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Lambeth Lectureship

The Lambeth Lectureship was established in 2006 at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill by the generous gift of an anonymous donor. Presented annually, its purpose is to bring to campus distinguished speakers who are practitioners or scholars of public policy, particularly those whose work touches on the fields of education, ethics, democratic institutions, and civic engagement. The lectureship is administered by the Lambeth Lecture Committee, composed of faculty members, students, and distinguished individuals engaged in public policy, in collaboration with UNC Public Policy.

The Lambeth Lectureship honors Thomas Willis Lambeth, who led the Z. Smith Reynolds Foundation as its executive director for more than two decades until his retirement in 2000. Born in Clayton, North Carolina, Lambeth graduated from UNC Chapel Hill in 1957 with a bachelor’s degree in history, and served as administrative assistant to Governor Terry Sanford and to U.S. Representative Richardson Preyer before being named to lead the Foundation in 1978. Described by one journalist as “the state’s do-gooder-in-chief,” Lambeth throughout his career has exemplified the qualities of personal integrity, a passionate devotion to education, democracy, and civic engagement, and wholehearted pursuit of the ideals of the public good and of progressive and innovative ways of achieving it. During his tenure, the Reynolds Foundation awarded grants totaling more than $260 million to address many of North Carolina’s most pressing public policy issues, particularly social justice and equity, governance and civic engagement, community-building and economic development, education, and protection of the state’s natural environment. Tom Lambeth also has made a strong personal impact on many key public policy issues in North Carolina and nationally, including leadership of the Public School Forum of North Carolina, Leadership North Carolina, the North Carolina Rural Center, and a task force of the national Institute of Medicine on the problems of people who lack medical insurance. He also has been a national leader in improving the management and effectiveness of family philanthropic foundations themselves.

Thomas Willis Lambeth

Previous Lectures

Honorable David Price
Democracy Beyond Elections: Institutions in Crisis
February 9, 2023
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Dr. Mandy Cohen
Emerging from the Covid Crisis: Where Do We Go from Here?
March 23, 2022
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Mitchell E. Daniels, Jr.
How “Higher” is Higher Education?
September 24, 2019
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Mary Sue Coleman
The Educated Citizenry: An Endangered Species?
November 29, 2018
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Graham Allison
Destined for War: Can America and China Escape Thucydides’s Trap?

September 13, 2017
Hill Hall, 5:00pm
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Honorable Alex Kozinski
Honorable Thomas W. Ross
Reforming Our Criminal Justice System
September 29, 2016
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Martin Eakes
Extreme Inequality: Is it Really a Problem?
October 1, 2015
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Norman Ornstein
Coping with Dysfunction: How Can the American Political System Emerge from its Morass?
October 2, 2014
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James B. Hunt, Jr.
North Carolina is Underinvesting in Education
September 26, 2013
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Alice Rivlin
Healthcare Reform: Will We Ever Get it Right?
September 27, 2012
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Erskine B. Bowles
The Deficit, Spending, and Taxes
September 8, 2011
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James A. Joseph
Remaking America: Higher Education and Civic Engagement
September 17, 2009
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W. Hodding Carter III
Where There Is No Vision
September 16, 2008
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Joel L. Fleishman
Ethics, Self-Interest, and the Public Good
October 11, 2007
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