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Andrew Carnegie Fellows: The Jury

“What distinguishes this initiative is, above all, its extraordinary jury,” said Corporation President Vartan Gregorian. “The selection committee includes the heads of some of the nation’s preeminent institutions dedicated to the advancement of knowledge, including six current and former university presidents. In addition, each proposal was reviewed and rated by at least one of the 25 prominent scholars, educators, and intellectuals who served as anonymous evaluators.”

Mar 28, 2017

The selection committee includes the heads of some of the nation’s preeminent institutions dedicated to the advancement of knowledge, including current and former presidents of universities, foundations, and scholarly societies. 

Chair

Susan Hockfield served from 2004 to 2012 as the sixteenth president of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the first life scientist and first woman in that role. She is now President Emerita, Professor of Neuroscience, and a member of the Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research. As president, Hockfield strengthened the foundations of MIT’s finances and campus planning, while advancing institute-wide programs in sustainable energy and the convergence of the life, physical, and engineering sciences. She helped shape national policy for energy and next-generation manufacturing, appointed by President Obama in 2011 to co-chair the steering committee of the Advanced Manufacturing Partnership. She recently served on a Congressional Commission evaluating the Department of Energy laboratories.

In 2012, under Hockfield’s leadership, MIT launched its online learning platform, MITx, and was quickly joined by Harvard University in creating edX, increasing educational opportunities for learners and teachers across the planet. Hockfield’s research pioneered the use of monoclonal antibody technology in brain research, identifying proteins involved in activity-dependent brain development. She discovered a gene implicated in the spread of cancer in the brain, providing a link between her research and human health. Prior to MIT, she was the William Edward Gilbert Professor of Neurobiology, Dean of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences (1998-2002), and Provost (2003-2004) at Yale University. She studied at the University of Rochester and Georgetown University and carried out research at the NIH and UCSF before joining the faculty at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and then Yale. She has published extensively, in scientific and public media.

Hockfield currently serves as a director of General Electric and the Council on Foreign Relations, and is a life member of the MIT Corporation, a trustee of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, and a board member of the Belfer Center at the Harvard Kennedy School and of Partners HealthCare System. She has received many academic and civic awards, as well as numerous honorary degrees from national and international universities.

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