Research on Knowledge Comercialization Wins Penn State Award
by
Sanet
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last modified
March 20, 2008 12:48 PM
"University Administrators, Agricultural Biotechnology, and Academic Capitalism: Defining the Public Good to Promote University-Industry Relationships." WINS
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa. - Leland Glenna, assistant professor of
rural sociology in Penn State's College of Agricultural Sciences, has
received the 2007 Roy C. Buck Faculty Award in the Agricultural
Sciences for his article "University Administrators, Agricultural
Biotechnology, and Academic Capitalism: Defining the Public Good to
Promote University-Industry Relationships."
The award recognizes the best refereed article by an untenured
faculty member in the college whose research involves the social or
human sciences published in a scholarly journal in the previous two
years. Co-authored with agricultural sociologists from the University
of California at Davis and Clarkson University, Glenna's article was
published in the Fall 2007 issue of the Sociological Quarterly.
The article examines "academic capitalism," or how federal,
state and university policies have expanded university-industry
relationships and contributed to a commercialization of knowledge.
Researchers surveyed top administrators at six prominent land-grant
universities responsible for agricultural biotechnology research
programs to determine how they see their role in promoting those
relationships. A significant finding was that administrators tend to
interpret their university's mission in a way that is conducive to
encouraging the relationships and to commercializing research discoveries.
"Leland's research examines the variables that lead to policies
guiding research at our public universities," says Bruce McPheron,
associate dean for research in the college. "The land-grant system is
founded on the principles of knowledge discovery and dissemination. Our
'stock-in-trade' is the understanding that our recommendations are
based upon science but are unbiased. The relationship of our faculty
and industrial partners is important for all parties and for our
stakeholders. Leland's work reminds us that we must be vigilant to
protect the public-good aspects of our research."
Prior to joining the Penn State faculty in 2005, Glenna taught
at Washington State University, the University of California at Davis
and Cornell University. He has a bachelor's degree in history from
Hamline University, a master's degree from the Harvard University
School of Divinity and a doctorate in rural sociology from the
University of Missouri.
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Editors: Contact Leland Glenna at (814) 863-8636 or by e-mail at
llg13@psu.edu.