Brittany Atchison conducting interviews with the U.N. World Food Programme in Bolivia (above) and posing with children and fellow Cornellians during a service trip to a school in Honduras (below).

Brittany Atchison

Brittany Atchison

Brittany Atchison knows she will dedicate her life to addressing issues of social justice and inequality, and she already boasts a two-page resume packed with accomplishments. For starters, she's completed internships with U.S. Senator Tom Harkin and Bread for the World in Washington, D.C. She also interned with the United Nations World Food Programme during a Spanish course in Bolivia, and she organized a spring break service project at a school in Honduras with two friends in 2008.

"The opportunities I have at Cornell I couldn't get anywhere else," says Atchison who is majoring in Ethnic Studies and Spanish while minoring in vocal music. She notes that the block plan has made possible her many independent and off-campus experiences, such as a block of intensive Spanish and service work in Guatemala that she completed on her own as a first-year student.

Atchison says her work in Latin America has been life changing. In Bolivia, for example, she traveled to remote villages and farms with U.N. field staff to assess aid programs.  She says the experience of speaking to people living in open shacks and then driving off in an air-conditioned van gave her an immediate appreciation of disparities in wealth, while at the same time deepening her love for the people themselves.

"When you see poverty on TV, it's so different than when you see it firsthand," she says. "It's easy to get discouraged by what you see, but the people of Latin America are so resilient and care about the things that are most important in life: people and relationships."

Meanwhile, her D.C. internships helped her see the importance of public policy, legislation, and grassroots advocacy for change. And courses such as Strategies for Alleviating Poverty, taught by politics professor David Yamanishi, have given her a sound footing for understanding complex, global issues.

"The course solidified my goals and deepened my knowledge of the multi-dimensionality of poverty," Atchison says. "All the factors that contribute to poverty are so intertwined."

Atchison has also brought her interests and passions to bear on campus by co-founding a living learning community, Student Together Eradicating Poverty, as well as by contributing to many initiatives addressing diversity and intolerance. She has also attended a number of national and statewide leadership conferences, including a global youth forum at the World Bank and intensive training from the Social Justice Training Institute with a select group of 30 students.

After Cornell, Atchison plans to pursue a masters in public policy after working for a couple of years with an organization such as Teach for America or The Congressional Hunger Center.

"I know for sure that whatever I do for the rest of my life it will have to do with policies related to those suffering from poverty, but from a grassroots perspective," she says.