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YU Signs Three-Way Agreement of Academic Cooperation with Israel and India

Jun 25, 2009 -- Yeshiva University brought the public health systems of India and the United States closer together in September 2007 when President Richard M. Joel signed a memo of understanding with his counterpart from the Public Health Foundation of India. Now the two have joined forces with Haifa University in Israel to collaborate on research and educational opportunities for faculty and students at all three institutions. The three-way international agreement was signed by leaders from the three organizations in Israel on June 22. The initiative was developed by Dr. Sonia Suchday, co-director with Dr. Paul Marantz of YU’s Institute of Public Health Sciences, and Dr. Yael Latzer, associate professor at Haifa University’s Department of Social Welfare and Health Sciences. Suchday first initiated close ties with India’s public health community last summer, when she led a group of undergraduate and graduate students taking a course on global health on a trip to Mumbai. There, they conducted research with students at St. Xavier’s College, learned about Indian approaches to medicine and health and visited the Tata Institute of Social Sciences, a premier graduate research institute. The global health course is running again this summer, with a follow-up trip to Mumbai scheduled for the middle of July. The Institute for Public Health Sciences teamed up with YU’s Center for Israel Studies last March to hold a conference addressing the economic, cultural and governmental ties between India and Israel. Leading scholars and the consulates of both countries participated in the conference. President Richard M. Joel described the newest collaboration as a “win-win-win relationship.” The arrangement will help students and faculty in the U.S., Israel and India gain a better understanding of international health issues. Another effect will be to bolster Israel’s academic community. Integrating Israeli faculty into international programs “is a very good statement” in response to pressure to boycott Israeli academics, added President Joel. “I think what we should do is engage with Israeli academic institutions and bring along as many partners as we can,” he said. Read about the Israel and India conference at YU here. Read about the memo of understanding between YU and India here.