Membership

Faculty affiliation with CLP is based on mutual interest in highly collaborative, multi-disciplinary, entrepreneurial research. Institute affiliation is non-binding, but Institute members are expected to play an active role in Institute programs and activities.

What happens with physicists, chemists, geneticists, cancer biologists meet?  A future without cancer tarts to become a reality.

Marcelo G. Bonini, PhD

Professor of Medicine (Hematology and Oncology) and Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics

CLP creates an environment where great minds unite. Everyone has a unique strength, and combining those strengths is the key to moving the field forward. The brain is very complex. Neurodegenerative diseases are very complex, so we need to approach them from multiple angles.

hande ozdinler

Associate Professor of Neurology

Our mission is to use chemical biology approaches to discover small molecules that hijack UPS in the cells to degrade more disease-causing proteins, particularly those undruggable proteins.

Xiaoyu Zhang, PhD

Assistant Professor of Chemistry

How to Join

There are two classifications of faculty membership in the Institute which are distinguished by residence or non-residence in Silverman and the process for granting membership differ between the two. Resident faculty are allocated space for their research group, as distinct from a core or center, in Silverman Hall. Affiliated faculty are non-resident members of the Institute. In both instances, a process has been implemented to ensure that faculty are committed to and contribute to collaborative, transdisciplinary research and education.

Faculty affiliation with CLP is based on mutual interest in highly collaborative, multi-disciplinary, entrepreneurial research. Institute affiliation is non-binding, but Institute members are expected to play an active role in Institute programs and activities.

There are two classifications of faculty membership in the Institute which are distinguished by residence or non-residence in Silverman and the process for granting membership differ between the two. Resident faculty are allocated space for their research group, as distinct from a core or center, in Silverman Hall. Affiliated faculty are non-resident members of the Institute. In both instances, a process has been implemented to ensure that faculty are committed to and contribute to collaborative, transdisciplinary research and education.

Resident Faculty Membership

Deans/department chairs may propose new resident CLP faculty in alignment with the building program for space allocation and the CLP mission.

Candidates must be interviewed by the CLP Director and preferably, by 1-2 members of the Faculty Executive Committee.

Proposals for residency status are submitted by the department chair/dean and must include (i) a letter of support from the dean/chair addressing the proposed faculty members’ alignment with the CLP mission, (ii) a statement from the candidate that shows alignment of their research interests with CLP mission, and (iii) a copy of their current vita. This package is distributed to members of CLP Faculty Executive Committee who then discuss and vote on the request. The Faculty Executive Committee is composed of the leadership of affiliated CLP centers and core facilities and the director of the CLP Training Program.

Affiliate Faculty Membership

Candidates for affiliate membership are required to submit a formal request to the Institute director stating their interest in joining CLP, reviewing their interdisciplinary research interests, current CLP collaborations and long-term collaborative interests, their willingness to participate in CLP faculty responsibilities, and a copy of their current vita.

Once these materials have been reviewed, the candidate is invited to an interview with the director at Silverman Hall.

The decision to accept the request for affiliate membership is made by the CLP Faculty Director.

For more information, please contact:

Sheila Judge

Senior Director, Administration, Research and Education, Chemistry of Life Processes Institute

s-judge@northwestern.edu

847-491-5868