
Amro Hamdoun, an assistant professor of biology at Scripps, is a new PopTech science and public leadership fellow.
Scripps
Scientist Selected for Science and Public
Leadership
Fellows Program
New fellows program aims to train young
scientists to improve public communication
Scripps Institution of
Oceanography/University of California, San Diego
PopTech, the renowned international thought leadership and
innovation accelerator network, has announced the inaugural class of participants
in a program to address the crucial need for scientists as socially engaged,
public communicators: the Science and Public Leadership Fellows.
The program, which selected Scripps Institution of
Oceanography at UC San Diego assistant professor Amro Hamdoun and Scripps
alumna Kim Cobb, acknowledges the critically important role science plays in improving
society and the simultaneous decline in public understanding of the field.
President Obama recently stated, “Today,
more than ever before, science holds the key to our survival as
a planet and our security and prosperity as a nation.” PopTech, which is dedicated
to accelerating the positive impact of world-changing people, projects and
ideas, is one of the
organizations seeking to nurture scientific luminaries to transcend their
respective technical communities while becoming visible public leaders, focused
on meaningful outcomes.
PopTech confronts this issue through its long-term commitment and
partnership with the Science and Public Leadership Fellows. PopTech will
provide intensive, high-quality training, a powerful social network comprised
of scientific media and corporate and academic leaders, ongoing mentoring and
opportunities for public leadership and engagement. The fellows, 18 early
and mid-career scientists, receive a year-round set of benefits, beginning with the
opportunity to participate – at no expense – in a special, invitation-only
leadership development retreat at the Banbury Center of the acclaimed Cold
Spring Harbor Laboratory, which convened in August 2010. The Fellows also will
be invited to participate in the annual PopTech 2010 conference, taking place October
21-23 in Camden, Maine.
Hamdoun is an assistant professor of marine biology in the
Scripps Marine Biology Research Division. He is a cell biologist studying how
chemical pollution impacts human and environmental health. Cobb, now an associate professor at the Georgia Institute
of Technology, is a climatologist exploring the mechanisms of global
climate change. She earned a Ph.D. in oceanography from Scripps in 2002.
The PopTech Social Innovation Fellows program, now in its third
year, was the first groundbreaking mentorship series for PopTech, equipping
world-changing innovators with the tools, insights, visibility and social
network that can help them scale their work and truly achieve impact. PopTech’s
commitment to devising new approaches to the planet’s toughest challenges by
leveraging available and burgeoning technology, various modes of communication
and innovation has been a long-standing hallmark of the organization.
PopTech
would like to thank all its partners and
supporters, without whom this vital and innovative program would not be fully
realized. The following have played an integral role in bringing this program
from ideation to inception: Microsoft Research, Intel, Doris Duke Charitable
Foundation, National Geographic, National Science Foundation, Rita Allen
Foundation, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory and the New York Academy of Sciences.
PopTech would also like to thank the world-renowned advisory board who
assisted with the selection of the first class of fellows and participate in
the program’s leadership training program.
About PopTech
PopTech is a new kind of innovation accelerator – a
community of cutting-edge leaders, thinkers and doers from many different
disciplines who come together to explore the social impact of technology and
the forces of change shaping the future. PopTech’s one-of-a-kind network
includes innovators in wide-ranging fields such as science, technology, green
energy, sustainable ecomaterials, violence cessation, design, and the
corporate, entrepreneurial and social sectors. PopTech’s mission is to
accelerate the positive impact of world-changing people and ideas and foster
unconventional collaborations that tackle some of the world’s most significant
challenges and lead to real and lasting change. PopTech is a non-profit
501(c)(3) organization. Garren, who studies coastal and marine issues in Scripps’ Center for Marine Biodiversity and Conservation, was awarded $15,000 as a Switzer Environmental Fellow. The Switzer Foundation awards annual fellowships for emerging environmental leaders “to advance their skills and develop their expertise to address critical conservation challenges.”
Please visit www.poptech.org and www.poptech.org/sciencefellows for more information.
-- Mario Aguilera
September 16, 2010
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