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Conference Speakers
Biodun Adediran Biodun Adediran is Professor of African History and Deputy Vice Chancellor (Academic) at Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife, Nigeria. He is also the Director of the University's Division of Linkages and Sponsored Research. Before his
present appointment, Professor Adediran was at Ife Director of the
Institute of Cultural Studies, Member of the Postgraduate Academic Board
and Dean of the Faculty of Arts. He was a member of Nigeria's National
Commission for UNESCO and at various times Visiting Professor at the
University of Wisconsin-Parkside, USA and the African Studies Center of
the Univerity of Bayreuth, Germany. Professor Adediran has extensive
experience in higher education management and has served on several
academic accreditation boards in Nigeria. In 2003, he served at the
instance of DAAD on an evaluation Mission on higher education in Eastern
Africa.
Maria Esmeralda Almeida Teixeira Maria Esmeralda
Almeida Teixeira is principal administrator at the Directorate General EuropeAid of
European Commission. She is in charge of the
regional programmes
for Latin America in the field of Higher Education, namely the Programmes
ALFA and AlBan, and has been in this position since
2001.
Sjur Bergan Sjur Bergan is Head of the Department of Higher Education and History Teaching at the Council of Europe (Directorate of School, Out-of-School and Higher Education Directorate General IV - Education, Culture and Cultural Heritage, Youth and Sport). He joined the
Council of Europe in 1991 and has since been involved in most of the
Councils higher education activities, amongst other functions as
secretary to the Steering Committee for Higher Education and Research
(CDESR) and Council of Europe representative on the Bologna Follow Up and
Preparatory Groups. He is responsible for the Councils activities on
recognition and mobility, including the establishment of a joint programme
with UNESCO in this area, Co-Secretary of the ENIC Network. Before joining
the Council of Europe, Sjur Bergan worked in the administration of the
University of Oslo from 1983 until 1991. Sjur Bergan is the editor of
Recognition Issues in the Bologna Process (2003) and, with Nuria Sanz, of
The Heritage of European Universities (2002). Christian Bode Christian Bode is the Secretary General of the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD). (DAAD is the largest scholarship organisation globally, with more than 200 programmes out of and into Germany, and over 60,000 scholarships per year. It also runs many initiatives to internationalise German higher education, and to increase its global attractiveness). Christian Bode
was educated in law, and received his Ph.D. from the University of Bonn in
1971. Between 1972 and 1982 he held different senior positions in the
Federal Ministry of Education and Science. From 1982 until 1990 he was the
Secretary General of the German Rectors Conference (at the time:
Westdeutsche Rektorenkonferenz). Christian Bode is one of the founders of
the Academic Cooperation Association, of which he was a Vice-President
twice. He was awarded numerous honorary doctorates, for example from the
University of Birmingham and the Technical University of Mongolia. He also
holds the French title of a Chevalier de l' Ordre National du Mérite.
Antoinette Charon Waulters Antoinette Charon-Waulters is in charge of international relations, student affairs and Bologna reforms at the University of Lausanne. Since September 2004, she is President of the European Association for International Education (EAIE). Prior to this appointment, she was EAIE Vice-President for a two-year period. Antoinette
Charon was born and educated in Brussels. She worked as an assistant in
Archaeology at the University of Lausanne and became scientific
collaborator for the Swiss Archaeology School in Greece in 1978. In 1991,
she was fully employed to deal with the international relations of the
University of Lausanne, and she has been in charge of student affairs from
2000 onwards. She has worked as a European Credit Transfer System (ECTS)
counsellor for the European Commission and the Federal Office for
Education and Science (OFES) Kate Geddie Kate Geddie is programme officer at the European University Association, working mainly on joint degrees programmes and the EUA joint Masters projects. She joined EUA's Brussels Office in the autumn 2002, in the framework of a partnership agreement with the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada (AUCC). She has stayed on since this experience, becoming a permanent member of staff. Originally from
the Niagara region, she studied Economic Geography at Wilfrid Laurier
University in Waterloo, Canada, and later at the University of British
Columbia in Vancouver where she specialized in urban integration issues of
highly skilled international migrants. Exchange programmes also enabled
her to study in Pietermaritzburg, South Africa, and Liège, Belgium and
gave her a first experience of the benefits of international university
cooperation. Volker Gehmlich Since 1972, Volker Gehmlich is Professor of Business Management at the University of Applied Sciences in Osnabrück, Germany. He is course director of undergraduate and postgraduate double degree programmes. He is also the major initiator of the restructuring of the faculty and the whole institution in terms of modularisation and introduction of a credit based system that is coherent with ECTS. Volker Gehmlich
has been involved in EU-programmes since 1978, and for various functions:
project co-ordinator, assessor of project applications (e.g. EU-US/
EU-CND), contributor to the design of new initiatives, evaluator and
trainer of assessors, EU-expert. He is also active in the Tuning Project,
and the author of various publications on the internationalisation of
organisations, skill needs, and credit systems in particular. Jochen Hellmann Jochen Hellmann is Head of the International Department at the University of Hamburg, a post he has held since 2001. He was educated at the University of Hamburg in Arts in Romance and German Languages and Literature, where he was awarded a PhD in 1991. His main fields of studies are international comparison of university systems, stressing on the European dimension, mobility, university reforms and modernisation of university administration, as well as the introduction of the bachelor master system. Jochen Hellmann
was Department Head for the promotion of Germany as a destination for
research and studying at the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) from
1998 to 2001 and Senior Officer for Research Promotion and European
mobility programmes in Hamburg from 1993 to 1998). Prior to this, he was
officer at the European Liaison Bureau at the University of Hanover and
worked as a lecturer for German Language and Literature at Sorbonne
University in Paris. Rolf Hoffmann Rolf Hoffmann is Executive Director of the German-American Fulbright Commission in Berlin. He has been in this position since 2004. Born in Cologne, Germany, Rolf Hoffmann studied biological sciences at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, USA, and the University of Tübingen in Germany where he was awarded a doctoral degree in 1983. After two years as an assistant professor in zoology at the University of Karlsruhe he joined the policy division of the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation in Bonn and later became Deputy Director of their selection division and the Feodor-Lynen Program. In 1990, he joined the newly created German Space Agency (DARA) as head of the international science and business relations policy office. Since 1991 he worked mainly for the German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD) in Bonn, first as Programme Director (for North American and European programs), then as Director of the DAAD North America office in New York, with an interim (1999-2000) as Director of the German-American Academic Council in Bonn and Washington, D.C. In 2001, Rolf
Hoffmann was appointed Director of DAAD's new International Marketing
Initiative, which combines GATE-Germany (the German Higher Education
Institution's marketing consortium) and the official Secretariat of the
German Government's Joint Initiative for the International Promotion of
Study and Research in Germany. Aurora Iglesias Ortego Aurora Iglesias Ortego is programme manager at the European Commission, where she is in charge of the Erasmus Mundus Programme. She has been working at DG Education and Culture since 2002, first at the School Education Unit (Socrates Comenius). She joined the unit in charge of the Erasmus Mundus programme in September. Aurora Iglesias was born in Madrid, where she was educated and later on worked as a secondary school teacher and principal. During her studies, she worked as a teacher in secondary schools in the UK and Germany. In 1991, the Spanish Ministry of Education sent her to Leipzig to coordinate the teaching of Spanish as a second language in secondary education. She also held lectures and seminars on Spanish Language, Spanish literature and Civilisation in the framework of initial and in-service teacher training programmes at the University of Leipzig. In 1996, she
started working as a translator in the common services of the Committee of
the Regions and the Economic and Social Committee in Brussels. Ulf Lie Ulf Lie has recently become a Senior Advisor of Norways Centre for International University Cooperation in Bergen, after having created this organisation and been its Director until last summer. Earlier on, he was the Director of the Bergen Student Welfare Organisation and the Chairman the Norwegian Student Welfare Organisations. In a different career, he was a Professor of American Literature at Bergen University, and a Vice-Dean. He held a research fellowship from ACLS to SUNY at Buffalo and published books and articles on poetry, art and literature, discourse analysis and language competence in industry. His recent publications focus on internationalisation, commercialisation, and globalisation of higher education. Ulf Lie also has a distinguished track record in educational development cooperation, in which field he championed many successful projects.
Jürgen Lüthje Jürgen Lüthje is the President of the University of Hamburg, and has been in this position since 1991. He was born in
Dievenow, Germany, and studied law in Berlin and Bonn. He was a member of
the academic staff at Bochum University and worked for the
Bundeswissen-schaftsministerium (Federal Ministry of Science), mainly on
the first Framework Act for Higher Education. In addition to numerous
other publications, he co-authored the Beck Commentary on the Framework
Act for Higher Education. He has participated as an expert in numerous
hearings for federal and state parliament committees and has offered
expert opinions in the proceedings of the Federal Constitutional Court.
Salvador Malo Salvador Malo is General Director of the National Evaluation Centre for Higher Education (CENEVAL), Mexico's Centre for the Assessment of Higher Education. With a degree
in physics from the Universidad Nacional de México (UNAM) and a doctorate
in physics from Imperial College at the University of London, he first
worked at the International Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna, Austria. After
that, he held several positions at Mexicos Instituto Mexicano del
Petroleo (an oil industry-related technical and research center),
including Vice-President of Research. He later joined the Mexican
Department of Education and initiated several programs to promote
development of the sciences in Mexican state universities. His past
positions at UNAM include Vice-President for Planning, professor in the
School of Sciences and UNAMs Center for University Studies, as well as
Secretary General and Vice-President of Administration. In addition to his
duties in these positions, he has been actively involved in international
activities. He was a member of the Mexican Task Force Group for
Collaboration in Higher Education in North America, and he is a member of
the board of the Consortium for North American Higher Education
Collaboration. Krishnapratap B. Powar Krishnapratap B. Powar is Founder Director of the Amity Foundation for Higher Learning. From 1993 to 2002, he was Secretary General of the Association of Indian Universities, New Delhi. For the last eighteen years Prof. Powar has been an educational administrator, and has made significant contributions to research and policy planning in higher education. He has published in this field fifty papers and is the author of four books including Internationalisation of Higher Education: Focus on India (2003). He has edited fifteen volumes dealing with different aspects of higher education the last being Private Initiatives in Higher Education (2004). Professor Powar
is also a well-known earth scientist who has made important contributions
to Himalayan Geology and Environmental Geology. He has been a past
Sectional President of the Indian Science Congress and the past
Vice-President of the Maharashtra Academy of Science. He is a Fellow of
the National Academy of Sciences, India. Karel Reus Karel Reus is Manager for International Cooperation in Monash University (Australia). Joining Monash University in 1993 as a senior administrator, Karel took over the budding student exchange program and built that up into the Monash Abroad program. For three years Karel also worked as a manager in the international marketing program at Monash University, with particular responsibilities for Europe, The United States and Indonesia. During 2001-2002 Karel was the manager of the Monash University Centre in London. Before he
joined Monash University, Karel Reus worked as a freelance consultant from
1987 to 1993. During this period, he worked on projects for the Victorian
Education Department, the University of Melbourne and liberal arts
colleges in the United States. Prior to this, Karel lectured Sociology of
Education at the University of Melbourne, and Sociology of Religion at
Melbournes United Faculty of Theology over a period of eighteen years,
and supervised the teacher-training programme at Melbourne University. Angelika Schade Angelika Schade is Managing Director of the German Accreditation Council (DAR), and has been in this position since 2001. She studied Law and Sociology in Münster and Bremen (Germany), as well in Lausanne (Switzerland) and Oñati (Spain). She earned her doctoral degree in 1991 at the University of Bremen, where she worked from 1986 until 1992 as a researcher. After that, she worked for the German Institute for International Educational Research (DIPF) in Frankfurt until 1999. During this time, she also spent nine month as a researcher at the European unit of Eurydice, the information network on education in Europe, in Brussels. From 1999 until 2001, she was head of the accreditation unit at the Central Evaluation and Accreditation Agency (ZEvA) in Hanover.
Peter Scott Peter Scott is Vice-Chancellor of Kingston University and President of the Academic Cooperation Association. Prior to this he was Pro Vice-Chancellor for External Affairs at the University of Leeds, as well as a Professor of Education and the Director of the Centre for Policy Studies in Education. Before going to Leeds in 1992, he was for sixteen years Editor of the Times Higher Education Supplement. Peter Scott was educated at the University of Oxford and at the University of California at Berkeley. He has honorary doctorates from the University of Bath, UMIST, the (former) Council for National Academic Awards, Anglia Polytechnic University and Grand Valley State University. He is also a Member of the Academia Europea and of the Academy of Learned Societies for the Social Sciences. His research
interests are the governance and management of universities and colleges,
non-standard access to higher education and the links between further and
higher education. Among his publications are The
Meanings of Mass Higher Education (1995), Governing Universities (1996),
The Globalization of Higher Education (1998) and
Higher Education Re-formed (2000), University Leadership: The Role of the
Chief Executive (2000), Ten Years On: Higher Education in Central and
Eastern Europe (2000) and Re-Thinking Science: Knowledge Production in an
Age of Uncertainties (2001). Catharine Stimpson Catharine R. Stimpson is Dean of New York University's Graduate School of Arts and Science and a University Professor. Catharine
Stimpson was director of the MacArthur Foundation Fellows Program from
1994 to 1997. She has also served as University Professor at Rutgers,
where, from 1986 she was Dean of the graduate school and vice provost for
graduate education from 1986 to 1992. She is a former chair of the New
York State Humanities Council and the National Council for Research on
Women, and president of the Modern Language Association. Her many
publications include the book Where the Meanings Are: Feminism and
Cultural Spaces and the Library of America's Gertrude Stein: Writings
1903-1932. Educated at Bryn Mawr College, Cambridge University, and
Columbia University, she holds honorary degrees from several universities
and colleges, including Uppsala, Bates, Hamilton, and the University of
Arizona, and has been awarded a Rockefeller Humanities Fellowship. Christian Tauch Christian Tauch is Head of the International Department of the Germand Rectors Conference (HRK), a post he has held since 1995. He is one of the authors of the Trends report on the progress towards the European Higher Education Area, a series of biannual reports produced for Ministerial conferences of the Bologna Process, which maps out the Bologna implementation in each country. He also supported the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research in preparing the Berlin Conference of European Ministers of Higher Education in September 2003. Christian Tauch
was born in Tettnang, Germany. He studied history, international relations
and literature at the University of Konstanz (Germany) and the University
of Massachusetts (US), and taught German language and History at the
University of Ulster (Northern Ireland). From 1988 to 1991, he was a
researcher at the European University Institute in Florence/Italy. Prior
to his current position, he was head of the international office at the
Technical University of Dresden. Hanneke Teekens Hanneke Teekens is presently Director of the Department for International Academic Relations at Nuffic, the Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education. In this capacity she also heads the Dutch Socrates National Agency. Hanneke Teekens
has an extensive experience of more than 30 years as an educationalist,
especially within an international context. She has worked in educational
cooperation and assistance programmes, EU programmes and in the field of
education management, teacher education and professional training. She has
worked as a consultant and manager, often in a co-ordinating role, for the
formulation, implementation, and evaluation of programmes and projects in
different types and levels of education. She participated in the
monitoring of programmes and projects. She conducts international courses
in the capacity of course leader on various aspects of international
education and intercultural studies. She has experience as a researcher
and organiser of international symposia and conferences on education. Ulrich Teichler Ulrich Teichler is a professor at the University of Kassel and the Director of its Centre for Research on Higher Education and Work (since 1978). He was a
Vice-President of the University of Kassel (1980-82) and he acted as an
OECD reviewer of education policies in several countries. Next to EU and
internationalisation, his research focused on admission to higher
education, international academic recognition, academic staff,
implementation of higher education reforms, evaluation in higher
education, curricula in higher education, education and social selection,
and adult education. Professor Teichler is a member of Academia Europea
and a member of the Board of the International Academy of Education. He
has been the president or chair of many international research networks.
He also received the Research Award of the Council on International
Educational Exchange (1997) and the Comenius Prize of UNESCO (1998). Peter van der Hijden Peter van der Hijden is Deputy Head of the Higher Education Unit of DG Education and Culture of the European Commission. The Unit is responsible for Socrates-Erasmus and Jean Monnet. Mr. van der Hijden coordinates the EU contribution to the Bologna process, in particular as regards quality assurance, credit transfer (ECTS) and joint degrees. Peter van der
Hijden was born in Sittard in the Netherlands. He studied Law at the
Universities of Nijmegen, Leiden and Maastricht before becoming an
university administrator at the University of Maastricht, where he worked
for ten years. He joined the European Commission in 1991 and, apart from a
short period in the Directorate General responsible for Transport, worked
mostly in the field of higher education. The development of Erasmus in
general, and of Quality Assurance, joint degrees and ECTS in particular,
has been focal point of his career. Paul van der Velde Paul van der Velde is Senior Policy Advisor and Senior Consultant for the International Institute for Asian Studies (IIAS). IIAS is a postdoctoral research centre based in the Netherlands. Its main objective is to encourage the study of Asia and to promote national and international cooperation in this field. Paul van der
Velde was educated in the Netherlands, Belgium, United States, and in
Taiwan. His main fields of studies are History of Asia, Chinese Art and
language. He has worked as a manager for the Asian market, and as a
scientific collaborator for the European Expansion History Institute. He
has been Head of the Communication Unit and editor of several publications
of IIAS. Paul van der Velde is the founder of the Netherlands Association
for Asia and Pacific Studies, and is involved in several history
associations, foundations and societies, amongst others the International
Convention of Asia Scholars. Pieter van Dijk Pieter van Dijk is the President of Nuffic, the Netherlands Organization for International Cooperation in Higher Education and Research, a post he has held since 1991. After
completing a Masters degree at Amsterdam University in Development
Sociology, Social Anthropology, Sociological Theory and the History of the
Arab World in 1968, his work in the following years concentrated on issues
of development cooperation, in organisations such as the Nuffic, the Free
University of Amsterdam and the Netherlands Foundation for Scientific
Research. Between 1978 and 1990, he was the Head of Policy Bureau
Planning, Evaluation and Multi-Sectoral Programmes at the Royal Tropical
Institute/Amsterdam, before he entered the services of OECD, where he
served a 10-year term as a principal administrator in the Public
Management Service. Before becoming the President of the Nuffic, he was
the Director of the Institute for Social Science Research in Developing
Countries in The Hague. Bernd Wächter Bernd Wächter is the chief executive officer (Director) of the Academic Cooperation Association (ACA), a European association of 20 nationally based internationalisation agencies. In this capacity, which he has held since 1998, he bears overall responsibility for the implementation of all ACA policy. Earlier on (1995 1997), he was the Head of the Erasmus Department in the then Socrates and Youth TAO, which implemented the centralised parts of the Erasmus Programme on behalf of the European Commission. Between 1992 and 1995, he headed the German national agency for the Erasmus Programme inside the DAAD, which also had important national information functions for the COMETT, LINGUA and TEMPUS schemes. His experience with internationalisation also relates to the institutional level, through his functions as head of the international office of the Fachhochschule Darmstadt, and as a departmental coordinator of international relations at the Gesamthochschule Kassel. He has also worked for the British Council. Bernd Wächter
has published and lectured widely on issues of Europeanisation and
internationalisation of higher education. He is the editor of the ACA
Papers on International Cooperation in Education. |
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