Chawky Frenn

Born in Lebanon, Mr. Chawky Frenn emigrated to the United States in 1981. He is currently an associate professor at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia. He received a BFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston in 1985 and an MFA from the Tyler School of Art of Temple University in Philadelphia and Temple Abroad in Rome in 1988.

Mr. Frenn has exhibited his works in the United States, France, Germany, Italy, Lebanon, Paraguay, and India. He has participated in several museum exhibitions and his work is part of collections in places like MARe (Museum of Recent Art) in Bucharest and the Housatonic Museum of Art in Connecticut; it is also part of private collections.

Mr. Frenn has received numerous awards, including the Teaching Excellence Award from George Mason University and the Blanche E. Colman Award from the Mellon Trust in Boston. His work has received critical acclaim in publications like The New York Times, Art New England, and Boston Globe in the United States, and in An-Nahar, L’Orient-Le Jour, and The Daily Star in Lebanon.

Mr. Frenn is the author of two books, 100 Boston Artists (2013) and 100 Boston Painters (2012). His work has also appeared in 100 Artists of Washington, D.C, Male Nude Now, and Encyclopedia of Arab American Artists. Besides, there’s a monograph on his work, titled Art for Life’s Sake.

This is Mr. Frenn’s second Fulbright-Nehru Award; the first one was in 2017. In his current project, he is expanding cultural bridges initiated during his 2017 stint. The project involves: cultivating art as a voice for mutual understanding, social justice, and peace; teaching at Banaras Hindu University and building partnerships with artists; collaborating with students and colleagues to create an exhibit communicating individual voices on collective concerns; presenting lectures, panel discussions, and workshops at universities and art centers; guiding art education forward into new interdisciplinary perspectives; fostering global educational connections and artistic collaborations; and promoting student engagement and multicultural teaching opportunities between India and the United States.

Kaylin Clements

Dr. Kaylin Clements has a BS in environmental science and a BA in business administration from the University of Florida, and an MS in conservation leadership and a PhD in human dimensions of natural resources from Colorado State University (CSU). Her past work has included: applied quantitative and qualitative research on protected area management and community engagement in southern Belize; studying pro-environmental behaviors in Florida and Belize related to controlling the invasive lionfish; and social network analysis on a variety of social and environmental issues. Between graduate degrees, she served as a social scientist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. She has also served as a facilitator and research assistant for the Center for Public Deliberation at CSU, as an instructor in human dimensions of natural resources courses at CSU, and as a social network research assistant for the Institute for Research in the Social Sciences. Most recently, as a research social scientist fellow for the United States Geological Survey, she served as the partner engagement coordinator and as a co-chair of the National Early Detection and Rapid Response Framework to prevent the establishment of invasive species in the United States.

Her main research interests center around human dimensions of natural resources, which applies social science theory and methods to understand complex social–ecological systems. Specifically, she is interested in how social networks, cultural norms and models, and other social factors support or inhibit adoption of pro-environmental behaviors and collaboration. She is also passionate about teaching and building capacity in the social sciences to enhance the impacts of conservation work.

Dr. Clements’s Fulbright-Nehru project is applying social network research methods to investigate the networks of healthcare professionals, community leaders, and health information in communities adjacent to wildlife habitat in the Western Ghats. The analysis is identifying barriers and opportunities for improved access to health and safety services and information. In addition, a social science methods course is training natural scientists in Bengaluru and at the Centre for Wildlife Studies to integrate social science into their research and practice.

Sanjeev Chawla

Dr. Sanjeev Chawla is a research assistant professor in the Department of Radiology, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania. He is also a medical physicist certified by the American Board of Medical Physics. The focus of Dr. Chawla’s research has been directed toward the development of metabolic and physiological MR imaging-derived biomarkers in making correct diagnosis and assessing treatment responses to established, novel, and emerging therapies in patients with brain tumor, head and neck cancer, and neurodegenerative diseases.

He has a master’s degree in chemistry from the Indian Institute of Technology Delhi and a PhD in radiology from Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences, Lucknow. He has authored 103 peer-reviewed original research/review articles and eight book chapters. He has been awarded research grants by agencies like the National Institute of Health/National Cancer Institute, the International Society for Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, and the Penn Center for Precision Medicine. Currently, he is leading two clinical trials related to electric field therapy in glioblastomas (NCT05086497) and evaluation of treatment response in the case of salivary gland tumors (NCT04452162).

Dr. Chawla is also an associate editor with the Journal of Translational Medicine and a reviewer for several leading scientific journals. Earlier, he was a guest editor with Frontiers in Neurology. He has also won the Outstanding Researcher Award in Neuroradiology from the Venus International Foundation and the Leadership and Mentorship Scholarship Award from the National Cancer Institute Awardee Skill Development Consortia.

Dr. Chawla’s Fulbright-Nehru project is building a robust, reproducible, and objective clinical decision support (CDS) tool by incorporating physiologic and metabolic MR imaging-derived parameters and molecular signatures combined with machine learning algorithms for assessing treatment response in glioblastoma patients receiving standard treatment as well as novel therapies. This tool will not only facilitate accurate and timely differentiation of true progression and pseudo progression in glioblastomas (precision diagnostics) but also allow clinicians to make “go/stop” decisions on therapeutic interventions (precision therapeutics). Additionally, it will help to relieve “scanxiety” among patients and their loved ones.

William Belcher

Dr. William Belcher is a forensic anthropologist and archaeologist in the School of Global Integrative Studies at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln (UNL). He manages the UNL Forensic Anthropology Research Laboratory as well as the undergraduate and graduate programs in forensic anthropology. Dr. Belcher consults and trains in identification efforts with local law enforcement within the State of Nebraska and beyond. Prior to coming to UNL in 2019, he retired as the deputy laboratory director of the US Defense POW/MIA Accounting Agency’s Central Identification Laboratory where he conducted forensic investigation, recovery, and identification efforts to support the US mission of missing-in-action identification and repatriation to family members. His research has been featured in numerous academic conferences in the U.S. and South Asia and in several publications.

Dr. Belcher’s Fulbright-Nehru project’s main goal is to provide a framework for building up the forensic anthropological/archaeological capacity of the National Forensic Sciences University in Gujarat. This involves three academic courses – in human osteology, forensic anthropology, and a field course in forensic archaeology – and is set to culminate in a field exercise of approximately five weeks in the north-eastern region of India associated with a U.S. World War II-era aircraft incident. Currently, there is no curriculum in the Republic of India in terms of archaeological recovery and excavation associated with crime scene investigation.