Northern Arizona University and institutions of higher education in Argentina and Mexico are joining together to teach students about the mining industry and create international connections.
Leaders United for Positive Energy (LUPE) is a mining industry-focused learning initiative among the following institutions of higher education:
- Northern Arizona University (NAU), United States
- Universidad Nacional de Tucum谩n, Argentina
- Universidad Nacional de Tierra del Fuego, Argentina
- Centro Austral de Investigaciones Cient铆ficas, Argentina
- Universidad Tecnol贸gica de Hermosillo, M茅xico
LUPE will be held at NAU in October 2019 and the partner institutions will send students and faculty to participate in the program.
鈥淚n total there would be 12 students and three faculty members coming from various parts of Argentina and Hermosillo, Mexico to Arizona in October to participate alongside students that we select here, which will be another four, and professors here at NAU,鈥 Kristin Allen, Strategic Latin American Initiatives program manager at NAU, said.
The U.S. Department of State and Partners of the Americas awarded the LUPE team and ten other partnerships a $25,000 grant through the 100,000 Strong in the Americas Innovation Fund grant competition.
鈥淓ach year a different corporation funds what is called their Innovation Fund and this round was funded specifically by Exxon Mobil,鈥 Allen said. 鈥淎nd so, through Partners of the Americas who really coordinates the entire initiative, Exxon Mobil and then the U.S. State Department are really able to push this out and make it happen.鈥
鈥淸The students] will get to see the different aspects that are involved basically from start to finish within what would be the experience of mining,鈥 Allen said.
She added, 鈥淎nd, they鈥檙e also doing so in cross-cultural teams. They鈥檙e not just having to use language skills but they鈥檙e also starting to understand one another from a different cultural perspective.鈥
For the first part of the program, the students will learn about regional and energy resources.
“To kick off the program, we will begin with a science segment in which students will look at the regional geology of each participating partner’s geographic location,” Allen explained.
Faculty will hold seminars and the students will present about the energy resources in their region.
After that, the students will learn about regional policy in the mining industry through seminars and faculty-led discussions.
鈥淭he students are going to be learning about and discussing how mining policy is created, specifically in each one of the participating countries,鈥 Allen said.
After students learn about resources and policy at the NAU campus, they will have the opportunity to travel to a Native American reservation to learn about social justice.
鈥淓ach participating location is home to important indigenous communities. An important aspect of the program will be to discuss how local communities are affected by mining activity, understanding local culture and how community relations are navigated before and throughout the process.鈥 Allen said.
Toward the end of the program, participants will travel to Phoenix to learn more about the industry from leaders and professionals.
Allen explained that the Arizona-Mexico Commission provides support through coordinating site visits, discussions and roundtables with industry leaders.
She said the AMC鈥檚 support will help the program 鈥渃over a lot of different areas in this field in a little bit of time.鈥
The students will have the chance to see the science, policy and social justice issues they learned about in the beginning of the program put into action. 聽
鈥淎 large focus of bringing in the AMC is the ability for [the students] to see how public-private partnerships work and for the students here and in Mexico and Argentina to see how those partnerships tend to work and also how they work across borders,鈥 Allen said.
In addition to the knowledge the students will gain, they will have the opportunity to create international connections.
鈥淭he main goal is for us to create a larger university partner network,鈥 Allen said. 鈥淪o, through this project we鈥檙e hoping to build a web that will connect Northern Arizona with two locations in Argentina and continue the work in Mexico, but also connecting those three institutions with one another.鈥






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