In his 1969 Annual Report to the United Nation General Assembly, UN Secretary-General U Thant proposed the creation of a “United Nations University, truly international in character and devoted to the Charter objectives of peace and progress”.
The General Assembly ordered a feasibility study and appointed a panel of experts to work closely with UNESCO in examining the potential for building such an institution. The panel submitted a report to the UN Economic and Social Council in September 1972, and in December 1972 the General Assembly adopted the decision to establish the United Nations University (UNU), thereby formally establishing the world’s first international university. A Founding Committee then prepared a draft University Charter and Resolution, both of which were approved by the General Assembly in December 1973.
It was through the generosity of the Government of Japan, which offered to provide headquarters facilities in Tokyo and to contribute US$100 million to establish an endowment fund, that UNU was able to launch its academic work in September 1975.
The first UNU Council and the University’s first Rector, Dr. James M. Hester, were appointed in 1974, and on 20 January 1975 a formal inauguration ceremony for the University was held at its temporary headquarters building in Tokyo. It was there that UNU’s first priority programme areas — world hunger, natural resources, and human and social development — were framed. These priority areas have been refined and built upon over the ensuing three-plus decades to form the five thematic clusters that the UNU pursues today:
Since official commencement of its academic activities in 1975, UNU has worked to live up to its role as an international university by expanding partnerships with academic institutions around the world. During the tenure of the University’s second Rector, Dr. Soedjatmoko, the first UNU research and training institute — UNU-WIDER — was established in Helsinki, Finland, in March 1985.
UNU has since grown to encompass 15 institutes and programmes in 13 countries around the world, as well as some 20 UNU Associated Institutions.
During his tenure the current Rector, Prof. Dr. Konrad Osterwalder, has taken steps (including amendement of the UNU Charter) to provide the University with the ability to confer postgraduate degrees. The first of these degree programmes was launched by UNU-ISP in September 2010, and the University graduated its first master’s degree students in July 2012. Rector Osterwalder also founded the “Twin Institutes” initiative, under which each of the University’s institutes will have two (and possibly up to four) locations: one in a developing country and one in a developed country.
UNU will continue to extend the scope of its global institutional network and build on its list of postgraduate programmes in order to recruit leading academics and graduate students equipped with a truly international mindset and the knowledge necessary to address the pressing issues currently faced by the international community.
While serving as chief academic and administrative officer of UNU, each former rector has contributed much to strengthening the University’s unique position as an academic institution within the United Nations system.
Dr. James M. Hester was the first Rector of the United Nations University. His appointment was announced in November 1974 by United Nations Secretary-General Kurt Waldheim after a world-wide search. He commenced full-time duty as Rector in September 1975. Dr. Hester came to UNU after fourteen years as President of New York University, one of the major institutions of higher learning in the United States. There he earned an international reputation for the role he played in strengthening the university and as a leading spokesman for higher education.
He originally joined New York University in 1960 as Executive Dean of Arts and Science and Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Science. Committed to the concept of the urban university as an agency for the intellectual, cultural, professional and economic progress of the city, he maintained that “the world needs men and women who combine appreciation of their cultural heritage and knowledge of the challenge of urban civilization”.
Dr. Hester was born on 19 April 1924, in Chester, Pennsylvania, and spent his boyhood at various stations to which his father, a United States Navy Chaplain, was assigned, including Hawaii and Samoa. In 1942, he graduated from Woodrow Wilson High School in Long Beach, California.
He attended Princeton University, where he won honours in the humanities and election to Phi Beta Kappa; he was awarded an A.B. degree in 1945. After joining the Marine Corps’ officer candidate programme, he was trained to be a Japanese language officer. He subsequently served in Japan in a civilian capacity as civil information and education officer on the Fukuoka Military Government Team.
In 1947, he entered Pembroke College, Oxford University, as a Rhodes Scholar, earning a bachelor’s degree in philosophy, politics and economics. Upon his return to the USA in 1950, he became assistant to the American Secretary to the Rhodes Trustees.
Recalled to active duty with the Marines in 1951, he served seventeen months as a battalion adjutant and instructor at Quantico, Virginia. After leaving the military, he spent several months at the National Archives in Washington, D.C., doing research for his doctoral thesis. He received a D. Phil. degree from Oxford University in 1955.
After three years of business experience in management consultation and consumer research, he returned to academic life. In 1957, he became Provost (administrative and academic head) of the Brooklyn Center of Long Island University in New York and subsequently Vice President of Long Island University. In 1960, he became Dean of both the undergraduate and graduate schools of arts and science at New York University. He became President of the University in 1962, at the age of 37. The University awarded him an honorary degree (L.H.D.) in 1977.
He served as chairman of the President’s Task Force on Priorities in Higher Education in the United States (1969). He was also President and a member of the executive committee of the Association of Colleges and Universities of the State of New York, and was President and member of the board of trustees of its Commission on Independent Colleges.
Dr. Hester served on the board of the American Council on Education, on the New York State Regents Advisory Council on Higher Education and Regional Co-ordinating Council for Post Secondary Education in New York City. He was the United States member on the Administrative Board of the International Association of Universities and a member of the executive committee of the Association of American Universities.
Upon leaving the UNU rectorship, Dr. Hester served a term as President of New York Botanical Gardens. He then spent 15 years as President of the Harry Frank Guggenheim Foundation in New York, an operating foundation charged by its founder to support research on the causes, manifestations and control of violence, aggression and dominance. This programme is carried out through grants in a wide variety of fields and by conferences and publications. Retiring in 2004, he is currently a lifetime director of the foundation.
He holds honorary degrees from many leading universities and colleges, and is a Chevalier of the French Legion of Honour. In 1981, His Majesty the Emperor of Japan conferred upon Dr. Hester the First Class of the Order of the Sacred Treasure.
Dr. Hester was married in 1953 to the former Janet Rodes. They have three children: Janet, Margaret and Martha.
Dr. Soedjatmoko became Rector of the United Nations University in September 1980. He was appointed by the Secretary-General of the United Nations, in consultation with the Director-General of UNESCO, to succeed Dr. James M. Hester who had been the University’s first Rector. In 1985, Dr. Soedjatmoko was appointed to a second term.
A scholar of international development and politics, Dr. Soedjatmoko published numerous articles in scholarly journals as well as books on the social, economic, cultural and political aspects of development. Among those titles published in English are The Primacy of Freedom in Development (1985) and Development and Freedom, based on his Ishizaka Lectures in Japan, published in 1980.
Dr. Soedjatmoko also played an active role in the international debate on global issues. He was a member of the Independent Commission on Disarmament and Security Issues (Palme Commission), the Independent Commission on International Humanitarian Issues and the Club of Rome. He also served on the Boards of the Aspen Institute, the World Resources Institute, the International Institute of Environment and Development, the Steering Committee of the North South Roundtable, the International Council of The Asia Society and the Council of the International Foundation for Development Alternatives in Switzerland. He was a longtime member of the International Institute of Strategic Studies, London, and was for 12 years a member of the Board of Trustees of the Ford Foundation. He had also been involved with a number of other cultural and academic organizations, for example, he was an International Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, an Honorary Member of the Siam Society (Bangkok, Thailand), and a member of the Jakarta Academy, and was twice a member of The Aga Khan Award for Architecture Master Jury.
From 1971 until he assumed the UNU Rectorship, Dr. Soedjatmoko was Adviser for Social and Cultural Affairs to the National Development Planning Agency of Indonesia. From 1968-1971 he served as Indonesian Ambassador to the United States. Prior to this Ambassadorship, and again afterwards, he was Personal Adviser to the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Indonesia. An earlier phase of his career was in Indonesian journalism, as Director of Pembangunan Publishing Company, Editor of the weekly Siasat, and Associated Editor of the daily newspaper Pedoman. From 1956-1959 he was an elected member of Indonesia’s Constitutional Assembly.
Dr. Soedjatmoko had a long association with the United Nations, having been a member of the Indonesian delegation to the Security Council from 1947-1950 and Alternate Permanent Representative of the Indonesian delegation to the UN from 1950-1951; in 1966 he was Vice-Chairman of the Indonesian Delegation to the General Assembly. Later he was a special consultant to the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific and from 1977-1980 a member of the Programme Advisory Committee of the former Human and Social Development Programme of the UN University.
In 1978 he was the recipient of the Ramon Magsaysay Award for International Understanding (sometimes referred to as the Nobel Prize of Asia). The citation included the following: “The lot of the independent thinker amidst the political tumult of developing Asia is precarious. It is a measure of Soedjatmoko’s positive commitment that concern for himself has not inhibited forthright expression. Nor has he allowed his membership in numerous leading international forums and organizations to divorce his concern from the realities of Indonesian village life.” His writings, the citation noted, have added “to the body of international thinking on what can be done to meet one of the greatest challenges of our time, how to make life more decent and satisfying for the poorest 40 per cent in Southeastern and Southern Asia. In the process he is stimulating others to sharpen their perception and make government and private efforts more relevant.”
In 1985 he was a recipient of The Asia Society Award, presented to four individuals who have made outstanding contributions in their own fields to greater understanding of the Asian/Pacific region. In 1986 he was chosen to receive the Universities Field Staff International Award for Distinguished Service to the Advancement of International Understanding.
Soedjatmoko was born in Sawahlunto, Sumatra on 10 January 1922. He studied at Medical College in Jakarta, Indonesia and at the Littauer School of Public Administration at Harvard University in the United States. In 1961-1962 he was Guest Lecturer in South East Asia History and Politics at Cornell University (USA). He was the recipient of honorary degrees from Yale University, Cedar Crest College and Williams College in the United States; Kwansei Gakuin University, Japan; Asian Institute of Technology, Thailand; and Universiti Sains Malaysia, Malaysia.
In October 1987, after he retired from the Rectorship, he was awarded an honorary degree by Georgetown University, D.C. In introducing him, Elliot Richardson, former US Secretary of State, said that what had impressed him most of all about Soedjatmoko’s career was that “one is talking to a man who has transcended the narrow limitations that divide people”. In December 1989, while lecturing to college students at his old university in Jakarta, Soedjatmoko suffered a heart attack and died at age 67.
Soedjatmoko was married in 1957 to the former Ratmini Gandasubrata. They have three daughters.
Heitor Gurgulino de Souza assumed the office of Rector in September 1987. At the time of his appointment, he was the President of the Latin American University Group, the head of the Planning Commission of the Federal Council of Education in the Brazilian Ministry of Education, and a member of the United Nations University Council.
After leaving UNU in 1997, Professor Gurgulino de Souza was named Special Advisor to the Director-General of UNESCO, a position he held until 1999. He was elected Vice-President of the International Association of University Presidents (IAUP) for the term 1999-2002 and then Secretary-General for the term 2008-2011.
Professor Gurgulino de Souza received his degree in physics from Mackenzie University in São Paulo and did graduate work at the Aeronautics Institute of Technology in Brazil and the University of Kansas in the United States. Since 1959, he has held the chair of Professor of Science at the Julio de Mesquita Filho State University of São Paulo.
In 1962, he joined the scientific department of the Pan American Union at its headquarters in Washington, D.C. During his seven years there, he helped to organize a regional programme for scientific and technological development, and the promotion of research, training and curricular programmes for use throughout Latin America. For most of that time, he also directed the Unit of Education and Research in the Department of Scientific Affairs of the Organization of American States (OAS).
In 1970, Professor Gurgulino de Souza returned to Brazil to help establish the new Federal University of São Carlos in São Paulo State and was subsequently appointed its first Rector. From 1972 to 1974, he was also head of the Department of University Affairs of the Brazilian Ministry of Education and Culture; from 1975 to 1978, he was Director of the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development of Brazil; and from 198O to 1982, he served as Vice-President of the Federal Council of Education of Brazil, of which he had been made a member by presidential appointment.
Professor Gurgulino de Souza has been involved in a number of international organizations active in the promotion of academic research and teaching. From 1974 to 1977, he served as Chairman of the Inter-American Committee on Science and Technology of the OAS Council for Education, Science, and Culture. In addition he was active with the International Council for Educational Development, and the Institute Ajijic Sobre Educación Internacional of Mexico.
Professor Gurgulino de Souza is the author of a large number of articles in the fields of physics, the application of science and technology to development, higher education, and university administration.
He was married in 1960 to Lilian Maria Quilici and they have two sons: Carlos Eduardo and Gustavo Alberto.
Prof. Hans J. A. van Ginkel was born in Kota-Radjah (Bandar Acheh, Indonesia) on June 22, 1940. In l966, he completed his M.Sc. studies at Utrecht University in human and physical geography, anthropology and history, cum laude. His M.Sc. thesis focused on the morphology and functions of Southeast Asian cities in the early 17th century. In l979, he defended his Ph.D. thesis on “Suburbanization and recent residential environments, with a case-study of the Green Heart of the Randstad”, within the social sciences, cum laude as well.
From 1965 to 1968, he was a teacher of geography and history at the Thomas à Kempis College, Arnhem. Ever since he has been active in secondary education as the chair of national committees, in teacher training and in establishing links between secondary schools and universities. From 1988 to 1998 he was Chair of the National Science and Technology Week, a foundation focusing on information to the public, in particular the young, on recent developments in science and technology. In l997, this foundation merged into a larger one, with Prince Claus as the honorary president.
From 1968 to 1985, Hans van Ginkel worked at Utrecht University in the Faculty of Geographical Sciences. In l980, he was appointed full professor in human geography and planning. From 1981-85, he was Dean of Faculty, becoming a member of the Executive Board of the University in 1985, and in 1986 Rector Magnificus. His special fields of interest are urban and regional development, population and housing studies. He was a member — and is now an honorary member — of the Commission on the History of Geographical Thought of the International Geographical Union (IGU), was the Chair of the Organizing Committee of the 28th International Geographical Congress (The Hague, 1996: “Land, Sea and the Human Effort”) and first member and then Board Chair of the Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute (1986-2000).
Prof. van Ginkel has a strong interest in the application of geographical knowledge in society, in particular in urban and regional planning, public housing and housing markets, and public administration. From 1988 to 1993, he was independent Chairman of the Regional Council of Utrecht. He became a Board member of the Utrecht Network for Innovation and Economy (UNIE) in 1994. Prof. van Ginkel was appointed Chair of the Coordinating Committee of Advisory Councils on Science Policy (COS) in 1991 and a member of the National Foresight Committee on Science Policy (1993). From 1994 to 1998, he has been a member of the European Science and Technology Assembly (Bruxelles) and in 1997-1998 member of the National Council for Science and Technology Policy (AWT).
Having a strong interest in internationalization, Hans van Ginkel has contributed to numerous international organizations, for example, the governing board of the International Institute for Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation at Enschedé (President 1990-1998), the Board of the European Association of Universities (CRE, Vice-president 1994-1998), and the Board of the International Association of Universities (IAU, Vice-president, 1995-2000, President, 2000-2004). He was the Treasurer of the Netherlands Foundation for International Cooperation in Higher Education (NUFFIC) from 1986-1997. He also extended the cooperative links of Utrecht University towards Latin America (in particular, Costa Rica and Bolivia), Southern Africa and South-East Asia.
In 1992, he became a member of the Governing Council of the United Nations University; in 1994 also of UNESCO’s Advisory Group for Higher Education and in 1996, member of the Steering Committee for UNESCO’s World Conference on Higher Education (Paris, 1998). In this last capacity he prepared and led among others the thematic debate on “Higher Education and Sustainable Human Development”. He was appointed Rector of the United Nations University in Tokyo in 1997.
In 1992, he was appointed to the Social Sciences Council of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW). Prof. van Ginkel also served as a member and Vice-chair of the Board of Trustees of the Asian Institute of Technology, AIT, Bangkok, as well as a member of the Governing Board of UNESCO-IHE in Delft and of the International Advisory Board of the Institute for Social Sciences (ISS), The Hague.
In 1994, he received a Knighthood in the Order of the Netherlands’ Lion from Queen Beatrix. He also holds the highest medals of distinction of the City of Utrecht, the Chamber of Commerce and Utrecht University. In 1997, he received an honorary doctorate from the Universitatea Babes-Bolyai of Cluj in Romania for his work in geography as well as internationalism. In May 2003 he received an honorary doctorate from State University of California (Sacramento). He has also received honorary doctorates from the University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana in 2005, the Technical University of Zvolen (Zvolen/Slovakia) in June 2006, and McMaster University, Ontario, Canada, in June 2007. In 2001 he was appointed a member of Academia Europaea. He is also a honorary fellow of ITC.
Hans van Ginkel is married to Bep Teepen. They have two children: son Auke and daughter Mapje.
Dr. Ichiro Kato was appointed as first Vice-Rector and General Counsel of the United Nations University on 1 April 1975, while the UNU headquarters was still being organized. He subsequently was named Senior Adviser to the Rector by Rector James Hester.
At the time of his appointment, Dr. Kato was a well-known figure in Japanese academic circles. After a long and distinguished academic career as a legal scholar, he served from 1969 to 1973 as President of the University of Tokyo. During that time, he also served as Chairman of the Association of Japanese National Universities.
Dr. Kato handled administrative and legal affairs for the UNU, and acted as the University’s chief administrator in Tokyo during the Rector’s absence.
Dr. Kato has published numerous books on various aspects of Japanese law. A recipient of the Matsunaga Prize, he was a member of the IAU Administrative Committee and member of the Legislative Council, and served as Vice-Chairman of the Association of Agricultural Laws and Chairman of the Japan Traffic Study Association.
Dr. Walther Manshard, a distinguished specialist on natural resources and human ecology, was Vice-Rector for the Programme on the Use and Management of Natural Resources, a unique endeavour devoted to finding better ways to use the world’s intellectual resources for the practical benefit of humanity. He assumed his post in February 1977, after having achieved worldwide recognition in tropical geography as Professor and Director of the Institute of Geography at the University of Freiburg, Germany.
Dr. Manshard came to UNU after notable careers in both academic and international life. A graduate of the University of Hamburg, where he took degrees in geography, geology and oceanography, and a doctorate in natural sciences, he lectured and taught widely at several universities, including the University of Southampton, University of Ghana and University of Cologne.
Before assuming his post as Director of the Institute of Geography at the University of Freiburg, Dr. Manshard was Professor and Director of the Tropical Institute at the University of Giessen. He also served for three years (197O-1973) as Principal Director of the Department of Environment Sciences and Natural Resources Research at UNESCO in Paris.
Dr. Manshard was Secretary General of the International Geographical Union and served as a member of the Scientific Board of the Federal Republic of Germany’s Ministry for Economic Co-operation, the German National Committee for Man in the Biosphere, and the Executive and the National Science Committees of the German UNESCO Commission. He also was a consultant to the Commission on Environmental Planning of the International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources (IUCN) and to the FAO.
The author of more than 80 papers and six books, of which his work on Africa and his study on Tropical Agriculture (London, 1974) are the best known, Dr. Manshard also edited, on behalf of the German Research Society, a series of thematic maps on tropical Africa.
He is married to the former Kiku Koch, who was born and brought up in Japan. They have one daughter, Andrea.
Dr. Miguel Urrutia, a Colombian economist and labour specialist, was Vice-Rector of the Development Studies Division. Prior to joining UNU, he held a number of governmental posts in Colombia, including Minister of Energy (1977); Executive Director, with cabinet rank, of the National Department of Planning (1974-1977); Deputy Governor of the Banco de Republica de Colombia, in charge of monetary policy; and Adviser to the Monetary Board of the Junta Monetaria de Colombia.
After leaving UNU, Dr. Urrutia was Head of the Economic and Social Development Department at the Inter American Development Bank and Director of Fedesarrollo, a private development research institute, as well as a professor at Universidad Nacional in Bogota. He served as General Manager of the Bank of the Republic of Colombia from 1993 to 2004 and is currently a Titular Professor of Economics at the University of the Andes in Bogota.
Dr. Urrutia has published a number of books on economics, labour and development, including The Development of the Colombian Labour Movement (Yale University Press), Employment and Unemployment in Colombia (Universidad de los Andes), Compendium of Historical Statistics (Nationai University of Colombia) and Income Distribution in Colombia (Yale University Press).
He was educated at Harvard University and the University of California at Berkeley (USA), receiving a Ph.D. in economics from the latter institution.
Mr. Edward W. Ploman, a Swedish expert in international communications, was Vice-Rector of the Global Learning Division. Mr. Ploman brought to the University some three decades of experience in international communications in his native Sweden, Europe and United Nations agencies. From 1972–1981 he was Executive Director of the International Institute of Communications in London. Previously he had worked for the Swedish Broadcasting Corporation and acted as consultant to various Swedish ministries and as a Swedish delegate to intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations. He worked in various capacities for the European Broadcasting Union, the United Nations, UNESCO, UNICEF and other bodies.
Mr. Ploman published numerous books and articles in scholarly journals on satellite broadcasting, communications technology, information flow and communications policy, and planning in development and relevant international law, including International Law Governing Communications and Information (London, 1982).
He was educated at the University of Uppsala, Sweden, where he received an LL.B degree in 1950.
Mr. Ploman died in 1990 at age 64.
Prof. Kwapong was educated at Achimota College (Ghana) and Cambridge University (UK), where he graduated with First Class Honours in Classics in 1951. He joined the faculty of the University of Ghana in 1953, received his Ph.D. in classics in 1957 and became a full Professor in 1962. Professor Kwapong taught Greek, Latin and Ancient History at the University of Ghana for more than a decade and served as Pro-Vice-Chancellor, and in 1966 became the first Ghanaian appointed as Vice-Chancellor.
In 1961-62 he was Visiting Professor of Classics at Princeton University (USA). which awarded him an honorary degree in 1974. In 1976, he joined the United Nations University as Vice-Rector for Institutional Planning and Resource Development. This was followed by three years as International Development Professor at Dalhousie University (Canada) and two years as Director of Africa Programmes for the Commonwealth of Learning, encouraging the development and sharing of open learning/distance education knowledge and becoming a leading spokesman for higher education in the British Commonwealth.
A classicist and an authority on higher education in development, Prof. Kwapong holds honorary degrees from the University of Warwick (UK) and University of Ife (Nigeria). He was awarded the 1981 Simba Prize for Scholarly Essays (Rome) and is the author of many articles in scholarly journals.
Prof. Kwapong has served on numerous boards, including the Aspen Institute for Humanistic Studies and the International Council for Educational Development, the Association of African Universities, the Association of Commonwealth Universities (President, 1971), the International Association of Universities, and the International Council for Philosophy and Humanistic Studies (Vice-President), and was Chairman of the Education Review Committee of Ghana.
After his retirement, Prof. Kwapong was appointed as Chairman of the Council of State of Ghana, an advisory body for the President and government of Ghana. He is married to the former Evelyn Caesar; they have six daughters.
Prof. Kinhide Mushakoji, a Japanese authority on international affairs, was Vice-Rector of the Regional and Global Studies Division of UNU.
Particularly interested in peace research, Prof. Mushakoji is the former Director of the Institute of International Relations at Sophia University, Tokyo, which he founded in 1969, a year after joining the Sophia faculty. He was a visiting professor at Princeton University and Northwestern University (USA) and, subsequently, a Senior Specialist at the East-West Center in Hawaii and consultant to the Committee on Society, Development and Peace in Geneva.
He is a former Vice-President of the International Political Science Association and member of the Executive Board of the Japanese Political Science Association. He is also a member of the Japanese Association of International Relations, the Japanese Peace Studies Association and the International Peace Research Association. Among his publications are An Introduction to Peace Research, Japanese Foreign Policy in a Multi-Polar World and Behavioural Sciences and International Politics.
Prof. Mushakoji was educated at Gakushuin University in Tokyo and the Institut des Sciences Politiques at the University of Paris. He is married to the former Noriko Uchida; they have one son.
Dr. Roland J. Fuchs, an American geographer specializing in development problems and policies, was appointed Vice-Rector of the Development Studies Division on 1 January 1987. Dr. Fuchs had been Chairman of the Department of Geography and Special Assistant to the President at the University of Hawaii, and served concurrently as Adjunct Research Associate at the Population Institute, East-West Center in Honolulu.
Dr. Fuchs, who has been active in both the US and international geographical communities in varying capacities for three decades, has been particularly concerned with spatial population and urbanization and regional development policies. Much of his research and writing has focussed on the countries of Eastern Europe and Asia.
He has been a member of the University of Hawaii faculty since 1958 and Chairman of the Department of Geography since 1964. At the East-West Population Institute, he has been involved in research on urbanization, migration and development. Dr. Fuchs did post-doctoral work in Soviet urban geography and planning at Moscow State University in 1960-61, and was a Fulbright Research Scholar at Tribhuvan University (Nepal) in 1966.
In addition to his academic career, Dr. Fuchs has served the United Nations system in various capacities. He has been a consultant to UNFPA and UNDP, and was a member of the ESCAP Technical Working Group on Migration and Urbanization in 1981.
Dr. Fuchs is a member of the Association of American Geographers, and serves on its Committee for International Cooperation. He is currently First-Vice President of the International Geographical Union and Chairman of its Research Development Committee. He has been active in the US National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council, where he has been Chairman of the Advisory Committee for the International Council of Scientific Unions (ICSU). He was Chairman of the US delegations to the ICSU conferences in Amsterdam (1980) and Berne (1986). He is a member of the Council of the Pacific Science Association and of the US National Committee for Pacific Basin Economic Cooperation.
He has published extensively in scientific journals on development, demography, land use and urbanization. He is co-author Urbanization and Urban Policies in the Asia-Pacific Region and a number of other books on geographical policies and problems, particularly as they relate to development. Dr. Fuchs was educated at Columbia University (New York) and Clark University (Worcester, Mass.), from which he received his Ph.D. in 1959. He is a native of Yonkers, New York (born 15 January 1933).
Prof. Takashi Inoguchi, a Japanese political scientist specializing in international relations in the Asia Pacific region, was Senior Vice-Rector of UNU from April 1995 to 1997.
Prior to his appointment at UNU, he was Professor of Political Science at the Institute of oriental Culture of the University of Tokyo, Prof. Inoguchi also held research and teaching positions outside of Japan, including at the Universite de Geneve (1977-78), Harvard University (1984), Australian National University (1986), University of Delhi (1989), Aarhus University (1990), Johns Hopkins University (1990), Universitas Gadjah Mada (1990), University of California, Berkeley (1993) and Beijing University (1993).
Prof. Inoguchi received Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in International Relations from the University of Tokyo in 1966 and 1968, respectively. He obtained a Ph.D. in Political Science from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) in 1974. From 1974 to 1977 he served as Associate Professor at the Institute of International Relations, Sophia University, Tokyo, and in 1977 joined the Institute of Oriental Culture, where he has been Professor of Political Science since 1988.
Prof. Inoguchi had been a member of the international advisory committees for the Australia-Japan Research Centre, the Australian National University and the East-West Center in Hawaii. He has served on editorial or advisory boards for such journals as World Politics, International Organizations, the International Studies Quarterly, the Journal of Conflict Resolution, the Journal of Japanese Studies and the Review of International Studies. He also contributes to Japan’s policy-making as a member of the Government’s Economic Council, the Council for Stabilization of National Life and the Academic Council.
Prof. Inoguchi has published widely, writing or editing more than 20 books in Japanese and English in the area of world affairs and international relations. His publications include Global Change: An Analysis (in Japanese, Chikuma Shobo, 1994); Contemporary Japanese Diplomacy (in Japanese, Chikuma Shobo, 1993); and Japan’s Foreign Policy in an Era of Global Change (in English, Pinter Publishers, 1993).
Prof. Inoguchi was born in Niigata Prefecture, Japan, in 1944. He lives in Tokyo with his wife and twin daughters.
Prof. Abraham Besrat (1938–2002) was a nutrition and biochemistry specialist. A native of Ethiopia, after receiving his Ph.D. in Biochemistry from the University of Minnesota (USA), he returned to Ethiopia and joined Haile Selassie I University, which later became Addis Ababa University. He had many responsibilities during his time there. First, he was head of the Department of Arts and Sciences, then was promoted to Associate Vice-President for Research and Publications and then he became Dean of the College of Agriculture.
In 1975 he became Provincial Programme Officer for Ethiopia’s National Campaign for Development, a position that entailed setting up and administrating a feeding and rehabilitation shelter for famine victims, under the direction of the Ethiopian Relief and Rehabilitation Commission. In 1978 he was appointed founding Dean of the School of Graduate Studies at Addis Ababa University. While there he put together 23 new graduate studies programmes, some of which led to master’s degrees and some to medical specialty certificates.
Prof. Besrat went back to the USA in 1981 under a UNU fellowship as a visiting scientist in the Department of Nutrition and Food Science at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, where he worked on a UNU/UNICEF-supported research programme on primary health care. Following this, he worked for two years as a consultant advising FAO on nutritional considerations in their agriculture and rural development projects.
Prof. Besrat joined the UNU in 1986 as a Training and Fellowship Officer. He served as the focal point for all of UNU’s training and fellowship activities and was involved with raising funds to support them. In 1989, he was promoted to Senior Academic Officer and took on added responsibility for providing technical backstopping from the UNU Centre for the Food and Nutrition Programme, the Programme for Biotechnology in Latin America and the Caribbean, the Microprocessors and Informatics Programme and, later, the UNU International Leadership Academy.
In 1995, he became Principal Academic Officer. This position gave him greater management-oriented duties, such as participating as part of the University’s Executive Committee, helping to direct the Academic Division and developing new programmes. In 1997, he was appointed Acting Vice-Rector for seven months before becoming Vice-Rector in 1998. He was a member of UNU’s senior academic staff and was responsible for overseeing the University’s postgraduate education programme.
Professor Besrat was married to Tsehai Gebre Selassie; they had two children, Hiruy and Naomi.
Prof. Motoyuki Suzuki is an environmental engineering specialist. He served as Vice-Rector from 1 April 1998 until his retirement in March 2003. He was a member of the UNU’s senior academic staff and worked as part of the University’s Environment Programme. Prof. Suzuki was born in Japan on 7 February 1941. He was educated at the University of Tokyo. After obtaining a Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering, he went to the University of California, Davis, as a Post-doctoral Fellow.
In 1968, he joined the University of Tokyo as an Assistant Professor in the department of chemical engineering. He then worked his way up to Lecturer, Associate Professor and Professor. He also served intermittently as Chairman of the University’s Graduate School of Chemical Engineering. In 1995, he became the Director-General of the University of Tokyo’s Institute of Industrial Science (IIS) (the largest university-affiliated research institute in Japan, consisting of approximately 100 professors and numerous laboratories). During his term in office, IIS improved its budgetary status and increased its academic activities.
Prof. Suzuki encouraged international cooperative research links and instigated 14 such agreements with overseas universities, including a contract between IIS and the UNU Institute of Advanced Studies (UNU-IAS). He also worked hard at improving the Institute’s relations with private research centres and the business community.
Prof. Suzuki is actively involved in eco-restructuring initiatives. He is Principal Researcher on the project Achievement of Zero-Emission Oriented Material Cycle Systems that involves 70 researchers and is funded by the Japanese Ministry of Education. Prior to becoming Vice-Rector at UNU, he was an Adjunct Professor at UNU-IAS where he advised the Institute’s Director on zero-emission programme issues and assisted young scholars with their research.
Prof. Suzuki is the author of 10 environmental engineering books and has published more than 300 papers in scientific journals. He has received numerous awards for his work, such as the Scientific Achievement Award from the Japan Society of Water Environment, the Distinguished Research Award from the Society of Chemical Engineers in Japan, and the Doctoris Honoris Causa from Hungary’s Veszprem University.
Prof. Suzuki is an active member of several professional associations. He is the President of the International Adsorption Society and President of the Japan Society on Water Environment. He also belongs to the American Institute of Chemical Engineers, the International Association of Water Quality, the Japan Absorption Society and the Society of Environmental Science.
His wife’s name is Keiko. They have two children, Hiroyuki and Junko.
Professor Yasui graduated from the Faculty of Engineering, University of Tokyo, in 1968. He received his Doctorate in Engineering from the University of Tokyo in 1973. Since 2009, he has served as president of the National Institute of Technology and Evaluation (NITE).
Prior to joing UNU, Professor Yasui served as a Lecturer at the Institute of Industrial Science from 1975, and became Associate Professor in 1979 and full Professor in 1990. From 1996-1999, he served as Director of the Centre for Collaborative Research at the University of Tokyo. During 1998-1999, he served as representative to the National Conference for Centres for Industry-University Collaboration, and since 2000 he has served as head investigator of the Man-Earth Research Project of the Japan Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology. Prof. Yasui is a member of the Evaluation Committee for Independent Administrative Institutions of the Japan Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare.
He has served on a number of academic societies and associations, including as a member of the Board of Trustees of the Japan Association on the Environmental Studies, as a fellow of the American Ceramic Society and as a member of the Engineering Academy of Japan.
Prof.r Yasui has published some 150 scientific papers in academic journals, 100 papers in proceedings of international conferences, and 30 papers in university publications. He has authored or co-authored some 50 books and written more than 120 articles in commercial and other publications.
Prof. Ramesh Thakur is a political scientist and peace researcher. He was appointed to the position of Vice-Rector on 1 April 1998 and was promoted to Senior Vice-Rector in October 2003. Prof. Thakur served as a member of the senior academic staff at UNU and worked as part of the University’s Peace and Governance Programme (now UNU-ISP). He is currently a Distinguished Fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) and Professor of political science at the University of Waterloo in Canada.
Professor Thakur was born in India on 23 November 1948. After completing his undergraduate degree at the University of Calcutta, he immigrated to Canada where he earned his Ph.D. in political studies at Queen’s University. He moved to New Zealand in 1980, where he joined the University of Otago as a Lecturer in the department of political studies. In recognition of his research achievements, he was appointed Associate Professor and then Professor. He also served intermittently as the department’s acting head. In 1992, the University granted him a personal chair in international relations. He had three significant administrative accomplishments during his 16 years at Otago: he helped to establish the annual Otago Foreign Policy School as the pre-eminent forum for foreign policy debate in New Zealand; he set up an inter-disciplinary major in Asian Studies; and he chaired the Panel to Review University Extension.
In 1995 he was appointed to head of the Peace Research Centre at the Australian National University. While at the Centre, he was involved with policy-oriented research, workshops and dissemination on numerous undertakings, such as the Non-Proliferation Treaty Review and Extension Conference, the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty and the International Campaign to Ban Landmines. He was also a consultant to the Canberra Commission on the Elimination of Nuclear Weapons.
Prof. Thakur has taken on various responsibilities during his career with national bodies in New Zealand and in Australia. He was a member of the Public Advisory Committee on Disarmament and Arms Control (a statutory body chaired by the Minister of Arms Control and Disarmament to aid and advise the Government of New Zealand on security issues) and a member of its Australia counterpart, the National Consultative Committee on Peace and Disarmament. He was also the External Moderator, on behalf of the New Zealand Qualifications Authority, for a diploma and degree programme in international relations at the International Pacific College, prior and subsequent to the college’s establishment.
Prof. Thakur is the author of numerous peace-related publications. His books include 14 volumes in print and an edited collection of papers from the ARF Track Two Seminar on Non-Proliferation, which was held in Jakarta in 1996 and which he helped organize and chair. He has published more than 100 journal essays and book chapters. He has had several articles printed in The International Herald Tribune, The Asian Wall Street Journal, The Australian and The Australian Financial Review.
UNU Council members serve for a period of six-years. Former Council members have included directors of research institutes; university deans, vice-chancellors, rectors, professors or presidents; government officials; consultants; ambassadors; and board chairpersons or trustees. Upon completion of their term, a number of former Council members have remained active within the UN system, serving, for example, as directors or executive directors of UN agencies.
Former Council members are listed here by term of service.
President of Fairleigh Dickinson University
Member of the Académie des sciences; Professor of the Faculty of Medicine, University of Paris
France
Director-General Emeritus, World Health Organization, Geneva
Brazil
Former Rector, Ain-Shams University, Minister of Higher Education and Scientific Research, Cairo
Egypt
Head of Chair of Contemporary Politics, Department of Social Sciences, Warsaw University
Poland
Former President, Haile Selassie I University, Addis Ababa
Ethiopia
State Secretary Federal Ministry of Education and Science, Bonn
Federal Republic of Germany
Vice-Chancellor, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi
India
Former Rector, University of Buenos Aires
Argentina
Director, Centre of Physical Chemistry, Bucharest
Romania
President, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico City
Mexico
Rector, University of Damascus
Syria
(Resigned in January 1976)
Vice-Chancellor, University of Lagos
Nigeria
Vice-Chancellor, University of Sussex
United Kingdom
Rector, University of Montreal
Canada
Chancellor of the Swedish Universities, Stockholm
Sweden
Former President, Japan Broadcasting Corporation Tokyo
Japan
Instituto di Geodesia e Geofisica, University of Trieste
Italy
Deputy Vice-Chancellor, University of Nairobi
Kenya
(Resigned in April 1976)
Ambassador, Deputy Permanent Representative of Japan to the United Nations in New York
Japan
(Resigned in 1974)
Special Advisor to the Prime Minister, Former Minister of Science and Higher Education, Tehran
Iran
Former Director, Venezuelan Institute for Scientific Research, Caracas
Venezuela
Rector, University of Dakar
Senegal
Chancellor, University of Wisconsin, Green Bay
United States of America
Prime Minister, Port of Spain
Trinidad and Tobago
Vice-Chancellor, Islamabad University
Pakistan
Secretary, Social Services and Development
Philippines
Extraordinary Professor, Central School of Planning and Statistics, Warsaw (now Warsaw School of Economics)
Poland
Director, Institute of Biophysics, Rio de Janeiro
Brazil
Minister for Water Development, Energy and Minerals, Arusha
Tanzania
President, Academy of Sciences, Paris
France
Prime Minister Secretary, New Delhi
India
(Resigned in October 1978)
Rector, Catholic University, Lima
Peru
Minister of Education, Amman
Jordan
Director, Centre for Nuclear Study, National University of Zaire, Kinshasa
Zaire
Professor of International Law Vienna
Austria
Ambassador, Permanent Delegate of the Arab Republic of Egypt to UNESCO
Egypt
UNESCO National Commission of Yugoslavia, Belgrade
Yugoslavia
Vice-Chancellor, University of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia
Vice-Chancellor, University of Ghana, Legon, Accra
Ghana
(Resigned in April 1984)
Professor and Chairman, Department of Sociology, Dartmouth College, New Hampshire
United States of America
Chairman, University Grants Commission, New Delhi
India
Vice-Chancellor, University of Cross River State
Nigeria
(Appointed in July 1984)
Vice-Chancellor and Principal, University of Guyana
Jamaica
(Resigned in June 1984)
President of the Council, Free University of Brussels
Belgium
Minister of Economics and Transportation of Land North Rhine-Westphalia, Dusseldorf
Federal Republic of Germany
Chairman, University Grants Commission; Secretary, Ministry of Higher Education, Colombo
Sri Lanka
Secretary-General, International Council of Scientific Unions (Paris); Director-General, European Molecular Biology Laboratory (Heidelberg)
United Kingdom
Secretary-General, Swedish Agency for Research Cooperation with Developing Countries (SAREC), Stockholm
Sweden
President, Foreign Press Center of Japan, Tokyo
Japan
Rector, University of Abidjan
Cote d’Ivoire
President, El Colegio de Mexico, Mexico City
Mexico
Rector, University of Petroleum and Minerals, Dhahran
Saudi Arabia
Chairman, National Bank of Sudan, Khartoum
Sudan
Technical Counselor, Office of the President of the Republic of Senegal, Dakar
Senegal
Professor, Signals and Systems Laboratory, Advanced School of Electricity, Gif-sur-Yvette
France
Director Institute for World Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest
Hungary
(Resigned in April 1986)
Dean, Population Institute, University of the Philippines
Philippines
Professor of Microbiology, University of Finland, Helsinki
Finland
(Appointed in May 1985)
Vice-Chancellor, University of Zimbabwe, Harare
Zimbabwe
Pro-Vice-Chancellor, University of the West Indies, Kingston
Jamaica
(Appointed in May 1985)
Former Caretaker Prime Minister, Lisbon
Portugal
Director, Institute of World Economy and International Relations USSR Academy of Sciences, Moscow
USSR
Former Ambassador of Peru to UNESCO
Peru
Deputy Director, Division of Information Science and Methodology, Institute of Scientific and Technical Information of China, Beijing
People’s Republic of China
Professor of History and Law, Howard University, Washington, DC
United States of America
Rector, Universidad Javeriana, Bogota
Colombia
Chairman, Italian National Agency for Atomic and Alternative Energy Sources (ENEA), Rome
Italy
Former Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to the Republic of Iraq and to the Federative Republic of Brazil
Japan
(Appointed in 1987)
President, Magdalen College, Oxford University
United Kingdom
Physics Department, Universidade Estadual Paulista
Brazil
(Resigned in 1987)
University of Dakar
Burkina Faso
President, Sociedade Brasileira de Instrucao, Rio de Janeiro
Brazil
(Appointed in 1987)
Secretary, Department of Science and Technology, Government of India, New Delhi
India
Principal Secretary, Ministry of Education and Senior Lecturer, University of Dar-es-Salaam
Tanzania
Deputy Director, Institute for World Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest
Hungary
(Appointed in 1987)
Chairman, Bangladesh Institute of Development Studies, Dhaka
Bangladesh
Kyorin University, Special Adviser to the Crown Prince’s Household and Member of the Provisional Council on Educational Reform, Tokyo
Japan
(Resigned in December 1987)
Faculty of Law, University of Geneva, and President of the International Association of Universities
Switzerland
Professor and former Chairman, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris
France
Deceased
Chairman, Petroleum Authority of Thailand, Bangkok
Thailand
Chairman, Instituto de la Paz, Universidad del Pacifico, Lima
Peru
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary and Permanent Representative of Jamaica to the United Nations in New York
Jamaica
Chairman, World Affairs Council, Amman
Jordan
Vice-Chancellor, University of Swaziland, Kwaluseni
Swaziland
Director, Institute of World Economy and International Relations, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow
USSR
Prof. and Researcher, Institut Universitaire de la Rechereche Scientifique, Universite Mohammed V (Rabat)
Morocco
Resigned in 1993
Rector, Polytechnical University of Madrid
Spain
Professor of International Relations, University of Helsinki
Finland
Professor of Mathematics, Université National de la Cote d’Ivoire, Abidjan
Cote d’Ivoire
Director, Department of International Cooperation, State Science and Technology Commission, Beijing
People’s Republic of China
(Resigned in 1991)
Minister of Industry and Trade, Czech Republic
Czech Republic
(Resigned in December 1995)
Former Permanent Representative of Japan to the United Nations in New York
Japan
Professor of Economics and Chairperson, Economics Department, Cairo University, Cairo
Egypt
Professor Emeritus,Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology, Seoul
Republic of Korea
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to France
Mali
Former Secretary of Science and Technology of the Presidency, Government of Brazil
Brazil
Professor University of Sudbury, Ontario
Canada
Bhatnagar Fellow (CSIR), National Physical Laboratory, New Delhi
India
Inspector-General In Charge of Higher Education, Ministry of Higher Education, Yaounde
Cameroon
Honorary President, Grupo Universitario Latino-Americano (GULERPE)
Venezuela
Senior Vice-President, MacArthur Foundation, Illinois
United States of America
Director, Queen Elizabeth House, Oxford University
United Kingdom
UNU Rector from 1 September 1997 to 31 August 2007
Rector Magnificus and Professor of Human Geography, Utrecht University, The Netherlands
The Netherlands
Director-General, Department of International Cooperation, State Science and Technology Commission (SSTC), Beijing
China
Professor University of the Gambia, Banjul, Gambia; former Consultant in Higher Education Management, The Ford Foundation, Johannesburg, South Africa; former Secretary-General, Association of African Universities, Accra, Ghana; and former Vice-Chancellor, Port Harcourt University, Nigeria
Nigeria
Sindaco (Mayor), Comune di Venezia; Professor, Department of Economic Science, Universita Ca’ Foscari di Venezia; former Minister of Public Works, Ministry of Public Works, Government of Italy; former Rector and Professor of Regional Economics, University Ca’ Foscari of Venice, Italy
Italy
Former Prime Minister of Lebanon and former Minister of Education, Government of Lebanon
Lebanon
Head, Department of World Physical Geography and Geoecology, Faculty of Geography, Moscow State University, Russian Federation; and former Assistant Secretary-General of the United Nations and Assistant Executive Director of the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
Russian Federation
Director, Laboratoire d’Anthropologie Sociale, Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, College de France
France
Chancellor, University of Helsinki; former Rector, University of Helsinki; Vice-Chairman, Finnish Council of University Rectors, Finland
Finland
President, Foundation for Community Development (FDC); Chairperson, National Organization of Children of Mozambique; former Minister of Education and Culture, Government of Mozambique
Mozambique
Executive Director, Corporacion Latinoammericana para el Desarrollo CLD, Quito, Ecuador
Equador
Vice-Chancellor, University of New England; former Vice-Chancelor (Academic), University of Canberra, Australia
Australia
Director, Programa Educacion, Fundacion Chile; and former Minister, Ministry of the Secretary-General, Government of Chile
Chile
Member of Parliament (Upper House), India; Vice-Chairman, Sardar Patel Institute of Economic and Social Research; and former Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Science and Technology and Power, Government of India
India
Former President, Kuwait University, Safat, Kuwait
Kuwait
Former President, Conference of European Rectors (CRE)- Association of European Universities); and former Rector, University of Barcelona, Spain
Spain
Deputy Director-General and Head, Department of Technical Cooperation, International Atomic Energy Agency; and former Research Prof., Institute of Physics, National University of Mexico (UNAM), Mexico
Mexico
Head, Department of Development Studies, University of London, United Kingdom
U.K./New Zealand
President, California State University, Sacramento, California, USA
USA
Director, International Centre for Chemical Studies, University of Ljubljana, Slovenia
Slovenia
Secretary-General, Ministry of Science and Technology, Beijing, People’s Republic of China
China
Former Ministre Conseiller spécial du Président de la République, Dakar; and former Rector, Université Gaston-Berger de Saint-Louis, Senegal
Senegal
Independent Consultant in Higher Education; and former Vice-Chancellor, University of Durban, South Africa
South Africa
Former Rector, Suranaree University of Technology, Thailand
Thailand
Pro-Rector, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium
Thailand
Consultant on Higher Education; and former Special Adviser to the Director-General of UNESCO for Latin America and the Caribbean, Managua, Nicaragua
Nicaragua
Member, International Law Commission of the United Nations; and former Prof. of International Law, Faculty of Law, Waseda University, Tokyo, Japan
Japan
Ambassador of Namibia in Germany
Namibia
Prof., King Saud University, Faculty if Administrative Science, Department of Law
Tunisia
Ambassador and Permanent Delegate of the Islamic Republic of Iran to UNESCO
Iran
Rector, Colegio do Brazil
Brazil
Rector, University of Yaounde I
Cameroon
Prof., Centre de Recherches de Climatologie, Universite de Bourgogne-UMR CNRS
France
Minister, Thurigian Ministry for Science, Research and Art
Germany
Prof., Director-General, National Research and Development Centre for Welfare and Health (STAKES)
Finland
Minister of Higher Education; Rector, Universidad de la Habana
Cuba
Rector, St. Petersburg State University
Russian Federation
President, Qatar University
Qatar
Director, Division of Science Policy and Sustainable Development, Natural Science Sector, UNESCO
Mozambique
Former Under-Secretary-General for Disarmament Affairs, United Nations, New York; former Ambassador and Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the United Nations in Geneva
Sri Lanka
Professor, Facultad de Ciencias Sociales, Universidad Nacional Mayor de San Marcos
Peru
Trustee, Gulbenkian Foundation; former Minister of Education of Portugal
Portugal
Independent Consultant; Former Counselor, Permanent Mission of the People’s Republic of China to the United Nations
China
Professor of Social Communication, Tartu University; former Minister of Social Affairs, Estonia
Estonia
Professor of Contemporary Philosophy and Logic; former Rector, Babes-Bolyai University
Romania
Geologist and Research Professor, Research Center for Oceanography, Indonesian Institute of Sciences
Indonesia
Former Secretary-General, Association of African Universities; former Vice-Chancellor and Professor of Law, University of Ghana
Ghana
President, Foreign Press Center/Japan; former Ambassador of Japan to Mexico, Belize, and Republic of Korea
Japan
Head and Senior Researcher, Department of Science Studies, Venezuelan Institute for Scientific Research
Venezuela
Consultant, American Council on Education; Former President, American Council on Education
United States
Professor of Management and Professional Development, King’s College London, University of London
United Kingdom