Second candidate for vice chancellor for research to present April 19


Tue, 04/16/2024

author

Savannah Rattanavong

LAWRENCE — Marc Mendonca will be the second candidate for the vice chancellor for research position to share his vision and strategies for the future of research and discovery at the University of Kansas.

Marc Mendonca
Marc Mendonca

His public presentation will take place 2-3 p.m. April 19 in the 1502 Building Auditorium located at 15th and Iowa streets. The event will also be livestreamed, and the passcode is 020719.

Mendonca is director of research development at Indiana University, IU Research, and professor of radiation oncology and of medical and molecular genetics at IU’s School of Medicine.

The remaining two candidates will be announced approximately two business days before their respective campus visits. Their public presentations are scheduled for the following dates and locations:

Members of the KU community are encouraged to attend each presentation and provide feedback to the search committee. Presentation recordings and the online feedback form will remain available on the search page through May 7.

Additional search information, including Mendonca’s CV, is also available on the search page.

Mendonca has served in multiple research administrative roles, including as associate vice chancellor and interim vice chancellor for research at IU & Purdue University, Indianapolis, and associate vice president for research at IU. In these roles Mendonca helped lead the development of IU’s overall and research strategic plans.

In addition, Mendonca was the president of the School of Medicine faculty steering committee and the IUPUI faculty council executive committee.

With expertise in X-ray and proton radiation and cancer biology, Mendonca generally focuses on understanding the mechanism of radiation-induced cancer and its prevention by natural antioxidants, as well as increasing the effectiveness of radiation in lung and pancreatic cancer treatment.

Since 2011, Mendonca has acted as the editor-in-chief of the Radiation Research journal, and in 2022, the Radiation Research Society named him a fellow. He has also been a member of the American Society for Radiation Oncology, American Association for Cancer Research and American Board of Radiology.

Having mentored several high school, undergraduate and graduate students, Mendonca has received a number of teaching and service awards, including the American Board of Radiology’s lifetime and volunteer service awards and the IU School of Medicine’s trustee teaching award.

Mendonca earned his doctorate in biophysics from the University of California, Berkeley, and his bachelor’s degree in biology from the College of the Holy Cross.

Tue, 04/16/2024

author

Savannah Rattanavong

Media Contacts

Savannah Rattanavong

Office of the Provost

785-864-6402