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NEWS
U.S.-India Joint Statement by Secretary of
State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Minister of Human Resource Development
Kapil Sibal
13th October, 2011
Washington, DC
INDIA AND THE UNITED STATES: GLOBAL PARTNERS IN KNOWLEDGE
Recalling the considerable
progress achieved in bilateral educational relations following the
visits by Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh to the United States
in 2009 and President Obama to India in 2010, Human Resource Development
Minister Sibal and Secretary of State Clinton today reaffirmed the
strategic partnership between India and the United States for meaningful
dialogue, cooperation, and engagement in the field of higher education,
and launched a new phase in this partnership. The two leaders acknowledged
the immense possibilities for further collaboration between the
two countries given the inherent dynamism, emerging challenges,
and numerous exciting opportunities available for sharing and growing
together.
Minister Sibal and Secretary Clinton emphasized
that access to and the development of technology and skills are
cross-cutting requirements to meet the challenges that their two
countries face. They acknowledged the fruitful collaboration between
India and the United States in the areas of education, research,
and innovation and noted its contribution to the development of
technologies, skills, and knowledge-based societies in both countries.
Both leaders emphasized the need to enhance this collaboration.
Expressing their commitment to that vision, Minister
Sibal and Secretary Clinton launched the expanded U.S.-India Higher
Education Dialogue as an annual bilateral event to map out strategies
for partnership in the field of education between the two countries.
The Dialogue should identify areas for mutually beneficial exchanges
and provide a platform for intense and meaningful collaboration
among academia, the private sector, and government on both sides.
The plan is for the Dialogue to be held alternately in the United
States and India.
The two leaders expressed satisfaction with the
progress achieved in the Obama-Singh 21st Century Knowledge Initiative,
launched in 2009, under which proposals have been invited by both
sides by November 1, 2011, to be reviewed by a joint working group
for academic awards in support of university partnerships. The two
leaders reiterated their strong commitment to the Fulbright-Nehru
Program and its contribution to leadership development and scholarly
achievement. They also highlighted and encouraged the full array
of collaborations directly between higher education communities,
such as the Yale-India program, for academic leadership and faculty
development. The two leaders underscored the need to enhance the
scope of collaboration and identify new ways to encourage linkages
and exchange programs.
The two leaders also expressed their support
for the Indo-U.S. Science and Technology Forum, which provides fresh
impetus to academic collaboration in the cutting-edge areas of scientific
research and technology development.
The two leaders lauded the continuing efforts
by both sides to explore new avenues for collaboration such as the
Indo-U.S. Engineering Education Conclave, held in January 2011 in
New Delhi, for strengthening higher educational institutions in
the fields of engineering and technology and expressed the hope
that more such opportunities for engagement would emerge in the
future in other fields.
The two sides endorsed the resolve of the stakeholders
from academia, government, and industry to take forward the following
areas of consensus arrived at during the Summit:
1. A continued expanded U.S.-India Higher Education
Dialogue with representatives from government, academia, and business
that would interact on a periodic basis to inform and underpin the
Dialogue.
2. Support for the following goals:
- Promoting strategic institutional partnerships for further
strengthening and expansion of collaboration in the priority areas
of higher education, including science and engineering, social
sciences, and humanities, and addressing societal challenges in
areas such as cyber security, energy, environment, health and
agriculture;
- Encouraging expansion and deepened collaboration in research
and development in the above areas between academic institutions
of the two countries through existing initiatives;
- Fostering partnerships in the areas of vocational education
and skills enhancement to meet the needs of today's world;
- Exploration of models for 'educational institutions for the
21st Century' (such as 'meta' universities);
- Further strengthening programs for student and faculty enrichment
and exchange, and development of leadership in academia at all
levels;
- Welcoming the involvement of the private sector in the two
countries to support and deepen collaboration with the higher
education community, faculty exchanges, skills development, and
institutional partnerships.
3. India announced its intention to set up an
India-U.S. higher education platform as a means to pursue these
goals.
4. Strengthening educator enrichment and exchange
programs (with the Government of India indicating its intention
to sponsor initially up to 1,500 faculty and junior scholars to
leading universities and research institutes in the United States)
to promote development of human resources while also enhancing broader
interaction between the two countries.
Minister Sibal thanked Secretary Clinton
and her colleagues, as well as the academic, non-governmental, and
business communities in the United States for their efforts in successfully
organizing the U.S.-India Higher Education Summit, and expressed
optimism about building on this successful Summit in the expanded
U.S.-India Higher Education Dialogue to be held in 2012.
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