Chapter 3 Impediments to outbound researchers
3.1
This chapter examines several key impediments to Australian researchers
seeking to go overseas to commence or support collaborative research, namely:
n Distance and culture
n Lack of seed funding
to establish or develop collaborations.
Distance and culture
3.2
The distance of Australia from the major research centres of North
America and Europe was a commonly noted impediment to both incoming and
outbound research collaboration.[1]
3.3
As a result of this distance, travel costs are a major issue for most
Australian researchers. However, some submitters noted that travel funding
wasn’t difficult to obtain to cement a strong research project[2],
or they were able to budget how much to spend on collaborations because of their
status as an institute.[3]
3.4
However, the Committee heard of instances where researchers had secured
time on facilities based overseas with no equivalent in Australia, where the
researchers were unable to take advantage of that opportunity due to a lack of
travel funding.[4]
3.5
Some witnesses noted that some non-scientists viewed overseas travel to
foster scientific collaboration as an indulgence:
The [NSW] department [of Environment, Climate Change and
Water] has quarterly update reporting, and at the last executive meeting, a
graph of overseas travel was flashed in front of me. The science division I
think has the largest number of overseas trips. From my perspective that should
be seen as a good thing. It shows that we are internationally engaged. But it
was put to me as: ‘Look, Kate, watch out.’ That was more the attitude, so it’s
more about changing that.[5]
3.6
Witnesses and submitters expressed their dismay that some people
considered funding researcher travel to be an indulgence,[6]
with others suggesting researcher travel should be viewed as assisting
innovation.[7]
3.7
The Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (AATSE)
observed:
[Australian funding is being spent on research collaboration]
because it raises our game, our effectiveness, our productivity. To me that is
the prime reason.[8]
Lack of funding to establish or develop collaborations
3.8
The benefits of international travel for Australian researchers are
many. Travel enables Australian researchers to meet with leaders in their
research field, it forges links between researchers that can evolve into opportunities
for collaboration, and it enables Australian researchers to use facilities that
are not available in Australia.[9]
3.9
A common theme in submissions received by the Committee was that there
was often a lack of seed funding available to enable researchers to travel and
forge links with colleagues overseas.[10] This was especially the
case for early-career researchers.[11]
3.10
It was noted that researchers needed to access grants to develop
relationships with overseas researchers, and that quite often research
proposals would have travel components removed from the grant.[12]
3.11
A witness noted that some researchers had funded their own travel
overseas to explore collaborative opportunities:
... I have probably had to recommend maybe 10 or a dozen
international trips, and for two of them the scientists were actually funding
themselves to go overseas.[13]
3.12
Several witnesses and submitters,[14] including Professor
Fiona Stanley AC note the value of getting young researchers to international
conferences to build connections with fellow researchers:
... we absolutely need to get funded to travel to these
international network meetings and conference and to get our young people
there.[15]
3.13
The University of Sydney (USYD) also supported the use of conferences as
a way of maximising the exposure of young Australian researchers to gifted
international minds, but in lieu of sending Australian researchers overseas:
... we need to change some of our own cultural apology
approach and think of Australia as a destination. I think we could have some
fairly inexpensive initiatives, be they managed better through universities or
other academic agencies, such as Nobel Fellows on visiting lectureships for up
to a year – up to a month, actually; a year is probably too long. That would
bring very high prestige. Many universities in Asia are now running Nobel
lectures on their own. They are not cheap but they get focus around selected areas.
A second would be funding to universities – again, probably
through the compact system – of major strategic conferences. By ‘major’ I mean
small, strategic conferences around Australia’s research priorities and how we
work with other countries. We should make these quite prestigious.[16]
3.14
Another witness noted that establishing relationships with colleagues
was the most fundamental step.
I still feel that it boils down to personal linkages; skills,
expertise that we need to have on the ground that can link us with the people
overseas. To me, that is really the starting point.[17]
3.15
Witnesses from the Australian Mathematical Sciences Institute (AMSI) advised
the Committee of a small grants model that operates in Canada to support
early-career researchers in forging international links, and that a similar
scheme used to operate in Australia and should be reinstated:
There was a small grants scheme in Australia 20 years ago; it
has not been around for a long time. The sorts of funds I am talking about are
of the order of $20,000 a year and are enough to maintain research programs for
many active mathematical sciences. Of course, $20,000 a year will not allow the
employment of young, early-career researchers, but it is certainly enough to be
able to provide travel support for international collaborations, to be able to
send early-career researchers overseas and so on.[18]
3.16
Further methods for supporting early-career researchers are canvassed in
Chapter 5.
Committee comment
3.17
Geoffrey Blainey’s ‘tyranny of distance’[19]
is all pervasive, even impacting on the ability of Australian researchers to
cooperate with their international colleagues, and it is a problem that will
have to continue to be managed by Australian researchers.
3.18
Developments in information and communication technology will serve to
mitigate these difficulties slightly, but given the importance to researchers
of face-to-face contact in developing collaborative opportunities there will
always be a need for Australian researchers to travel and meet their colleagues
in person.
3.19
Addressing the issue of culture, and opposition to researcher mobility,
the Committee acknowledges that researcher mobility is vital in building
research collaboration and maximising opportunities for Australian researchers
and Australian science.
3.20
The Committee also acknowledges that funding for travel to establish and
support collaborations is insufficient, and is disappointed that often when
grant applications are reduced, international travel components are removed.
However, the Committee also believes that guaranteeing travel funding would
reduce the percentage of successful research grants even further. Further
discussion on funding is in Chapter 5.
3.21
Reducing an already low success rate for grant applications is an
undesirable outcome, and the Committee would prefer to see more research done
in Australia than less. The Committee acknowledges that information
communication technology is no substitute for true face-to-face contact between
researchers, but it nonetheless encourages researchers to use these methods to
develop and maintain contact with colleagues overseas.
3.22
The Committee believes there is real benefit for young researchers in
attending international conferences to make contact with colleagues based
overseas, and encourages research organisations and universities to maximise
available opportunities for young researchers in attending these events.
3.23
Further, the Committee is dismayed to hear of cases where Australian
researchers, especially young Australian researchers with potentially
innovative research, win time on facilities located overseas, but are then
unable to use these facilities due to a lack of funding for travel.
3.24
The Committee believes that when unique opportunities like these are
presented to early-career researchers, they should be taken as often as
possible, and recommends that the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science
and Research investigate the viability of a small grants scheme to be
established to support the travel expense of Australian early-career researchers
who win time on foreign instruments and facilities that are unavailable in
Australia.
Recommendation 1
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The Committee recommends that the Department of Innovation,
Industry, Science and Research investigate the viability of a small grants
scheme to be established to support the travel expense of Australian
early-career researchers who win time on foreign instruments and facilities
that are unavailable in Australia.
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