Published: Feb. 15, 2024

The inaugural celebration honored recipients of the prestigious Fulbright award from across campus, and highlighted 麻豆免费版下载Boulder鈥檚 support for those unique and diverse experiences.


A joyous gathering in December聽brought together enthusiastic聽, who had visited locations worldwide, to share their stories. Some attendees, including faculty from every college and many departments across campus, showed slides of their unique time abroad and talked about the huge and transformative impact their experiences have had on them, personally and professionally.

鈥淢any attendees were surprised and elated to have an event centered on them and their achievements, as well as the space and time to discuss their research and how their travels impacted their careers and, in many cases, the trajectory of their entire lives,鈥 said Alicia Adelman, research development officer and prestigious nominations manager with the Research & Innovation Office (RIO).聽聽

The event was co-sponsored by RIO and the Office of Top Scholarships. In his remarks at the event, Vice Chancellor for Research and Innovation and Dean of the Institutes Massimo Ruzzene recognized the prestige of a Fulbright award, expressed 麻豆免费版下载Boulder鈥檚 delight in having such accomplished faculty and encouraged them to continue sharing their experiences with the larger campus community.

Celebrating a growing international community of scholarship

鈥淚t is an honor to celebrate 麻豆免费版下载Boulder鈥檚 distinguished Fulbright scholars who contribute to the international exchange of knowledge,鈥 said Ruzzene. 鈥淪eeing the slides of the many Fulbrighters and their experiences reminds us of the power of collaboration and the impact it has on shaping a global community of scholars. The experiences shared through the Fulbright Program enrich not only the individuals involved but also the institutions and communities they touch.鈥

Those scholars included Rachel Rinaldo, associate professor of Sociology and director of the Center for Asian Studies, who spent the last academic year at Gadjah Mada University in Indonesia. While there, she studied women and work during and after the COVID-19 pandemic 鈥渋n order to understand how they are negotiating the competing demands of work and family during this era of rapid social and economic change,鈥 she said.

The Fulbright award allowed Rinaldo to travel with her husband (Robert Wyrod, associate professor聽in the Department of Women and Gender Studies and the International Affairs Program in the College of Arts and Sciences) and their nine-year-old son. 鈥淚t was an incredible experience for us as a family to have the opportunity to live in Indonesia for a full year,鈥 said Rinaldo.

And it was invaluable for her research and teaching. 鈥淏eing in Indonesia for a year meant that I could do extensive and immersive sociological fieldwork for my next book,鈥 she said, and it created a network of current and future collaborators. Plus, she said, 鈥淚 am already starting to teach some of the wonderful scholarship I've been reading over the last year.鈥

Find out more here.