缅北禁地

Millennium Fellow Kimberley Bates: Achieving Peace through Storytelling

The United Nations Academic Impact and the Millennium Campus Network (MCN) are proud to partner on the Millennium Fellowship, a semester-long leadership development program that helps students design and implement community-level initiatives to promote sustainability and help others in need.

Kimberley Bates, a Millennium Fellow for the Class of 2020, aspires to bring young people together through the concept of “positive alternative narrative”. Her Millennium Fellows Project focuses on?SDG16 : Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions.


It was a sense of emptiness that brought Kimberley, a university student studying criminology in Australia, on the Millennium Fellowship Programme.

Those who work from home might show less exhaustion and cognitive stress (Photo: UNOG)

Exploring Effects on Mental Health, Working Conditions and Living Habits of the COVID-19 Pandemic

The COVID-19 pandemic and associated societal restrictions such as lockdowns and movement limitations, have impacted many areas in society as well as aspects of individual’s work and private life. People have been affected in disparate ways, due to occupation, socioeconomic situation and other variables. For example, depending on the requirements for physical presence at work, and real-life interpersonal contact, contra possibilities to telework, people have experienced different types of changes in their day-to-day lives.

After cleaning, ocean plastics are ground into tiny bits, then melted and mixed to create new plastics ready for re-use (Photo: WWU/Max Romney)

University Team Works to Unlock the Recycling Potential of Ocean Plastics

The forested coastlines of Afognak Island, part of the Kodiak Archipelago in Alaska, seem at first glance to be pristine and unspoiled. The miles of deserted beaches being left mostly in the care of the island’s brown bears and Roosevelt elk. Unfortunately, that perception is far from accurate, due to the island’s location along the North Pacific Gyre – an enormous ocean current swirling counterclockwise across the Pacific Ocean north of the Equator which deposits hundreds of thousands of kilos of the world’s ocean plastics on its beaches each year.

Training and testing an app in the field developed for data collection (Photo: University of Connecticut)

Improving Water and Food Security in Ethiopia Through Research with a People-Centered Approach

The question of?how science, research, and study address challenges, pinpoint innovative solutions and reach people in need, is an?issue of concern for academic institutions. On that note, the School of Engineering of the , a UNAI member institution in the United States, is leading a group of researchers to tackle how scientific knowledge is disseminated and applied in their , funded by the National Science Foundation.?

Millennium Fellow Monica Gbuchie: Promoting Women’s Rights in Nigeria

The United Nations Academic Impact and the Millennium Campus Network (MCN) are proud to partner on the Millennium Fellowship, a semester-long leadership development program that helps students design and implement community-level initiatives to promote sustainability and help others in need.

Monica Gbuchie, a medical student at Niger Delta University in Nigeria and a Millennium Fellow for the Class of 2020, aspires to promote sexual and reproductive health and women’s rights in underserved communities. Her Millennium Fellows Project focuses on SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being and SDG 5: Gender Equality.

The critical conclusion from the proposed model is the fact that the COVID-19 pandemic behaves like a physical phenomenon (Image: PAHO)

Universities Create New Epidemiological Model to Study COVID-19 Dynamics

The COVID-19 pandemic is one of the greatest and most serious issues of our times, requiring several?approaches to deal with it successfully and effectively. Consequently, it is very important to understand the biological mechanisms of virus propagation, as well as the governing diffusion dynamics. These dynamics can be studied using the notion of universality, according to which?different systems or classes of systems can demonstrate the same dynamic behavior and dynamical features, regardless of underlying mechanisms and dynamic details.

More than 17 million people work in the fisheries sector in Bangladesh (Photo: FAO / Munir Uz Zaman)

Measuring Impact of COVID-19 on the Socio-Ecological System of the Bay of Bengal

The marine fisheries sector constitutes a critical element for the economy of Bangladesh, a country where more than 17 million people work in this sector, comprising about 11% of the?population. Fish plays a crucial role in the average food consumption and is an important source of protein. While within the marine fisheries sector, small-scale fisheries account for the biggest share of fish production, they are also one of the most vulnerable groups in the industry, facing a number of challenges -including poverty-, exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic and the climate crisis.?

This method gives accurate results in just 17 minutes (Photo: Yonsei University)

University Research Team Develops High-Speed nanoPCR Technology to Diagnose COVID-19

During the initial wave of the COVID-19 global pandemic back in 2020, the Republic of Korea suffered from an explosive peak in cases. It provoked the necessity of quick, massive diagnosis tests and isolation means responding to the soaring infection numbers. To make a breakthrough that could alleviate the concerns of the authorities and also the population, it was inevitable to diminish the fatality rate by developing enhanced diagnostic capacities?and isolating the infected individuals in the absence of vaccination.

缅北禁地Secretary-General Highlights Importance of Universities during the IAUP Triennial Conference

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On 29 July 2021, the Secretary-General of the United Nations, Antonio Guterres, highlighted during his message to the Triennial Conference, the importance of institutions of higher education within the current global context. See the full text of the message, below:

The world is experiencing a challenge of enormous proportions - from the global health crisis caused by the COVID-19 pandemic to the climate crisis. We have all been affected.

And yet, these crises have created opportunities to enhance our resilience, strengthen our solidarity, and showcase solutions through the diverse work of universities.

Seeds are embedded in both pens and pencils to promote afforestation (Photo: Rajalakshmi Engineering College)

Recycling Paper Waste to Make Pencils: An Eco-Friendly Project by Engineering Students in India

Pencils, an ubiquitous tool around the world massively used by students, particularly those enrolled in primary and secondary education, are normally not the product of a recycling process. Yet, calls to “substantially reduce waste generation through prevention, reduction, recycling and reuse”. In light of this, but also given the environmental impact of the production of wooden pencils, students from the , a UNAI member institution in India, developed an innovative solution.

Medical doctors and students say: "We stayed at work for you; you stay at home for us” (Photo: Astana Medical University)

Medical Students in Kazakhstan Volunteer to Fight COVID-19 at the Forefront

During the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, the Kazakhstani healthcare system has been facing a number of challenges. One of the most acute problems at the peak of the crisis was the staffing of medical institutions. In this period, the integration of medical education and practical medicine should be especially noted. From day one, , a UNAI member institution in Kazakhstan, has been actively involved by not dividing the educational process and direct assistance in the fight against the virus.

The ASAP program has attracted more than 350 students since April 2020 (Photo: FEFU)

Promoting Employment by Connecting Students with Companies in the Russian Far East

In these?uncertain times, many institutions of higher education are re-shaping traditional concepts of how they see themselves, to provide their students with not only theoretical but also practical knowledge and skills, useful for their future career prospects, to enhace their possibilities of getting a job after they finish their studies. This is even more challenging given the circumstances derived from the socioeconomic consequences of the COVID-19 pandemic around the world.?

Refugees in Higher Education: Aliny Wa Sibomana, Rwanda – Canada

When you become a refugee – a person who has escaped from their own country for political, religious, or economic reasons or because of a war - they lose not only a home. You feel a part of your identity falling off, while the strong bonds built with friends and families back home are also lost along the way. You are suddenly placed in a new environment with no one to rely on. Just imagine how much courage it takes to rebuild your life from scratch.

To commemorate the World Refugee Day on 20 June, the United Nations Academic Impact (UNAI) has produced a series of podcasts and articles, bringing together stories of refugees from Afghanistan, Thailand/Myanmar, Nepal/Bhutan, Haiti and Rwanda.

COVID-19 and Youth: The Future of Work for Young People

The COVID-19 pandemic has had an unequivocal impact on young people.??found that ‘the impact of the pandemic on young people [is] systematic, deep and disproportionate.’ Twenty-three per cent of young people aged 18-24 who were working pre-pandemic are now unemployed, and those who are working have reported reductions in hours and income. “Students’ perceptions of their future career prospects are bleak, with 40 per cent facing the future with uncertainty and 14 per cent with fear,” the report adds. Globally, young people are feeling more uncertain about what the future holds.

Students from both universities, accompanied by their professors, get an experience in education for sustainability (Photo: UPV/EHU)

Ocean i3 as a Cross-Border Academic Community Committed to the Ocean

Every day we receive more information on pollution in the seas and oceans caused by the invasion of plastics. In fact, nobody can ignore the images of the massive slicks of plastic floating through the seas, which are even more distressing when they show animals surrounded by plastic bottles and other waste. The responsibility we feel towards the environment and the planet’s health as we watch these images can doubtlessly be used to boost commitment, implication and action from institutions of higher education.