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Past
Speakers From
Association of Bilingual Education
Center for
International Security Studies at Maryland
Center for
Strategic & International Studies
Congressional
Black Caucus
Congressional
Research Service
Department of
Housing and Urban Development
Foreign Service
Foundation for
Child Development
Congressional
Hispanic Caucus
Management
Systems International
Maryland
African American Museum Corporation
U.S. Department
of Commerce
U.S.
International Trade Commission

Policy Visits To
AOL/Time Warner
Chinese Embassy
U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
Inter-American
Development Bank
Macro
International Data Collection Center
U.S. Department
of State
The Pentagon
World Bank
U.S. Department
of Homeland Security
Central
Intelligence Agency
Council on
Foreign Relations
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History
The Public Policy and
International Affairs (PPIA) program began with a 1981 grant to the
Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management (APPAM) from the
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. This grant included two components:
• That undergraduate students of
color could learn about public policy and prepare for admission to graduate
school through summer public policy institutes at leading public policy
graduate schools; and
• That participating students
would be provided with substantial graduate student fellowships upon
admission to a graduate program (participating graduate schools were
required to match the Sloan fellowship money).
Since 1981, the program has been
funded by the Sloan Foundation, the Ford Foundation (1989-99) and the
Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation under the title Woodrow Wilson
Fellowships in Public Policy and International Affairs. APPAM has continued
to be the major institutional sponsor for the program along with the
Association of Professional Schools of International Affairs (APSIA) and the
National Association of Schools of Public Affairs and Administration (NASPAA).
The University of Maryland –
College Park became a host institution for the PPIA program in 1995. At that
time they expanded the program with support from the
Institute for International
Public Policy (IIPP)/Department of Education and the
Woodrow
Wilson National Fellowship Foundation/Department of State. Additional
summer programs take place at Carnegie Mellon University, the University of
California, the University of Michigan, and Princeton University.
Program
Objectives
The objectives of the Maryland
Leadership Institute are to increase the likelihood that each program
participant will successfully apply to and complete graduate programs in
public policy and international affairs, and to increase the involvement of
minority voices and perspectives in domestic and international policymaking.
Curriculum
The Maryland Leadership Institute
curriculum is based in part on our own graduate program in public policy at
the Maryland School of Public Policy (MSPP). Students complete
graduate-level coursework in microeconomics and international policy or
macroeconomics; statistics (intermediate and advanced); leadership theory;
and foreign policy analysis. Students also participate in the Professional
Development Series, which affords them an opportunity to examine their
personal leadership styles and strengths through the use of various personal
assessment exercises and leadership assessment instruments. Courses are
taught primarily by University of Maryland faculty who are assisted by
graduate-level teaching assistants.
Classes meet most week days for a
morning session ( 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM ) and afternoon session ( 2:00 PM –
5:00 PM ). Discussion sessions, as needed, take place during evening ( 7:00
PM – 9:00 PM ) and weekend hours.
Speakers and Events
In previous years, fellows have
had the opportunity to personally meet such notable figures as Thomas
Pickering, Secretary of State for Political Affairs; Dr. Susan Rice, former
Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs; Susan Schwab, Dean of
Maryland School of Public Affairs; Frm. Ambassador to Nepal, Amb. Julia
Chang Bloch; Shibley Telhami, PhD., Anwar Sadat Professor for Peace and
Development at the University of Maryland and Middle East scholar and
Maryland State Delegate Pete Rawlings.
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