Australia has made a āsolid startā in overhauling its research priorities but the effort will not succeed without a ārobust implementation planā, according to the learned society of scientists.
The federal government hasĀ Ģż“ړdzܰłĢżĀ to replace theĀ , which date from 2015.
The four āoverarchingā priorities were āconsistently identifiedā in over 300 written submissions and almost 70 roundtable discussions, according to the reportās author, chief scientist Cathy Foley.
She said the proposed priorities would ācut across traditional discipline and sector boundariesā to address āspecific challengesā to Australiaās environment, health, prosperity and resilience.
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Unlike the existing priorities, which focus on key sectors like food, energy, advanced manufacturing and cybersecurity, the proposed replacements consist of very broad societal goals.
They are: āensuring a net zero future and protecting Australiaās biodiversityā; āsupporting healthy and thriving communitiesā; āenabling a productive and innovative economyā; and ābuilding a stronger, more resilient nationā.
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The Australian Academy of Science endorsed the approach. āTo be effective, priorities need us toā¦concentrate resources around ambitious missions or grand challenges,ā said academy president Chennupati Jagadish.
But he warned that the effort would falter without a ācarefully designed implementation planā clarifying how scientists, research institutions and funding bodies should āincorporateā the priorities in their work.
āPrevious science and research priorities were not effective because they were lacking in implementation, monitoring and evaluation and therefore did little to focus and scale up science in the identified areas,ā Professor Jagadish said. āIt is important that these priorities are implemented through investment-led schemes.ā
Universities Australia said the priorities must also be underpinned by āadequateā funding. āDeclining investment in research [is] seriously jeopardising our ability to advance as a nation,ā said chief executive Catriona Jackson.
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The government has promised a renewed āā to explain how the priorities will be embedded in the science system. The statement will consider the roles of local and international collaborations, open access, data sharing and a science engagement strategy.
The new statement will also outline mechanisms to inject scientific expertise into government decision making.
°ä²¹²Ō²ś±š°ł°ł²¹Ģż³ó²¹²õĢżĀ to replace the priorities and statement by October 2023. The Department of Industry, Science and Resources has committed to three weeksā consultation to āhelp refineā the priorities, with the feedback also intended to āinformā the new statement.Ā
In drafting the new priorities, Dr Foley examined how nine other countries and regions ā including Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Thailand and the European Union ā organised their science and research ambitions.
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The new document lists 10-year aims and objectives for each of the four priorities, along with the ācritical researchā areas involved. They include research into carbon sinks, brain function, decarbonisation technologies, food security and the ācognitive and social causes of engagement with misinformation and disinformationā.
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