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© Bruce Weller for the Open Society Foundations

Diana Morris

Director
OSI-Baltimore

Diana L. Morris, JD, is the director of OSI-Baltimore. From 1991-1997, she served as the executive director of the Blaustein Philanthropic Group, a set of eight family foundations based in Baltimore that awards local, national and international grants.

Previously, Morris was a program officer at the Ford Foundation, first for refugee and migrant rights (1982-1987) and then for human rights and social justice for Eastern and Southern Africa (1987-1990). Morris began her career as an attorney-adviser for human rights and refugee matters in the Office of the Legal Adviser at the Department of State.

She holds an AB from Smith College and a JD from Boston University and is a member of the New York State Bar. Morris served as president of the Association of Baltimore Area Grantmakers from 1996-2000 and was a member of its board from 1994-2001. She is a member of the board of directors of the Baltimore Substance Abuse Systems and the chair of the board of the Safe and Sound Campaign. She was named to The Daily Record's Top 100 Women in Maryland in 1999 and 2001.  Morris is a recipient of a Special Recognition Award from the Maryland Legal Services Corporation and a Public Service Award from Boston University Law School.

Related Information

Audacious Thinking: Spring 2011
Spring 2011
This issue of Audacious Thinking focuses on the Open Society Institute–Baltimore’s work to help keep kids connected to school.

Can We Talk About How Race Affects Our Classrooms?
Baltimore, MD
November 2, 2009
audio AUDIO
Beverly Daniel Tatum, president of Spelman College, will talk with David Hornbeck, former Philadelphia superintendent of schools, about how race plays out in American classrooms.

Do We Still Need to Talk About Race?
Baltimore, MD
September 16, 2009
audio AUDIO
Ben Jealous, executive director of the NAACP, and Gerald Torres, professor at the University of Texas Law School, discusses the assumption that Americans now live in a "post-racial" era.

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