Padma Shri National Order of Scientific Merit (Brazil) UM Distinguished Leadership Award Order of Ski-U-Mah Engineering Personality Award TNF Excellence Award M. K. Nambiar Memorial Award
Rotary Vocational Service Award For the Sake of Honour Award National Science and Technology Award Ugadi Puraskar Man of the Year 1999 Platinum Jubilee Award ICCES Outstanding Achievement Award UGC National Swami Pranavananda Saraswati Award
Munirathna Anandakrishnan was born on 12 July 1928[7] in the south Indian state of Tamil Nadu.[7][8] After graduating in civil engineering (BE) from the College of Engineering, Guindy,[9]Madras University in 1952,[1] he pursued his studies at the University of Minnesota from where he secured a master's degree (MS) in 1957 and a PhD[2] in civil engineering in 1960.[7][8][10][11] During his doctoral studies, he was a teaching assistant at the university and was the president of the Indian Students Association and Foreign Students Council at the university.[1][8] He also worked part-time at Twin City Testing and Engineering Laboratories, a private firm, as a materials engineer[2]
Anandakrishnan returned to India in 1962 and started his Indian career as a Grade I Senior Scientific Officer at the Central Road Research Institute, Delhi and worked there for a year.[1][2] His next posting was as a member of the faculty of civil engineering at the Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur (IIT Kanpur) where he worked till 1974, holding various positions such as assistant professor, professor, senior Professor, chairman of civil engineering department, dean and acting director.[2] He also served IIT Kanpur as the chairman of the central staff recruiting committee and as the advisor on campus development.[1]
In 1974, Anandakrishnan moved to the US, on deputation from the Department of Science and Technology to work as the science counsellor at the Indian embassy in Washington D.C.[1][2] In 1978, he joined the United Nations Commission on Science and Technology for Development (CSTD) as the chief of new technologies at the Office of Science and Technology (OST), where he worked till his retirement from UN service in 1989.[1][8] At the United Nations, he also held the posts of the deputy director at the Commission on Science and Technology for Development (CSTD) and the secretary of the UN Advisory Committee on Science and Technology for Development (UNACAST).[2]
In 1990, Anandakrishnan returned to India to take up the position as the vice chancellor of Anna University, Tamil Nadu[8] and served the institution for two consecutive terms till 1996.[1][2][12] During this period, he was also a member of an International Expert Committee for the development of Science and Technology in Brazil and was involved in its activities till 1997.[1] After his second tenure as the vice chancellor, he was appointed the vice chairman of the Tamil Nadu State Council for Higher Education (TANSCHE)[13] and also held the post of the Advisor to the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu[12][14][15] on matters related to Information Technology and E-Governance.[2][8][11] In his advisory role, he was responsible for replacing the Common Entrance Test system[16] with the Single Window Admission System for admission to engineering courses across Tamil Nadu. Anandakrishnan retired from active service in 2001 and lived with his family at Kasturibai Nagar, in Adyar, Chennai.[citation needed]
Anandakrishnan was a former chairman of several University Grants Commission committees and panel such as Engineering and Technology panel, Committee on Specification of Degrees, Expert Committee to review the Maintenance Grant Norms for Delhi Colleges and the Expert Committee to examine the proposals for starting new Academic Staff Colleges. He has also headed the AICTE committees like Sectoral Committee of the National Board of Accreditation, Southern Regional Committee, Standing Committee on Entry and Operation of Foreign Universities in India and All India Board of Under Graduate Studies in Engineering and Technology.[2] He has also been associated as a member with the academic advisory council of Pondicherry University and with the National Assessment and Accreditation Council (NAAC), Bangalore.[2]
Publications
Anandakrishnan is the author of a book and the editor of three more on educational and technical aspects of engineering.[2]
Planning and Popularizing Science and Technology in Developing Countries[27]
Trends and Prospects in Planning and Management of Science and Technology for Development[28]
He is also credited with over 100 articles[1] in peer reviewed national and international journals.[2][29][30]
Awards and recognitions
Munirathna Anandakrishan won the Order of the Ski-Uh-Mah from the University of Minnesota in 1958 for his activities during his studies at the institution.[2][8] In 1972, he received the Indian Invention Promotion Award for developing the design of a radial permeability measuring device.[2] The Institution of Engineers (India) selected him for the Engineering Personality Award in 1992 for his contribution in liaising with UN agencies.[2] The next year, he received two awards, the TNF Excellence Award from the Tamil Nadu Foundation and the M. K. Nambiar Memorial Award from the Madras Institute of Magnetobiology.[2] A year later, Rotary International, Meenambakkam awarded him the Rotary Vocational Service Award. Rotary Club of Madras followed it with the For the Sake of Honour Award the next year. He received one more award, the National Science and Technology Award for Excellence in 1995.[2]
The Government of Brazil conferred on him the Commander of the National Order of Scientific Merit (Brazil) in 1996[1][3][8] and the same year, he received the Ugadi Puraskar from the Madras Telugu Academy.[2] The International Institute of Tamil Studies honoured him in 1999 and the Centenarian Trust, Chennai selected him as the Man of the Year 1999.[2][8] The Government of India awarded him the civilian honour of Padma Shri in 2002[8] and the University of Minnesota awarded him the Distinguished Leader Award in 2003.[1][2][8] The year 2004 brought him two awards, the Platinum Jubilee Award of the Indian Ceramics Society and the ICCES Outstanding Achievement Award from the International Conference on Computational and Experimental Engineering and Sciences.[2]
M. Anandakrishnan, ed. (1983). Planning and Popularizing Science and Technology in Developing Countries. Tycooly Publications. OCLC822708930.
M. Anandakrishnan, ed. (1984). Trends and Prospects in Planning and Management of Science and Technology for Development. United Nations Centre for Science and Technology for Development.
Standke and Anandakrishnan (Editors) (1980). Science, Technology and Society. Pergamon. ISBN9781483148281. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
M. Anandakrishnan (Author), R.H. Siddiqi (Author) (184). Engineering Graphics. Prentice Hall. ISBN978-0876920015. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)
^"Award". University of Minnesota. 2014. Archived from the original on 20 January 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
^ ab"Minnesota Alumni". Minnesota Alumni.org. 2014. Archived from the original on 20 January 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
^ abc"Good Governance". Good Governance. 2014. Archived from the original on 20 January 2015. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
^"TANSCHE". TANSCHE. 2014. Archived from the original on 10 September 2012. Retrieved 19 January 2015.
^ ab"ISSUU". ISSUU. 2014. Archived from the original on 20 January 2015. Retrieved 18 January 2015.
^Madanmohan Rao (April 2001). "E-Government Services take off in India". Information Technology in Developing Countries. 11 (1). Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 20 January 2015.