HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries...

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HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014 All photos are part of the Office of Internaonal Educaon’s annual photography contest and were taken by Harvard undergraduates engaged in study, work, internship, or research abroad.

Transcript of HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries...

Page 1: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE

October 1-2, 2014

All photos are part of the Office of International Education’s annual photography contest and were taken by Harvard undergraduates engaged in study, work, internship, or research abroad.

Page 2: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

COL Harvard College Undergraduate

FAS Faculty of Arts and Sciences (includes College, SEAS, and GSAS)

SEAS School of Engineering and Applied Sciences

GSAS Graduate School of Arts and Sciences

GSD Graduate School of Design

GSE GraduateSchoolofEducation

HAA HarvardAlumniAssociation

HBS Harvard Business School

HDS Harvard Divinity School

HKS Harvard Kennedy School

HLS Harvard Law School

HMS Harvard Medical School

RIAS RadcliffeInstituteforAdvancedStudy

SPH School of Public Health

HSDM School of Dental Medicine

UNIV University

Key to Acronyms Used in Charts and Materials

HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATEGLOBAL ADVISORY COUNCIL

October 1-2, 2014

Harvard Faculty & StudentsHarvard Alumni

HarvardInternationalFundraisingHarvard’s Global Reach

Page 3: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

2935

4632

16%

22%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

0

1000

2000

3000

4000

5000

6000

Source: Harvard University Fact Book (duplicated headcounts)

HARVARD FACULTY & STUDENTS International Data for 2014

InternationalEnrollmentatHarvardEnrollment and percentage, 1999-00 to 2014-14

InternationalEnrollmentattheSchoolsEnrollment by school, 2002-3 and 2013-14

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

HMS HDS HSDM GSE GSD SPH HLS HKS COL HBS GSAS

8% 12% 22% 14% 41% 34% 19% 46% 11% 31% 33%

2002-2003 2013-2014

Page 4: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

HarvardInternationalStudents:Top5HomeCountriesEnrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

2000

-01

2001

-02

2002

-03

2003

-04

2004

-05

2005

-06

2006

-07

2007

-08

2008

-09

2009

-10

2010

-11

2011

-12

2012

-13

2013

-14

Institutionalgrantaidtointernationalstudentsgrew$10million(11%)overthepastfouryears.

GrantAidtoInternationalStudents$million,institutionalgrantaid,FY09-FY13

$89

$93 $93

$98

$99

$82

$84

$86

$88

$90

$92

$94

$96

$98

$100

$102

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Mill

ions

556

686

251304

202

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Canada

China

India

South Korea

UK

556

686

251304

202

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Canada

China

India

South Korea

UK

556

686

251304

202

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Canada

China

India

South Korea

UK

556

686

251304

202

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Canada

China

India

South Korea

UK

556

686

251304

202

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

1990

1991

1992

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

2004

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

Canada

China

India

South Korea

UK

Source: Harvard University Fact Book (duplicated headcounts)

Source: Harvard Office of Institutional Research

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GrantAidtoInternationalStudents:TopCountries$million,institutionalgrantaid,FY13

$2.1 $2.4 $2.5 $2.5$3.3

$5.2 $5.3 $5.5

$12.0

$14.6

$0

$2

$4

$6

$8

$10

$12

$14

$16

Israel Australia Turkey Mexico Germany SouthKorea

UnitedKingdom

India Canada China

87 111 80 125 133 297 200 277 615 693

Mill

ions

Source: Harvard Office of Institutional Research

GrantAidtoInternationalStudentsbySchool$million,institutionalgrantaid,FY13

$0.2 $1.2 $1.7 $1.8$3.0

$4.5 $4.9

$8.6$10.4

$25.9

$37.1

$0

$5

$10

$15

$20

$25

$30

$35

$40

HSDM HDS GSE HMS GSD SPH HLS HKS HBS COL GSAS

Mill

ions

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Harvard College Students’ Global Experiencesfor academic year 2013-14

Total of 2,701 students who traveled abroad

Internship/Service Work/

Volunteer 26.81%

Research 9.93%

Study Abroad 61.81%

Other Academic

1.44%

GraduatingSeniorswhoreportedhavinga“meaningfulinternationalexperience”atHarvard:2011:52.5%2012:58.1%2013:57.1%2014:58.0%

InternationalTravelbyStudents,Faculty,andStaffToptraveldestinations,FY14

718

331282 264 258 245 243 227 223 223

0

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

800

China Italy Japan India UnitedKingdom

Turkey France Spain Brazil SouthAfrica

Tota

l trip

s m

ade

Source: self-reported data from the Harvard Travel Registry, maintained by Global Support Services. Travel data for Harvard College students is com-prehensive, but data for faculty, graduate students, and staff is less so. Therefore, these figures likely undercount total travel.

Source: Harvard Global Support Services

Page 7: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

InternationalFaculty2002-3 to 2013-4

1174 1165 1163 1164 1169 1168 1154 1124 1103 1096 1086 1074

545 566 576 592 613 623 618 616 625 631 623 606

0

200

400

600

800

1000

1200

1400

1600

1800

2000

2002-03 2003-04 2004-05 2005-06 2006-07 2007-08 2008-09 2009-10 2010-11 2011-12 2012-13 2013-14

32% 33% 33% 34% 34% 35% 35% 35% 36% 37% 36% 36%

Source: Harvard Human Resources. PeopleSoft data, snapshot date 10/31. Unduplicated count of ladder faculty holding paid positions. “International”: any faculty member for whom any of the following are true: currently a non-resident alien; currently a citizen of a foreign country; born in a foreign country; received education in a foreign country.

Thenumberofinternationalfacultyhasgrown11%since2003-4.

Page 8: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

HARVARD ALUMNI WORLDWIDEInternational data for 2014

6840

5432

3287

2242 2211 2082 1891 1775 1713 1622

UnitedKingdom

Canada Japan Australia France Germany India People'sRepublic of

China

Switzerland Singapore

39

1513

6 5 4 3

Europe Asia and Pacific Latin America Canada South Asia Middle East Africa

NumberofAlumniResidents:Top10Countries

Number of Harvard Clubs by Region

Source: Harvard Alumni Association and Harvard Worldwide

Page 9: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

HARVARD FUNDRAISINGInternational data for 2014

Int’l % of total 10% 20% 14% 12% 9% 22%

$684

$478$543

$740

$1,094

$1,306$76

$118$89

$97

$108

$370

$0

$200

$400

$600

$800

$1,000

$1,200

$1,400

$1,600

$1,800

2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Source: University Development Office

$352.0

$215.6

$80.6

$91.2

$58.6

$38.3 $5.2

Asia and Pacific

Europe

South Asia

Latin America

Middle East

Canada

Africa

InternationalGivingbyRegionFY09-FY14Regionalbreakdownbycontribution

Int’l

U.S.

InternationalGivingFY 09-FY14

Page 10: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

InternationalGivingbyCountryFY09-FY14,Top10countriesbycontribution

$204.3

$102.4 $100.2

$75.3$64.4

$38.3$29.7 $27.2 $24.7 $21.0

$0

$50

$100

$150

$200

$250

China India U.K. Brazil Hong Kong Canada Turkey Switzerland Indonesia Greece

InternationalGivingbySchoolDollars raised by school in FY 09-FY14

NumberofInternationalDonorsBreakdown by school in FY 09-FY14

Source: University Development Office

$0.2 $0.5 $2.6 $4.5 $10.9 $11.2 $17.2$25.1

$84.6$94.9

$116.4$124.2

RIAS HSDM HDS GSD GSE SPH HMS HLS HKS FAS UNIV* HBS

$ M

illio

ns

107 192 351 387 634 683 7361203

2124 2372

8572

9799

HSDM HDS HMS RIAS GSE SPH GSD UNIV HLS HKS HBS FAS

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InternationalGiving:DonorStatisticsFY 09-FY14

Donationtype

Breakdown of individual donor pool

Other Individual

65%

Parent 4%

Alum31%

TotalNumberofInternationalGifts: 26,980

InternationalGiftsmadeup15%oftheUniversityGivingtotal.

Source: University Development Office

Individual58%Corporation

29%

Other Organizations

13%

* Includes funding from Governments, Foundations, Educational Institutions, Museums, Non-Profit Organizations, and Religious Organizations

*

Page 12: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

HARVARD’S GLOBAL REACH International data for 2014

InternationalSponsoredResearchFundingFY 04-FY14

Funding from non-US sponsors grew 182%($ million)

$17$19 $20

$22 $21

$28$30

$33

$38$41

$48

$0

$10

$20

$30

$40

$50

$60

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Mill

ions

SponsoredResearchProjectswithInternationalActivity*:Expenses$million,FY04-FY14

*Includes projects that a) had a foreign country in the title or description of the project, b) listed a foreign country as the location of the project, c) gave a subcontract to a foreign recipient, or d) had a foreign sponsor. Excludes funding for PEPFAR (President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief), which peaked at $67 million in 2009.

$99 $100$107

$94

$108$121 $118

$129

$146

$166 $166

$0

$20

$40

$60

$80

$100

$120

$140

$160

$180

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

Source: Office for Sponsored Programs *Includes projects that a) had a foreign country in the title or description of the project, b) listed a foreign coun-try as the location of the project, c) gave a subcontract to a foreign recipient, or d) had a foreign sponsor. Excludes funding for PEPFAR (President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief), which peaked at $67 million in 2009.

Page 13: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

Harvard Centers & Programs Engaged in Global ResearchAga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture at Harvard & MITAsh Center for DemocracyAsia CenterBelferCenterforScienceandInternationalAffairsBerkman Center for Internet & SocietyBertarelliPrograminTranslationalNeuroscienceandNeroengineeingCarr Center for Human Rights PolicyCenterforBiostatisticsinAIDSresearchCenter for Environment and TechnologyCenter for European StudiesCenter for Health and the Global EnvironmentCenter for Health Decision ScienceCenter for Hellenic StudiesCenterforInternationalDevelopmentCenter for Jewish StudiesCenter for Middle Eastern StudiesCenterforPopulationandDevelopmentStudiesCenter for Public LeadershipCenter for the Study of World ReligionsChinaInitiativeCommitteeonAfricanStudiesCommitteeonAustralianStudiesDavidRockefellerCenterforLatinAmericanStudiesDavis Center for Russian and Eurasian StudiesDubaiHarvardFoundationforMedicalResearchDumbarton OaksEast Asian Legal Studies ProgramEnvironmental Law ProgramFairbank Center for Chinese StudiesFrancois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human RightsGlobalEquityInitiativeHarvard-YenchingInstituteHarvardBusinessSchoolGlobalInitiativeHarvard China Fund

Harvard China ProjectHarvard Environmental Economics ProgramHarvardGlobalHealthInstituteHarvardHumanitarianInitiativeHarvard Law School Project on DisabilityHarvardMalariaInitiativeHarvard Program in Ethics and HealthHarvard Program in Refugee TraumaHarvardSchoolofPublicHealthAIDSInitiativeHarvardUkrainianResearchInstituteHarvard University Center for the EnvironmentHarvard University HerbariaHarvard Center for Risk AnalysisHuman Rights ProgramInstituteforGlobalLawandPolicyInternationalHealthSystemsProgramIslamic Legal Studies ProgramKoreaInstituteLabor and Work-life ProgramMossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and GovernmentPrince Alwaleed Bin Talal Islamic Studies ProgramProgram in Health Care FinancingProgramonHumanitarianPolicyandConflictResearchProgramonInternationalFinanceSystemsProgramonNegotiationProgram on the Legal ProfessionReischauerInstituteofJapaneseStudiesSouthAsiaInstituteThe Kokkalis Program on Southeastern and East-Central EuropeUn Buen Comienzo (A Good Start)VillaITatiW.E.B.DuBoisInstituteforAfricaandAfrican-AmericanResearchWeatherheadCenterforInternationalAffairsWIDE World

HarvardGlobalEngagement:LocationsAbroad

Source: International Strategy Working Group, updated by Office of the Vice Provost for International Affairs

DRCLASMexico&CentralAmericaOfficeMexico City, MexicoEst.:2013

DRCLASChileRegionalOfficeSantiago,ChileEst.:2002

HBSLatinAmericaResearchCenterBuenosAires,ArgentinaEst.:2000

Botswana-Harvard PartnershipGabarone, BotswanaEst.:1996

DRCLASBrazilOfficeSão Paulo, BrazilEst.:2006

Africa Academy for Public HealthDar es Salaam, TanzaniaEst.:1999

HKS Fulbright Economics Teaching ProgramHo Chi Minh City, Viet NamEst.:1994

HBS India Research CenterMumbai, IndiaEst.:2006

Center for Hellenic StudiesNafplion, GreeceEst.:2008

HBS Europe Research CenterParis, FranceEst.:2003

VillaITattiFlorence, ItalyEst.:1959

HBS Istanbul Research CenterIstanbul, TurkeyEst.:2013 Harvard Center Shanghai

Shanghai, ChinaEst.:2010

HBSAsia-PacificResearchCenterHong KongEst.:1999

HBS Japan Research CenterTokyo, JapanEst.:2002

DRCLAS: David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies,HBS:Harvard Business School, HKS: Harvard Kennedy School

Page 14: HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE October 1-2, 2014...Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 2000-01 2001-02

InternationalPartnerships,SelectedExamplesThefollowingareselectedexamples,intendedtoillustratethebreadthofHarvard’sglobalpartnerships.Becausepartnershipstakemanyforms,oftendonotinvolvefor-malagreements,andmaystartandendwithlittlenotice,thefollowingshouldbeconsideredasampleofHarvard’sinternationalpartnerships,notacomprehensivelist.

Harvard Law SchoolInternational Human Rights Clinic – partnerships with various internationalNGOsandlawclinicstoenhancehumanrightsandhumanrightslaw.

OpenNet Initiative – partnership between the University of To-ronto, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, and HLS to identifyanddocumentinternetfilteringandsurveillance.

Youth and Media Project –partnershipwiththeUniversityofSt.Gallen(Switzerland)researchingyoungpeople’sdigitalpractices.

Exchange program with Universidad de Chile Law School.J.D./LL.M.JointDegreeProgramwithUniversityofCambridge

Harvard School of Public HealthBotswana-Harvard PartnershipservesasaresearchplatformforHSPHfacultyinBotswanaandtrainingresourceinBotswana.

FMUSP Laboratory Research Collaborative – partnership with University of São Paulo Medical Schol (FMUSP) to bring FMUSP undergraduate students to HSPH for one year to conduct labora-toryresearch.

China Initiative – partnership with Tsinghua University to pro-motecollaborativeresearch,studentexchange,andexecuiveeducation.

Harvard Kennedy SchoolEnergy Technology Innovation Program – partners with Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology and other Chinese partners, andwithIndianEnergyandResourcesInstitute,todevelopandpromoteeffectivestrategiesforenergyefficiency.

US-Russia Initiative to Prevent Nuclear Terrorism – partners withRussianAcademyofSciencestoidentifystepsUS,Russia,andothercountriescantaketopreventnuclearterrorism.

Mexico Program – partnership with Graduate School of Public AdministrationandPublicPolicy(EGAP)atTecnologicodeMon-terrey(ITESM)topromotecollaborationinresearch,teaching,studentexchange,executiveeducation.

Nonprofits in China Program – partnership with Center for Civil SocietyStudiesatPekingUniversitytodocollaborativeresearchandconductexecutiveeducation.

Multidisciplinary Program on Inequality and Social Policy – partnershipswith13Europeanuniversities,allowinganexchangebetweenHarvardPhDcandidatesandstudentsfromthoseinsti-tutions.

Fulbright Economics Teaching Program – partnership with Uni-versity of Economics-Ho Chi Minh City to develop the capacity of Vietnam’sfirstprivate,nonprofitinstitutionofhighereducation.

Harvard Medical SchoolHMS-Portugal Program in Translational Research and Informa-tion–withthePortugueseScienceandTechnologyFoundationtoproduceanddisseminatemedicalinformationinPortugal,provide post-graduate medical training for Portuguese students, andtopromotecollaborativeresearchandthedevelopmentoftranslationalandclinicalknowledge.

Clinical rotation exchange program with the University of Chile and Catholic University (Chile)

Harvard Business SchoolExecutive Education–partnershipswithseveraluniversitiesaroundtheworld,especiallyinChina,toofferopenenrollmentExecutiveEducationprograms,includingCEIBS,FudanUniversity,IESE,PekingUniversity,TsinghuaUniversity.

School of Engineering and Applied SciencesBASF Advanced Research Initiative–betweenSEASfaculty/stu-dentsandBASFresearchersinGermany.

Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center –collaborationbetweenHarvard,MIT,UC-SB,BostonMuseumofScience,DelftUof Technology (Netherlands), Uof Tokyo, to construct nanoscale devices and understand their behavior

Harvard Water Security Initiative – with U of Melbourne (Austra-lia), U of Sao Paulo, and Gov’t of Pakistan to study water issues

China Project – partnership with Tsinghua University, Peking University, and Hong Kong Polytechnic University to study China’s atmosphericenvironment.

Faculty of Arts and SciencesReal Colegio Complutense – with Universidad Complutense de Madrid,offersfinancialsupporttostudentsatHarvard,scholar-shipsforVisitingScholarsfromSpain,andprovidesfundingandadministrativesupporttoscholarsstudyingSpain.

Harvard-Yenching Institute-National University of Singapore Joint Scholarship Program – for young scholars at HYI partner institutionsinCambodia,Thailand,andVietnamtocompleteaPh.D.atNUSwithdissertationresearchatHarvard.

Harvard-Yenching Institute Visiting Fellows and Scholars Pro-grams–bringshumanistsandsocialscientistsfromselectedpart-nerinstitutionsinEastandSoutheastAsia(e.g.RoyalAcademyof Cambodia, Beijing Normal University, Thammasat University in Thailand)toHarvardforoneyearof,respectively,dissertationorpostdoctoralresearch.

Magellan Project –withPontificiaUniversidadCatólicadeChile,UniversidaddeChile,andseveralU.S.institutionstoutilizetheMagellantelescopesattheLasCampanasObservatoryinChile.

Health and Spanish Immersion Program in Chile – partnership with Chilean NGOs to provide language immersion and health careinternshipstoHarvardCollegepre-medstudents.

Harvard-USP Collaborative Field Couse – joins students from Harvard and the University of São Paulo in a January course on a pressingissueofpublicpolicy.

HarvardGraduateSchoolofEducationUn Buen Comienzo – with Universidad Diego Portales (Chile) andotherChileanorganizations,toimproveoutcomesforearlychildhoodeducationinChile.

Harvard Graduate School of DesignEcological Urbanism Collaboration -Partnership with Peking University(PKU)tosupportfacultyresearchonurbanization,especiallyinChina,andfacultyexchangebetweenGSDandPKU.

“PARTNERSHIPS”DEFINITION*:Aformal,ongoingrelationshipwithspecificorganizationsattheinstitutionallevel(i.e.,notfaculty-to-faculty).Mustbemutual,two-wayflowofwork.