Bradford Morse Distinguished Lectureship

The Bradford Morse Distinguished Lectureship at Boston University has been established through the generous support of the Industry Council for Development and in recognition of the contribution of the Honorable Bradford Morse to international peace through development. Mr. Morse, an alumnus of BU and BU School of Law, joined the United Nations in 1972. From 1976 to 1986, he served as the administrator of the United Nations Development Program, the major source of United Nations development assistance to developing countries, including those of sub-Saharan Africa. The lectureship also acknowledges Mr. Morse’s role as founder of the United Nations Office for Emergency Operations, which organized the successful international relief effort to combat the severe droughts ravaging Ethiopia and the Sudan in the mid-1980s.

The first annual Bradford Morse lecture, “Africa Beyond the Famine: The Case for Hope,” was delivered by Maurice F. Strong, president of the World Federation of United Nations Associations. Mr. Strong had a long and distinguished career in private and public affairs, served as founding president of the Canadian International Development Research Commission, and was the founding executive director of the United National Environment Program. First appointed undersecretary-general of the United Nations in 1970, Mr. Strong also served as executive coordinator of the United National Office for Emergency Operations in Africa from 1985 to 1986. During this period, he worked closely with Bradford Morse.

See and register for the 2026 program here

You can find the list of our past Bradford Morse Distinguished Lecture here.