A new research alliance that includes five of England鈥檚 top six research powers is not a case of the institutions 鈥済anging up鈥 on the rest of the university sector, one of its founders has insisted.
The Science and Engineering South Consortium, unveiled on 9 May, contains the universities of Oxford, Cambridge and Southampton, Imperial College London and University College London.
It is the latest regional alliance of research intensives to be announced since the formation of the N8 group of northern English universities in 2007. The south-western GW4 alliance was unveiled in January, and the Midlands-based M5 group was formed last August.
But the members of the south-eastern consortium, known as SES-5, constitute five of the top six English universities by research council income, making it by far the most powerful grouping.
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Its members also account for nearly a third of all spending by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, on whose research areas it will primarily focus.
According to David Price, vice-provost for research at University College London, this 鈥渢otal dominance鈥 in engineering and physical sciences made the alliance a 鈥渘o-brainer鈥 and he hoped it would permit successful bids for funds that its members would not be able to win individually.
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But Philip Nelson, pro vice- chancellor for research at Southampton - which was awarded more EPSRC grant funding in 2011-12 than Oxford or Cambridge - emphasised that the consortium was 鈥渁bsolutely not鈥 a case of the research giants 鈥済anging up on the rest of the sector鈥 and attempting to 鈥渞un off with the loot鈥.
Rather, he said, it was about being 鈥渞esponsible鈥 and sharing large items of equipment in 鈥渟traitened times鈥.
Ian Walmsley, pro vice-chancellor for research at Oxford, concurred, pointing to the 鈥渜uite drastic and very sudden鈥 cuts to the research capital budget in the 2010 spending review: 鈥淚n order for us to be able to stay at the world-leading edge of research, we have to figure out a way to manage this.鈥
Professor Nelson admitted the collaboration was partly a response to 鈥渘udging鈥 by the EPSRC, which is 鈥渁nxious to see bids for equipment that make sense for the sector as a whole rather than [just] for individual universities鈥. But he added that SES-5 members had been sharing digital infrastructure since 2010.
James Wilsdon, professor of science and democracy at the University of Sussex, said that the formation of SES-5 was 鈥渘ot a huge surprise鈥 since it 鈥渇ills a gap in the geographical jigsaw鈥 for regional collaborations. But he noted that some significant research universities in the South East, such as King鈥檚 College London, Queen Mary, University of London and his own institution, were not members.
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Professor Walmsley said that this was because, for 鈥済ood reason鈥, the group had been formed out of successful existing collaborations, such as on high-performance computing. The 鈥渞eally challenging鈥 question of how best to 鈥減artner鈥 with other institutions was still to be addressed.
Professor Price agreed that there were 鈥渙ther institutions in the region and elsewhere that might benefit from being more closely associated鈥 and emphasised SES-5 was 鈥渘ot closed鈥. But no 鈥渇ormal requests for discussion鈥 had been received and, in his view, it made sense first for the large founder members to formulate the consortium鈥檚 strategy.
This remains under discussion but could include shared postgraduate training. Professor Walmsley suggested that collaboration on equipment could also lead to more partnerships on research projects.
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Trevor McMillan, chair of the N8鈥檚 management board, cautioned that the scale of the SES-5 institutions might make it more difficult and less advantageous for them to collaborate on academic or industrial projects.
He said the 鈥渞eal value鈥 of consortia 鈥渃omes when there is well-embedded trust at senior levels - and this does not come quickly or easily鈥.
But Professor Price said the historical rivalries within SES-5 would not inhibit its growth, noting that UCL academics had more partnerships with colleagues from Imperial than from any other institution. He said SES-5 was part of a new 鈥渮eitgeist of collaboration鈥.
Chris Mottershead, vice-principal for research and innovation at King鈥檚, agreed that major research institutions had recently become 鈥渧ery collegiate鈥. He did not feel 鈥渆xcluded鈥 from SES-5 because King鈥檚 did not have most of the expensive equipment that the new alliance aimed to share.
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