1 hr 29 min

Abbey Speaker Series: Science and Democracy The UNC Program for Public Discourse

    • Politics

Does politics belong in the laboratory? Is science inevitably political or does politics hinder good research? 

As the 12th largest research institution in North America, this discussion is paramount at UNC-Chapel Hill. On February 8th,  the UNC Program for Public Discourse and General Alumni Association  brought together scientists from academia and publishing for Science and  Democracy, an online Abbey Speaker Series event exploring the interplay  of science and politics.

Panelists:

Holden Thorp ‘86 is the current editor-in-chief of Science and former chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel  Hill, a position he held from 2008 - 2013. Before his selection as  chancellor, Thorp taught at UNC for 15 years, during which time he  directed the Morehead Planetarium, was appointed as a Kenan professor  and chair of the Department of Chemistry and served as dean of the  College of Arts and Sciences. Thorp co-founded two biotechnology  companies and has written two books with co-author Buck Goldstein about  higher education's role in entrepreneurship and its relationship to the American people. Between his appointments at UNC and Science, Thorp served as provost of Washington University in St. Louis.

Luana Maroja is an associate  professor of biology and chair of the biochemistry and molecular biology  program at Williams College. Her areas of expertise include  evolutionary genetics, speciation, and landscape genetics, and she  teaches courses on evolution and leads a lab researching the evolution  of barriers to gene exchange. Maroja’s work has been published in  various journals, including Ecology and Evolution, G3, and Nature, and she wrote for The Atlantic about the potential dangers of self-censorship in the sciences in higher education.  Maroja holds bachelor’s and master's degrees from the Universidade  Federal do Rio de Janeiro and a doctorate from Cornell University.

Moderator:
Chris Clemens is Provost and  Jaroslav Folda Distinguished Professor of Physics and Astronomy at the  University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has held numerous  administrative roles at Carolina, including department chair, senior  associate dean for natural sciences, and senior associate dean for  research and innovation. In these roles, he helped launch the  Environment, Ecology, and Energy program (E3P) and collaborated with  chairs to build the research enterprise and develop the curriculum in  the College’s newest departments — applied physical sciences and  biomedical engineering. Clemens holds a bachelor's degree in  astrophysics from the University of Oklahoma and a doctorate in  astronomy from the University of Texas at Austin.

Does politics belong in the laboratory? Is science inevitably political or does politics hinder good research? 

As the 12th largest research institution in North America, this discussion is paramount at UNC-Chapel Hill. On February 8th,  the UNC Program for Public Discourse and General Alumni Association  brought together scientists from academia and publishing for Science and  Democracy, an online Abbey Speaker Series event exploring the interplay  of science and politics.

Panelists:

Holden Thorp ‘86 is the current editor-in-chief of Science and former chancellor of the University of North Carolina at Chapel  Hill, a position he held from 2008 - 2013. Before his selection as  chancellor, Thorp taught at UNC for 15 years, during which time he  directed the Morehead Planetarium, was appointed as a Kenan professor  and chair of the Department of Chemistry and served as dean of the  College of Arts and Sciences. Thorp co-founded two biotechnology  companies and has written two books with co-author Buck Goldstein about  higher education's role in entrepreneurship and its relationship to the American people. Between his appointments at UNC and Science, Thorp served as provost of Washington University in St. Louis.

Luana Maroja is an associate  professor of biology and chair of the biochemistry and molecular biology  program at Williams College. Her areas of expertise include  evolutionary genetics, speciation, and landscape genetics, and she  teaches courses on evolution and leads a lab researching the evolution  of barriers to gene exchange. Maroja’s work has been published in  various journals, including Ecology and Evolution, G3, and Nature, and she wrote for The Atlantic about the potential dangers of self-censorship in the sciences in higher education.  Maroja holds bachelor’s and master's degrees from the Universidade  Federal do Rio de Janeiro and a doctorate from Cornell University.

Moderator:
Chris Clemens is Provost and  Jaroslav Folda Distinguished Professor of Physics and Astronomy at the  University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He has held numerous  administrative roles at Carolina, including department chair, senior  associate dean for natural sciences, and senior associate dean for  research and innovation. In these roles, he helped launch the  Environment, Ecology, and Energy program (E3P) and collaborated with  chairs to build the research enterprise and develop the curriculum in  the College’s newest departments — applied physical sciences and  biomedical engineering. Clemens holds a bachelor's degree in  astrophysics from the University of Oklahoma and a doctorate in  astronomy from the University of Texas at Austin.

1 hr 29 min