Published June 1, 2023
UB has been selected to be the United States host this summer for the Zimbabwe Emerging Faculty Development Program.
Through a grant from the U.S. Department of State to the Institute of International Education, a global nonprofit organization facilitating international exchange, the program will bring nine faculty members from Zimbabwean universities to UB for six weeks, beginning in June. Attendees will learn about biomedical research, pharmacy, university administration, public health and sustainable development.
UB’s Center for Integrated Global Biomedical Sciences (CIGBS) is providing administrative oversight and will develop the curriculum, oversee mentored training, develop micro-credentials and organize a posttraining projects that each faculty trainee will complete when they return to Zimbabwe. CIGBS is part of the School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences.
“This is a great opportunity to build on our 25-year capacity-building collaboration with the University of Zimbabwe, funded primarily by the Fogarty International Center at the National Institutes of Health,” says Gene Morse, SUNY Distinguished Professor and CIGBS director.
Along with Charles Maponga, director of the University of Zimbabwe Center of Excellence in Clinical Pharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciences, and research assistant professor in the UB School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Morse is working to develop a new national university network in Zimbabwe.
“This program will enable the initial group of emerging faculty, representing seven Zimbabwean universities, to contribute to the initiative and hit the ground running upon return to Zimbabwe,” says Maponga, co-investigator of the Zimbabwe Emerging Faculty Development Program.
Additional project contributors include:
“We value our longstanding partnership with the Institute of International Education and welcome the opportunity to collaborate with IIE and our colleagues in Zimbabwe on this important initiative, providing mutual benefit to Zimbabwean universities and the UB projects with which they are involved,” says Nojin Kwak, vice provost for international education.