Demonstrating leadership

Lina Deshilton, Executive Director
Zuckerman Israel Institute

I’m delighted to present the 2023 “Zuckerman Effect” and share the program’s achievements for the past year.

This year’s report is presented during challenging times for Israeli and North American universities who are doing their utmost to maintain high levels of research at their institutions. Despite continuing obstacles, our program serves as a model for impactful science and our Zuckerman scholars emerge with innovative approaches, bold thinking, and a collaborative leadership spirit.

In the last year, our program expanded as we embraced new partnerships, helped our communities grow, and provided extra support to our scholars.

Evidently, “it takes a village” to maintain the Zuckerman Effect. We spare no effort in promoting the great work undertaken by our scholars. We listen to voices on the ground, meeting with university rectors and visiting campuses in Israel and the US. As we learn about the most pressing issues, we introduce new methods to advance research and increase much-needed resources.

The expanding effect of the community we have created has no limit. Scholars come together to help each other and collaborate. New scholars receive mentoring, guidance and strength from their peers. They have worked even through a global pandemic, an ongoing war in Israel, and rising antisemitism in campuses in North America. Zuckerman Scholars have also achieved personal milestones—marrying and forming new homes in Israel, having babies, and maintaining the Zuckerman spirit.

We commend our community, from the Council of Higher Education’s leadership to the leadership at our partner universities and through to our scholars conducting research in their labs. It is my absolute pride and joy to serve, lead and be part of the Zuckerman positive community.

I hope this report provides a glimpse into the exciting and hopeful world of discovery that is the “Zuckerman Effect.” With wishes for quieter days ahead, Lina Deshilton, Executive Director, Zuckerman Israel Institute

Breakthrough Science

We are immensely proud of the tremendous scientific contribution made by our community of researchers. In 2023 alone, Zuckerman scholars published their research in 190 journals, with dramatic advancements for the global scientific community as a whole.

The genetic phenomenon that
worsens the signs of autism

Published by Zuckerman Faculty Scholar Shani Stern at the University of Haifa

Selected breakthroughs from 2023

Over the past seven years, we have consistently raised the bar while adhering to our vision that the next generation of leaders needs to be cultivated as they begin their scientific career paths, a strategy that has proven itself.

Zuckerman in Numbers
Visualize the data

Scholars

1
SINCE 2016
1
JOINED IN 2023

Labs

1
SINCE 2016
1
FOUNDED IN 2023

Participating
Universities

1
ISRAELI UNIVERSITIES
IN 2023
1
AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES
IN 2023
1
AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES
IN 2023

Publications

1
IN 2023

ERC Grants

1
IN 2023

Women

1 %
IN 2023
Krista Natasha Oswald,
Postdoctoral Scholar at Ben-Gurion University of the Negev

Nearly half (45%) of the scholars recruited in 2023 are women

Fulfilling our vision. Nearing parity.

Promoting women at the highest level of scientific research is critical to ensuring Israel’s position as a leader in basic and applied research, in producing an even more robust and egalitarian community of academics, and in breaking the glass ceiling. We are exceedingly proud that our program – from postdoctoral exchange through faculty – has attracted a tremendous caliber of women researchers across disciplines and in numbers nearly matching those of our male scholars. Each of these women, through her contribution and voice, is inspiring the next generation of peers and paving the way for more women to pursue scientific research.

BEFORE
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AFTER

Arielle Fischer getting ready to set up her lab
at Technion-Israel Institute of Technology

Alon Ron stands in the space for his lab at Tel Aviv University

The founding of each Zuckerman lab allows a bright, promising young scientist to return to Israel, design a cutting-edge lab from the ground up, and recruit a team of research fellows and technicians to push the limits of research in their field. This is the first time Zuckerman faculty scholars become Principal Investigators (PIs) and learn the ins and outs of lab operations from setup through management, appeals for funding, budgets, management of human capital, and of course, guiding research conducted at their labs.

Some of these labs have allowed Israeli universities to acquire critical instrumentation and facilities, giving access to a more advanced research capability. Among these is the most powerful laser in the Middle East, located at Zuckerman Faculty Scholar Ishay Pomerantz’ NePTUN lab at Tel Aviv University.

The most powerful laser in the Middle East is located in the Ishay Pomeranz Lab at Tel Aviv University.

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We are

Supporting young scientists who are being recognized by the world’s most prestigious granting organizations

ERC Grants

1 %
OF ZUCKERMAN FACULTY
SCHOLARS HAVE RECEIVED
ERC GRANTS SINCE 2018
1 M
IN TOTAL AWARDED TO OUR FACULTY SCHOLARS SINCE 2018

ERC Grants 2023

1 m
STARTING GRANT
TO NETA SHLEZINGER
1 K
PROOF OF CONCEPT GRANT
TO YOAV SHECHTMAN
1 M
STARTING GRANT
TO DEKEL ROSENFELD
1 M
STARTING GRANT
TO YAARA OREN

The European Research Council (ERC) continues to recognize the important contribution of Zuckerman Faculty scholars with three prestigious Starter Grants awarded to scholars in 2023. According to the ERC, between 2007 and 2021, Israel had the second highest number of ERC grant recipients per capita, a reflection of Israel’s continued commitment to excellence in academic research.

The Zuckerman program allowed me to work on projects at the forefront of understanding stony coral biomineralization with top researchers. I had an amazing time in Israel and look forward to continuing collaborations that were established during my time as a Zuckerman postdoctoral fellow."

Jeana Drake
Assistant Project Scientist and Lecturer and Director of Marine Programming at The Center for Diverse Leadership in Science at University of California, Los Angeles, USA – Zuckerman Postdoctoral Alum, University of Haifa 2019-2021

In Israel’s Negev, a ray of hope shines
for combating global climate instability

Krista Oswald, Postdoc at Ben-Gurion University featured on i24 News

Swahili_Tribe

Genetic study details complex ancestry
of East Africa’s Swahili people

Esther Brielle, Israeli postdoc at Harvard is lead author in an article published in Nature

Photo courtesy: Mariasilvia Giamberini

Has Generative AI peaked?

Nadav Cohen, Israeli Postdoc Alum at Princeton University and Asst. Professor of Computer Science, Tel Aviv University, featured in The Jerusalem Post

COVID_Vaccine

Covid Vaccine Mandates: Is it time?

Rachel Gur-Arie, Zuckerman-CHE Israeli Woman Postdoc at Johns Hopkins University featured in “the conversation

2023 was yet another year (our fifth) of tight collaboration aimed at maintaining the edge in excellence. We continue our strategic partnership with the Israel Council for Higher Education which has allowed our program to root itself and expand to include eight universities and an increase in scholar intake.

The MIT-Israel Zuckerman STEM Fund has supported collaboration between faculty and research scientists at MIT and their Israeli counterparts. In 2023, The MIT-Israel Seed Fund Selection Committee accepted _____ proposals for the 2023-2024 funding cycle.

Established in 2021, the Zuckerman Travel and Research STEM Fund covers costs associated with collaborative meetings and travel, as well as technology, equipment and supplies, faculty and student support, and the publication and dissemination of research between PIs at Israeli Universities and their peers at Harvard. The Zuckerman Travel and Research Fund Selection Committee accepted six proposals for the 2023-2024 funding cycle.

We are honored to have contributed to a profound academic and cultural experience for such a fine group of scholars. Today we count 181 alumni, many of whom are closely connected to their Zuckerman peers and the research they pursued during the program. We are intensely committed to our community, to its needs and to the sensibilities of each of our scholars. We expend a great deal of care and resources to ensure fluid communication among members of our community, providing enrichment and networking opportunities, and generally empowering our members inside and outside their labs.

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The Zuckerman community has been stepping up since the start of the war in Israel, proving that science has the power to transcend the walls of the laboratory.

Stronger together
Five students from Arielle Fischer’s Biomotion Lab at the Technion were drafted at the start of the war. The Zuckerman Faculty Scholar thanked her students with “Stronger Together” t-shirts

One good turn…
Zuckerman postdoctoral alum Lucien Weiss, now an Assistant Professor at Polytechnique Montréal’s Department of Engineering Physics, completed his research under Zuckerman Faculty Scholar Professor Yoav Schechtman at the Technion. Weiss is currently hosting Wade-Hann-Caruthers at his lab in Montreal.

From the Negev to Miami
Zuckerman Postdoc Grace Snyder began her postdoctoral research in May 2023 at Benyamin Rosental’s lab at Ben-Gurion University. With research slowing to a halt when when the young PI was drafted at the start of the war, Rosenthal’s long-time collaborator Prof. Nikki Traylor-Knowles, at the University of Miami, proposed to host Grace and another Ben-Gurion University student at her Cnidarian Immunity lab so as not to disrupt their research.

A life-long commitment to bettering society through philanthropy and promoting an
exchange of ideas.

Mortimer B. Zuckerman
shares his vision