1. Ross School to boost Detroit Neighborhood Entrepreneurs Project

    The Detroit Neighborhood Entrepreneurs Project moves to the Ross School, but has always been a collaborative effort involving faculty from Ford, Ross and other schools as well as students from across campus. This includes those from the College of Engineering, Stamps School of Art & Design, Law School and School of Information.

  2. Alum: Lily Hamburger shares priorities at Invest Detroit

    “There is so much structurally that holds back businesses owned by people of color, and the network I am a part of is hoping to turn that upside down.”
    ~ Lily Hamburger, Ross School alumna

  3. Back-to-school topics: U-M experts available

    Back to school brings several challenges, from student learning, expectations of academic success and mental health concerns among children to questioning technology replacing educators and AI and the ongoing shortage of teachers, school staff and supplies. University of Michigan experts can address these and other issues as students return to school.

  4. Engage Detroit Workshops showcase brings community and U-M together

    The Engage Detroit Workshops grant program will support eight teams of U-M faculty, staff, students, and community partners in organizing workshops that will strengthen partnerships between the University of Michigan and Detroit. The 2023 round of funding is supporting projects through August 2024. The projects range from one that helps parents become more involved in their children’s education to another that explores the range of fatherhood experiences.

  5. Alum Neesha Modi: Building community connection for Kresge Foundation in Detroit

    Neesha Modi, who earned a dual MBA and Master’s of Science in 2012, is the director of programs and social investment operations at the Kresge Foundation. Modi forwards Kresge’s goals of building and strengthening pathways to opportunity for low-income people in America’s cities, and seeking to dismantle structural and systemic barriers to equality and justice.

  6. Partner Profile: Urban Neighborhood Initiatives supports people and places in Detroit’s Springwells neighborhood

    Part of helping people thrive is making sure the neighborhoods where they live are thriving too. For the past 25 years, Urban Neighborhood Initiatives has focused on serving the people and places within a 1.4-square-mile-area of the Springwells neighborhood in Southwest Detroit. 

  7. U-M graduate students showcase sustainability ideas for Detroit small businesses

    The students met with Detroit entrepreneurs and energy experts to understand the most pressing energy needs in the city. Those meetings helped them create how-to guides on how Detroit business owners can make their business “greener” and obtain funding through the Inflation Reduction Act to make changes.

  8. U-M students create equitable business models for green energy businesses in Detroit

    To make sure their business solutions are targeted toward Detroit small business needs, community engagement will take a center role in the course like never before.

  9. My summer learning valuable lessons at Sister Pie

    Detroit Neighborhood Entrepreneur’s Project +Impact Studio for Local Business is an interdisciplinary summer internship where undergraduate students from the Ross School of Business and several other schools and colleges at the University of Michigan partner with a portfolio of Detroit entrepreneurs to help expand their businesses.