VOLUME 25 #1

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Through the new National Institute for Innovation in Manufacturing Biopharmaceuticals, UD will work with 150 partners nationwide to develop ways to make the next generation of medicines and patient therapies. Additionally, the Rapid Advancement in Process Identification Deployment will focus on less expensive, more energy-efficient ways to manufacture chemicals.
Photo by Kathy F. Atkinson
Shown here speaking at President Dennis Assanis’ inauguration ceremony, Joseph Biden, AS65, will serve as the founding chair of UD’s new public policy institute, established in his name.

Biden, UD partner to launch Biden Domestic Policy Institute

OUR UD | A new partnership between the University of Delaware and Joseph R. Biden Jr., AS65, the 47th vice president of the United States, will pair his long-time work in domestic policy issues with the University’s strengths in public policy education and research.

Biden will serve as the founding chair of UD’s Biden Institute, a new research and policy center focused on developing public policy solutions for issues ranging from economic reform and environmental sustainability to civil rights, criminal justice, women’s rights and more. The institute will also convene thought leaders on the most important issues of the day.

“Every day of my career in public service has been motivated by the desire to ensure that every American is treated with dignity and gets a fair shot,” said Biden. “I am happy to continue that work at my alma mater, a place that is stamped on my heart. I look forward to working with a top-notch policy staff at the Biden Institute to continue the hard work of developing public policy to benefit American families.”

The Biden Institute, which will be part of the University’s School of Public Policy and Administration, will initially be located at 44 Kent Way on the University campus in Newark, Delaware.

“We’re very excited about this new relationship with Joe Biden, one of our most distinguished and loyal alumni,” said University President Dennis Assanis. “His vast experience as a public servant for more than 40 years will bring an important focus to many domestic policy matters that enhance the broader portfolio of programs within our school of public policy. His insight and experience will lend invaluable enhancement to programming, education and research initiatives as the University of Delaware helps shape the future leaders of our society.”

Assanis said the creation of the Biden Institute will be complemented by the addition of new faculty, increased enrollment in the school, and an initiative to expand the school’s offerings in the areas of smart cities, environment and energy, social justice and disaster management.

With a distinguished faculty and a cadre of dedicated professionals, the School of Public Policy and Administration is a globally recognized, comprehensive school that translates scholarship and research into usable knowledge to inform decision-making and policy, improve leadership and management and address critical societal needs. Top-ranked programs include city management, nonprofit management and public administration and management. The school offers bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degree programs, and more than 300 public, private and nonprofit institutions, locally and globally, use the research expertise and services of the school each year.

A career of service

As a U.S. senator from Delaware for 36 years, Biden was a leading architect of domestic policy on some of the most pressing issues facing the country. Then-Sen. Biden served as chairman or ranking member of the Senate Judiciary Committee for 17 years, and was a preeminent voice on criminal justice issues, including authoring both the landmark 1994 Crime Act and the Violence Against Women Act. Biden has worked relentlessly since the passage of the Violence Against Women Act in 1994 to change the culture around domestic violence and sexual assault, and protect and strengthen victims’ rights.

As the 47th vice president of the United States, he oversaw the implementation of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, which was integral to rescuing the economy from the brink of another Great Depression. The Recovery Act added two million jobs to the economy and made an unprecedented investment in America’s infrastructure.

He also chaired the Middle-Class Task Force, an administration-wide effort to improve the everyday lives and livelihoods of working men and women, and oversaw the administration’s Skills Initiative to improve federal workforce training programs. He authored “Ready to Work: Job-Driven Training and American Opportunity,” a report to the president on how best to ensure American workers are trained for the jobs of the 21st century.

Biden led the administration’s efforts to implement meaningful reforms to reduce gun violence in this country, which resulted in federal actions aimed at strengthening the background check system and addressing mental health issues linked to gun violence, among others.

In January, President Barack Obama awarded Biden the Presidential Medal of Freedom, with Distinction, the highest civilian honor in the U.S.

A frequent visitor to his alma mater, Biden has spoken at four UD Commencement ceremonies (in 1978, 1987, 2004 and 2014). Last December, he was a featured speaker at the inauguration ceremony for UD’s new president, Dennis Assanis.

He donated his Senatorial papers to the University of Delaware Library in 2011, when he also delivered the inaugural James R. Soles Lecture on the Constitution and Citizenship. In 1984, he was inducted into the University’s Alumni Wall of Fame.

His wife, Jill Biden, AS75, EHD06PhD, and sister Valerie, AS67, are also UD alumni.