If Subra Suresh had been offered the job of leading Singaporeâs Nanyang Technological University just a few years ago, he âwould not have taken itâ, he admits.
The scientist and engineer has more than 40 yearsâ experience working in US research and academia, with a CV that boasts leadership roles at Brown University, the University of California, Berkeley and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and includes Barack Obama as a referee.
Professor Suresh could have had â as he has had before â his pick of the worldâs elite institutions to work in, which is why it will have surprised some that he chose to leave his role as president of Carnegie Mellon University for NTU at the end of last year.
But with the rapid growth in Asian economies causing global higher educationâs centre of gravity to shift eastwards, Professor Suresh insisted that his move was ânot as unusualâ as some might think.
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âThereâs no better place in Asia [for connecting] with all of Asia than Singapore,â he told Times Higher Education. âIn the past 20 years, a number of people have relocated here â you have nearly half the American Fortune 500 companies with a major presence here.
âGood science anywhere is good for science everywhere; I feel that, for people like me or most people in academia, itâs not location that matters, but what you do.â
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Professor Suresh was born in Mumbai and arrived in the US âwith a one-way ticket bought with borrowed funds and $40 in my pocketâ. In a keynote speech at THEâs Asia Universities Summit, he emphasised the need for open borders if higher education was to flourish and sounded a warning about the increased visa restrictions being introduced in the US by the Trump administration, noting that âempires rise and fall throughout historyâ.
Regardless, NTU brings new and âexcitingâ prospects, Professor Suresh told THE. It might be placed only 52nd in the most recent THE World University Rankings, compared with Carnegie Mellonâs 24th position, but its research volume has increased 10-fold in as many years and the institution is ambitious to go even further.
NTU âhas much more agility and nimbleness than many longer established institutions around the worldâ, said Professor Suresh, who explained that his role was to place the university among the worldâs elite for the long term.
âNTU has come a very long way in a very short period of time by anybodyâs metric,â he said. âI see this as more of an opportunity â how do you stabilise this rapid growth, and how do you make it part and parcel of the day-to-day operation of the university? Itâs not a sprint, itâs a marathon for the really long haul; and I think thatâs really exciting.â
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The university has a new medical school run jointly with Imperial College London, offering revolutionary technology that, Professor Suresh suggested, even US institutions could not compete with.
Meanwhile, preparing students and society for the fourth industrial revolution â the reshaping of the world of work by automation and artificial intelligence â is something that âNTU can do better than almost any other university in the worldâ, he argued.
Just last month, NTU announced its âsmart campus initiativeâ with the Singapore government to become a test bed for the nationâs transport development. A number of large global corporations including Rolls-Royce, BMW and, most recently, Volvo are also partnering with NTUâs engineering department to fund research into greener technological initiatives.
âThey can [already] charge an electric bus at a bus stop in 20 seconds,â Professor Suresh gave as an example. âIn all this, we are working with the government to [advise on] policies, to decide what the laws might be around autonomous and electric vehicles.â
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NTUâs involvement in public policy affords Professor Suresh a significant degree of influence in the government â another potential factor in his decision to move across the world. He is a keen environmentalist â âSingaporeâŠhas a sustained long-term commitment to its ecosystem, so thatâs part of the reason [for moving]â â and his aim is to help build âthe smartest university in the worldâ.
âVery soon, we hope to have all 59 buildings on the campus âGreen Markâ certified,â he said. âIt should be the most eco-friendly campus on the planet. So itâs not just talk, itâs not just research; itâs walking the talk.â
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âI first visited NTU in 1991,â he concluded. âWhat has changed since? The hunger, the aspiration, the ability to attract talent, the desire to play on a global scaleâŠI feel very privileged to lead this world-class university at this point.â
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