New Weiser Diplomacy Center to bring foreign policy experts to U-M

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With a $10 million gift from University of Michigan alumni Ron and Eileen Weiser, U-M will establish a new diplomacy center to serve as a hub for engagement with the foreign policy community.

The Weiser Diplomacy Center, housed at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, will bring a diverse cadre of seasoned diplomats and foreign policy experts to campus.

Photo of Ron and Eileen Weiser
Ron and Eileen Weiser have made a $10 million gift to establish the Weiser Diplomacy Center at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy. (Photo by Gregory Fox Photography)

The gift will support professors of practice in international diplomacy as well as shorter-term opportunities for diplomats in residence from around the world. It will also help students apply knowledge in practical settings through workshops, simulations, conferences and internship opportunities in the United States and abroad. The goal is to strengthen U-M’s role as a national leader in international policy education.

“The Weiser Diplomacy Center will enhance the University of Michigan’s and the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy’s ability to advance international understanding and develop policies that improve lives around the globe,” said President Mark Schlissel.

“I thank former ambassador and current regent Ron Weiser and Eileen Weiser for their generosity, vision and commitment to U-M.”

“This new initiative will help train a new generation of informed, principled and entrepreneurial students committed to international affairs,” said John Ciorciari, director of the International Policy Center at the Ford School.

“It will also help connect the academy to the world of foreign policy practice to generate new ideas for addressing the many global challenges we face. No comparable concentration of diplomatic expertise exists at any university in the Midwest.”

The Weisers say they want to prepare students in a quickly shifting foreign policy world with new ideas and engagement with renowned scholars and policy experts.

“Under the leadership of Dean Michael Barr, the Ford School is well positioned to become the best public policy school in the country,” said Ron Weiser, former ambassador, founder of McKinley Inc. and a member of the Board of Regents.

“I am pleased to provide resources to help in this important field. Diplomacy is not just relationships between countries, it’s about relationships between people. … It can change the direction of a country, affecting tens of millions of people.”

Ron and Eileen Weiser’s philanthropy and service extends far beyond Michigan. The Weisers have long been committed to diplomacy, an interest that deepened in 2001-04 when Ron Weiser was appointed by President George W. Bush to serve as the U.S. ambassador to Slovakia, a country that faced considerable challenges.

After three years furthering the Slovak economic and political relationship with the United States, he received the highest award given to non-Slovaks in the country: the White Double Cross.

“Ron and Eileen Weiser’s generosity and vision will dramatically expand the Ford School’s ability to teach our students about the vital role diplomacy plays in international affairs,” said Michael Barr, the Joan and Sanford Weill Dean of Public Policy at the Ford School of Public Policy.

“The Weiser gift will build on our strong faculty and programming in international politics, international development and international economics.”

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