Former U.S. Department of State Official Uzra Zeya Added to Kroc Institute Advisory Board in 2025
Uzra Zeya, most recently the Under Secretary for Civilian Security, Democracy, and Human Rights for the U.S. Department of State, has joined the advisory board of the Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies, part of the Keough School of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame.
Zeya served on the Kroc Institute advisory board in 2020 until she was tapped by the U.S. Department of State for her Under Secretary position, which began in July 2021.
“As the new year begins, I am delighted to welcome Uzra back to our board. She brings a wealth of knowledge and experience in the realm of international peace, which will no doubt enrich our efforts at the Kroc Institute,” said Asher Kaufman, John M. Regan, Jr. Director and Professor of History and Peace Studies.
As a board member, Zeya and others provide advice and guidance to Kaufman and executive staff at the Institute, and support the development of its resources.
“I’m thrilled to return to the Kroc Institute’s advisory board and devote time and energy to its mission to dismantle injustice and sustain peace,” said Zeya. “The Institute’s newly launched strategic plan looks fantastic, and I welcome the opportunity to support its implementation.”
Zeya has more than three decades of diplomatic and leadership experience at the intersection of international peace, security, and human rights.
As Under Secretary, Zeya led global diplomatic efforts to strengthen democracy, advance universal human rights, support refugees and humanitarian relief. Other responsibilities included promoting rule of law and counternarcotics cooperation, fighting corruption and intolerance, preventing armed conflict, and eliminating human trafficking. In December 2021, Zeya was given a concurrent assignment – as the U.S. Special Coordinator for Tibetan Issues, supporting the humanitarian needs and rights of the Tibetan people to preserve their cultural, religious, and linguistic identity.
Prior to this, from 2019 to 2021, Zeya was the president and CEO of the Alliance for Peacebuilding, a non-partisan global network of more than 200 organizations working in more than 180 countries to end conflict by peaceful means. During her 27-year Foreign Service career, she served as deputy chief of mission and chargé d’affaires in Paris; acting assistant secretary and principal deputy assistant secretary in the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor; chief of staff to the deputy secretary of state; political minister-counselor in New Delhi; and deputy executive secretary to Secretaries of State Rice and Clinton. She also served in Syria, Egypt, Oman, Jamaica, and in various policy roles at the Department of State.
Zeya has served as an ex-officio member of the U.S. Institute of Peace Board of Directors and as a Commissioner at the Congressional Executive Commission on China. She also served on several non-profit boards focused on education, women’s empowerment, peacebuilding, and digital freedom.
“Uzra’s professional expertise, familiarity with a broad swath of global peace issues, and enthusiasm are such an asset,” said Paddy Mullen, board chair. “The Kroc Institute advisory board welcomes you back and looks very forward to your contributions.”
Originally published by kroc.nd.edu on January 13, 2025.
atLatest Research
- Notre Dame helps bring the first high-resolution transmission electron microscope to ArmeniaThe University of Notre Dame’s Integrated Imaging Facility (NDIIF) has helped Armenia reach a historic milestone by supporting the acquisition and implementation of the country’s first-ever high-resolution transmission electron microscope (TEM).
- Four Arts & Letters faculty continue Notre Dame’s record NEH fellowship successFour faculty members were offered support for projects that will examine the history of Kurdish music and media, rethink Thomas Aquinas’ philosophical approach, unveil how the Catholic Church handled marital violence and separation in the 18th century, and further understand the cultural impact of Hurricane Maria.
- Simple changes to social media messaging can help persuade people to heed wildfire evacuation ordersAccording to research from the University of Notre Dame, simple tweaks to social media messaging can make a huge difference in getting people to take safety mandates seriously during wildfires and other natural disasters.
- Engineers and cancer researchers develop tunable biomaterials to treat lymphedemaThe lymphatic system plays a vital role in many health issues, such as heart disease, neurodegenerative conditions, inflammation, metabolic disorders, cancer, and lymphedema. Despite its importance, scientists still lack many details about how the lymphatic system grows and functions, and this prohibits…
- Resilience amid atrocity: Journalist and master of global affairs graduate chronicles the experiences of Ukrainian peopleAnna Romandash is an award-winning journalist from Lviv, Ukraine and a 2022 graduate of the Keough School of Global Affairs’ Master of Global Affairs program. Romandash, who works as a research associate at the school’s Pulte Institute for Global Development, continues to report on Russia’s war in Ukraine and how it affects the lives of everyday people. In this conversation, she shares how her education has helped to strengthen her work covering wartime atrocities and documenting the resilience of the Ukrainian people.
- Notre Dame researchers unveil innovative system for studying the impact of climate change on streamsEarth owes its nickname “The Blue Planet” to the seas and oceans that cover over 70% of its surface. And yet, for most people, it is Earth's smaller freshwater sources that serve their daily needs. Over half of the world’s population lives within two miles of a river or stream. These replenish aquifers…