His undergraduate thesis at Davidson was titled, “Poverty in Charlotte, North Carolina.” His doctoral dissertation at Harvard focused on a theologically informed approach to inequality and becoming a more just society.
“These are similar commitments that I learned at Davidson in economics, in Spanish and in religion,” Hicks said. “They’re commitments that I learned on campus. They’re commitments that led me into the work that I do. I write on religious ethics. I write on moral equality and economic equality. And I write on religious diversity and how we, as a diverse and devout America, can live together with mutual respect.”
Those multiple aspirations, he said, weave into one.
“I could name professors at Davidson who helped me to fit those things together, and it’s important work, I believe, with civic implications,” he said. “And I also believe it informs my leadership of a college, because we also embody those values. We deal with inequalities. We help prepare students from various backgrounds to go out and to create a society of equals and to give everyone—more than equal opportunity—equal capacities to make a difference in the world. I’m deeply motivated by what I study, which is how we can build a more equal and just society, starting right here on campus.”