Conducting Research Abroad By Sydney Stewart
The Fulbright Program is a bilateral educational and professional exchange program funded and managed by the U.S. Department of State. Students holding a bachelor’s degree or higher can study or conduct research abroad for 10-12 months (one academic year) or teach English for one to two years and are provided with financial and logistical support to do so. I was a research fellow affiliated with the Institute for Animal Sciences at the Rheinische-Friedrich-Wilhelms Universität Bonn, a university in western Germany. I joined the Preventive Health Management Group and worked on a number of projects related to farm biosecurity, animal health and welfare, and antibiotic resistance. Though I was able to help with some animal handling and data and sample collection, Germany’s strict rules and regulations regarding animal and pathogen research made it difficult for me to take on an independent farm or lab project. Instead, I contributed to the group by translating technical bulletins, publications, and presentations between English and German (which was great for my vocabulary – in both
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languages), and I wrote a review article on the practice of feeding unsaleable or waste milk back to dairy calves, which is currently undergoing revisions. I also helped teach the farm practicum portion of the Institute’s OneHealth Master Program, a weeklong mini-course designed to introduce non-agriculturists to the livestock and animal health fields. At first, I was disappointed and frustrated that my role was limited to teaching and writing; but I eventually came to appreciate the opportunity to work on those skills and to delve into new topics. While teaching the OneHealth course, I realized I had a knack for politics and ag policy. Slowly but surely, my official Fulbright project became less about the science behind animal health and welfare, and more about how politics and market dynamics affect those outcomes. The German-American Fulbright Commission (the administrators of my grant) were very supportive of this new project direction. At our mid-year meeting in Berlin, I was asked to sit for an NPR StoryCorps interview with another Fulbright grantee to Germany, an agricultural economist focusing on rural development; we had the
chance to share and compare our experiences at home and abroad and discuss the complex, multifaceted issue of food insecurity. Two days later, I presented my work with and my experiences in the German swine industry to an audience of roughly 550 of my peers; a month after that, I was recommended for and invited to a seminar in Brussels related to the future of work, particularly in the contexts of technology and automation. Taking part in these seminars and working in Europe was an extremely humbling experience. I spent a lot of time trying to answer complex and often uncomfortable questions about the problems and controversies we face in the livestock and food industries. Having to justify practices we consider “routine” or “standard” to people without a strong agricultural or scientific background was not only a test of my knowledge, but also my honesty. While I genuinely believe we as an industry are doing the best we can with what we have, I have to admit that there are things I think we can, should, and must do better. We are not a shadowy, secret corporate conglomerate trying to turn a profit at the expense of everyone