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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Atlanta, GA | Posted: September 23, 2019
Three faculty from the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts are among the representatives from leading world universities — including Georgia Tech — who are convened today, September 23, at Rutgers University, Newark to participate in the University Global Compact (UGC)’s 17 Rooms-U, hosted in partnership with the United Nations in pursuit of its Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The event brings together more than 150 faculty champions, thought leaders, students, and stakeholders to discuss solutions and plan actions to help achieve the Sustainable Development Goals. The Ivan Allen College faculty are among nine Georgia Tech participants who are attending with President Ángel Cabrera, a founder of the UGC.
“Universities around the world are essential in achieving the Sustainable Development Goals,” Cabrera said. “They conduct research that can lead to new solutions, they educate professionals and leaders who are prepared to enact those solutions, and they are trusted conveners of other stakeholders. It is exciting to see higher education getting organized to better collaborate in support of the Goals, and the 17 Rooms event will help us identify ways to have the greatest possible impact.” President Cabrera shared additional thoughts in a recent post on his blog.
The UGC is a platform of universities and other higher education organizations committed to working together, in partnership with the United Nations, and with other relevant organizations in support of the UN’s 17 SDGs (outlined below).
The Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts participants are:
Social justice is a core value of research, education, and public engagement by the Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts and so faculty across the College work in areas relates to the SDGs.
The Atlanta Global Studies Center (AGSC), a partnership between the Ivan Allen College School of Modern Languages and Georgia State, builds international awareness, global competence, and advanced language capacity in higher education, the private & public sector, and the K-12 community to empower the Atlanta and Southeast global agenda. AGSC integrates and emphasizes principles of Education for Sustainable Development and the Sustainable Development Goals. Its inaugural symposium in April 2019 focused on The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals in Education, Research, and Community Engagement. AGSC is a National Resource Center and a Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship program.
Five Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts faculty are part of the Sustainable Development Goal Faculty Fellows by Georgia Tech's Center for Serve-Learn-Sustain (SLS). The Ivan Allen College of Liberal Arts fellows are:
Georgia Tech researchers are working with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to reinvent the toilet — technology that hasn’t changed much in more than a century — which could provide safe sanitation to 2.5 billion people. Georgia Tech is also opening the doors to The Kendeda Building for Innovative Sustainable Design this fall. It will be the most environmentally advanced education and research building ever constructed in the Southeast. Tech's Global Change Program seeks to train a new generation of leaders who are equipped to pursue solutions to a host of interconnected challenges such as climate change, environmental pollution, water resources, human health, and affordable, clean energy.
Georgia Tech is also a partner in the Regional Center of Expertise (RCE) for Greater Atlanta, a sustainability network that supports implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals at the regional level through education and training. The designation makes Atlanta one of only seven RCEs in the U.S. and 168 worldwide. RCE Greater Atlanta brings together nine universities and colleges with nonprofit, community, government, and business partners, including leadership and participation from historically black colleges and universities.
The UN’s 17 sustainable development goals include:
Other Georgia Tech participants in the 17-rooms event include: