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Home > Media releases > 2002
AUSTRALIAN ACADEMY OF SCIENCE DISMAYED AT ARC FUNDING DECISION
31 January 2002
The Australian Academy of Science today expressed dismay at the process used by the
new coalition government to impose priority areas of research on the Australian
Research Council.
While the Academy strongly supports a role for Government in articulating broad
priorities for a whole-of-government approach to R&D in Australia, the
Academy believes that this exercise, focused on one agency, will have serious
deleterious effects on Australian research. The Academy is particularly concerned at the timing of the decision, the extent of ARC funding affected, and the lack of any apparent integration with
the activities of other agencies or other Government programs designed to
assist innovation.
The Academy is concerned at the extent of the ARC funding affected no less than one
third of the total funds in the 2003 funding round of the ARC. While the designated areas are undoubtedly
of great import, there are many other worthy areas that will be left with
inadequate support, including the social sciences and humanities. One obvious omission, of particular
importance to Australia, is environmental sustainability.
The timing of the announcement could not have been worse and is not conducive to the
development of strong competitive proposals.
It comes at the very moment that Australian researchers across the
nation are completing their grant applications to the ARC for submission in
March. The concession to applicants of
one additional week in which to comply with the new guidelines is completely
unrealistic and suggests that the Government is unaware of the long process by
which strong research projects are developed, particularly those that involve
linkages with industry and other end users.
The Academy cautions that basic research should not be overlooked. It is basic
research that underpins thematic areas of national priority and enables
Australia to maintain a competitive edge in innovation. The Government’s laudable objective to
focus Australia’s research to 'fields of existing and emerging research
strength in which Australia can achieve international leadership' and which
have 'the potential to deliver significant economic and social benefits to the
Australian community' will not be achieved if the quality of the ARC-funded
research is compromised. The Academy
would wish the ARC to guarantee that the quality that has been a highlight of
the Discovery program would not be compromised and to state that the identified
priorities will be interpreted in the broadest possible way.
The Academy’s Secretary (Science Policy), Professor Barber, said, 'To advance all
of the identified priorities will require basic research in often at first
sight unlikely areas of science. The
true value of basic research will not be fully realised until the well of
creativity runs dry.'
The Government will now finalise priorities across the whole of the national
research effort, including major Commonwealth research agencies. The Academy urges the Government to modify this particular directive to the ARC.
Priority setting of research areas will only be in the national interest
if it is well-coordinated and phased in over a much longer period of time to
permit valuable linkages and team building to take place.
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