
The IRES program gives undergraduate and graduate students from US institutions the opportunity to carry out international research projects in host countries with the goal of educating a globally-engaged science workforce. Under the direction of Hayes and Burks this IRES award will support 15 undergraduate students and one graduate student to conduct collaborative research in Brazil and Uruguay for three years.
Dr. Robert Cowie, with colleagues from the University of Hawaii's College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, the U.S. Department of Agriculture in Hilo and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, Georgia, organized this transdisciplinary international workshop. The workshop addressed all aspects of this important emerging infectious disease that is caused by a parasitic worm and which can cause coma and even death. Scientists and clinicians from China, Thailand, Taiwan, Brazil, Jamaica, the U.S. mainland and Hawaii covered everything from the biology and control of the snail and rat hosts of the parasite, detection of the parasite in the hosts, pathways via which people become infected and ways to reduce the chances of infection, to the epidemiology of the disease, its diagnosis and treatment.
The matter has been referred to UH President M.R.C. Greenwood for further consideration, but any future plans for abolishment or reorganization would again be subject to approval by the Board of Regents.
Dunn is the tenth scientist in the biological sciences category, and only the second evolutionary biologist, to receive the award since its inception in 1976. Congratulations Casey!