M. R. C. Greenwood

Last updated
Mary Rita Cooke Greenwood
US Navy 110412-N-WP746-117 Dr. M. R. C. Greenwood speaks to Navy leadership at the Learn from the Leaders speaking event sponsored by the Workforce.jpg
Greenwood speaks to Navy leadership in 2011
14thPresident of the University of Hawaiʻi
In office
August 24, 2009 (2009-08-24) September 30, 2013 (2013-09-30)
Scientific career
FieldsHuman Nutrition
Institutions
Thesis The regulation of body weight: Developmental, behavioral and physiological considerations  (1973)

Mary Rita Cooke Greenwood (born April 11, 1943[ citation needed ]) is a nationally recognized leader in higher education, nutrition, and health sciences. Additionally, her research has been extensively published, internationally recognized, and has earned awards. [1]

Contents

Greenwood had served as president of the University of Hawaiʻi and chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz. She had held leadership positions in several academic and profession societies and had served in several scientific organizations within the United States government.

She currently holds an appointment as a Distinguished Professor Emerita of Nutrition and Internal Medicine at the University of California, Davis.

Early life and education

Greenwood was born in 1943 in Gainesville, Florida. [2] Greenwood earned the A.B. degree in biology, Summa cum laude, from Vassar College in 1968. [3] She received her Ph.D. in physiology, Developmental Biology, and Neurosciences from Rockefeller University in 1973, [4] and she completed a postdoctoral study in Human Nutrition at Columbia University in 1974. [2]

Career

She is best known for her position as the associate director for Science in the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy [1] (confirmed by the US Senate) during the Clinton Administration. She also served as President of the American Association for the Advancement of Science in 1999. In addition, she has been President of the North American Association for the Study of Obesity (NAASO)—now the Obesity Society; and also President of the American Society of Clinical Nutrition.

Formerly an adjunct professor of Public Health and Nutrition at the University of California, Berkeley, she currently holds an appointment as a Distinguished Professor Emerita of Nutrition and Internal Medicine at the University of California, Davis.

She held various positions in the University of California system: as Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, University of California Office of the President; Chancellor of University of California, Santa Cruz; and Dean of Graduate Studies and Vice Provost at University of California, Davis. During her time at chancellor, she oversaw the opening of the University of California system's first new residential college in 30 years. Her tenure oversaw the hiring of 250 new faculty members and academic programs were expanded by 52 percent.

In 2005, the University of California found that Dr. Greenwood had violated its conflict of interest rules related to a management position created for a colleague with whom she co-owned a rental property. [5] The university found no evidence of improper conduct in a second allegation that she influenced a position held by her son at UC Merced, concluding no pattern of impropriety or ethics violations in regard to both matters that were thoroughly investigated. [6] The university accepted Dr. Greenwood's resignation from the position and affirmed her return to the tenured professorship she formerly held at the University of California, Davis.

Greenwood became the President of the University of Hawaiʻi in 2009 and was the first woman to hold the position. [1] During her tenure, she oversaw several major projects including the University of Hawaiʻi Cancer Center, the new University of Hawaiʻi – West Oʻahu campus, the University of Hawaiʻi at Hilo Hawaiian Language and Culture building, the Windward Community College Learning Center, the Maui Community College Science and Technology Center, the Kauaʻi Community College Campus Center project, the University of Hawaiʻi at Mānoa Campus Center and a new Information Technology Building. [1] On May 6, 2013, Greenwood announced her retirement from the University of Hawaiʻi as president.

She is a member of the Institute of Medicine in the National Academy of Sciences, and a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.

Awards and fellowships

Publications

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">University of California, Santa Cruz</span> Public university in Santa Cruz, California

The University of California, Santa Cruz is a public land-grant research university in Santa Cruz, California. It is one of the ten campuses in the University of California system. Located on Monterey Bay, on the edge of the coastal community of Santa Cruz, the main campus lies on 2,001 acres (810 ha) of rolling, forested hills overlooking the Pacific Ocean. As of Fall 2022, its ten residential colleges enroll some 17,500 undergraduate and 2,000 graduate students. Satellite facilities in other Santa Cruz locations include the Coastal Science Campus and the Westside Research Park and the Silicon Valley Center in Santa Clara.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sandra Faber</span> American astrophysicist

Sandra Moore Faber is an American astrophysicist known for her research on the evolution of galaxies. She is the University Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and works at the Lick Observatory. She has made discoveries linking the brightness of galaxies to the speed of stars within them and was the co-discoverer of the Faber–Jackson relation. Faber was also instrumental in designing the Keck telescopes in Hawaii.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Denice Denton</span> American academic administrator

Denice Dee Denton was an American professor of electrical engineering and academic administrator. She was the ninth chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz.

The Baskin School of Engineering, known simply as Baskin Engineering, is the school of engineering at the University of California, Santa Cruz. It consists of six departments: Applied Mathematics, Biomolecular Engineering, Computational Media, Computer Science and Engineering, Electrical and Computer Engineering, and Statistics.

History of Consciousness is the name of a department in the Humanities Division of the University of California, Santa Cruz with a 50+ year history of interdisciplinary research and student training in "established and emergent disciplines and fields" in the humanities, arts, sciences, and social sciences based on a diverse array of theoretical approaches. The program has a history of well-known affiliated faculty and of well-known program graduates.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Narinder Singh Kapany</span> Indian physicist

Narinder Singh Kapany was an Indian-American physicist best known for his work on fiber optics. Kapany is a pioneer in the field of fiber optics, known for coining and popularising the term. Fortune named him one of seven "Unsung Heroes of the 20th Century" for his Nobel Prize-deserving invention. He was awarded India's second highest civilian award, the Padma Vibhushan, posthumously in 2021. He served as an Indian Ordnance Factories Service (IOFS) officer. He was also offered the post of Scientific Adviser to the Defence Minister of India, by the first Prime Minister of India, Jawaharlal Nehru. He is considered the father of Fiber Optics.

The UCSC Silicon Valley Initiatives are a series of educational and research activities which together increase the presence of the University of California in Silicon Valley. To that end, UC Santa Cruz has set up a 90,000 square-foot satellite campus called the University of Santa Cruz Silicon Valley Campus (SVC), currently located on Bowers street in Santa Clara, California, where it has been since April 2016 The Initiatives, still in the early stages of their development, have had ambitious hopes attached to them by UCSC, among them the possibility of a home for the University's long-planned graduate school of management and the Bio|Info|Nano R&D Institute. It currently houses professional the SVLink incubator-accelerator program, programs and a distance education site for the UCSC Baskin School of Engineering, the UCSC Silicon Valley Extension, the Office of Industry Alliances and Technology Commercialization leadership, and the University of California's online learning program, UC Scout.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Delaine Eastin</span> American politician from California (1947–2024)

Delaine Andree Eastin was an American politician and educator from California. A professor by education, she was the first woman to be elected California State Superintendent of Public Instruction (1995–2003) since the office was first held in January 1851. Eastin represented parts of Alameda County and Santa Clara County in the California State Assembly between 1986 and 1994. She was a member of the Democratic Party.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Claire Ellen Max</span>

Claire Ellen Max is a Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics at the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC) and is affiliated with the Lick Observatory. She was the Director of the Center for Adaptive Optics at UCSC, 2007-2014. Max received the E.O. Lawrence Award in Physics.

The Center for Microbial Oceanography (C-MORE) is a research and education organization established in 2006 as a National Science Foundation funded Science and Technology Center.

Sandra (Sandy) Chung is an American linguist and distinguished professor emerita at the Department of Linguistics at the University of California, Santa Cruz. Her research focuses on Austronesian languages and syntax.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lise Getoor</span> American computer scientist

Lise Getoor is a professor in the computer science department, at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and an adjunct professor in the Computer Science Department at the University of Maryland, College Park. Her primary research interests are in machine learning and reasoning with uncertainty, applied to graphs and structured data. She also works in data integration, social network analysis and visual analytics. She has edited a book on Statistical relational learning that is a main reference in this domain. She has published many highly cited papers in academic journals and conference proceedings. She has also served as action editor for the Machine Learning Journal, JAIR associate editor, and TKDD associate editor.

Cynthia Larive is an American scientist and academic administrator serving as the chancellor of University of California, Santa Cruz. Larive's research focuses on nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy (NMR) and mass spectrometry. She was previously a professor of chemistry and provost and executive vice chancellor at the University of California, Riverside. She is a fellow of AAAS, IUPAC and ACS, associate editor for the ACS journal Analytical Chemistry and editor of the Analytical Sciences Digital Library.

Patricia Zavella is an anthropologist and professor at the University of California, Santa Cruz in the Latin American and Latino Studies department. She has spent a career advancing Latina and Chicana feminism through her scholarship, teaching, and activism. She was president of the Association of Latina and Latino Anthropologists and has served on the executive board of the American Anthropological Association. In 2016, Zavella received the American Anthropological Association's award from the Committee on Gender Equity in Anthropology to recognize her career studying gender discrimination. The awards committee said Zavella’s career accomplishments advancing the status of women, and especially Latina and Chicana women have been exceptional. She has made critical contributions to understanding how gender, race, nation, and class intersect in specific contexts through her scholarship, teaching, advocacy, and mentorship. Zavella’s research focuses on migration, gender and health in Latina/o communities, Latino families in transition, feminist studies, and ethnographic research methods. She has worked on many collaborative projects, including an ongoing partnership with Xóchitl Castañeda where she wrote four articles some were in English and others in Spanish. The Society for the Anthropology of North America awarded Zavella the Distinguished Career Achievement in the Critical Study of North America Award in the year 2010. She has published many books including, most recently, "I'm Neither Here Nor There, Mexicans"Quotidian Struggles with Migration and Poverty, which focuses on working class Mexican Americans struggle for agency and identity in Santa Cruz County.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">James Zachos</span>

James Zachos is an American paleoclimatologist, oceanographer, and marine scientist. He is currently a professor in the Department of Earth and Planetary sciences at University of California, Santa Cruz where he was elected to the National Academy of Sciences in 2017. His research focuses on the biological, chemical, and climatic evolution of late Cretaceous and Cenozoic oceans, and how past climatic conditions help improve forecasts of the consequences of anthropogenic carbon emissions on future climate change.

Adina Paytan is a research professor at the Institute of Marine Sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz. known for research into biogeochemical cycling in the present and the past. She has over 270 scientific publications in journals such as Science, Nature, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, and Geophysical Research Letters.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Angela N. Brooks</span> American biologist and geneticist

Angela Brooks is an Assistant Professor of Biomolecular Engineering at University of California, Santa Cruz. She is a member of the Genomics Institute.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2020 Santa Cruz graduate students' strike</span> 2020 students strike against the University of California

The 2020 Santa Cruz graduate students' strike was a wildcat strike launched against the University of California, Santa Cruz (UCSC).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jean Langenheim</span> American plant ecologist and ethnobotanist

Jean H. Langenheim was an American plant ecologist and ethnobotanist, highly respected as an eminent scholar and a pioneer for women in the field. She has done field research in arctic, tropical, and alpine environments across five continents, with interdisciplinary research that spans across the fields of chemistry, geology, and botany. Her early research helped determine the plant origins of amber and led to her career-long work investigating the chemical ecology of resin-producing trees, including the role of plant resins for plant defense and the evolution of several resin-producing trees in the tropics. She wrote what is regarded as the authoritative reference on the topic: Plant Resins: Chemistry, Evolution, Ecology, and Ethnobotany, published in 2003.

Thorne Lay is an American seismologist. He was born in Casper, Wyoming in 1956, and raised in El Paso, Texas. He is a professor of earth and planetary sciences at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Women We Admire series: M.R.C. Greenwood, President Emerita, University of Hawaiʻi" . Retrieved 2016-05-06.
  2. 1 2 "From Complex Organisms to A Complex Organization: An Oral History with UCSC Chancellor M.R.C. Greenwood, 1996-2004". University of California, Santa Cruz Library. Retrieved 2016-04-30.
  3. Luquis, Lavonne (February 22, 2004). "UC Santa Cruz Chancellor Appointed Provost of UC System". UC Santa Cruz News. Retrieved 2016-04-30.
  4. Greenwood, Mary Rita Cooke (1973). The regulation of body weight: Developmental, behavioral and physiological considerations (Ph.D. thesis). The Rockefeller University. OCLC   38056482 via ProQuest.
  5. "Conflict of interest found for UC provost / Despite violations, she got paid leave and offer of new job". SFGate. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
  6. Star-Bulletin, Honolulu. "Hawaii News Archive - Starbulletin.com". archives.starbulletin.com. Retrieved 2016-05-06.
  7. 1 2 3 4 "p.10-1. Nominations of M.r.c. Greenwood, Jane M. Wales, and Robert T. Watson to Be Associate Directors of the Office of Science and Technology Policy". www.forgottenbooks.com. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  8. 1 2 Zhulin, Denis Larionov & Alexander. "Read the eBook Nominations of M.R.C. Greenwood, Jane M. Wales, and Robert T. Watson to be associate directors of the Office of Science and Technology Policy : hearing before the Committee on Commerce, Science, and by Science United States. Congress. Senate. online for free (page 2 of 6)". www.ebooksread.com. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  9. "History of Nutrition" (PDF).
  10. "United States Government Manual (1995-1996) Edition - Office of Science and Technology Policy". www.gpo.gov. Archived from the original on 2016-08-07. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  11. "Support of Science Award | Council of Scientific Society Presidents". sciencepresidents.org. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  12. "Dean Cited by American Psychological Association". UC Davis. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  13. "Chamber Recognitions". www.santacruzchamber.org. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  14. Appendix A: Committee and Staff Biographies | Making the Nation Safer: The Role of Science and Technology in Countering Terrorism | The National Academies Press. 2002. doi:10.17226/10415. ISBN   978-0-309-08481-9.
  15. Valley, The Women's Fund of Silicon. "14 Bay Area Women Win Women of Achievement Awards From The Women's Fund". www.prnewswire.com. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  16. "M.R.C. Greendwood | University of California, Davis Department of Nutrition". nutrition.ucdavis.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  17. "William D. Carey Lecture". AAAS - The World's Largest General Scientific Society. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  18. "Scholarship Benefit Dinner". currents.ucsc.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  19. "CCST Council Member M.R.C. Greenwood". ccst.us. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  20. "American Academy of Arts and Sciences (AAAS)". news.ucsc.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  21. "American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)". news.ucsc.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  22. "American Society of Nutrition Fellows".
  23. "Secretary of State Clinton Appoints New Members to East-West Center Board of Governors". East-West Center | www.eastwestcenter.org. 2012-01-11. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  24. Cheung, Debra. "2010 Award of Distinction Recipients — University of California, Davis College of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences". www.caes.ucdavis.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-24.
  25. "Current News". manoa.hawaii.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  26. "Honorary Doctoral Degree Conferral Ceremony for President M. R. C. Greenwood, University of Hawaiʻi System". www.u-ryukyu.ac.jp. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  27. "Girl Scouts of Hawaii honors Greenwood". University of Hawaiʻi System News. 2011-11-18. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  28. "Institute of Human Nutrition at CUMC- Advancing Nutrition, Science, and Education to Improve Health" (PDF).
  29. "Mason assumes board chair at Association of Public and Land-grant Universities". Iowa Now. 2012-11-22. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
  30. "System: Health Department & UH Applaud Obesity Prevention Report | University of Hawaii News". manoa.hawaii.edu. Retrieved 2016-04-29.
Academic offices
Preceded by
Karl Pister
7th Chancellor of the University of California, Santa Cruz
1991 – 2004
Succeeded by
Martin Chemers (acting)
Denice Denton
Preceded by7th President of the University of Hawaiʻi System
2009 – 2013
Succeeded by
David Lassner