Vice Provost for Sustainability and Climate Action
Company: University of Michigan
Location: Ann Arbor
Posted on: November 16, 2023
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Job Description:
The University of Michigan (U-M) is well-positioned to take on
the global challenges that surround our planet related to
sustainability and climate action. Administrators, faculty, staff,
and students are already steeped in education, research, and
community engagement on sustainability and climate action at the
University.
U-M seeks a collaborative, experienced, and innovative leader to
serve in the inaugural role of the Vice Provost for Sustainability
and Climate Action (VPSCA). The VPSCA will build upon the
University's successes and work to create new opportunities for
further collaboration, partnership, and engagement inside and
outside the University. Additionally, the VPSCA will foster a
culture whereby sustainability and climate action are embedded
within the educational and research missions across all units to
drive significant progress and impact.
Reporting directly to the Provost and Executive Vice President for
Academic Affairs, the VPSCA will be responsible for guiding,
coordinating, and advancing U-M's leadership in the spheres of
education and research related to sustainability and climate
action, and for partnering with other responsible leaders to
advance campus sustainability culture and living lab
opportunities.
Aligned with its public mission, U-M is a leader in its commitment
to diversity, equity, inclusion, and justice. U-M strives to embed
and integrate these values to ensure a pluralistic entity that is
free from discrimination and welcomes and supports underserved and
underrepresented communities. The VPSCA will build on these
commitments by infusing them throughout the sustainability and
climate action education and research priorities.
The VPSCA will engage the campus on academic and research
activities, as well as public and community engagement initiatives,
to enhance and facilitate cross-campus collaboration in the areas
of sustainability and climate action. This role will serve an
important convening and coordinating function to ensure that U-M is
recognized as a global leader in cutting-edge sustainability and
climate action education and research.
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The University of Michigan has a long and distinguished history. It
was founded in 1817, 20 years before the territory became a state
and 45 years before the Morrill Act of 1862 established the modern,
public land-grant university system. It was one of the first public
universities in the nation, and throughout its over 200-year
history, it has maintained the highest levels of education,
scholarship, and research.
The University of Michigan was ranked in the top 35 of the 1,500
higher education institutions across 104 locations in the world,
according to the QS World University Rankings 2024 edition. Among
national universities, U.S. News and World Report regularly ranks
the University of Michigan as a top 25 institution. The University
has also held the title as the third ranked public university every
year since 2019 and is the second U.S. public university with the
highest National Science Foundation (NSF) research volume.
The University of Michigan has a total budget of $13.4 billion in
FY24. The faculty headcount at U-M's three campuses is 7,457, with
the Ann Arbor campus alone having a total of 6,752 faculty
full-time equivalents (FTEs). Instructional appointments comprise
3,617 FTEs, and another 3,134 FTEs are individuals with clinical,
research, and other titles who are primarily involved in health
care, research, and related scholarly activities. The University of
Michigan enrolls approximately 52,065 undergraduate, graduate, and
professional students. It regularly ranks as first or second in the
country in research expenditures among public universities, with
total research expenditures at over $1.8 billion in FY23. Having
earned distinction in almost every academic area, the University of
Michigan is an exceptional, comprehensive research environment.
Initial screening of applicants will begin immediately and continue
until the position is filled. The University of Michigan will be
assisted by Jackie Zavitz, Abby Rudman, and Sara Szynal of Heidrick
& Struggles, Inc.
Nominations and applications should be directed to:
Michigan_VPSustainability@heidrick.com
The University of Michigan, as an equal opportunity/affirmative
action employer, complies with all applicable federal and state
laws regarding nondiscrimination and affirmative action. The
University of Michigan is committed to a policy of equal
opportunity for all persons and does not discriminate on the basis
of race, color, national origin, age, marital status, sex, sexual
orientation, gender identity, gender expression, disability,
religion, height, weight, or veteran status in employment,
educational programs and activities, and admissions. Inquiries or
complaints may be addressed to the Equity, Civil Rights, and Title
IX Office (ECRT) at 734-763-0235 and ecrtoffice@umich.edu, and as
follows:
Sex/Gender Identity/Gender Expression/Sexual Orientation, including
sexual misconduct: ECRT Sexual and Gender-Based Misconduct Director
and Title IX Coordinator
Disability: ECRT Disability Director and ADA Coordinator
Race/Color/National Origin/Age/Marital
Status/Religion/Height/Weight/Veteran Status: ECRT Civil Rights
Director
Land Acknowledgement: The University of Michigan occupies the
ancestral, traditional, and current lands of the Anishinaabe or
People of the Three Fires, namely the Ojibwe, Odawa, and Bodewadmi
Nations. These nations were forced to cede their lands in 1817
through the coercive Treaty at the Foot of the Rapids. The Treaty
earmarked half of the lands for 'a college at Detroit,' where
Indigenous students would be able to receive an education. Despite
this commitment, U-M did not enroll an Indigenous student until 130
years later. Additionally, it is the sale of this land that
established U-M's endowment and helped create and sustain U-M as a
premier research university.
As U-M continues to occupy this land, we recognize that this
acknowledgment does not substitute for the creation of an authentic
and sustained relationship with the Indigenous communities and
their lands that we occupy. Further, this acknowledgment will not
erase the harm and violence that have been done to Indigenous
people through the actions and inactions of the institution.
However, through a land acknowledgment, U-M is taking an important
small step towards the creation of an equitable, sustainable, and
self-determined future. In offering this land acknowledgment, we
recognize and affirm Indigenous people and communities who live in
Michigan now and those who were forcibly removed from their
homelands. We also affirm Indigenous histories and experiences, and
the historic and ongoing struggles for Indigenous sovereignty.
Keywords: University of Michigan, Ann Arbor , Vice Provost for Sustainability and Climate Action, Other , Ann Arbor, Michigan
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