British science and technology are already haemorrhaging talent and collaborations because of the Brexit vote, write Mike Galsworthy (left) and Rob Davidson of Scientists for EU. The government’s promise to underwrite Horizon 2020 funding was a bare minimum and uncertainty about future funding has made the UK a much less attractive place for research. They present an eight-point plan to limit damage to UK science and put its knowledge economy back in contention
The UK higher education sector has entered a period of turbulence, as the consequences of the UK lea...
>Continuity and certainty are crucial to excellent scientific research, which builds on decades of f...
With the loss of EU funding and collaborative opportunities – as well as a shake-up of research coun...
Funding, regulation, immigration, and investment should be points of focus</jats:p
It was a flicker of good news in the unrelenting gloom of Brexit Britain. On September 7, after y...
Scientific research, particularly at the university level, has long been a hallmark of UK economic a...
In this extract from their evidence to the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology...
Brexit has weakened collaboration between UK higher education institutions and their EU counterparts...
On June 23, 2016, the people of the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, forever changi...
SummaryThe UK government has revealed its spending plans for the next four years with cuts affecting...
Senior university staff have been scaremongering about the damage leaving the EU would do to British...
Britain’s current presidency of the European Union is overshadowed by worries about the budget in th...
The UK fares very well in international comparisons of the research and development intensity of the...
AbstractBritain is planning to increase spending on science over the next ten years with the predict...
Several comments immediately following the British vote for Brexit focused on the negative effects b...
The UK higher education sector has entered a period of turbulence, as the consequences of the UK lea...
>Continuity and certainty are crucial to excellent scientific research, which builds on decades of f...
With the loss of EU funding and collaborative opportunities – as well as a shake-up of research coun...
Funding, regulation, immigration, and investment should be points of focus</jats:p
It was a flicker of good news in the unrelenting gloom of Brexit Britain. On September 7, after y...
Scientific research, particularly at the university level, has long been a hallmark of UK economic a...
In this extract from their evidence to the House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology...
Brexit has weakened collaboration between UK higher education institutions and their EU counterparts...
On June 23, 2016, the people of the United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union, forever changi...
SummaryThe UK government has revealed its spending plans for the next four years with cuts affecting...
Senior university staff have been scaremongering about the damage leaving the EU would do to British...
Britain’s current presidency of the European Union is overshadowed by worries about the budget in th...
The UK fares very well in international comparisons of the research and development intensity of the...
AbstractBritain is planning to increase spending on science over the next ten years with the predict...
Several comments immediately following the British vote for Brexit focused on the negative effects b...
The UK higher education sector has entered a period of turbulence, as the consequences of the UK lea...
>Continuity and certainty are crucial to excellent scientific research, which builds on decades of f...
With the loss of EU funding and collaborative opportunities – as well as a shake-up of research coun...