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Brief history
1914: U-M launched America’s first
graduate program in municipal administration
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for aspiring public servants.
1968: The curriculum was refocused to provide students an analytic toolkit and cutting-edge problemsolving methods, giving way to IPPS, the Institute of Public Policy Studies, the
nation’s first public
policy degree program.
1995: U-M established the School of Public Policy. 1999: Named in honor of Gerald R. Ford, the 38th President of the United States and a 1935 U-M graduate.
2001: Pioneered a
joint-PhD program, a model that remains shared with just a handful of other universities.
2007: Launched our junior-senior
undergraduate
program with about 60 per class. 2013: Celebrated President Ford’s 100th birthday.
2014: Celebrated our Centennial with a yearlong slate of events around the world. 2019: Launched a new
Master of Public Affairs
degree program. 2020: Launched a new
undergraduate minor.
2021: Celebrated PPIA 40th anniversary.
Weill Hall
Joan and Sanford Weill Hall was designed by Robert A.M. Stern Architects and opened in August 2006. The 85,000-square-foot building offers state-of-the-art classrooms, event spaces, and comfortable niches for student-faculty study and collaboration.