Georgia Tech Announces New Executive Vice President for Research
Staff Report From Metro Atlanta CEO
Friday, June 29th, 2018
The Georgia Institute of Technology has named Chaouki T. Abdallah, currently provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at the University of New Mexico, to be its new executive vice president for research. The EVPR directs Georgia Tech’s $824 million research program and is part of the Institute’s four-member executive leadership team.
Abdallah, who is a Georgia Tech alumnus with master’s and Ph.D. degrees in electrical engineering, conducts research and teaches courses in the general area of systems theory with focus on control and communications systems. He will move into the EVPR role in mid-August, succeeding Stephen E. Cross, who is stepping down after serving as Georgia Tech’s first EVPR for the past eight years.
“Dr. Abdallah has a proven track record as an administrator, scholar and researcher, along with experience collaborating with industry, government and community partners,” said Georgia Tech President G.P. “Bud” Peterson. “As a Tech alumnus who has remained engaged with the Institute, he brings a unique perspective. We’re looking forward to working with him to enhance Georgia Tech’s basic and applied research and maximize economic impact.”
Beyond his service as provost and executive vice president for academic affairs, Abdallah is a professor in the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the University of New Mexico. He has also served there as acting president, interim president and president, and was the first recipient of the New Mexico ECE department’s Lawton-Ellis Award for combined excellence in teaching, research and student/community involvement. He has received research funding from the National Science Foundation, the Air Force Office of Scientific Research, the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, other national laboratories and various companies.
“After an academic career of 30 years at the University of New Mexico, I am very excited to be joining one of the premier institutions of higher learning in the world,” said Abdallah. “I look forward to contributing to President Peterson's cabinet, to advocate for and lead the research enterprise at Georgia Tech, and to help ‘create the next’ in research.”
Abdallah is married to Catherine Cooper, a logistics expert who earned her bachelor’s degree in industrial and systems engineering from Georgia Tech. Their twin sons, Carter and Calvin, are incoming Georgia Tech first-year students. Abdallah is fluent in English, French, and Arabic, and serves on Georgia Tech’s ECE Advisory Board. Abdallah is a senior member of IEEE and a recipient of the IEEE Millennium medal.
Christopher Jones, associate vice president for research, has agreed to serve as interim EVPR until Abdallah’s arrival.
Cross plans to step down June 30 to return to his research faculty position in the Georgia Tech Research Institute. In welcoming Abdallah, Peterson thanked Cross for his many accomplishments in leading the research program. In addition to dramatic growth in research volume, Cross led the formation of Georgia Tech’s system of 11 interdisciplinary research institutes to coordinate research in areas of specific interest to industrial companies.
“I want to take this opportunity to thank Steve Cross, who has served us well as Georgia Tech’s first EVPR,” said Peterson. “I am personally grateful for his leadership in the development of our 25-year strategic plan, ‘Designing the Future.’ In his EVPR role, he has worked to enhance Georgia Tech’s research impact by bringing together GTRI, the Enterprise Innovation Institute, IRIs and other Institute research, encouraging collaboration, making it easier for government, business, and industry to partner with us, and building innovation neighborhoods around the campus.”
Abdallah’s selection resulted from a national search led by Georgia Tech Provost Rafael L. Bras, who holds the K. Harrison Brown Family Chair.