Smith School Awarded $1.4 Million
Center for International Business
Education and Research (CIBER)
The Smith School has been awarded a
four-year, $1.4 million grant by the
U.S. Department of Education to fund a
Center for International Business
Education and Research (CIBER). This
high honor designates the Smith School
as a national resource center in
international business education and
research. There are only 31 CIBERs in
the nation.
The federal government instituted the
CIBER program to increase U.S.
competitiveness in the global
marketplace by creating useful links
between the business and academic
communities on international business
issues. In addition to programmatic
enhancements and faculty research, the
Smith School CIBER will support
conferences and seminars, training, and
consulting to the business community in
the mid-Atlantic region as part of its
outreach activities.
A key area of concern to
international businesses relates to
national and homeland security and its
implications for enterprise continuity;
the Smith School CIBER will provide
significant leadership in this area. The
Smith Schools Larry Gordon, Ernst &
Young Alumni Professor of Managerial
Accounting, and Martin Loeb, professor
of accounting and information assurance
and Deloitte & Touche LLP Faculty
Fellow, are already well-known for their
research relating to the economics of
information security. The Smith School
CIBER will combine their work with
existing programs and centers in the
University of Maryland which deal with
national and homeland security. The
Smith School CIBER will sponsor its
first Conference on Global Security in
2008 to bring together the best scholars
in this nascent domain along with
leaders from government and business.
The Smith School CIBER will pursue
other strategic initiatives as well. The
University of Maryland has extensive
resources related to language study and
research, and the center will leverage
those resources to develop business
language courses and support the schools
International Fellows track of the
Undergraduate Fellows Program. Global
e-commerce, entrepreneurship and
innovation, global services and emerging
markets are also among the CIBERs
strategic initiatives.
Vinod Jain, PhD 94, senior director
of professional programs and director of
the Smith School CIBER, thinks the
center will have a significant impact on
students and faculty as well as the
wider business community. The centers
outreach activities will give students
many more opportunities to interact with
global business people, which can only
help them as they begin their careers in
today's global economy, says Jain.
Students will find that more of their
courses contain an international
component, compliments of curriculum
development grants from the Smith School
CIBER. Faculty members will have the
opportunity to pursue
internationally-focused research in
their own disciplines and present their
research in international conferences,
funded partly by CIBER.