Hagler Institute for Advanced Study
The Hagler Institute for Advanced Study at Texas A&M University, formerly the Texas A&M University Institute for Advanced Study, is a research institute at Texas A&M University in College Station, Texas, that brings world-renowned scholars to collaborate on frontier research with faculty and students at A&M, with particular focus on “rising star” faculty. The institute cuts across all fields of graduate study in A&M's colleges, schools and the Health Science Center. The institute integrates a visiting scholar with the relevant department endeavors and with related specialists in adjoining fields. The Institute is named in honor of Jon Hagler, a distinguished graduate of Texas A&M and a philanthropist who donated $20 million to launch the endowment for the institute.
Ten years in the making, HIAS was founded by John L. Junkins, a professor of aerospace engineering, and the former interim President of Texas A&M University. His ideas for a strategy of bringing more top scholars to Texas A&M were adopted by A&M's administration in 2010, with support from the university and the Chancellor of the Texas A&M System.
The First Twelve Classes
The institute's first twelve classes have included six Nobel Laureates, awardees of the National Medal of Science, the Wolf Prize and the Hubbell Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Literature, and about 110 others who have won internationally competitive research honors equivalent to or exceeding the US national academies of Science, engineering and medicine and comparable international academies such as the Academia Europaea, the Académie nationale de médecine and the Royal Society of Sciences.Hagler Fellows
Visiting scholars, Hagler Fellows or formerly known as TIAS Faculty Fellows, after nominations by tenure track faculty, five per college or school, are approved by the college or school Dean, then vetted and selected by an elected panel of University Distinguished Professors. In this way, a fit with the existing scholarship and research pursuits at A&M is ensured, as is the quality of nominees based on their notable achievements. The US science, engineering and medicine nominees must already be members of their respective national academies, all others must be judged of equivalent or higher stature in their field. Once recruited, HIAS Faculty Fellows nominally visit Texas A&M for up to 12 months, but appointments can also be distributed over several years.Hagler Faculty Fellows are provided maximum time for intellectual pursuits with A&M's faculty and students. While they give public lectures and are invited for periodic departmental or college seminars, they typically have no formal teaching assignments. Their focus is research, scholarship, providing concentrated periods of time for collaboration with A&M's faculty and for development of graduate students.