Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development, provide access to justice for all and build effective, accountable, and inclusive institutions at all levels.
SDG 16 focuses on issues relating to reducing all forms of violence, end abuse, exploitation and violence of children, promote the rule of law, and reduce corruption, among other issues. At Lynn University, these efforts take on a variety of forms from initiatives created to engage in non-partisan dialogue and degrees designed to educate students on the importance of the law to events memorializing history’s most violent eras and focusing on how to prevent them from repeating.
This report is organized into three sections:
Institutional Initiatives: Refers to ongoing initiatives at the institution that are currently active, occur every year, and relate to SDG16. Wherever possible, statistics are provided to show the impact of this work.
Events/News: Refers to single events or news that occurred during the reporting year of AY22-23 relating to SDG 16. These are not recurring, and as such are not part of the long-term initiatives.
Courses: Refers to all the courses in the university’s academic catalog for the reporting year of AY22-23 that deal with issues related to SDG 16.
Goal 16

Institutional Initiatives
Project Civitas
Project Civitas was created to educate the Lynn community—students, staff, and faculty—on how to be engaged citizens and civic leaders who work toward a humane and inclusive future for our nation and world. Through activities and collaborative programs in and out of the classroom, Project Civitas helps tackle political, economic, and social challenges head on by voting, organizing, leading, speaking out, dialoguing across difference, educating others, finding solutions, and healing deep wounds.
Dialogues Lecture Series
The Dialogues Lecture Series is a non-partisan series that welcomes politicians, community activists, journalists, film directors, and other public figures committed to solving pertinent issues in politics and public life. Former guests include Oscar-winning director Deborah Oppenheimer, former CNN White House Correspondent Dan Lothian, and Congressman Ted Deutch, among others.
GenZ Story Expression Workshop
Every spring, Lynn University holds the Nuremberg Trials course and the GenZ Story Expression Workshop, which culminates in an event that has been treasured by students and the Boca Raton community for more than a decade. Both the course and the workshop provide special opportunities for students to explore history with the people who survived it. As part of the workshop, students hear from a Holocaust survivor firsthand. Later, they create a story expression project through creative mediums like art, poetry, music, film, theater, technology, blogs, or social media which are made into iBooks for ease of access. The purpose is for students to express what they have heard in a way to reach out to others who have not heard the survivor’s story and may not be familiar with the horrors of the Holocaust.
In addition to an in-person workshop, Lynn University archives the survivor testimonies and ensures that they will last for future generations.
Holocaust and Genocide Awareness Annual Programming
Lynn University hosts annual Holocaust and Genocide awareness events to encourage conversations on remembrance and awareness around these important topics. These events are available to students, faculty and staff, and the outside community. All event information and related collections are also archived and available digitally through the institution’s SPIRAL.
By educating the community on the importance of civil dialogue in politics and public service, as well as on the repercussions of mass violence, Lynn University helps further target 16.1 of SDG16, which focuses on significantly reducing all forms of violence and related deaths everywhere. Additionally, these educational programs also help further target 16.7 of SDG 16, which focuses on ensuring responsive, inclusive, participatory, and representative decision-making at all levels.
Criminal justice degree
In this criminal justice degree program, students learn the structure and process of the American judicial system and explore and analyze diverse ethical issues that they may encounter as a criminal justice professional. Students gain a deeper understanding of policing in America, social problems, and global human rights. Full-time students enrolled in this program can participate in internships in Washington, D.C., for a semester.
By educating students in criminal justice, Lynn University helps further target 16.3 of SDG 16, which focuses on promoting the rule of law at the national and international levels and ensuring equal access to justice for all.
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Students graduated with a Criminal Justice Degree in AY22-23
38
Participants in the GenZ Stories Expression Workshop
176
Total number of attendees in the Dialogues Speaker Series –attendees in AY22-23
954