Blog Post
Key priorities for the GCRF Collective Fund
Research Councils UK has launched a call for evidence to gather views on the high-level challenges and delivery the GCRF Collective Fund, part of the new £1.5...
Nick Perkins, Director of SciDev.net shares his thoughts on the key priorities for the GCRF Collective Fund.
Research Councils UK has launched a call for evidence on the GCRF Collective Fund, part of the new £1.5 billion Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF). Nick Perkins, Director of SciDev.net shares his thoughts on how the GCRF Collective Fund can be most effective.
The Sustainable Development Goals reflect unprecedented ambition for the wellbeing of the planet. There are 169 targets and are estimated to cost several times as much as the Millennium Development Goals. Although the real ambition is in the process.
The attempt to approach these goals with a strong understanding of the interconnectedness of planetary systems and the required coherence across countries and policy mechanisms is a crucial feature of the SDGs and the attendant Agenda 2030. Similarly the oft stated commitment to ‘leave no one behind’ presents a formidable task considering the universality of the goals- not just for low income countries- and the breadth of those targets.
The sustainable development framework also presents a unique opportunity for science to influence policy. The annual global sustainable development report is written principally by scientists and is well positioned to be a report card on SDG progress. It’s true the SDGs are not the only game in town but the Africa Union’s Agenda 2063 is even more ambitious in the scale of transformation expected. There is little point in routing around for a lower common denominator.
In this context then the GCRF should not be business as usual. It would be a failure of imagination and responsibility to deliver a research programme which looks like a global research call that might have been issued 10 years ago. This is underscored by consideration of British national interests, Oxfam blogger Duncan Green called London the Silicon Valley of global development and the research fund should be in keeping with the game changing reputation of UK aid.
The GCRF has made a promising start with its high level challenges – as this project on the key 100 questions reveals, synthesising the essential challenges is no easy task. But the research topics is just the start, there are three features which would suggest that the GCRF is fit for purpose.
Nick Perkins is Director of SciDev.net which he believes “has an important role to play by inspiring a culture of science amongst vulnerable or deprived communities”.
Share your thoughts on the GCRF Collective Fund in the section below, and input into the Call for Evidence by 22 August.
Disclaimer: This blog solely represents the views of Nick Perkins.
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