Skip to content

Rob Corcoran

  • About Rob
  • Services & Consultations
  • Book
  • Blog
  • Resources
  • Contact

Category: Uncategorized

September 13, 2012September 5, 2019

Educating the head and the heart

By any measure, a good education is the surest path to a successful career and financial security. Yes, it’s true that countless people with university degrees are struggling in today’s depressed economy. But the latest employment figures again highlight the fact that those with minimal education have far more difficulty finding a job.The unemployment rate for someone who did not […]

Read more>>
September 3, 2012September 5, 2019

More than a songwriter

A dear friend died much too early last week. David Mills was one of the great songwriters of his generation. His innate sense of melody and his arresting lyrics combined to produce a range of music both rousing and haunting, but always purpose-driven. Unlike many musicians in today’s self-absorbed culture, Dave always had a larger aim in mind: to give […]

Read more>>
August 18, 2012September 5, 2019

A global team in the making

How does a diverse network encompassing forty countries, different spiritual traditions, cultures and generations find a common framework for action? For the past week I have been in Caux, Switzerland, the international conference center of Initiatives of Change, with 100 colleagues who are committed to building trust across the world’s divides. High above Lake Geneva we start our days with […]

Read more>>
August 5, 2012September 5, 2019

Becoming better listeners

Last month America lost a voice for rational and civil national discourse. William Raspberry, a veteran Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist with the Washington Post, produced some of the most cogent and balanced commentaries on race relations.   He came to Richmond nearly two decades ago to meet with a multi-city committee of the Initiatives of Change program, Hope in the Cities, […]

Read more>>
July 18, 2012September 5, 2019

A gracious and gentle people

Reading about Hillary Clinton’s recent visit to Laos brought back vivid memories of a month I spent in that beautiful country four decades ago and where I celebrated my 25th birthday. It was 1974 when I flew into Vientiane with my colleague Suresh Khatri. We were the advance team for the Initiatives of Change stage production Song of Asia with […]

Read more>>
July 2, 2012September 5, 2019

The promise of new life

Last month Susan and I became grandparents for the first time and Susan’s uncle celebrated his 100th birthday. The wonder of new birth and celebration of a life lived over a century. The van Dykes arrived in New Amsterdam in 1652. They helped found five Dutch towns and were part of the birth of this nation. John Richardson van Dyke […]

Read more>>
June 5, 2012September 5, 2019

A question for leaders: how is the circle being drawn?

I’ve just returned from the John Hope Franklin Center for Reconciliation national symposium in Tulsa, Oklahoma. This has always been a tough place for race relations. The first item of business of the new state in 1907 was to pass segregationist legislation. In 1921, Tulsa was the scene of America’s worst race riot when a white mob destroyed the thriving […]

Read more>>
May 15, 2012September 5, 2019

Make Tackling Poverty Job #1

One of the most exciting experiences of recent months has been observing our team of community facilitators at work. Operating in pairs, they have delivered more than 40 presentations of Unpacking the 2010 Census: the new realities of race, class and jurisdiction. Most days one or two of them stop by the office to collect materials or to prepare for […]

Read more>>
April 30, 2012September 5, 2019

Notes from America Healing for Democracy

Last week I spent three days in New Orleans with 500 people who are passionate about racial reconciliation and justice. Twenty years after the Rodney King verdict that sparked the LA uprising, America Healing for Democracy was hosted by the W. K. Kellogg Foundation for its grantees as part of its racial equity initiative. “Racism is the corruption that pollutes […]

Read more>>
April 21, 2012September 28, 2019

Learning from Texas History

I’m just back from a long weekend visiting our son Mark and daughter-in-law Ari in Austin, Texas. They are first-time home owners in a diverse neighborhood a few miles east of downtown. A visit to the Bob Bullock Texas State History Museum gave me a new appreciation of the rich heritage of the Lone Star State. Living in Virginia for […]

Read more>>

Posts navigation

Older posts
Newer posts
  • Facebook
  • Twitter

Recent Posts

  • The Oxford Group: An Inside Look
  • My calling in life is to go between
  • The Power of Two Way Prayer
  • Two pioneers of Hope in the Cities
  • A different America
  • A Damascus Road experience
  • Raising hope, building resilience
  • Using data and historical narrative to address poverty
  • “A warrior for truth, justice and healing,” in Richmond and beyond
  • Where are we now? Post-election questions & reflections

Archives

Get Connected

  • Facebook
  • Twitter