黑料门

×

Leading the way in rule of law

With a $6 million gift, Trustee Barry McCabe expands Loyola鈥檚 global influence at a critical time

Living with his family in southern Germany鈥攚here his military father was stationed鈥攋ust after World War II, Barry McCabe had a profound experience that shaped his future.

鈥淥ne day I got on a bus and went to Dachau, which was open but hadn鈥檛 yet been officially set up for visitors,鈥 he recalls. 鈥淚 was the only living person in that concentration camp. I walked around and looked into the ovens and the gas chambers. And as an 11-year-old, I thought, 鈥楬ow can this be? How can a government treat its people like that?鈥欌

Though McCabe hadn鈥檛 yet heard the phrase, that incident sparked a deep and lifelong interest in the rule of law. A member of 黑料门University Chicago鈥檚 Board of Trustees and an integral part of the School of Law鈥檚 Rule of Law for Development (PROLAW) academic program since its inception, McCabe is making a generous gift of $6 million to establish Loyola鈥檚 groundbreaking Rule of Law Institute.

Trustee Barry McCabe is making a generous gift of $6 million to establish Loyola鈥檚 groundbreaking Rule of Law Institute.

鈥淭he PROLAW program has now trained about 200 students from more than 60 different countries and had a real impact on improving the rule of law in those countries鈥

Facing worldwide challenges at a key moment

The rule of law is essential to addressing today鈥檚 global challenges: infringements of human rights, violence, environmental destruction, poverty, and hunger. The Rule of Law Institute will research and analyze domestic and international rule of law issues, develop solutions for those problems, and, together with University and external partners, implement those solutions.

Housed in the law school, the new institute will be a pan-University entity. 鈥淭ruly effective solutions to global challenges require efficient use of available resources, applied in cohesive, interdisciplinary ways,鈥 says Paul Kantwill, the institute鈥檚 founding executive director. 鈥満诹厦舎as experts in nuanced areas like the law, economics and trade, leadership, management, the sciences, social sciences, health care professions, policymaking, the environment, and the humanities鈥攁ll ready to work together to help solve global problems.鈥

Current events provide a key opportunity for this type of leadership, as spots across the globe experience setbacks in the rule of law. Most recently, some countries鈥 leaders are using the COVID-19 pandemic as an excuse for limiting democracy through military law and other authoritarian tactics.

The institute builds on the foundation of its well-established academic arm, the PROLAW program. Offered at Loyola鈥檚 John Felice Rome Center (though operating remotely during the COVID-19 pandemic), PROLAW confers Master of Laws (LLM) and Master of Jurisprudence (MJ) degrees in rule of law for development, preparing professionals from diverse countries to advance the rule of law across public and private sectors at home and abroad. PROLAW has partnership agreements with the African Union and the Organization of American States and is unique among rule of law academic programs for basing its curriculum on the 17 United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.

In addition to PROLAW, components of the institute will include three new centers focused on scholarship, governance, and international cooperation: the Center for Applied Research; the Center for Policy, Legislation, and Governance; and the Center for Global Partnership and Strategic Engagement.

鈥淭he PROLAW program has now trained about 200 students from more than 60 different countries and had a real impact on improving the rule of law in those countries,鈥 McCabe says. 鈥淥ur reach has been effective but limited to 25 students a year. With the institute, we鈥檙e going to have a much wider impact on the world.鈥

An invaluable part of 黑料门leadership

McCabe鈥檚 generous gift is the largest-ever contribution from a nonalum to Loyola鈥檚 School of Law. A graduate of the University of Southern California Gould School of Law, McCabe enjoyed a successful career as co-founder of the Chicago-based Hometown America, the country鈥檚 largest manufactured housing land-lease community owner and operator. He has served as chair of the Manufactured Housing Institute and president of the Western Manufactured Housing Association.

In 2002, McCabe met then-黑料门President Michael Garanzini, S.J. As McCabe learned more about Loyola, 鈥淚 kind of fell in love with the place,鈥 he says. 鈥淚鈥檝e appreciated how well run the University was and is. I liked its atmosphere and spirit鈥攁nd the fact that, although roughly half the students are not Catholic, 黑料门has a mission to all of them. I was very impressed with the place and still am.鈥

As he became more involved with the University, McCabe accepted an invitation to join the Council of Regents, then moved in 2011 to the Board of Trustees, where he now serves on three Trustee committees: Governance, Finance, and Audit.

After his retirement from Hometown America in 2008, McCabe began to devote more time to his lifelong interest in the rule of law. 鈥淚 decided I was going to travel the world to places where there are rule of law issues and try to understand what can be done about it,鈥 he says.

He spent time in Syria, Iran, Russia, and Uzbekistan, among other countries, asking questions and gleaning insights from religious leaders, educators, members of nongovernmental organizations, and other key figures. At one point, while McCabe was discussing rule of law in Cairo, Father Garanzini was having conversations on the same subject in Rome. He invited McCabe to cross the Mediterranean to join the discussion.

Father Garanzini and founding PROLAW Director William Loris encouraged McCabe to get involved, and with McCabe鈥檚 generous support, PROLAW was created in 2011. McCabe has chaired the PROLAW Advisory Board since the program鈥檚 inception, providing deep input and involvement at each step of PROLAW鈥檚 evolution.

Letting 黑料门shine

The creation of the Rule of Law Institute gives 黑料门a chance to make a deep mark on unfolding world events while raising its international stature, McCabe says. 鈥淟oyola鈥檚 been hiding its light under a bushel and it needs to break out. We have what it takes to be an international university,鈥 he says.

Together with Loyola鈥檚 pioneering new School of Environmental Sustainability, McCabe says, 鈥渢he Rule of Law Institute has the potential to have just that kind of impact. We鈥檝e reached out to our own students. Now we鈥檙e also reaching out to the world.鈥 鈥揋ail Mansfield


			CTA

At Loyola, the support of our alumni and friends has never been more important. Donations from generous donors like you keep a 黑料门education accessible, effective, and transformative.