The Australian Academy of Science says the lack of coherence supporting Australian research is an indictment of the approach that knowledge is only important if it can be commercialised – or relate to some ill-defined national interest test.
The Academy also says that the current state of Australian research is the consequence of vague strategic Government direction, piecemeal interference over nearly two decades, and ad hoc interventions that have demoralised researchers, minimised efficiency and disadvantaged the nation.
The comments were made in the Academy’s submission, on the review of the Australian Research Council Act, published today.
The submission also says fundamental research should be the primary focus of the ARC.
The submission reads: It is of the utmost importance to the national research system and our national prosperity that the role of the ARC in supporting fundamental research be restored and safeguarded.
The Academy notes while the review of the Australian Research Council Act does not have the scope to consider wider system issues, no review, or recommendations to do with the Australian Research Council (ARC) can occur in a vacuum.
The submission reads: Changes to the role, responsibilities, focus, settings, governance, or legislation of the ARC will invariably influence the operation of the broader research system – without addressing the central problem: 212 research funding programs across 12 Commonwealth Departments.
The submission calls on the Australian Government to commission an independent science and research system review without delay.
It also recommends:
The submission says it is instructive that research councils in overseas jurisdictions have different governance structures from that of the ARC. Read the submission and the full list of recommendations for the ARC.
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