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Science, we have a problem

Debate leads to anger over Lord Drayson鈥檚 accusation that scientists don鈥檛 fully recognise their accountability to taxpayers. Zo毛 Corbyn reports

Published on
December 1, 2009
Last updated
May 11, 2015

The Science Minister has come under fire from researchers who fear that the Government鈥檚 focus on the economic impact of research could damage the UK鈥檚 science base.

At a 探花视频 debate at the Wellcome Collection in London last night, Lord Drayson and a panel of young scientists laid out their hopes and fears for the future of UK science.

At the event, entitled 鈥淏lue skies ahead? The prospects for UK science鈥, Lord Drayson argued that scientists who receive money from the public purse have a duty to 鈥渢hink more鈥 about how their work benefits the economy and society.

鈥淪cientists should be accountable where work is funded by the taxpayer and therefore I think it is right that scientists should be asked to think about the impact that they have had,鈥 Lord Drayson said at the debate, which was chaired by scientist and radio presenter Brian Cox.

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He said that if the science community 鈥渉as a problem鈥 with this principle then 鈥渨e have a problem鈥.

His fear, he said, was that unless scientists began to take impact more seriously, any incoming science minister would be in a weaker position to argue for the science budget.

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Scientists鈥 accountability to taxpayers, he said, was the basis for the introduction of an impact component into the forthcoming research excellence framework, which will replace the research assessment exercise as the mechanism used by the Higher Education Funding Council for England to distribute about 拢2 billion in research funding annually.

鈥淸The REF] is about developing a framework that works in practice. But a fundamental principle is at stake here: does the scientific community believe that it is accountable to the taxpayer for the public funding that goes into science?... I think if the science community has a problem with this, we have a problem,鈥 he said.

Britain, he said, had been 鈥渁bsolutely brilliant鈥 at carrying out scientific research, but the impact this has had on the country鈥檚 development had been below par.

鈥淭he scientific research we have done in the past has had not enough impact on the wider society, our economy, our public realm,鈥 he said.

His comments were met with disdain from some members of the audience and the panel.

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Scientists did recognise their accountability to taxpayers, argued Colin Stuart, astronomer at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich and chair of the young scientists鈥 panel.

The problem was that they could not gaze into 鈥渃rystal balls鈥 to predict the outcome of research projects in advance 鈥 as is now required by research councils as part of grant applications, and which would be the likely result with the proposed 25 per cent weighting given to impact in the REF.

Also questioned was whether the REF 鈥 which is based on impact achieved from past work 鈥 goes back far enough, given the time lags in achieving impact, and whether requiring peer reviewers to assess impact fell within academics鈥 competence.

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John Dainton, professor of physics at the University of Liverpool and fellow of the Royal Society, said: 鈥淓very time government or management or bureaucracy has stepped in to distort peer review it has been shown that the science that comes out is less good than otherwise.鈥

Other topics raised included the ongoing financial crisis at the Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC), which is currently undertaking a review to determine which projects it will have to cut to balance its books after exchange rate fluctuations pushed up the costs of international facility subscriptions.

On the STFC, Lord Drayson said he recognised the 鈥渟ignificant problems鈥 the council faced, but that it was up to the STFC to balance its books. 鈥淭he job of a research council is to manage its budget,鈥 he said.

Scientists need to stop pretending in an 鈥渦nreal way鈥 that science is disconnected from the Government鈥檚 budgeting decisions and that more money could simply be injected, he added.

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鈥淵ou have got to work within the existing systems... [otherwise] science is not going to be able to make an effective case. It is no good pretending that you can fund science in a fundamentally different way to the way in which you fund education or health.鈥

zoe.corbyn@tsleducation.com

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