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Europe

Competitive funding supports talented researchers and teachers

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Europe, the birthplace of the modern university, is our leading source of research collaborations.

高清福利片ers have produced more than 21,000 co-authored publications since 2016 with academics from European universities and institutions,聽chiefly in the United Kingdom, Germany, France, the Netherlands, Spain and Denmark.

Since 2016, we have signed or renewed seven agreements with European university partners, representing a cross-section of the region鈥檚 leading universities. Our partners are committed to building and investing in active, productive collaborations.

To date we have committed more than $2 million in funding 鈥 matched by our partners 鈥 to support our talented researchers in 100 joint research projects, early-career mobility awards and collaborative workshops.

Europe is also the most popular destination for our outgoing exchange students, and we have super exchange agreements in place with the University of Edinburgh, University College London and the University of Glasgow.

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Explore future partnerships

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Our partners in Asia

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Sorbonne University

聽in Paris was established in 2018 through a merger between Paris-Sorbonne University and Pierre et Marie Curie University. Sorbonne and the University of Sydney are collaborating in Marine Sciences, Quantum and Social Sciences.

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University College London

聽is one of the world's leading multi-disciplinary universities and a member of the League of European Research Universities. The University of Sydney has a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), Partnership Cooperation Agreement and Student Exchange Agreement with UCL to explore and participate in shared teaching, training, and research activities across a broad range of faculties including the Faculty of Science and Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences.

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Heidelberg University

聽is one of Europe鈥檚 leading research-intensive institutions.聽Its twelve faculties include the humanities, law, social and behavioural sciences, life sciences, medicine, and natural sciences We run seed funding rounds to promote research collaboration.

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University of Edinburgh

Our Partnership Cooperation Agreement with the聽聽provides joint funding to support collaborative research projects. A聽Super Exchange agreement聽for students is also in place. The Office of Global and Research Engagement provides seed funding to support research collaboration.

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University of Glasgow

Under our Partnership Cooperation Agreement with the聽, we have joint PhD programs in place, and run annual seed funding rounds to support research collaboration. Our collaboration is extensive and includes the Charles Perkins Centre, Sydney Policy Lab, the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, Sydney Business School and Sydney Law School. We also have a Student Exchange Agreement and MOU in place.

Collaborative projects

高清福利片ers are working with colleagues at Utrecht University to develop an ovine IVF procedure that produces high-quality sheep embryos.

The project, which has received partnership funding from both universities, extends the work done at Utrecht on bovine IVF. If it is successful, it could unlock commercial opportunities.

鈥淲e are trying to better understand the process of fertilisation,鈥 says Dr Tamara Leahy from the School of Life and Environmental Sciences, who is leading the University of Sydney research team.

鈥淲e have already developed a new fluorescent assay for the measurement of cholesterol in sperm samples which is easy to use, cost effective and reliable.鈥

The process has been trialled in Sydney by Associate Professor Bart Gadella from Utrecht鈥檚 Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, and Sydney PhD candidate Naomi Bernecic spent six months at Utrecht to further validate the test.

The research team is working on two joint papers for publication, and has discussed further collaborations with INRA, the French agricultural research institute.

Where did galaxies like our own Milky Way come from? A joint research project co-led by Professor 聽and Professor Rob Ivison, astrophysicists at the University of Sydney and the University of Edinburgh, has opened up a new window on the universe and the search for the cold gases that fuelled the formation of stars like the Sun.

The collaboration has produced a new computational approach that combines data sources to uncover the cosmological distances to objects, a key feature in determining just where a galaxy sits in the overall evolution of the universe. Whilst a major development, it is only a first step, and the research will continue with on-going observational programs in the world鈥檚 leading facilities, with future plans to use the Hubble Space Telescope to peer into the distant universe.

The project, co-funded by the University of Sydney and the University of Edinburgh through Partnership Collaboration Awards, could advance our knowledge about the early universe, revealing the birth places of galaxies.

Professor Lewis and Professor Ivison expect new data to flow towards the end of the year, providing exciting insights into the growth of the early universe. It is expected that significant scientific papers, with high international impact, will quickly follow.

The collaboration has already produced聽.

In Australia, some 38,000 reports are made each year in relation to people who go missing. Ninety-eight out of every hundred are located quickly, within a month or less, with just under half at risk of going missing again 鈥 a pattern of behaviour that involves significant social, economic and health-related costs for those vulnerable to going missing, police and the wider community.

Until now, international research has primarily focussed on search and rescue techniques, or the grief experiences of those left behind. But a joint research project co-led by聽Dr Sarah Wayland, Lecturer in Behavioural and Social Sciences in Health at the University of Sydney, and Hester Parr, Professor in Geography at the University of Glasgow, will allow a group of academics from both universities, alongside industry and community partners, to focus attention on the health and wellbeing of those who return, and to effectively intervene to prevent future incidents. Due to COVID-19 plans to collaborate in person have now shifted to utilising online platforms to continue this important work.

Dr Wayland said: 鈥淭he project will seek to identify, across different spatial contexts, how to facilitate a shift from 鈥榤issing persons鈥 being a law enforcement issue to a public health problem. Only a tiny percentage of these people are victims of crime. We need to understand the voices of those who return from going missing in order to develop a comprehensive prevention strategy鈥

Dr Wayland has been researching missing people since 2004, initially as a counsellor and then manager of the NSW Government Families and Friends of Missing persons Unit. She said her experiences had led her to believe there was a need to understand psychologically why people go missing in the first place and how they can be connected to support services to ensure they do not go missing again.

She was聽聽earlier this year about the research project with a recent opportunity to discuss the impact of the one year anniversary of missing Belgian backpacker, Theo Hayez,聽. Her survey, to assist in gathering data to support the project can also be found聽

Long-term university partnerships require a significant investment of resources 鈥 both human and financial 鈥 so how can we demonstrate to others that they are succeeding and what metrics can we use?

A project led by the University of Edinburgh and involving the University of Sydney, the University of Copenhagen, and other European partners, sets out to answer these questions. Developing a Framework for Evaluation of International University Partnerships, or EVALUATE, is funded by the European Union under the Erasmus+ scheme and aims to improve the quality and consistency of the evaluation of strategic international partnerships between universities in Europe and beyond.

Other partners in the consortium include the University of Helsinki, Leiden University and University College Dublin.

Consortium partners will develop by August 2022 a framework for the evaluation of partnerships based on existing good practice, evaluation literature and practices in associated industries, and consultation with stakeholders.

The UK National Agency,聽which controls and coordinates the Erasmus programs in the UK, approved the project in May 2020 with a budget of 鈧409,580. Consortium meetings have been taking place virtually to discuss next steps such as project outputs and revised timelines.

Staff working on the project include Amanda Sayan and Kathleen Berezay from the Office of Engagement (University of Sydney) Derek Macleod, Llinos Jones and their team (University of Edinburgh), and Mie Morthorst and Hedvig Thomsen (University of Copenhagen).

鈥淓VALUATE is an innovative project that addresses an area of need,鈥 said Amanda Sayan, Partnerships Director at the University of Sydney. 鈥淲e are excited to be part of this project, both to contribute our expertise and to learn from other partners.鈥

Just under a year after signing a strategic partnership agreement, Sydney and Sorbonne have launched into a series of materials science workshops. The four online meetings during October and November focused on energy, biomaterials, catalysis and optics.

Sorbonne University became Sydney鈥檚 20th global partner in November 2019 when Sorbonne president Jean Chambaz and Vice President for International Development Serge Fdida visited Sydney.

A large Sorbonne delegation was due to visit Sydney in March 2020 for a series of workshops but the coronavirus epidemic intervened. 鈥淭he travel restrictions have played havoc with our planning, but it鈥檚 forced us to be resourceful and to look at new ways of doing things,鈥 said Sydney鈥檚 Partnerships Director Amanda Sayan.

鈥淭he virtual workshops are a product of that new thinking, and it鈥檚 a tribute to the determination of our two academic champions, Professor David McKenzie in the School of Physics at Sydney and Professor Mathieu Salanne in the PHENIX laboratory at Sorbonne University. It speaks volumes about the potential contained in this partnership.鈥

More than 100 established researchers and students took part in the workshops, covering themes such as porous materials, nanoscience, hydrogen economy, bio sensing, energy storage and photovoltaics.

Another joint virtual workshop on Quantum Artificial Intelligence was also held in mid-November.

Sorbonne and Sydney are also exploring options in other subjects including medicine, the humanities, environment and musicology, and there are further discussions around a joint PhD.

The University of Sydney and the University of Edinburgh hosted a joint virtual workshop series on sustainable food production, antimicrobial resistance and One Health.

The five workshops held in March and April 2021, focused on societal drivers of AMR and social science of AMR, antifungal resistance and food security.

The discussions covered opportunities for interinstitutional collaboration in shared areas of strength based on current understanding/approaches, remaining knowledge gaps and funding opportunities.

, Professor of Production Animal Health at the University of Sydney and Professor Lisa Boden, Chair of Population Medicine and Veterinary Public Health Policy at the University of Edinburgh, worked together to organise these workshops featuring 11 speakers from both institutions.

More than 100 researchers and students took part in the multidisciplinary workshops and had the opportunity to connect and network offline between events.

Edinburgh and Sydney are exploring options to progress the research collaboration and partnership such as submitting joint grant proposals and discussions about a joint PhD.

A new MoU between the Charles Perkins Centre at the University of Sydney and College of Medical, Veterinary and Life Sciences (MVLS) at the University of Glasgow was signed on the 26 October 2021.聽 This celebration also included renewal of the institutional MoU with University of Sydney.

Professor Stephen Simpson, Academic Director of Charles Perkins Centre, said: 鈥淚 am thrilled that the Charles Perkins Centre is embarking with our renowned colleagues in the College of MVLS at the University of Glasgow to tackle the epidemics of obesity, cardiometabolic and autoimmune diseases that are threatening the sustainability of health systems worldwide.聽Meeting this challenge requires tackling root causes which lie in the modern industrialised food system, in our built and work environments, and deep in social disadvantage and inequity.

"We need new models of disease prevention and treatment that build upon the emerging science indicating the shared biology of many chronic disease, ageing - and susceptibility to infectious diseases. 聽Pulling this off requires partners who have deep expertise, disciplinary breadth and who understand how to work across disciplines. 聽The CPC and the College of MVLS are such partners and I look forward to an exciting future together.鈥

Professor Iain McInnes, Vice Principal and Head of College of MVLS, commented: 鈥淭he College of MVLS is delighted to establish this exciting new partnership with the Charles Perkins Centre - an internationally renowned, multidisciplinary, research and education hub that uses a complex-systems approach to tackling chronic diseases.聽

"We share values, curiosity, and a complementary focus so are very much looking forward to collaborating with our colleagues in Sydney. Together, we can create a superb platform to make critical inroads into the understanding and management of chronic diseases that afflict society to improve global health. 鈥

University of Sydney Vice-Chancellor and Principal, Professor Mark Scott, and Professor Iain McInnes signed the new MoU with the Charles Perkins Centre together with the Director of the Charles Perkins Centre, Professor Stephen Simpson.

This collaboration will build on three symposiums already held as part of this new partnership covering:聽

  • Sex differences in cardiovascular diseases
  • 滨苍蹿濒补尘尘补迟颈辞苍听
  • Beyond traditional risk factors

Future plans are to establish new collaborations between staff at both partners in complimentary research areas (such as, obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular disease), joint PhD research projects and when possible, staff and student exchanges.聽

The institutional MoU was signed by Professor Mark Scott and Professor Kathy Belov (for the University of Sydney) and Professor Sir Anton Muscatelli and Rachel Sandison (for the University of Glasgow). The collaboration continues to address current challenges, for example two jointly organised webinars were held on 鈥楾he future of education in a Covid-recovery world鈥 in November 2020 and May 2021.

A joint research project co-led by聽Professor聽聽and Dr聽Sean Humphrey聽from the University of Sydney聽and Professor J酶rgen Wojtaszewski from the University of Copenhagen, could revolutionise our understanding of type 2 diabetes in diverse populations and provide new drug targets, initiating the development of Precision Medicine strategies to tailor appropriate treatments.

Exercise is known to have profoundly beneficial effects for people with diabetes as it improves insulin sensitivity. However, the mechanisms for this effect have eluded researchers for decades. By teaming up with researchers in Copenhagen, world leaders in exercise research in humans, James and Humphrey have applied their cutting edge mass spectrometry methods to study protein phosphorylation in people following exercise. One of the striking findings to emerge from this work is that each individual was found to possess a unique pattern of protein phosphorylation spanning many thousands of data points.聽 By utilising these unique patterns they were able to for the first time begin to discover novel aspects of the molecular circuitry used by exercise to encode its beneficial effects.

The ongoing collaboration is expected to have an incredibly strong impact given it is currently working on a $2.2M USD project with Pfizer on how exercise promotes insulin sensitivity in European populations. The team has taken advantage of these resources to develop sophisticated tools and methods that they are now planning on applying to Indigenous populations such as the Greenlandic Inuits who are well known to be at unusually high risk of developing diabetes.

The project, which has led to聽, has been co-funded by the University of Sydney and the University of Copenhagen through Partnership Collaboration Awards.

The teams have now applied for additional funding in Australia and in Copenhagen to continue the project.

Enquiries

External Engagement

Global organisations looking to collaborate with the University, please complete our聽enquiry form聽or contact us on the details below.

贰尘补颈濒:听engage.team@sydney.edu.au

Office of Global and Research Engagement

For information on university partnerships and research collaboration, please contact:聽

Phone: +61 2 9351聽4461
贰尘补颈濒:听pvc.ge@sydney.edu.au

International Collaboration Principles

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International Collaboration Principles
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