Romain Murenzi, a key architect of Rwanda's efforts to devise a
successful blueprint for science-based sustainable development
after years of civil war and genocide, has been appointed the new
executive director of TWAS. He replaces the Academy's long-time
executive director, Mohamed H.A. Hassan, who is retiring.
Romain Murenzi, who was born in Rwanda and raised in Burundi,
earned a bachelor's degree in mathematics from the University of
Burundi (1982), and a master's degree (1986) and doctorate degree
(1990) in physics from the Catholic University of Louvain in
Belgium.
In 1990, he was named a postdoctoral researcher at the European
Center for Advanced Training and Research in Scientific Computation
(CERFACS) in Toulouse, France. Two years later, he moved to the
United States to become a principal investigator at the Clark
Atlanta University Center for Theoretical Studies of Physical
Systems in Georgia. In 1993, he was named an associate professor of
physics and, in 1999, he was selected chair of the physics
department. One year later, he became a full professor. His
research has focused on applications of multidimensional continuous
wavelet transforms to quantum mechanics, and image and video
processing.
In 2001, Rwanda's President Paul Kagame appointed Murenzi minister
of education, science, technology and scientific research, and, in
2006, minister of science, technology and information and
communication technologies. As minister, Murenzi contributed to the
expansion and modernization of Rwanda's education system and the
building of the country's scientific and technological
capacity.
In 2009, Murenzi left Rwanda to become a senior scholar at AAAS
in Washington, DC. In July 2010, he was named director of the AAAS
Center for Science, Technology and Sustainable Development. As part
of AAAS's International Office, the centre examines issues related
to science-based sustainable development, especially in the
developing world. Over the past two years, he has also been a
visiting professor at the University of Maryland's Institute of
Advanced Computer Studies in the United States.
Murenzi, who was elected a member of TWAS in 2005, has served as
vice president of TWAS for Africa. He is also a member of the board
of the African Institute of Mathematical Sciences (AIMS) and Dian
Fossey Gorilla Fund International, on the advisory board of
Scientists Without Borders, and on the scientific board of UNESCO's
International Basic Science Programme.
"Professor Murenzi's successful career as a researcher, teacher
and high-level administrator and policy official makes him an
excellent choice for the executive director of TWAS," says the
Academy's president Jacob Palis. "We believe that Professor Murenzi
has the skills and experience to lead the secretariat in the years
ahead as TWAS seeks to expand its efforts to build scientific and
technological capacity in all developing countries."