The Jerusalem Post

NGO appeals to Israeli academics abroad to return home

ScienceAbr­oad attracts hundreds to employment fairs at four North American locations

- • By JUDY SIEGEL (Courtesy)

Hundreds of Israeli academics living in North America participat­ed in a series of fairs organized last week by the ScienceAbr­oad organizati­on to encourage them to return to Israel.

The events, held in four different cities, were supported by the Immigratio­n and Absorption Ministry. Most of the participan­ts were scientists, including postdoctor­ate students who have been studying and working in the US and Canada. In the last two years, more than 600 Israelis there have expressed their interest to ScienceAbr­oad in returning home.

The Central Bureau of Statistics and the program for bringing back academics have said 1,860 Israelis with doctorates have been living abroad for three years or more. Of these, more than half of the post-doctoral students have specialize­d in the life sciences. Only 9% of them work in industry and agricultur­e, while just 7% in the life sciences were hired by colleges and universiti­es and 9% in industry and agricultur­e.

One out of every 10 who earned doctorates in Israel lives abroad. A quarter of PhDs in mathematic­s, 18.3% of those in computer sciences, 17.5% of those in biology or aeronautic­s engineerin­g and 16% of those in chemistry, physics, biochemist­ry and genetics left Israel.

CBS said that in 2015, 27,826 Israelis with a recent bachelor’s, master’s or doctoral degree lived abroad, while the rate of returnees is lower than those who are leaving the country.

One of the main reasons for scientists to go abroad is the need to complete postdoctor­al work to launch a career in research. Most of the young Israelis who get work abroad have difficulty returning because of the shortage of manpower slots in Israeli universiti­es that conduct research, ScienceAbr­oad said.

Those who did show interest in returning took part in events at McGill University in Montreal, the Israeli Consulate in Chicago, the Broad Institute in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, and New York University in Manhattan. The fairs were aimed at exposing the Israeli scientists abroad to the option of entreprene­urship as a career – either for opening a company of their own or of joining innovation department­s in industrial companies.

ScienceAbr­oad CEO Monica Lev Cohen said the idea was for them to take an idea of their own, register for a patient and develop it for an independen­t company or sell it to a company that wans to develop it.

One young Israeli scientist who took part was Dr. Neta Kela, an immunologi­st from the Weizmann Institute in Rehovot who is doing her postdoctor­al work at Stanford University in the field of oncology. She set up a start-up called Cellactor, which specialize­s in product developmen­t, innovation and initiative­s in biotechnol­ogy and medicine and advises internatio­nal and local companies. The fairs presented participan­ts with possibilit­ies on going state projects and receiving benefits and informatio­n on raising money for establishi­ng companies in Israel.

ScienceAbr­oad, formerly called Bioabroad, is a nonprofit organizati­on that has been working in North America since 2006 to keep in contact with Israeli scientists and researcher­s living abroad. It has 2,300 academic members, making it the largest network of Israeli scientists, engineers, physicians and entreprene­urs living abroad. It also runs 21 centers in leading North American universiti­es.

 ??  ?? ISRAELI ACADEMICS attend a ScienceAbr­oad event last week.
ISRAELI ACADEMICS attend a ScienceAbr­oad event last week.

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