Administration Directory

Keith Allred

Executive Director, National Institute for Civil Discourse

Jennifer Barton

Director, BIO5

Stephanie Capuano

Sr. Director, Marketing, Communications and Engagement, Institute for the Future of Data and Computing and the Space4 Center

Stephanie Capuano

Sharon Collinge

Director, Arizona Institute for Resilience

Brian Dodge

Director, The University of Arizona LGBTQ+ Institute

Javier Duran

Director, Confluencenter for Creative Inquiry

Régis Ferrière

Deputy Director, France-Arizona Institute

Andrea K. Gerlak

Director, Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy

Heather Haeger

Research Director, STEM Learning Center

Erika Hamden

Director, UA Space Institute

Arthur "Barney" Maccabe

Executive Director, Institute for the Future of Data and Computation

Arthur "Barney" Maccabe

Arthur "Barney" Maccabe, former computer science and mathematics division director at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and a UArizona alumnus,  has been appointed the new director for the Institute for the Future of Data and Computing. This new transdisciplinary institute will bring together student and faculty researchers from colleges across campus, exploring solutions for collecting and making sense of big data. Prior to his tenure at Oak Ridge, he spent 26 years teaching computer science at the University of New Mexico. At UNM, Maccabe was the director of high-performance computing as well as chief information officer.

Nirav Merchant

Director, Data Science Institute

Vishnu Reddy

Director, Space4 Center

Mary Rigdon

Director, Center for the Philosophy of Freedom

Yisel Suarez

Executive Associate

Liesl Folks

Vice President, Semiconductor Strategy

Liesl Folks

Dr. Liesl Folks currently serves as the Vice President for Semiconductor Strategy at the University of Arizona, where she is also a Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering. For the period 2019-2023, she served the institution as Provost, leading strong growth in on-campus and online student enrollment, greatly expanded research activity, increased diversity of faculty, staff and students, led salary equity reviews for faculty, introduced minimum stipends for graduate student researchers, and the launch of two new colleges.

She holds a BSc (Hons) and a PhD, both in Physics, from The University of Western Australia, as well as an MBA from Cornell. She previously served as the dean of the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences and professor of Electrical Engineering at the University at Buffalo, NY. Prior to joining UB in 2012, she spent 16 years in research & development in support of the data storage industry in Silicon Valley. There, she worked at IBM Almaden Research Center, Hitachi Global Storage Technologies, and Western Digital. Her R&D accomplishments include key contributions to the fields of nanoscale magnetic metrology, bit-patterned media, microwave-assisted magnetic recording (MAMR), Helium sealed drives, spin-transfer-torque sensors, and Hall cross sensors. An internationally recognized expert in the fields of magnetic materials and devices, nanoscale metrology, and spin-electronic devices, Dr. Folks holds 12 U.S. patents and is author of more than 60 peer-reviewed articles that have attracted more than 13,300 citations.

Dr. Folks has long been a mentor to women and under-represented groups in STEM and was a co-author of the ASEE's Deans Diversity Statement that was announced by President Obama in 2015 and has more than 200 engineering deans as signatories. She was the first female President of the IEEE Magnetics Society, for 2013-2014, and has served on the Strategic Planning Committee for the IEEE Technical Activities Board. Within the academy, she has been a leader in expanding interdisciplinary research aimed at addressing major social and global challenges, and in growing hands-on and experiential learning opportunities for students. She chaired the 2020 congressionally-mandated NASEM Review of the National Nanotechnology Initiative, and is now serving as NASEM Committee Chair for the panel on Global Microelectronics: Models for the Department of Defense in Semiconductor Public-Private Partnerships.  Dr. Folks is a Fellow of the National Academy of Inventors.

Joaquin Ruiz

Director, Biosphere 2

Executive Director, Alfie Norville Gem / Mineral Museum

Executive Director, France-Arizona Institute

Vice President, Global Environmental Futures

Joaquin Ruiz received his B.S. (1977) in Geology and Chemistry from the University of Miami and his M.S.(1980) and Ph.D. (1983) in Geology from the University of Michigan. He was Assistant Professor at the University of Miami from 1982 to 1983. In 1983, he joined the University of Arizona Geosciences Department as Assistant Professor and was promoted to Associate Professor in 1989 and Professor in 1993, serving as head of the Department of Geosciences from 1995 to 2000. He served as Dean of the College of Science from 2000-2019, Executive Dean of the Colleges of Letters, Arts and Science from 2009-2018, and Vice President for Innovation from 2013-2019. He was appointed Vice President of Global Environmental Futures in 2019 and has served as the Thomas R. Brown Chair and Director of Biosphere 2 since 2013. Dr. Ruiz served as President of the Geological Society of America (2010-2011). He is also a Fellow of the Society of Economic Geologists, and a member of the American Geophysical Union, the American Chemical Society, the Geochemical Society, and the National Research Council of the National Academies of Science. He is a member of the Mexican Academy of Sciences and was named a National Researcher by the Mexican government in 2010, when he was recognized for his outstanding scientific contributions and efforts to enhance Mexico's scientific and technological capacity through collaborations with the UA and research institutions in Mexico. In 2018, the Mexican Secretary of State named Dr. Ruiz one of forty distinguished Mexican citizens living abroad who have brought distinction to the country. He has served as Secretary of the Volcanology Section of the American Geophysical Union, Councillor of the Geological Society of America, and as a National Science Foundation Panel Member for the Instrumentation and Facilities Program and the Centers for Excellence in Science and Technology Program. He has served as Associate Editor of the American Journal of Science, Geology, Revista, and Geofísica International of the Institute of Geology, UNAM. As a scientist with equal abilities in chemistry and in geology, Dr. Ruiz addresses many first-order problems in the Earth Sciences, such as the development of new isotope systems for studying ore deposits and the tectonic processes involved in the growth and evolution of Mexico. His research team addresses problems ranging from the origins of life to present-day climate change.

Peter Reiners

Interim Associate Vice President, Research Centers & Institutes

Pete serves as the Interim Associate VP for Research Centers, Institutes, Museums, and Core Facilities. Prior to joining RII, he served as Associate Dean for Research in the College of Science from 2019-2021, Department Head of Geosciences from 2013-2018, and Dean of Faculty of Environment at the University of Northern British Columbia for 2022. Pete came to the University of Arizona in 2006 and continues to direct or co-direct geochronology and geochemistry laboratories, conduct research across a range of Earth and environmental science, and pursue projects in subsurface processes, cleantech, and resources necessary for mitigating climate change and promoting sustainability.

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