Nadia Galati
Principal Consultant
Nadia Galati is a Principal Consultant at the Frankfurt office of Technopolis Germany. She has developed expertise in public policy evaluation with a particular interest in higher education, innovation, education, and science policy. She has contributed to various evaluations and studies for European and national public bodies and foundations. She regularly and successfully applies both quantitative and qualitative methods, including focus groups and workshops, interviews, surveys, case studies, desk research, document analysis, statistical analyses and benchmark studies.
Her projects include ex-post and formative evaluations for various programmes for the BMBF, currently in particular the ”360° monitoring” of the DATIpilot experimental funding lines and the accompanying evaluation of the federal-state programme ”FH-Personal”. In the past, she has also carried out various evaluations (some of them lasting several years) in the field of higher education, transfer and innovation, including ”Innovative University”, ”FH-Impuls”, the ”Female Professor Programme” and ”Software Sprint”. For the DAAD, she was involved in studies and projects in the field of digitisation and internationalisation of university cooperation. For the European Commission she has worked on the implementation and evaluation of programmes and networks – for example within the framework of the EU-India network in the field of innovation and entrepreneurship or the EU-Latin America cooperation platform INNOVACT for innovation and growth.
She also regularly works for foundations and other non-profit organisations: Recently, together with an evaluation commission chaired by Annette Schavan, she implemented the evaluation of the Baden-Württemberg Foundation, which, in addition to research and education, also supports programmes in the field of society and culture. Furthermore, she conducted studies for the Stifterverband on topics such as interdisciplinary MINT formats in teaching and learning (STEAM) and interoperability in university cooperation. She was also involved in the overall evaluation of the Mercator Foundation, the evaluation of the Robert Bosch Foundation’s ”Robert Bosch Academy” and ”Policy engagement and partnerships” programmes, and the international funding lines of the Volkswagen Foundation.
She earned her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in political science with a focus on international relations at the Goethe University in Frankfurt. She is fluent in German and English.