UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. — What started as a tiny extra-curricular project with seven undergraduates has become the largest university-based, cross-cultural dialogue center in the United States. World in Conversation (WinC), a center for public diplomacy, is housed in Penn State’s College of the Liberal Arts, but it engages people across the University and around the world. WinC offers dialogue programming for 20,000 participants from nine colleges at University Park and nine countries, as well as tailored programs for campus and community groups upon request.
Co-founded by spouses Laurie Mulvey, clinical professor in sociology, and Sam Richards, teaching professor in sociology, WinC trains student facilitators to use dialogue as a tool to enable people on opposing sides of an issue to build solutions together.
“All we have to do is look at all the problems around us and the combative stances between interest groups to see how much we need facilitators,” Mulvey explained. “We don’t build the world with our friends. We build it with our opponents, so we need intentionally designed, ideologically neutral spaces to address the polarization and impasse that inevitably occurs between these groups.”
Richards added, “Ultimately, people with different perspectives and priorities have to realize that they actually need each other. We can’t solve a problem when we only see part of it. Conservatives and liberals, for example, see different parts of issues. All of those parts are necessary to see the whole problem and create practical solutions.”
Originally funded with a small seed grant from two alumni, Richards explained, WinC has been supported over the years by the Office of the President, the College of the Liberal Arts, the Office of Educational Equity and “a patchwork” of funding from other Penn State sources. The center currently has 32 paid staff members and offers an undergraduate certificate called “Facilitating Conflict and Collaboration,” which requires three semesters of intensive, hands-on training.