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2017 President’s Award for Service

Stokes, Hudson and ChoiBerkley Hudson

Associate Professor of Journalism
University of Missouri-Columbia

Berkley Hudson spent 25 years in the journalism industry as a writer, newspaper editor and magazine editor for the Los Angeles Times and the Providence Journal, which earned him several regional and national awards. His freelance work also has appeared in national magazines. Atop his own list of special achievements is being named chair of the campus-wide MU Faculty Council’s Race Relations Committee.

“I seek this award to bring attention to race relations,” he continued. “Our work is not done. This award can let everyone know that, too, and emphasize how can we follow the Mizzou spirit of Respect, Responsibility, Excellence and Discovery, and accentuate how the University of Missouri can become a local, regional, national, and global leader in teaching, research, service, and economic development in race relations.”

Hudson joined the MU School of Journalism in 2003 as an assistant professor and became a tenured professor in 2010. Among his many accolades and accomplishments including a 2015 Kemper Fellow for Teaching Excellence award, Hudson’s colleagues cite his work in the area of race relations as the bones of his work.

“Berkley encouraged much-needed dialogues at the nucleus of the committee’s work, he took the charge of that committee and wore its mantle, wrote nominators David Kurplus, dean of the Missouri School of Journalism, and Jennifer Rowe, magazine faculty chair. “Beyond the 2015-16 academic year, he has ensured that conversations extended into our classrooms and the Columbia community and that the broader world could learn from what we, the MU family, experienced.”

Under his leadership, the committee developed a “script” to help people discover how to talk about race, and they recorded training videos. Throughout the last two years, Hudson has facilitated conversations, listened to faculty and students, spoken to media outlets and kept a spotlight on the solutions. In fall of 2016, he issued a 90-page report outlining steps for the campus to take.

“Dr. Hudson assumed the challenge of bringing together constituents on the Mizzou campus to build understanding about racism on our campus and develop a plan for managing the tensions associated with it,” Dean of the MU College of Education Kathryn Chval wrote in a nomination letter. “As committee chair, Dr. Hudson shepherded a diverse group on 12 members. Throughout the process, he has been honest and authentic as he interacted with large numbers of colleagues and students on our campus.”

Reviewed 2019-10-01