Summary
· The new project will focus on advancing climate change adaptation and vulnerability assessments with a focus on high-quality, relevant, accessible, and impactful applications
Dar es Salaam. The Aga Khan University (AKU) has entered a research
partnership that, among other things, will benefit communities in and around
Tanzania by advancing resilience against the current climate menace, it was
stated yesterday. The new project, they said, will focus on advancing climate
change adaptation and vulnerability assessments with a focus on high-quality,
relevant, accessible, and impactful applications.
This comes after the university
signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the Nelson Mandela African
Institution of Science and Technology (NM-AIST) for the exchange of expertise
and collaboration on research, capacity building, and institutional
development.
According to the two parties’
five-year agreement, facilitated by AKU’s Global Engagement Office and signed
yesterday, AKU will avail its land in Arusha to NM-AIST for research.
“Responding to global problems requires the creation and nurturing of
partnerships. It requires building links across borders and boundaries of all
kinds—between the public and private sectors; between cultures, countries, and
continents; between disciplines and industries,” said AKU Provost and Vice
President for Academics, Dr Carl Amrhein.
“My hope for our partnership is that we will
develop shared strategies for research and policy implementation, involving our
collective student body and faculty. Together, we will make important
contributions to knowledge and demonstrate the power of partnerships and their
impact on the community,” he said.
He said the five-year partnership
will also enable AKU and NM-AIST to establish a long-term, mutually beneficial
relationship that links natural resources and the environment with human,
animal, plant and planetary health—known as the OneHealth concept.
“The uniqueness of our university is
its use of the five D business modes to achieve social and economic
transformation through research and innovation,” said Prof Anthony Mshandete,
Deputy Vice Chancellor for Academic, Research and Innovation at NM-AIST.
According to them, as a result of the commitment to partnership, AKU and
NM-AIST faculty members have begun exploring collaboration on grant
applications, for example in water resource management. According to Dr
Amrhein, AKU recently established its 3,700-acre Arusha climate and
environmental research station in Tanzania. “The site is meant to be a ‘living
laboratory’ for studies related to climate change, environmental stewardship,
biodiversity, sustainable agriculture, community engagement, and other fields.”
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