Higher Education, The Research Councils, UK Aid Strategy and UK public budget
25 November 2015
The news may be focusing on today’s Spending Review, but to fully understand the situation you also need to look at the many strategies and visions outlined earlier this month.
November has been an incredibly important month for UK research, with several major reports deciding the future of its funding and governance.
The news may be focusing on today’s Spending Review, but to fully understand the situation you also need to look at the many strategy’s and visions outlined earlier this month.
Published on 6 November, the paper proposed many changes, including closing the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) and relocating its quality research funding function elsewhere, most likely to the Research Councls. It also outlined the potential introduction of the Teaching Excellence Framework to assess universities.
The new “Research UK” would have greater powers than the current Research Councils UK, potentially taking on the role of allocating funding to UK universities and administering the Research Excellence Framework (usually the job of HEFCE), as well as providing strong cross-council, interdisciplinary research management.
Research UK would be independent of government but interact with a ministerial committee (chaired by a senior minister) and help put science at the heart of government.
a new £1 billion commitment – over five years – to global public health (the “Ross Fund”) which will fund work to tackle the most dangerous diseases, including malaria
a new Global Challenges research fund of £1.5 billion over the next five years to ensure UK science takes a leading role in tackling issues such drug-resistant infections and protecting animal and plant health
The news was good for research, as the £4.7 billion science budget will be protected in real terms, and will include the new £1.5bn Global Challenges fund mentioned above.
The government will take forward Paul Nurse’s recommendations in creating Research UK, and will look to integrate Innovate UK into it in order to strengthen collaboration with the business community.
aims to improve the capacity of developing countries to produce and use statistics with an overall objective of supporting effective decision-making for development. T
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