Director Holdmann Announced as Fulbright Scholar
 
                        
                        
                        					
                        
                        Two researchers from the Âé¶¹¹ÙÍø Fairbanks are among 17 scholars selected
                           as the inaugural cohort of the U.S. Department of State’s Fulbright Arctic Initiative.
 
 Gwen Holdmann, an energy researcher at the UAF Alaska Center for Energy and Power,
                           and Tamara Harms, a biologist at the UAF College of Natural Science and Mathematics
                           and UAF Institute of Arctic Biology, will join their colleagues from eight Arctic
                           nations next month in Iqaluit, Canada, for the launch of their 18-month appointments.
                           Holdmann and Harms were selected from among a pool of more than 100 applicants from
                           the United States and the seven other Arctic Council nations: Canada, Denmark, Finland,
                           Iceland, Norway, Russia and Sweden.
 
 The Fulbright Arctic Initiative is an interdisciplinary collaborative research program
                           to study the changing Arctic region. Launched to coincide with the U.S. chairmanship
                           of the Arctic Council, which begins this week, the initiative supports the U.S. goal
                           of stimulating international scientific collaboration on issues facing the Arctic,
                           while increasing mutual understanding between the people of the United States and
                           the people of other countries. Through international exchanges, three group seminars,
                           online engagement and collaborative research, Fulbright Arctic Initiative Scholars
                           will explore public-policy research questions and engage governments, NGOs, businesses
                           and Arctic communities. The group’s research will focus broadly on the impact of climate
                           change on the Arctic and particularly on the issues of water, energy, health and infrastructure.
 
 The selected group of scholars includes junior scholars as well as established experts.
                           Disciplines range from hard sciences, including geology and biology, to law, sociology,
                           global health and art.
 
 The program will officially launch at an initial group seminar and program orientation
                           meeting in Iqaluit, Canada, from May 17-21. This seminar will follow on the heels
                           of the Arctic Council Ministerial Meeting in Iqaluit on April 24, which will bring
                           together ministers of the Arctic states, including U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry,
                           as the chair of the council officially passes from Canada to the United States. At
                           the seminar, Fulbright Arctic Initiative co-lead scholars Mike Sfraga, of UAF, and
                           Ross Virginia, of Dartmouth College, will guide the research teams in establishing
                           guidelines and goals for their work.
 
 ADDITIONAL CONTACTS: Mike Sfraga, UAF, 907-474-2600, msfraga@alaska.edu. Gwen Holdmann, 907-590-4577, gwen.holdmann@alaska.edu. Tamara Harms, 907-474-6117, tkharms@alaska.edu. U.S. Department of State, eca-press@state.gov, 202-632-6452.
 
 ON THE WEB:
 Tamara Harms information: 
 Gwen Holdmann information: 
 Fulbright Arctic Initiative Scholar biographies: 
 About Fulbright: 
Photo: Gwen Holdmann. Courtesy of T. Paris, UAF.
 
				
