Dean Michael Barr speaks during the 2019 Ford School Commencement.
Transcript:
Thank you welcome everyone those of you
who are still standing please have a seat.
It's great to see everybody here welcome
I'm Michael Barr I'm the Joan and
Sanford while dean of the Gerald R.
Ford School of Public Policy It
was a real pleasure to see many of
you yesterday at our open house
at the Rock and graduate ceremonies or
this morning at the big house and
it's my honor to welcome you here this
afternoon on behalf of the entire Ford
school community for
I'm going to begin by briefly introducing
the members of the platform party up here
with me today with more to say
about our speakers later with me on
stage is our keynote commencement speaker
distinguished journalists Michele Norris
thank you are so
honored to have Michelle with us
this evening this afternoon and
look forward to her remarks
were honored to be joined by
region of the University of
Michigan ambassador Ron wiser
thank you region Wiser is a leader
in business philanthropy and politics he
and his wife Eileen have been incredibly
generous friends to the University
of Michigan and of the Ford School
in particular Ron we're really thankful
to have you here this afternoon.
I'm delighted to welcome another longtime
University of Michigan leader Rob Sellers
thank you Rob is the vice provost for
equity and inclusion and the Charles D.
moody collegiate professor of psychology
and education that Rob thank you so much
for being here and also for representing
the University of Michigan leadership.
I'm pleased to be thanked
I'm pleased to be joined as well by
a number of my faculty colleagues at stage
right is Elizabeth Gerber our associate
dean for research and policy engagement.
Thank you next to
Liz Ford School Professor John chary John
thank you John directs our new wiser
diplomacy center in our International
Policy Center and he's going to be reading
names of our graduates as they cross the
stage you'll see he's very good at that.
On my left we have Sharon Messina who is
the director of undergraduate programs.
Thank her Fessor Brian J.
could represent the leadership
of our Ph D. program
thank you and our associate dean for
academic affairs and
director of our master's programs
Professor Paul Ince thought.
Thank You may be able to tell
from the applause Paul is
the elected speaker from the students
on behalf of the faculty.
Finally elected by their classmates to
provide the student commencement addresses
our soon to be forward and P.P.
graduate Jose Javier the high and
I'm the one
thank you and
our and R.B.A. soon to be graduate
I guess as of this morning have
is now a graduate that's with
the present University said.
During fish.
The WITH thank
you we are gathered this afternoon to
recognize and celebrate the accomplishment
of 166 outstanding students
smart driven Don't cry yet.
You're supposed to cry at the end.
Smart driven public minded people
who are believing our communities in
the next half century.
Thank you
I have the honor of talking about these
students what they've learned here what
they've brought to us what they've
learned what we've learned from them and
a little bit about what we know about what
they're going to do next let me start by
sharing our schools mission statement
what our faculty and students and
staff believe and do the Ford school
at the University of Michigan
is a community dedicated to
the public good we inspire in perfect
diverse leaders grounded in service
conduct transformational research and
collaborate on evidence based policymaking
to take on our communities and
our world's most pressing
challenges yes we do.
Yes we do our world indeed
faces a time of truly daunting
challenges outside this auditorium
spring has finally arrived just in time.
Campus is full of flowers and buds and
happy faces celebrating accomplishments
and that is as it should be but
we are a community steeped in policy and
politics and so we know that our world
indeed faces many daunting challenges
here in the U.S. and around the world the
democratic institutions and global norms
that we've relied on to build to build a
better world are in many ways under attack
from Zina phobia racism anti-Semitism
from leaders who have no respect for
democracy or fear it from corruption and
skyrocketing inequality
the post-war global order the rules
based international system our
commitment to fight bigotry our dedication
to the civil rights tradition to embrace
difference our openness our vitality
our shared values emerging from
the wreckage of World War 2
are in many ways all at risk
graduates none of this is new to you it's
why you came to the ford school to take
responsibility for the Times in which
you live you've inspired me every single
day of the past 2 years with your
energy your passion your empathy and
creativity I believe in you I believe in
your capacity and your conviction and
your preparation to take on these pressing
challenges our school is named for
one of the University of Michigan's most
distinguished graduates the 38th president
of the United States Gerald Ford
in 1975 is
the Vietnam War ground to an end
President Ford faced a refugee crisis and
he rose to the challenge many
in South Vietnam Laos and
Cambodia had been allies of the United
States and they sought asylum here in this
country we were in some large measure
responsible for the conditions they fled.
Ford created an interagency task force
that managed the resettlement of more than
of time because he believed it was
the right thing to do coming on the heels
of a devastating deeply divisive war
Ford's efforts to help refugees were
not popular with the public nor
with Democrats nor
with Republicans in the Congress nor
with many in state houses around
the country but he pressed his case just
none the less it just burns me up these
great humanitarians President Ford
was quoted as saying of those
opposed to opening America's doors
they just want to turn their backs he
said we didn't do it to the hungry
we didn't do it to the Cubans and
dammit we're not going to do it now.
Today issues of immigration and
asylum building walls or
building bridges are all too relevant
once again and they will be among the top
issues today's graduates will face
leading on leading on in the years and
decades to come there are an estimated
$25000000.00 refugees around the world and
more than half are under the age of
asylum policy those are all and
part political issues there's room for
plenty of reasonable disagreement about
particular policies or the right number
of people to admit and what for what for
what reasons for example the burdens and
the benefits that new immigrants bring to
our communities the role that principled
foreign policy can or cannot play in
supporting just unstable governments and
societies around the world these
are all valid policy debates but
here are 3 principles that I
believe should guide us 1st
a fundamental recognition of the humanity
of each and every human being.
in places of relative safety and
security should feel a profound sense
of gratitude to our country and
responsibility for those less fortunate
and 3rd that our differences make a strong
our differences make a strong you can see
it right here in the Ford school community
where a stronger wiser more caring
community because of our differences
because of the unique contributions of
every single member of our community
members of our classes of 21000 hail
from over 20 countries they speak
dozens of languages they include
a graduate a dreamer who earlier
today gave a truly beautiful speech at the
University's graduation in the Big House
declaring herself quote undocumented and
unafraid
thank
They include in our community descendants
of enslaved people whose brutal journeys
to America cry out for justice who
unpaid labor built this country
who sacrifices and injustices
in indignities day after day and
decade after decade have worn on and
without recompense
they include Midwesterners Southerners
red staters and
blue staters rural and
urban citizen and non-citizen black and
white and brown and
every shade of the human condition.
Students who worked in the White House for
President Trump and a student who is
the Easter Bunny for President Obama's
egg roll on the White House lawn.
Thank our Ford school
community includes a senior member of our
faculty who led and built this school for
many years the daughter of immigrants from
Jamaica a beloved teacher who emigrated
from Cape Town South Africa a staff
leader whose parents came to the U.S.
fleeing religious discrimination in
the Middle East a faculty member whose
research demonstrated the huge positive
impact refugees have right here in our
community in southeast Michigan myself
whose grandparents fled the rising tide of
anti-Semitism in Poland in the 1930 S.
coming 1st to Israel and
then to the United States with my father
after World War 2 on a boat filled with
oranges and old merchant marine
to the Port of New Orleans and
so many more of our faculty students and
staff all contributing to our strength
our differences make a strong immigrants
and children of immigrants make
America stronger with their talents and
drive they bring us friends in far places
they help us understand and succeed in
those far places when we negotiate and
trade among the Vietnamese refugees
that President Ford welcome to
the United States in 1975 when more than
$3000.00 orphans evacuated from Saigon as
a major North Vietnamese military
offensive approach that city
in April of that year Gerald and
Betty Ford traveled to California to
meet one of the cargo planes filled
with those young children and
babies President Ford entered
the plane and carried the 1st baby off
himself there's a photograph of him
sitting on a bus headed toward the hangar
he's cradling one of the Vietnamese babies
in his arms bottle feeding the orphan.
President Ford was leading he was using
his power the power of his office
to show the capacity for American
leadership and generosity and humanity
he took responsibility students
it gives me great inspiration and
hope to know that soon you you will
be the ones out there leading and
that you will lead like Gerald Ford
with compassion and heart
with analytics Yes with empirics Yes but
driven by our shared generous
understanding of the human condition
how we prepared our graduates for
that let me tell you a little bit about
our curriculum for both our graduate and
undergraduate students we start with a
shared understanding of an belief in facts
and today's graduates have learned
to analyze complicated data sets
to think analytically to
evaluate benefits and
cos they know their stuff that's
a strong foundation to build on
we stress communication skills and so
they learn to speak and write clearly and
we've taught leadership our graduates have
been taught to listen and to talk and
to think critically ethically and
compassionately and
let me tell you a little bit more at this
point about our world class faculty and
our outstanding staff who work so
closely with our graduates
these past 2 years our faculty
hold joint appointments all over campus
in politics in political science and
sociology in economics and in so many
more disciplines in departments around
the school and around the university
their expertise is both broad and
deep their thoughtful enthusiastic
teachers and mentors they're doing
cutting edge research and they're actively
engaged with critically important public
policy challenges here in our community
across the nation and around the world.
Therefore schools professional staff are
a source of the school strength that well
our terrific staff Trimix
recruited they counseled and
they supported today's graduates let
me ask all Ford school faculty and
staff now to stand and please join me
in thanking them for all that they do
thank.
There are others who deserve thanks in
recognition and that's all of you in
the audience and family and friends who
are watching on line you've raised these
students to care about what matters
you've nurtured them counseled them and
consoled them they wouldn't be here
without you graduates please take
this chance to thank your loved ones for
their support over the years
thank you.
Today 91 of our students have earned
a master's degree they hail from 10
different countries and speak 23 different
languages a 3rd have earned dual
masters with other schools the law school
of public health social work the School of
Information engineering the business
school and many more they include
the chair of the Washington County Board
of Commissioners of R.C. aflat athlete and
captain in the US Army for those of you
who have seen their class photo I feel
like I might need to explain that they
do not actually include a walking bagel.
Members of this group led a fantastic
course and study trip to Morocco they
led a successful charity auction to raise
funds for a youth program in Detroit and
afterwards led a rousing singalong
on a bus back to the present.
They've been intentional about their
education in their career preparation
they've led by action by
putting their heads down and
getting to work this group also overcame
a lot of personal adversity and
through it all they took care of each
other let me tell you now a bit about
the 72 students who have earned a Bachelor
of Arts in public policy they are very
smart very enthusiastic group they have
been part of one of the university's
finest liberal arts traditions in small
classes with Michigan's top faculty R.B.A.
curriculum train students to think
critically and across disciplines to
understand policy challenges and
to develop solutions today's B.A.
graduates include $175.00 Beta Kappa
is in 18 Angel scholars they include
a student chosen to speak as I've said at
the university's honors convocation last
month another who spoke this morning at
the University's commencement ceremony in
the big house and you'll hear more from
our B.A. students in just a moment
they write for the Michigan Daily and
The Detroit Free Press that campus wide
student government ran track participated
in Razzi in the marching band and
advocated passionately for
the causes they believe that they
helped an arbor massively improve student
voter turnout during last fall's election
these students have improved our
school in the university but
what's truly remarkable to me is that
somehow they've managed to do all that
without ever once checking their email.
It's pretty stunning.
We celebrate as well to students who have
earned Ph D.'s one in public policy in
sociology and the other in public policy
in economics those are pioneering programs
for students who want to pursue research
careers in a traditional social social
science discipline and to see themselves
as deeply committed to the study and
improvement of public policy.
Taken together the classes of 21000
are serious students hard workers and
dedicated leaders
graduates you are amazing.
But let me give you 5 tips to help
you on the path from here the 1st
I've said already we'd like
Gerald Ford find your passion
take unpopular stand when you know they're
right take responsibility number 2.
Work hard really hard really really
really hard Anything worth doing
requires an enormous amount
of hard work number 3 don't be a jerk.
That might seem like one of these
norms we've lost but it's not and
I really implore you to be kind to
your colleagues and friends number 4
empower yourself you can do
anything don't talk yourself down
talk yourself up we're facing enormous
challenges and you can make the difference
Lasley a number 5 love your
team you can't do it alone but
you don't have to build a team around you
that will help you solve our most pressing
challenges together as your time
at Michigan draws to a close I
know you're thinking a lot about your team
about the classmates you've worked and
studied and become lifelong friends with
you're excited yes about new challenges
new cities but I know I miss you'll miss
a lot of things about your days here in
Ann Arbor at the very
least Dominic's Rick's.
Charlie's.
Calculus with Carl Simon.
Sticks with John Hanson.
You missed the patient year of Cory
stark stork in the water guide of our
writing center team and so
many other beloved teachers and mentors.
You won't miss the stressful hours
perhaps in the computer lab or
debating endlessly about whether to
provide forks in the student lounge.
But you might miss naps in the reading
room the excitement of exploding water
pipes in the Great Hall or
the occasional wind chill day off
of course for most of you you'll miss each
other most next year your friends and
classmates may not be
just down the street but
I promise you that the ties you've made
here ties forged in mutual purpose
in hard work as well as in fun will
endure and will help sustain and
propel you graduates we are proud of
you and we're all going to miss you
congratulations and
best wishes to the classes of 2019 go blue
Thank you.