National Security Higher Education Advisory Board
The National Security Higher Education Advisory Board is boby "designed to foster outreach and to promote understanding between higher education and the Federal Bureau of Investigation." It was estblished to advise the FBI "on the culture of higher education" and to "to establish lines of communication on national priorities pertaining to terrorism, counterintelligence, and homeland security."[1] The Board was announced in September 2005 and at which point it was planned that the Board would meet collectively at least three times a year in Washington, D.C.[2] The board is chaired by Graham Spanier, President of Pennsylvania State University.
Members
- Graham Spanier, President of Pennsylvania State University
- William Brody, President, Johns Hopkins University
- Albert Carnesale, Chancellor, University of California, Los Angeles
- Jared Cohon, President, Carnegie Mellon University
- Marye Ann Fox, Chancellor, University of California, San Diego
- Robert Gates, President, Texas A&M University
- Gregory Geoffroy, President, Iowa State University
- Amy Gutmann, President, University of Pennsylvania
- David C. Hardesty Jr., President, West Virginia University
- Susan Hockfield, President, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- Martin Jischke, President, Purdue University
- Bernard Machen, President, University of Florida
- James Moeser, Chancellor, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- C.D. Mote, President, University of Maryland, College Park
- John Wiley, Chancellor, University of Wisconsin, Madison
- Mark Emmert, President, University of Washington
Notes
- ↑ FBI press release, 'FBI Appoints National Security Higher Education Advisory Board', 15 September 2005
- ↑ FBI press release, 'FBI Appoints National Security Higher Education Advisory Board', 15 September 2005