in opening up brand new personal
and professional possibilities for deaf and hard of hearing individuals."
For more information about the James Lee Sorenson Center for Global
Impact Investing at the University of Utah's David Eccles School of
Business, visit http://www.sgiicenter.com.
About the David Eccles School of Business
From its beginnings in 1896 as part of the Economics and Sociology
Department, what is now the David Eccles School of Business (http://www.business.utah.edu)
educates nearly 3,500 students a year, and boasts more than 31,000
alumni. Students manage a university venture fund of $18.3 million, the
largest of its kind in the nation. In January 2012, the school opened
its new, $72 million Spencer F. Eccles Building, offering students a
cutting-edge learning environment packed with state-of-the-art
technology.

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