Gerald TelfortNotre Dame Hosts Haiti’s Only 2008–09 Fulbright Visiting Scholar

Notre Dame’s Kellogg Institute for International Studies is hosting the only Fulbright visiting scholar selected from Haiti this academic year in the newly re-launched Fulbright Visiting Scholar Program for Central America and the Caribbean.

Gerald Telfort, the director of research for Haiti’s Ministry of Agriculture, will spend two months at the Kellogg Institute, where Rev. Robert Dowd, CSC, director of the Institute’s Ford Family Program in Human Development Studies and Solidarity, is serving as his faculty associate. To facilitate Telfort’s research, Dowd has connected him with researchers at Purdue University’s International Programs in Agriculture, a Ford Program partner.

Haiti has lost over 40% of its vegetative coverage in the last two decades, as wood is cut for fuel or income generation. With the goal of making conservation of trees economically viable in Haiti, Telfort is studying the measurement of carbon sequestered by trees and the international carbon concept. Other interests include the environmental consequences of disposable plastics, which have contributed to devastating flooding in Haiti.

At Notre Dame, Telfort joins Marie Denise Milord, MD, the former coordinator of the Haitian government’s malaria and filariasis elimination effort, who was previously awarded a Fulbright fellowship for postdoctoral study. Currently, she is undertaking research in the College of Science on a Dorvil fellowship awarded by Notre Dame’s Haiti Program.

Fulbright programs are sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the United States Department of State.

Elizabeth Rankin, writer/editor, Kellogg Institute, 574-631-9184 or erankin3@nd.edu and Denise Wright, Visiting Fellows Program coordinator, Kellogg Institute, 574-631-8523 or dwright1@nd.edu