Alumni trustee candidate Mehta shares experience in medical field, vision for Tufts see FEATURES / PAGE 3
MEN’S AND WOMEN’S TRACK AND FIELD
Jumbos earn several top-50 Div. III performances, personal records over weekend
Iranian author Missaghi discusses tragedy, history, dreams, new novel at local bookshop see ARTS&LIVING / PAGE 4
SEE SPORTS / BACK PAGE
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T HE T UFTS DAILY
VOLUME LXXIX, ISSUE 16
Tuesday, February 18, 2020
MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.
School of Engineering kicks off National Engineers Week celebrations
tuftsdaily.com
by Stephanie Rifkin Assistant News Editor
Yesterday, the School of Engineering began its annual celebration of National Engineers Week (E-Week), which honors the profession and study of engineering. E-Week, which will continue through Friday, is intended to highlight what engineering means to both engineers and non-engineers and to introduce the field to those who have not yet explored the discipline, according to Chris Swan, the dean of undergraduate education for the School of Engineering. “It’s a powerful evaluation and acknowledgment of the stuff that engineers do as affirmation to the engineer, but also as a showcase to what engineering is about to those in engineering as well as those outside,” Swan said. The events scheduled for E-Week this year are designed to attract all audiences, from engineers and liberal arts students to students outside of Tufts, according to its organizers. The celebrations began with a carnival on Monday, which will be followed by a spread of other events, some of which see E-WEEK, page 2
SOPHIA ELIA / THE TUFTS DAILY
The exterior of the Science and Engineering Complex is pictured on Sept. 18, 2019.
MIT researcher discusses Madagascar pharmaceutical industry by Yiyun Tom Guan Contributing Writer
Gabrielle Robbins, a Ph.D. candidate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), spoke on Friday about how local farmers in Madagascar navigate their relationships with pharmaceutical and biotechnological companies in a globalized setting. Robbins visited Tufts for the Science, Technology, and Society (STS) lunch seminar, co-hosted by the Jonathan M. Tisch College of Civic Life and the Department of Biomedical Engineering, for her talk in the Sophia Gordon Multipurpose room titled “Exploring the Pharmaceutical Industry ‘On the Ground’ in Madagascar.” Robbins, a student from the MIT Department of History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology, and Society, explained that what prompted her to research the relationship between the pharmaceutical industry and local communities was her curiosity about what it takes to make a drug.
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“In my work specifically, I focus on pharmaceutical manufacturing,” Robbins said. “What kind of work does it take to make those medicines we often take for granted? Where does that work happen? It turns out that making pharmaceuticals is really complicated. It takes all sorts of ingredients, and they often come from a variety of places.” Inspired by her undergraduate mentor, Robbins first traveled to Madagascar in 2014, where she began fieldwork on the artemisia plantations in the city of Fianarantsoa. This plant is of particular interest to her due to its effectiveness in battling malaria, which is on the rise because of global warming, according to Robbins. “Large pharmaceutical companies … now invest millions in what is called [artemisinin-based combination therapies], or ACTs, which [are] a [World Health Organization]-recommended treatment for malaria,” Robbins explains. “As global malaria severity increases due to climate change, a stable supply of ACTs is critical.” For breaking news, our content archive and exclusive content, visit tuftsdaily.com @tuftsdaily
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Robbins then transitioned from her research into questions of power dynamics between a developing country’s rural communities and the global pharmaceutical industry, as well as questions of exponential growth of technological innovations. She went on to explain how a French company, located in Fianarantsoa and supported by the local government, infiltrated farmers’ production. “In 2015, a French-owned company took over a government-built industrial plant that sits along the river throughout [Fianarantsoa] and they began to expand artemisia cultivation around the city,” Robbins said. “The idea was to be able to support rural farmers and urban industrialization at once by establishing what’s called a value-added pharmaceutical supply chain.” Since crop-theft remains prevalent in the region, Robbins noted that companies like the one in her example could ensure the price of the crops to local farmers, so long as they grew the crops the companies wanted. This practice leads to the widespread cultivation of artemisia in
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Fianarantsoa, even though the land can be used to grow other valuable crops in need, according to Robbins. Farmers in Madagascar also face competition from the biotechnology industry, which tries to use synthetic biology to engineer products to counter the global rise of malaria, according to Robbins. “Concerns about the anti-malarial shortage in the 1990s [propelled this giant multimillion-dollar research project,” Robbins said. “Artemisia supply was going up and down constantly, and this group was trying to find new laboratory production methods to stabilize this industry … You sort of have a fight playing out between chemical and plantbased [ingredients].” Robbins added that the current biotechnology industry hasn’t yet achieved any technological breakthrough that will threaten small-holder cultivation. She highlighted the conflict that continues between the ideals of sustainability and the protection of low-tech drug industries.
NEWS............................................1 FEATURES.................................3 ARTS & LIVING.......................4
see ROBBINS, page 2
FUN & GAMES.........................6 OPINION..................................... 7 SPORTS............................ BACK