International Activities at NSF
NSE Grantees Conference December 5, 2011
Machi F. Dilworth Director Office of International Science and Engineering
International Activities at NSF NSE Grantees Conference December - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
International Activities at NSF NSE Grantees Conference December 5, 2011 Machi F. Dilworth Director Office of International Science and Engineering National Science Foundation Supports International Collaborations Science is more
NSE Grantees Conference December 5, 2011
Machi F. Dilworth Director Office of International Science and Engineering
The nation's commitment to research will … take on a more globally connected context as the major issues and problems we face know no boundaries.
Science is more essential for our prosperity, our security, our health, our environment, and our quality
work with our friends around the world.... my administration is ramping up participation in -- and our commitment to -- international science and technology cooperation across the many areas where it is clearly in our interest to do so. President Barack Obama, April 27, 2009
International activities are supported throughout NSF
collaborative research
scientists
Sample International Activities Across NSF
BIO Long-term Ecological Research; Metabolomics CISE Collaborative Research in Computational Neuroscience; Global Environment for Network Innovations GEO Integrated Ocean Drilling Project; Belmont Forum EHR Graduate Research Fellowships Nordic Supplement; Integrated Graduate Education & Research Traineeship ENG Earthquake Research; Synthetic Biology; Nanotechnology; MPS International Collaboration in Chemistry; Materials World Network; Astronomical Observatories OISE Human Frontier Science Program; Global Science Forum OPP Antarctica and Arctic research and education OCI International Research Network Connections SBE S&T Statistics; Science of Science and Innovation Policy
inside NSF
and the State Department with implementation of international S&T agreements
funding organizations
research and education activities
Australia, China, Japan, Korea, New Zealand, Singapore, and Taiwan
collaboration with foreign researchers
laboratories
– Ten days to three weeks, involving lectures, demonstrations, research seminars, and discussions – 25 to 40 students/participants from the different countries in the Americas
with their international collaborators
international research collaborations
agencies
Japan
substantial government investment over the past decade.
(https://nanonet.nims.go.jp/english/), welcomes international partnerships.
international environment: NIMS (National Institute of Materials Science; AIST (National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology; and RIKEN@Wako China
Engineering Center for Nanotechnology); NCNST (National Center for NanoScience and Technology); and CNANE (China National Academy of Nanotechnology and Engineering).
EU
working (slowly) towards a potential joint call in this area. Germany
agreed to:
Ireland
(http://www.nsf.gov/pubs/2011/nsf11070/nsf11070.jsp), the eligible areas include: nanoscale science & engineering; sensors & sensor networks; telecommunications; and energy & sustainability. Nordic Countries
( http://www.nano-connect.org/)
be: 1) an existing NSF center/institute awardee; or 2) a virtual center/institute consisting of multiple investigators holding individual NSF awards with shared research/education interests.
solid foundations for virtual institutes.
to be supported by their own funding sources.