Prof Andrew Endy
Biography
Professor Andrew Endy is a science fellow and senior fellow (courtesy) at
the Hoover Institution. He leads Hoover’s Bio-Strategy and Leadership
effort, which focuses on keeping increasingly biotic futures secure,
flourishing, and democratic. Professor Endy also researches and teaches
bioengineering at Stanford University, where he is the Martin Family
University Fellow in Undergraduate Education, senior fellow (courtesy)
of the Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies, and faculty
codirector of degree programs for the Hasso Plattner Institute of
Design.
Professor Endy helped launch new undergraduate majors
in bioengineering at both MIT and Stanford and the International
Genetically Engineered Machine (iGEM) competition, which involves
thousands of students annually. Endy has served on the US National
Science Advisory Board for Biosecurity; the National Academies of
Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine Committee on Science, Technology,
and Law; the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Synthetic
Biology Task Force; and, briefly, the Pentagon’s Defense Innovation
Board. He currently serves on the World Health Organization’s Advisory
Committee on Variola Virus Research; the Organization for Economic
Co-operation and Development’s (OECD) Global Forum on Technology’s
synthetic biology task force; and the Defense Science Board’s Emerging
Biotechnology and National Security Task Force. Endy earned his PhD from
Dartmouth in biotechnology and biochemical engineering and has been
recognized in Esquire magazine as one of the seventy-five most influential people of the 21st century.