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SHORTLY AFTER I CAME TO AUBURN (FOR THE FOURTH TIME)
IN 1983 as professor and head of the Department of Agronomy
and Soils, I agreed to participate in a “globalizing the
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AU faculty in other colleges. Shortly
after, I agreed to manage a farming systems research and extension
project in Mali.
I had been active in international
activities with the U.S. Department of Agriculture prior to
my return to Auburn, but never expected to be caught up in a
new wave of international project activity at AU. Auburn had—and
continues to have—a major international program in aquaculture
and aquatic ecology, but until about 1985, other CoAg faculty
rarely participated in international projects. About this time,
the leadership of the College began to promote engagement of
faculty, students, Extension agents and agricultural leaders
in educational and cultural exchanges and collaborative research
projects.
When I stopped to ask “why
me?” I thought about my county agent, Jim Moore, when
I was a 4-H club member in Bullock County. Mr. Moore was a close
family friend who took time out from Extension to work for four
years in the Middle East. He and his family spent two years
each in Jordan and Iraq, where he helped farmers improve agricultural
production. He encouraged me to go to college and become a medical
doctor, but instead I believe that his career choices became
a model for me to emulate when I came to AU.
As an expression of commitment
to international programs in the College, then-CoAg Dean Jim
Marion established the position of associate dean for International
Agriculture in 1988, a position shared with the AU Office of
International Programs. In 1989, then-AU President James Martin
formally recognized the International Center for Aquaculture
and Aquatic Environments (ICAAE) as an official CoAg entity.
That recognition included funding for an ICAAE director. During
this period, international agriculture flourished: I was appointed
associate dean and Bryan Duncan fisheries and allied aquacultures
professor was appointed ICAAE director.
Auburn became active in projects
sponsored by the South-East Consortium for International Development
(SECID), leading to opportunities for faculty and staff in departments
that had not previously been involved in international work.
International research and outreach coordinated by ICAAE continued
to expand, while diversifying to include a wider range of faculty
expertise. AU faculty in the College of Agriculture, along with
colleagues in the School of Forestry and Wildlife Sciences,
were successful in attracting significant extramural funding
to support foreign assistance projects in developing countries.
Beginning in the late 1980s,
international agriculture began to assume an integral role in
the life of CoAg faculty, staff and students. With the support
of endowments provided by philanthropic alumni, international
internships became available for students and faculty who wanted
to become more globally aware and competitive in their careers.
A thriving visitor exchange program in the College brought new
ideas and capabilities to research programs in the form of outstanding
scholars from other countries. In the mid-1990s, the Office
of International Agriculture began organizing agricultural study
tours for faculty, farmers and agricultural leaders. Since 1995,
more than 150 persons have toured farms, universities and research
centers in Germany, Hungary, Poland, China, Argentina, Brazil
and South Africa. The goal of these tours is to garner a better
understanding of agriculture and society in the world.
Being a part of the international
agriculture scene has been a joyride for me. Developing programs
and seeking funds to support them has been especially challenging,
but also very rewarding professionally. The interaction with
citizens of another culture, often speaking a language other
than English, has been intellectually and socially stimulating.
Perhaps curiosity about “foreign” countries and
people has motivated much of my interest in pursuing international
relationships. In a word, “rewarding” best describes
the emotion associated with all the pleasure, improved understanding
and renewed commitment of faculty, students, farmers and other
leaders resulting from being a part of the College’s international
programs.
*Effective
Dec. 31, 2003, Richard Guthrie retired as CoAg associate dean
and director of the Office of International Agriculture (OIA).
Guthrie will continue to provide oversight and donor coordination
for the International Scholars Program and assist with the management
and coordination of the Dean’s Study Tours. He will also
assist the dean, as assigned, with other special projects. Bryan
Duncan, who currently serves as director of the International
Center for Aquaculture and Aquatic Environments (ICAAE), assumed
the additional responsibilities of director of OIA. Plans for
a merger of OIA and ICAAE, including a new name, are being developed. |
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