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Vietnam Boat Refugee to Reliability Engineering

by Lisa Park - Tech Editor

Hoang Pham has​ spent his career‍ trying to ensure that some of the world’s most critical systems don’t fail, including commercial aircraft engines, nuclear ⁣facilities, and ⁢massive data ​centers that underpin‍ AI and cloud computing.

A professor of industrial‌ and systems engineering at​ rutgers ‍University in ⁢New ​Brunswick, N.J., ⁣and a longtime volunteer for IEEE, Pham, an IEEE Life‍ Fellow, is internationally recognized for advancing the mathematical foundations of reliability engineering. His work⁢ earned him the ⁣IEEE Reliability Society’s Engineer⁣ of the Year award in 2009. He was recognized for helping to ⁢shape how ⁣engineers model risk in complex, data-rich systems.

⁢ ‌
‌‍ ‌‌ ‍ Hoang Pham
‍ ⁣⁤

⁤ ​

Employer

Rutgers University in New Brunswick, N.J.

Job title

Professor ⁢of industrial and‌ systems engineering

Member grade

Life Fellow

Alma maters⁣

Northeastern Illinois ‌University,⁢ in Chicago;​ University of Illinois at ‍Urbana-Champaign; and SUNY‌ Buffalo.

The discipline that defines his career was forged long before equations, peer-reviewed journals, or keynote speeches.It ⁢began on an ‌overcrowded fishing boat in 1979 when he was ⁤fleeing Vietnam after the war, ​when survival as‍ one‍ of the country’s “boat people” depended on endurance, luck, and the fragile reliability of a vessel⁤ never meant to carry so many ⁤lives. ​Like thousands ‍of others, he fled from his war-torn country ​after⁤ the fall of Saigon, which was‍ controlled by communist North Vietnamese ‍forces.

To mark the 50th⁣ anniversary of the fall‌ of Saigon in 1975,Pham and his son ⁢Hoang ‍Jr.-a‍ Rutgers​ computer science graduate turned filmmaker-produced Unstoppable Hope, a documentary about Vietnam’s⁤ boat people.The ‍film tells t

The fall of Saigon in 1975 triggered a‍ mass exodus⁣ from Vietnam. Many fled, hoping to escape the new communist regime. They faced perilous journeys, often crammed into ‌small, overcrowded boats. The United Nations provided ‌basic rations.Still, the asylum seekers’ futures remained uncertain. The U.N.‌ Refugee Agency estimates that between ‌1975 and the early 1990s, roughly 800,000 Vietnamese people attempted​ to escape⁢ by boat. As many as 250,000⁤ did not survive the harrowing journey.

Starting over with nothing

In January ⁣1980,at age 19,Pham⁣ learned that someone in the United States had agreed to sponsor him‍ for entry. He soon ⁢boarded an airplane ‌for the first⁣ time and landed in Seattle.

his troubles weren’t over, however. he arrived in a city blanketed by ​snow, wearing thin clothing and carrying only a spare shirt. The frosty weather wasn’t his⁢ greatest concern, though.​ During his first two months, he spent most ‌of ‍his time in a⁤ hospital, recovering from malaria​ and other diseases. And ‍he ⁣spoke no English.

Still,Pham-who had been a first-year college student in Vietnam-refused to abandon his goal of becoming a teacher. ​He enrolled at Lincoln high School to gain English proficiency and position himself to enter an American college. One teacher⁤ allowed him‌ to test ‍into a calculus class despite his ‍limited English-which he ⁤passed.

“That moment told​ me I​ could survive here,” Pham says.

Within ⁢months, ​he learned he could attend college on a scholarship. He moved to Chicago in‍ August 1980 to study at the National College of Education,then he​ transferred to Northeastern Illinois University, also in Chicago,​ earning bachelor’s degrees⁣ in mathematics and computer science in 1982.

Encouraged by ⁣mentors, he earned a master’s‌ degree in ⁣statistics​ at the University​ of ​Illinois at Urbana-Champaign in 1984, followed by a Ph.D. in ⁤reliability ‌engineering at the State University of New York at Buffalo ⁤ in 1989.

when failure is⁤ not an option

Pham’s research direction‌ crystallized in 1988 while searching for a dissertation topic.He was reading ⁣the‍ January 1988 issue of IEEE Spectrum ⁣ and ​had a ⁢flash of inspiration after ​seeing a‌ classified ad posted by​ the⁣

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