A meeting to consider how research globalization is impacting U.S. R&D within the context of ensuring national security and economic prosperity, and what roles the government, university, and industry sectors may play in this new globalized environment.
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
Harold E. Varmus, Director, National Cancer Institute
RESEARCH GLOBALIZATION STARTING FROM A PERSONAL EXPERIENCE
Jacques Banchereau, Director of Immunological Sciences, The Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine
DRIVERS AND OBSTACLES
John D. Evans, Vice President, International Engineering and Technology, Lockheed Martin
Patricia K. Falcone, Associate Director, National Security and International Affairs Division, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy
Caroline S. Wagner, Ambassador Milton A. and Roslyn Z. Wolf Chair in International Affairs, The Ohio State University
Moderator: Elizabeth E. Lyons, Senior Advisor, Office of the Science and Technology Adviser to the Secretary, and Bureau of Oceans, Environment and Science, Department of State (on detail from the National Science Foundation)
THE INFLUENCE OF PUBLIC POLICY
Daryl Pelc, Vice President of Engineering & Technology, Phantom Works, Boeing Defense, Space & Security
Lee Branstetter, Associate Professor of Economics and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University
Christopher B. Stagg, Associate, Williams Mullen
Moderator: Patricia S. Wrightson, Associate Director of the Board on Global Science and Technology, The National Academies
FUTURE TRENDS
F. Gray Handley, Associate Director for International Research Affairs, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, National Institutes of Health
Alan Shaffer, Acting Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering, U.S. Department of Defense
Erica R.H. Fuchs, Associate Professor, Department of Engineering and Public Policy, Carnegie Mellon University
Moderator: Kent Hughes, Public Policy Scholar, Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars