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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. HARVARD GLOBAL UPDATE GLOBAL ADVISORY COUNCIL October 1-2, 2014

Harvard Faculty & Students Harvard Alumni Harvard International Fundraising Harvard’s Global Reach

Key to Acronyms Used in Charts and Materials

COL Undergraduate HDS FAS Faculty of Arts and Sciences (includes College, SEAS, and GSAS) HKS SEAS School of Engineering and Applied Sciences HLS GSAS Graduate School of Arts and Sciences HMS Harvard GSD Graduate School of Design RIAS Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study GSE Graduate School of Education SPH School of Public Health HAA Harvard Alumni Association HSDM School of Dental Medicine HBS UNIV University HARVARD FACULTY & STUDENTS International Data for 2014

6000 International Enrollment at Harvard 25% Enrollment and percentage, 1999-00 to 2014-14 22%

5000 4632 20%

16% 4000 15%

2935 3000

10% 2000

5% 1000

0 0%

1400 2002-2003 2013-2014 International Enrollment at the Schools 1200 Enrollment by school, 2002-3 and 2013-14

1000

800

600

400

200

0 HMS HDS HSDM GSE GSD SPH HLS HKS COL HBS GSAS 8% 12% 22% 14% 41% 34% 19% 46% 11% 31% 33% Source: Fact Book (duplicated headcounts) 800

700 686 800 800600 Harvard International Students: Top 5 Home Countries 700 686556 800 Enrollment by country, 2000-1 to 2013-14 686 500 800 700 686 Canada 600 700400 700 686556 China 500600 500 556 600300 600 304 CanadaIndia 500 556 400 251 ChinaCanadaSouth Korea 500200 500 202 400 CanadaIndiaUKChina 300 400 304 400100 251 ChinaSouth Korea 300 304251 SouthIndia Korea 200 300 202 3000 304251 IndiaUKSouth Korea 200 202 100 200 251 SouthUK Korea

200 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 202 100 100 UK 0 100 0 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 0 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 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 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2010 2011 2012 2009 Source: Harvard University Fact Book (duplicated headcounts)

Grant Aid to International Students $ million, institutional grant aid, FY09-FY13 $102

Millions $100 $99 $98 $98

$96

$94 $93 $93 $92

$90 $89 $88

$86

$84

$82 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013

Institutional grant aid to international students grew $10 million (11%) over the past four years.

Source: Harvard Office of Institutional Research Grant Aid to International Students: Top Countries $16 $ million, institutional grant aid, FY13 $14.6

Millions $14

$12.0 $12

$10

$8

$6 $5.2 $5.3 $5.5

$4 $3.3 $2.4 $2.5 $2.5 $2.1 $2

$0 Israel Australia Turkey Mexico Germany South United India Canada China Korea Kingdom 87 111 80 125 133 297 200 277 615 693

Grant Aid to International Students by School $40 $ million, institutional grant aid, FY13 $37.1 Millions $35

$30 $25.9 $25

$20

$15

$10.4 $10 $8.6

$4.5 $4.9 $5 $3.0 $1.2 $1.7 $1.8 $0.2 $0 HSDM HDS GSE HMS GSD SPH HLS HKS HBS COL GSAS

Source: Harvard Office of Institutional Research Harvard College Students’ Global Experiences for academic year 2013-14 Total of 2,701 students who traveled abroad

Graduating Seniors who reported having a “meaningful international experience” at Harvard: 2011: 52.5 % 2012: 58.1% 2013: 57.1% Internship/ 2014: 58.0% Service Work/ Volunteer 26.81% Study Abroad Other 61.81% Academic Research 1.44% 9.93%

Source: Harvard Global Support Services

International Travel by Students, Faculty, and Staff Top travel destinations, FY 14 800 718 700

600

500

400 331 282 300 264 258 245 243 227 223 223 Total trips made trips Total 200

100

0 China Italy Japan India United Turkey France Spain Brazil South Kingdom Africa

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. International Faculty 2002-3 to 2013-4

2000

1800

1600 592 613 623 618 545 566 576 616 625 1400 631 623 606

1200

1000

800

600 1174 1165 1163 1164 1169 1168 1154 1124 1103 1096 1086 1074 400

200

0 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%

The number of international faculty has grown 11% since 2003-4.

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. HARVARD ALUMNI WORLDWIDE International data for 2014

Number of Alumni Residents: Top 10 Countries

6840

5432

3287

2242 2211 2082 1891 1775 1713 1622

United Canada Japan Australia France Germany India People's Switzerland Singapore Kingdom Republic of China

Number of Harvard Clubs by Region

39

15 13

6 5 4 3

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

Source: Harvard Alumni Association and Harvard Worldwide HARVARD FUNDRAISING International data for 2014 International Giving FY 09-FY14 $1,800 Int’l $1,600 $370 U.S. $1,400

$1,200 $108

$1,000

$800 $97 $76 $1,306 $600 $89 $118 $1,094

$400 $740 $684 $543 $478 $200

$0 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Int’l % of total 10% 20% 14% 12% 9% 22%

International Giving by Region FY 09-FY14 Regional breakdown by contribution $38.3 $5.2

$58.6 Asia and Pacific Europe $91.2 $352.0 South Asia Latin America $80.6 Middle East Canada Africa

$215.6

Source: University Development Office International Giving by Country $250 FY 09-FY14, Top 10 countries by contribution

$204.3 $200

$150

$102.4 $100.2 $100 $75.3 $64.4

$50 $38.3 $29.7 $27.2 $24.7 $21.0

$0 China India U.K. Brazil Hong Kong Canada Turkey Switzerland Indonesia Greece

International Giving by School $124.2 Dollars raised by school in FY 09-FY14 $116.4

$94.9 $ Millions $ $84.6

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

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

Number of International Donors 9799 Breakdown by school in FY 09-FY14 8572

2124 2372 1203 634 683 736 107 192 351 387

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

Source: University Development Office International Giving : Donor Statistics FY 09-FY14

Total Number of International Gifts: 26,980

International Gifts made up 15% of the University Giving total.

Donation type

Other Organizations* 13%

Individual Corporation 58% 29%

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

Breakdown of individual donor pool

Alum 31% Other Individual 65%

Parent 4% Source: University Development Office HARVARD’S GLOBAL REACH International data for 2014

$60 International Sponsored Research Funding

Millions FY 04-FY14 $50 $48

$41 $40 $38 $33 $30 $30 $28

$22 $21 $19 $20 $20 $17

$10

$0 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014

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

Sponsored Research Projects with International Activity*: Expenses $180 $ million, FY04-FY14 $166 $166 $160 $146

$140 $129 $121 $118 $120 $107 $108 $99 $100 $100 $94

$80

$60

$40

$20

$0 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*Includes projectsPlan for AIDSthat Relief),a) had awhich foreign peaked country at $67 in the million title inor 2009. 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. Harvard Global Engagement: Locations Abroad

Center for Hellenic Studies Nafplion, Greece HBS Japan Research Center Tokyo, Japan Est.: 2008 HBS Istanbul Research Center HBS Europe Research Center Istanbul, Turkey Est.: 2002 Paris, France Est.: 2013 Harvard Center Shanghai Est.: 2003 Shanghai, China Est.: 2010 HBS Asia-Pacific Research Center Florence, Italy Hong Kong HBS India Research Center DRCLAS Mexico & Central America Office Est.: 1959 Est.: 1999 Mexico City, Mexico Mumbai, India Est.: 2013 Est.: 2006 HKS Fulbright Economics Teaching Program Ho Chi Minh City, Viet Nam Est.: 1994 DRCLAS Regional Office Africa Academy for Public Health , Chile Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Est.: 2002 Est.: 1999 DRCLAS Brazil Office São Paulo, Brazil HBS Latin America Research Center Est.: 2006 Botswana-Harvard Partnership Buenos Aires, Argentina Gabarone, Botswana Est.: 2000 Est.: 1996

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

Harvard Centers & Programs Engaged in Global Research

Aga Khan Program for Islamic Architecture at Harvard & MIT Harvard China Project Ash Center for Democracy Harvard Environmental Economics Program Asia Center Harvard Global Health Institute Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs Harvard Humanitarian Initiative Berkman Center for Internet & Society Harvard Law School Project on Disability Bertarelli Program in Translational Neuroscience and Neroengineeing Harvard Malaria Initiative Carr Center for Human Rights Policy Harvard Program in Ethics and Health Center for Biostatistics in AIDS research Harvard Program in Refugee Trauma Center for Environment and Technology Harvard School of Public Health AIDS Initiative Center for European Studies Harvard Ukrainian Research Institute Center for Health and the Global Environment Harvard University Center for the Environment Center for Health Decision Science Harvard University Herbaria Center for Hellenic Studies Harvard Center for Risk Analysis Center for International Development Human Rights Program Center for Jewish Studies Institute for Global Law and Policy Center for Middle Eastern Studies International Health Systems Program Center for Population and Development Studies Islamic Legal Studies Program Center for Public Leadership Korea Institute Center for the Study of World Religions Labor and Work-life Program China Initiative Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government Committee on African Studies Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal Islamic Studies Program Committee on Australian Studies Program in Health Care Financing David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies Program on Humanitarian Policy and Conflict Research Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies Program on International Finance Systems Dubai Harvard Foundation for Medical Research Program on Negotiation Program on the Legal Profession East Asian Legal Studies Program Reischauer Institute of Japanese Studies Environmental Law Program South Asia Institute Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies The Kokkalis Program on Southeastern and East-Central Europe Francois-Xavier Bagnoud Center for Health and Human Rights Un Buen Comienzo (A Good Start) Global Equity Initiative Villa I Tati Harvard-Yenching Institute W.E.B. Du Bois Institute for Africa and African -American Research Harvard Business School Global Initiative Weatherhead Center for International Affairs Harvard China Fund WIDE World

Source: International Strategy Working Group, updated by Office of the Vice Provost for International Affairs International Partnerships, Selected Examples The following are selected examples, intended to illustrate the breadth of Harvard’s global partnerships. Because partnerships take many forms, often do not involve for- mal agreements, and may start and end with little notice, the following should be considered a sample of Harvard’s international partnerships, not a comprehensive list. Harvard Law School Clinical rotation exchange program with the University of Chile International Human Rights Clinic – partnerships with various and Catholic University (Chile) international NGOs and law clinics to enhance human rights and human rights law. Harvard Business School OpenNet Initiative – partnership between the University of To- Executive Education – partnerships with several universities ronto, University of Cambridge, University of Oxford, and HLS to around the world, especially in China, to offer open enrollment identify and document internet filtering and surveillance. Executive Education programs, including CEIBS, , IESE, , . Youth and Media Project – partnership with the University of St. Gallen (Switzerland) researching young people’s digital practices. School of Engineering and Applied Sciences J.D./ BASF Advanced Research Initiative – between SEAS faculty/stu- Exchange program with Universidad de Chile Law School. dents and BASF researchers in Germany. LL.M. Joint Degree Program with University of Cambridge Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center – collaboration Harvard School of Public Health between Harvard, MIT, UC-SB, Boston Museum of Science, Delft Botswana-Harvard Partnership serves as a research platform for Uof Technology (Netherlands), Uof Tokyo, to construct nanoscale HSPH faculty in Botswana and training resource in Botswana. devices and understand their behavior

FMUSP Laboratory Research Collaborative – partnership with Harvard Water Security Initiative – with U of Melbourne (Austra- University of São Paulo Medical Schol (FMUSP) to bring FMUSP lia), U of Sao Paulo, and Gov’t of Pakistan to study water issues undergraduate students to HSPH for one year to conduct labora- tory research. China Project – partnership with Tsinghua University, Peking University, and Hong Kong Polytechnic University to study China’s China Initiative – partnership with Tsinghua University to pro- atmospheric environment. mote collaborative research, student exchange, and execuive education. Faculty of Arts and Sciences Real Colegio Complutense – with Universidad Complutense de Madrid, offers financial support to students at Harvard, scholar- Harvard Kennedy School ships for Visiting Scholars from Spain, and provides funding and Energy Technology Innovation Program – partners with Chinese administrative support to scholars studying Spain. Ministry of Science and Technology and other Chinese partners, and with Indian Energy and Resources Institute, to develop and Harvard-Yenching Institute- of Singapore promote effective strategies for energy efficiency. Joint Scholarship Program – for young scholars at HYI partner institutions in Cambodia, Thailand, and Vietnam to complete a US-Russia Initiative to Prevent Nuclear Terrorism – partners Ph.D. at NUS with dissertation research at Harvard. with Russian Academy of Sciences to identify steps US, Russia, and other countries can take to prevent nuclear terrorism. Harvard-Yenching Institute Visiting Fellows and Scholars Pro- grams – brings humanists and social scientists from selected part- Mexico Program – partnership with Graduate School of Public ner institutions in East and Southeast Asia (e.g. Royal Academy Administration and Public Policy (EGAP) at Tecnologico de Mon- of Cambodia, Beijing Normal University, Thammasat University in terrey (ITESM) to promote collaboration in research, teaching, Thailand) to Harvard for one year of, respectively, dissertation or student exchange, executive education. postdoctoral research.

Nonprofits in China Program – partnership with Center for Civil Magellan Project – with Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Society Studies at Peking University to do collaborative research Universidad de Chile, and several U.S. institutions to utilize the and conduct executive education. Magellan telescopes at the Las Campanas Observatory in Chile.

Multidisciplinary Program on Inequality and Social Policy – Health and Spanish Immersion Program in Chile – partnership partnerships with 13 European universities, allowing an exchange with Chilean NGOs to provide language immersion and health between Harvard PhD candidates and students from those insti- care internships to Harvard College pre-med students. tutions. Harvard-USP Collaborative Field Couse – joins students from Fulbright Economics Teaching Program – partnership with Uni- Harvard and the University of São Paulo in a January course on a versity of Economics-Ho Chi Minh City to develop the capacity of pressing issue of public policy. Vietnam’s first private, nonprofit institution of higher education. Harvard Graduate School of Education Un Buen Comienzo – with Universidad Diego Portales (Chile) HMS-Portugal Program in Translational Research and Informa- and other Chilean organizations, to improve outcomes for early tion – with the Portuguese Science and Technology Foundation childhood education in Chile. to produce and disseminate medical information in Portugal, provide post-graduate medical training for Portuguese students, Harvard Graduate School of Design and to promote collaborative research and the development of Ecological Urbanism Collaboration -Partnership with Peking translational and clinical knowledge. University (PKU) to support faculty research on urbanization, especially in China, and faculty exchange between GSD and PKU.

“PARTNERSHIPS” DEFINITION*: A formal, ongoing relationship with specific organizations at the institutional level (i.e., not faculty-to-faculty). Must be mutual, two-way flow of work.