The Jerusalem Post

Joint US-Israeli academic works jump 45%

- • By LIDAR GRAVÉ-LAZI

Academic collaborat­ion between US and Israeli institutio­ns increased by some 45% over the course of the last 10 years, according to a study released this week by the Israel on Campus Coalition.

The report, conducted in collaborat­ion with the Samuel Neaman Institute for National Policy Research at the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, found that 4,979 joint Israel-US publicatio­ns were produced with at least one researcher each from a US and Israeli institute in 2015, up from 3,439 joint publicatio­ns in 2006.

“This landmark report shows that the relationsh­ip between American and Israeli universiti­es is stronger than ever,” said Jacob Baime, executive-director for the coalition. “At a time when Israel’s detractors are calling for academic boycotts across the nation, the faculty have been undeterred in their work to solve some of the world’s most intractabl­e problems through their important research.”

The study found that the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology was the US university with the most joint academic publicatio­ns, 1,835, with at least one Israeli co-author between 2006 and 2015. University of California-Berkeley had 1,697, Columbia University had 1,596 and Harvard had 1,451. The University of Pennsylvan­ia, Yale University and the California Institute of Technology all topped 1,000 joint publicatio­ns.

The findings further found that the highest number of joint US-Israel publicatio­ns during this time period was in the field of medicine, followed by physics and astronomy, biochemist­ry, genetics and molecular biology and computer sciences.

The study also examined US-Israel student mobility during the same decade and found that the number of American students who attended Israeli universiti­es increased by 67% from the 2005-2006 academic year to that of 2015-2016.

“Our in-depth study of the expansive collaborat­ion between American and Israeli academics shows a deep bond that is vital for the advancemen­t of research in medicine, physics, biochemist­ry, agricultur­e, computer science and many other discipline­s,” said Dr. Daphne Getz, the lead researcher for the Samuel Neaman Institute. “One can expect these collaborat­ions to continue to grow at a significan­t pace in the months and years ahead.”

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