鈥淚n our view it is illogical on the one hand to assert the unity of science and the fluidity of its internal boundaries, and on the other hand to approve a system of completely independent Research Councils, each of which can only operate within relatively rigid boundaries set by its individual charter.鈥
These words, from聽Sir Frederick Dainton鈥檚 1971 review of the UK research councils, were quoted earlier this year by Sir Mark Walport (鈥Why a shake-up of UK research funding is needed鈥,听Opinion,听2听February)聽in defence of the creation of聽UK Research and Innovation,听the controversial new funding behemoth that he will lead.聽Due to begin operations next April, the body combines the roles of all seven research councils, knowledge transfer body Innovate UK and the research remit of the Higher Education Funding Council for England.
Unfortunately, Sir Mark鈥檚 quotes are extracted from paragraphs 39 and 40 of Dainton鈥檚 report. The conclusions are in paragraph 45:聽鈥淎lthough our arguments would seem to point to the establishment of a monolithic National Research Council we are opposed to this solution. A single Council given authority and responsibility across the whole range of basic and strategic science might become too remote from the scientists actually carrying out the work; there would be a serious danger that a paralysing bureaucracy might develop. There would also be a risk that if the grant-giving authority were monolithic, its errors would have graver consequences.鈥
The roadmap drawn up by Dainton was followed by government for the next 45 years. In July, Sir Mark聽聽that he wants the UK funding system to be 鈥渢he best in the world鈥 and insisted that, contrary to concerns, he will not centrally direct research. UKRI, he said, will play key roles in encouraging interdisciplinary collaboration and delivering the government's industrial strategy, which aims to leverage UK scientific strengths for the benefit of the economy.
探花视频
However, it is often not clear which scientific areas have the most economic potential. For instance, in 1975 C茅sar Milstein and Georges K枚hler, researchers from the Medical Research Council鈥檚 Laboratory of Molecular Biology in Cambridge, discovered monoclonal antibodies. The government had already set up a body, the National Research Development Corporation, to ensure that good ideas from academic research realised their economic potential. Yet the committee of senior industrialists, patent lawyers, venture capitalists and financial experts failed to see any value in monoclonal antibodies and turned down Milstein and K枚hler鈥檚 entreaties to patent them. The discovery went on to earn the researchers the 1984 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine, and the omission probably lost the UK taxpayer many hundreds of millions of pounds.
In his 探花视频 article, Sir Mark wrote that the world is 鈥済etting the hang of the idea that research and innovation are crucial to economic growth鈥. But creating a monolithic body risks imposing a single recipe for innovation that will lead to stagnation.
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The discovery of the CRISPR gene editing system in biology, which is now taking the scientific world by storm, was made by scientists in their twenties, following their curiosity in relatively obscure labs in places such Alicante, Spain and Vilnius, Lithuania. Their papers were rejected by leading journals, but the combination of their youthful determination and the freedom that they were afforded allowed them to persist with their research regardless.
If Dainton鈥檚 fears about the development of paralysing bureaucracies are realised, such freedom will be in short supply under UKRI. As Sui Huang recently argued in THE, scientific innovation is already being stifled by the routine peer review of grant applications (鈥Bland peer review needs a pinch of salt鈥, Opinion, 31 August). Focusing research ever more tightly on national priorities will further encourage short-term research in fashionable fields, ignoring the young. And UKRI鈥檚 monopoly on public funding will make such follies disastrous. How will Sir Mark deal with these consequences?
Donald Braben is honorary professor in the department of earth sciences and in the office of the vice-provost (research) at University College London. John Dainton is Sir James Chadwick professor of physics (emeritus) at the University of Liverpool.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Is UKRI too heavy to fly?
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