Munich鈥檚 leading universities have pledged to dial back their long-standing rivalry and instead coordinate a joint research strategy, the latest sign that Germany鈥檚 excellence initiative is spurring the creation of citywide science plans, rather than universities going it alone.
The medieval LMU Munich and its 19th-century rival, the Technical University of Munich (TUM), have committed to what is called the 鈥淥ne Munich Strategy鈥 and will jointly open a biofabrication research centre with other city partners.
The universities still see some benefits in healthy rivalry. 鈥淲e both need that to improve ourselves,鈥 said Thomas Hofmann, president of聽TUM.
But their view is increasingly that competition between Munich and the likes of Boston or San Francisco is more important than pitting LMU against TUM.
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鈥淚n the future, next to this competition, our strategy needs cooperation,鈥 Professor Hofmann explained. As publicly funded bodies, 鈥渋t聽would be wrong not to do it鈥 to maximise the social impact of research.
At the end of April, the two universities announced that they would join a 鈥淥ne Munich Strategy Forum鈥, which will meet three to four times a聽year, to聽scope out emerging fields where Munich could be a world leader within three to five years.
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The first joint project is 鈥淢unich BioFab鈥, a network of researchers in synthetic biology who may move into a聽shared building within two to three years. Other partners include the Max Planck Institute for Biochemistry, Helmholtz Centrum Munich and the Munich University of Applied Sciences. Another two common projects are set to be announced this year and聽next.
The shift towards collaboration was driven by the changing nature of research, said Professor Hofmann, and the need to link up researchers in large-scale cross-disciplinary centres. 鈥淲e still need strong disciplines, but we need better tools to connect the scientists,鈥 he explained.
This had already happened in London, he pointed out, with several universities including UCL, Imperial College London and King鈥檚 College London pooling resources to create the Francis Crick Institute, a聽biomedical research centre. Harvard University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology have joined forces to create the Broad Institute, which focuses on human biology and genomic medicine.
Munich鈥檚 move to coordinate its universities鈥 strategies mirrors developments in Germany鈥檚 capital, which has a 鈥淏erlin University Alliance鈥 to open joint research centres and create joint master鈥檚 programmes.
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The drive towards citywide research plans in Germany has been spurred by the country鈥檚 excellence strategy, a funding initiative that since 2007 has sprinkled extra money and prestige over a handful of 鈥渆xcellent鈥 universities.
The aim is to inject more competition into German higher education and to fashion an internationally recognised elite out of a traditionally egalitarian system.
But at the same time, the excellence strategy has also funded university partnerships known as 鈥渃lusters of excellence鈥, and this has driven universities to coordinate their activities. LMU and TUM already boast four joint clusters of excellence, focusing on research areas including quantum science, batteries and the origins of聽life.
Also backing the plan for a 鈥淥ne Munich Strategy鈥 is the Bavarian government, which has said that it wants to make Munich the 鈥渨orld鈥檚 leading centre for artificial intelligence鈥 as part of a 鈧2聽billion (拢1.7聽billion) plan launched in 2019 to stimulate 鈥渉igh-tech鈥 research, including an extra 1,000 professor positions by聽2023.
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