The double-glazed ceiling: new PIs face continuing precarity
Early career researchers’ path to independence is unnecessarily bumpy
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Early career researchers’ path to independence is unnecessarily bumpy
The American Association for the Advancement of Science and the Royal Society have launched a new framework for science diplomacy.
President Trump sees himself as a dealmaker and Elon Musk sees himself as a science-based innovator. Might this fabled partnership lead to a confluence towards what is termed “science diplomacy?”
Three years after the attack on Ukraine, positions are changing, but there is no more money in Germany for military research.
Over the past two decades, transdisciplinarity has been cited increasingly by policymakers and university actors as a means to reshape learning and research processes to improve society’s potential to tackle grand societal challenges.
The Spark grants scheme, run by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), anonymises applications. This has meant a more diverse range of winners, particularly younger scientists and those new to SNSF funding.
Research centers move to reduce salaries and lay off staff.
Whether well-meaning or hostile, decisions about categories and counting are always political.
One-size-fits-all approach gives fluent writing an outsize role in research success.
The realities of the new political landscape have cast its shadow on the future of academia.
Just a few weeks into Donald Trump's return to power, the world is witnessing a narrow-minded and autocratic policy regime - one especially harmful to US science. But for Europe, the author believe it offers a window of opportunity for science and innovation.