The Leading House South Asia in a nutshell
The ZHAW has been mandated as the Leading House South Asia by the State Secretariat for Education, Research and Innovation (SERI) for a third consecutive time from 2025 to 2028.
The Leading House South Asia promotes and fosters research and innovation cooperation between Switzerland and nine countries in South Asia: Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, the Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, and Iran.
2025-2028 mandate period
For the current mandate period, we have set ourselves the goal to make an impact by supporting projects that incorporate the following three cornerstones:
Adress global challenges holistically
Topics such as climate change, improvements in public health, and sustainable development demand collaborative efforts beyond science alone. These challenges require input from policymakers, industry leaders, and civil society to ensure that scientific solutions are implementable, socially acceptable, and scalable.
Co-creation between different fields encourages breaking down silos, fosters open-mindedness, and enhances cross-disciplinary learning. It also allows for integrating diverse perspectives, methodologies, and expertise, leading to innovative solutions, a more holistic understanding of complex challenges, faster problem-solving and is more likely to produce practical, relevant, real-world applications.
Bridge the gap between knowledge and action
Interdisciplinary approaches can better bridge the gap between knowledge and action, ensuring that scientific discoveries evolve into practical solutions that address pressing needs.
By combining expertise from various scientific disciplines with real-world insights from industry, government, and communities, collaborative science not only deepens understanding but also accelerates the development of impactful innovations that enhance quality of life, support sustainable practices, and drive societal progress.
Focus on building long-lasting relationships and trust
Collaboration in science across disciplines and involving diverse stakeholders helps build trust, even amid strained political relations. Shared scientific goals and challenges, such as addressing environmental issues and water scarcity, provide common ground for scientists, policymakers, and industries to work together.
By uniting expertise from various fields and sectors, such collaborations foster mutual understanding and create resilient and sustainable partnerships that transcend political borders.
Get to know the other Leading Houses
In addition to the Leading House South Asia, there are four other Swiss Leading Houses: