Contributions to Development
UNU Panel at the Global
Development Network (GDN) Annual Meeting 2000 in Tokyo
Hans J.A. van Ginkel
Rector of the United Nations University
Click to download MS Word Version
van-ginkel.doc
(28 KB)
Hans J.A. van Ginkel was appointed by United Nations Secretary-General
Kofi Annan as the UNU's fourth Rector, commencing on 1 September
1997.
He succeeded Heitor Gurgulino de Souza of Brazil who had been the
University's Rector since 1987. Rector van Ginkel was born in Indonesia
on 22 June 1940 and has lived in the Netherlands since 1951. There
he completed his kandidaats and doctoraal exams as well as his doctor's
degree (Ph.D.) at the University of Utrecht. His masters thesis
was titled "The Morphology and Functions of Ancient South-East Asian
Cities in the early 17th century" and focused on the urban, economic
and historical geography of South-East Asia. His Ph.D. thesis was
titled "Suburbanization and Recent Residential Environments." It
helped define effective policies that the Dutch Government subsequently
used to understand and deal with suburbanization in the highly urbanized
western part of the country.
From 1965 to 1968, he taught geography and history at Thomas à
Kempis College, Arnhem. Since that time he has remained active in
secondary education, serving as chairman of national committees
responsible for the renewal of curricula and national examination
programmes in geography, as the programme leader of full-time and
part-time teacher training and as a member of advisory committees
on programmatic links between top-level secondary schools and universities.
Since 1988 he has been the chairman of the National Science and
Technology Week Foundation, which focuses on informing the general
public, in particular youth, about developments in science and technology.
In early 1997, this foundation merged into the National Foundation
"Science and Technology, the Netherlands" of which Prof. van Ginkel
serves as chairman, with Prince Claus as the honorary president.
From 1968-1985, he worked at the University of Utrecht in the Faculty
of Geographical Sciences which more than doubled the number of its
students from 650 to nearly 1,400 during the period 1970 to 1985.
In 1980, he was appointed a full professor in human geography and
planning. From 1982-1985, he served as dean of the faculty. Prof.
van Ginkel became a member of the Executive Board of Utrecht University
in 1985. He served as Rector from 1986 until assuming the Rectorship
of UNU in September 1997.
Rector van Ginkel's special fields of interest are urban and regional
development, as well as population and housing studies. He has a
strong interest in aspects of the application of geographical knowledge
in society, in particular in urban and regional planning, public
housing and housing markets, and public administration.
From 1988-1993 he was the independent chairman of the Regional
Council of Utrecht in which Utrecht and 10 surrounding municipalities,
together with representatives of the Chamber of Commerce, provincial
and national authorities prepared the strategic plan for regional
development. He has also served as a member of the Utrecht Network
for Innovation and Economy established by the Regional Council of
Utrecht in 1994.
Rector van Ginkel has a strong interest in science policy and
has served as Chairman of the Coordinating Committee of Advisory
Councils on Science Policy (1991-1997) and as a member of the National
Foresight Committee on Science Policy (1993-1997). In 1997, he served
as a member of the Advisory Council on Science and Technology which
provides advice to the Ministry of Education, Culture and Science
as well as the Ministry of Economic Affairs of the Netherlands.
From 1994 to 1998, he has been a member of the European Science
and Technology Assembly (Bruxelles).
He has also maintained a strong interest in internationalism. From
1986 to 1998, he served as the treasurer of the Netherlands Foundation
for International Cooperation in Higher Education (Nuffic). He has
also served a member and chairman (1990-98) of the governing board
of the International Training Centre for Aerospace Survey and Earth
Sciences at Enschedé. Since 1989 he has been a member of the Board
of the European Association of Universities (CRE), serving as vice-president
since 1994. Since 1990 he has been a member of the Administrative
Board of the International Association of Universities (IAU), serving
as vice-president since 1995. He is one of the founders of the CRE-Copernicus
Programme (1989), which seeks to enhance the contributions of European
universities to sustainable development. He has been the chairman
of the CRE-Academic Task Force for Bosnian and Croatian universities
since 1994. He was the initiator of the CRE-Institutional Audit
Programme, which is meant to stimulate a culture of quality among
diverse European universities (since 1994).
As the Rector of the Utrecht University, he developed North-South
academic cooperation programmes between his university and universities
in Southern Africa, South-East Asia, and South and Central America.
In 1991, he initiated the Utrecht-Unitwin Network, linking several
universities in Europe (Lund, Bochum, Oporto) with the southern
African universities of Maputo (Mozambique), Harare (Zimbabwe),
Windhoek (Namibia) and Western Cape (South Africa). He also extended
links to South-East Asia and Latin America, bringing such universities
as Gadjah Mada (Yogyakarta, Indonesia), Hassanudin (Ujung Pandang,
Indonesia), Chulalongkorn (Bangkok, Thailand), Cochabamba (Bolivia),
Georgetown (Guyana), Paramaribo (Suriname), Heredia (Costa Rica),
León, (Nicaragua), and Guatemala (Guatemala) into the Utrecht University
network.
Rector van Ginkel contributed extensively to the work of various
international educational organizations: since 1992 he has been
a UNU Council Member, since 1994 a member of Unesco's Advisory Group
for Higher Education, and in 1996 he was appointed to a UNESCO Steering
Committee to help guide the 1998 "World Conference on Higher Education."
Rector van Ginkel is an active author in his fields of interest,
including geography, and more specifically, urban, population and
housing studies. He has also written a number of articles on internationalization
and university management.
Rector van Ginkel is a member and officer in several professional
associations and organizations. He is currently still Chair of the
Board of Governors of the Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic
Institute (since 1995).
Rector van Ginkel has received several awards of honour from his
country. In 1992, he was appointed to the Social Sciences Council
of the Royal Netherlands' Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW). In
1994 he was awarded the Knight in the Order of the Netherlands'
Lion-one of the country's higher distinctions, from Queen Beatrix.
He also holds the highest medals of distinction of the City of Utrecht,
the Chamber of Commerce and Utrecht University. In 1997, he received
an honorary doctorate from the Universitatea Babes-Bolyai of Cluj
in Romania for his work in geography as well as internationalism.
Rector van Ginkel is married to Bep Teepen. They have two children:
one son and one daughter.
UNU Panel on Contributions
to Development
| UNU
Home | Index
| Search
| Feedback
| Help
| Disclaimer
| Copyright
|
|