CHAPEL HILL – Research at UNC-Chapel Hill means both big dollars and big impact in North Carolina and around the globe.
“Here at Carolina, we’re proud of the fact that we’re now the fifth-leading research university in the nation,” Interim Chancellor Kevin Guskiewicz says in the accompanying video.
“We’ll top $1 billion in research expenditures for the second year in a row – I think we’re probably going to come in around $1.2 billion,” Guskiewicz says. “And that’s in the absence of a school of engineering.
“It’s really special. But it’s not just the dollars that are important – it’s the impact of the research.”
UNC-Chapel Hill is widely known for its research in medicine, especially cancer. But Guskiewicz recounts some lesser-known research in the humanities and social sciences that also make a huge difference in human lives, such as:
- “Smart cities” designed by city and regional planners working with big data;
- Suicide prevention and attacking the opioid epidemic at the School of Social Work;
- The growing field of cybersecurity;
- And award-winning work in Malawi and Zambia by Dr. Myron “Mike” Cohen to prevent transmission of HIV.1
Nearly all of the work aims to improve human life, says Guskiewicz, a neuroscientist who was awarded a MacArthur “genius grant” himself in 2011 for his innovative work on diagnosis, treatment and prevention of sport-related concussions.2
“I talk often about being not only the first of the public (universities), but we’re the most public of the publics – I say we’re passionately public at Carolina,” he says. “And if you look at the breadth of the research conducted here, it’s so often the case – the impact it has on humankind and improving the human condition.
“I could tell you a hundred great stories about the work being done here in terms of research. But again, we’re proud to be the leading global public research university.”
1 https://sph.unc.edu/adv_profile/myron-cohen-md/.
2https://www.macfound.org/fellows/7/.
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