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President Jackson To Lead Institute Delegation to Europe
A delegation from Rensselaer will travel to Europe March
15-22 to meet with leading representatives from government,
industry, science, and higher education. Led by President
Shirley Ann Jackson, the trip will provide a platform for
university officials to continue forging partnerships with
international leaders and institutions. Through speeches in
Geneva, Paris, and London, the trip also will provide a
platform for Jackson to highlight her message about the
challenge of global energy security.
“Education has the transformational power to help us realize
our collective potential,” Jackson said. “Rensselaer has a long
history of educating students from around the world, but we
must continue to create pathways for exchange by developing and
enhancing international education and research partnerships.
This exchange of people and ideas — across geographic and
cultural boundaries — will help us work together to address the
key energy, health, and environmental challenges of our
time.”
A key objective of the trip is to foster partnerships and
collaboration with some of Europe’s leading policy, research,
and academic institutions on issues of common interest. The
trip will begin with a stop in Geneva on March 16, where the
delegation will meet with Rensselaer alumni and community
leaders and visit the European Organization for Nuclear
Research (CERN), the world’s leading laboratory for particle
physics.
On March 19, Jackson will deliver an address at the
prestigious INSEAD Business School in Fontainebleau near Paris.
She will discuss how such trends as massive population growth,
excessive water use, increased numbers of automobiles, and
skyrocketing air travel volume are combining to make energy
security the critical challenge of our time. Jackson will argue
that a collaborative, innovative, and global response will be
required if we are to achieve a sustainable global energy
framework. She will then explore some of the strategic
technological fronts toward which this innovation and
collaboration should be directed.
While in Paris, Jackson will meet with President Xavier
Michel, Director General of École Polytechnique. Other members
of the Rensselaer delegation, including Acting Provost Robert
Palazzo, Acting Vice President for Research Wolf von Maltzahn,
Dean of Engineering Alan Cramb, and Dean of Science Wei Zhao,
will meet with Professor Sir Leszek Borysiewicz, Deputy Rector
of Imperial College in London.
In another speech at the Institute of Directors in London on
March 21, Jackson will focus on energy security and global
markets. She also will sign a memorandum of understanding with
the University of London — Birkbeck College to promote
educational and research cooperation. The agreement will enable
both institutions to undertake a variety of activities,
including exchanges of faculty and students; sharing of
publications, scientific materials, scholarly papers and
research information; and development of collaborative research
programs.
For more information about Jackson’s positions on key topics
of interest, please see:
— On global energy security: www.rpi.edu/research/energy/.
— On the shortage of U.S. technically skilled workers: www.rpi.edu/homepage/quietcrisis/.
Other members of the Rensselaer delegation are: David
Gautschi, dean of the Lally School of Management and
Technology; William N. Walker, vice president for strategic
communications and external relations; Cynthia McIntyre, chief
of staff; and Dawn (Xia) Chen, director of international
advancement.
Published
March 12,
2007
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