DIL State of the Lab - Fall 2014 | Page 5

Ask the Experts: Mentors Donate Time for DIL Innovators By Rachel Strohm, DIL Graduate Student Researcher Interdisciplinary collaboration is essential to foster innovation in international development. DIL promotes interdisciplinary collaboration through its Practitioner-in-Residence program, which brings experienced development practitioners and social innovators to UC Berkeley. Its one-on-one consulting sessions are open to the entire university community, with the goal of bringing diverse and new perspectives, knowledge, and connections to researchers working on development issues. In its inaugural year, the Practitioner-in-Residence program primarily served undergraduates and PhDs, researchers and post-doctoral scholars. Their backgrounds spanned academic disciplines from history, business, and development practice to electrical engineering, nutritional sciences, and education. PROGRAM IN BRIEF. The Practitioner-inResidence program brings experts with a wide variety of experience in development to UC Berkeley. The residents have a range of regional and sectoral (private, public, nonprofit; health, tech, energy) experience. During the 2013-2014 academic year, eight practitioners-in-residence provided consulting expertise to 55 UC Berkeley students and researchers. The practitioners’ expertise ranged from venture capital in Silicon Valley to maternal health in Africa and mobile phone-enabled campaigns to help citizens hold politicians accountable. Dr. Frankie Myers, a research scientist at the Fletcher Lab in the Bioengineering Department, met with Practitioner-in-Residence Andree Sosler to learn about her experience expanding Potential Energy, a clean cookstove initiative in Sudan, Ethiopia Future sessions will be advertised in the and beyond. Myers and his team are developing a novel DIL Newsletter. smartphone-enabled microscope for remote diagnosis of tinyurl.com/dilnewsletter. diseases. The meeting with Sosler explored how to build buy-in for a new technology among major players in the global health space, and resulted in a number of concrete suggestions for creating relationships and seeking funding from influential donors. Many visiting practitioners see the program as an opportunity to give back to a community that shaped their careers. Four of the eight practitioners are UC Berkeley alumni; others work with UC Berkeley-affiliated spinouts. Sosler, whose organization Potential Energy launched in Sudan with support from the Blum Center for Developing Economies, decided to sign up as a practitioner-in-residence because she feels “committed to the center's mission [and] personally connected to it.” Sign up for the DIL Newsletter to hear about upcoming Practitioner-in-Residence sessions at: tinyurl.com/dilnewsletter. 4