Atlas Week Speaker Shares History, Benefits of Public Health
04/11/2025
Daniel Dawes, J.D., had a message for the attendees in the Wool Ballroom on Thursday night – keep doing what you’re doing.
Dawes, a health equity and policy expert, delivered the 2025 Atlas Week Signature Symposium. His remarks were tied to the theme of this year’s Atlas Week – "From Inequality to Justice: Transforming Global Health through Social Change."

Daniel Dawes, J.D., delivered the Atlas Week Signature Symposium on Thursday, April 10, in the Wool Ballroom. Photo by Joe Barker.
Dawes provided a history of public health efforts and stressed their importance to improving lives. The work to improve public health has not always been a straight line. Dawes noted that throughout history there have been steps forward followed by periods of steps back.
“We have always been able to weather previous storms and periods of retrenchment because Saint Louis University has always led from the front when it comes to social mission and the advancement of healthy equity for all groups,” he said. “That is precisely what I hope you all in this room continue to do.”
Dawes’ view of SLU was shaped by a previous visit to the University. He said he previously spoke at the University as part of SLU’s bicentennial celebration and came away impressed.
“I left feeling that these are the folks that get the social mission,” he said. “They understand that we are working assiduously to create a more healthy, equitable, and inclusive society.”
During his lecture, Dawes talked about the milestones of public health like the passage of the Civil Rights Act and the Affordable Care Act. He also shared his insight into the impact of policy on public health. For example, he noted that the large policy to expand the interstate system left people near the new roads with higher rates of asthma.
Dawes talked about the importance of working to improve public health to improve the lives of everyone. To do this, he said disparities must be addressed and rectified. At the end of his remarks, Dawes issued a challenge to those in attendance.
“Today I want to call upon each of us to affirm our commitment to dismantle structural racism and advance health equity for all groups,” he said. “To use our knowledge, our voice, and our collective power to drive progress forward. To dissent, not just in words but in action. Justice is not inevitable, progress is not guaranteed. It is up to us, and I believe that together we can move the nation closer to the promise of healthy equity for all. We must dissent because America can’t do better, America must do better. ”
Saint Louis University's Atlas Program brings together members of the SLU community to focus on the global challenges that confront us in the 21st century. The theme for Atlas Week 2025 is "From Inequality to Justice: Transforming Global Health through Social Change" and focuses on the interconnectedness of global health and social justice while encouraging deeper discussion on present global health challenges.
The Atlas Week Signature Symposium is presented by internationally renowned speakers who have dedicated their lives to issues of political and social justice. Dawes was the 25th speaker in the history of the program.
Dawes is a health equity and policy expert, educator, and researcher who currently serves as Senior Vice President, Global Health, and is the founding Dean of the School of Global Health at Meharry Medical College, which is the first school of its kind in the United States. Before that, he served as executive director of the Satcher Health Leadership Institute at Morehouse School of Medicine and is a professor of health law, policy and management.
Latest Newslink
- New SLU, SSM Study Shows Ozempic Could Help Dialysis Patients Qualify for Kidney TransplantsObesity is one of the biggest barriers preventing patients with end-stage kidney disease from receiving a life-saving kidney transplant. New research from Saint Louis University School of Medicine and SSM Health physicians reveals that breakthrough weight loss medications could change that -- giving more patients a second chance at life.
- John F. Cross, Ph.D.: 1932-2025John F. Cross, Ph.D., professor emeritus of psychology, died Monday, Oct. 27, 2025. He was 93. Cross was a long-time professor at Saint Louis University as well as an alum, having earned his doctorate from SLU in 1964.
- Chaifetz Center for Entrepreneurship to Honor 2025 Entrepreneurship Hall of Fame InducteesThe Chaifetz Center for Entrepreneurship at Saint Louis University will hold its 2025 Entrepreneurship Hall of Fame induction ceremony at a dinner on Friday, Nov. 14, at the Richard A. Chaifetz School of Business.
- Gorlewicz Honored With 40 Under 40 RecognitionJenna Gorlewicz, Ph.D., who holds the Eugene Kranz Professorship for Excellence in Research in the School of Science and Engineering at Saint Louis University, has been chosen as one of the St. Louis Business Journal's 40 Under 40.
- NSF Grant Funds New Industry-University Cooperative Research Center at Saint Louis UniversitySaint Louis University, along with The Ohio State University and Purdue University, will establish a new, innovative industry-university cooperative research center. A $2.25 million grant from the National Science Foundation will fund the launch of CAGE, the Center for Accurate Georeferencing of the Environment. SLU will receive $500,000 to support its campus operations.
- Feser Inaugurated as SLU's 34th PresidentSaint Louis University officially inaugurated Edward J. Feser, Ph.D., as its 34th president in a ceremony today. Feser, a Jesuit-educated leader in higher education, assumed the presidency on July 1. Themed "Igniting Hope, Growing in Community," the inauguration celebrated the light of hope that inspires this moment and the new possibilities we can cultivate -- together -- in service to the greater good.









