Universities and science minister Jo Johnson has announced a ānew approachā to make sure that all areas of the country can reach their āfull potentialā in research.
Speaking in Sheffield, he said that the countryās recovery relied on a āfundamental rebalancingā of the economy.
The plan involves audits to map research and innovation strengths and infrastructure in different parts of the country and an āaction planā to tackle the lack of diversity in science.
Mr Johnson was speaking at the Rolls-Royce Factory of the Future, which is part of the University of Sheffieldās Advanced Manufacturing Research Centre.
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He explained that 46 per cent of public investment in research goes into the āgolden triangleā of London, Cambridge and Oxford. He stressed that excellence must remain the criterion for funding research.
āBut we do have to ensure we recognise that other parts of the country have proven research excellence in their universities and ensure we fund excellence wherever it is found in order to realise the productivity gains that we have seen in the golden triangle,ā he said.
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āTo achieve this we need a new approach ā one that promotes and protects our reputation for world-class science, and also drives growth and raises productivity for the whole of the UK,ā he added.
The first part of One Nation Science is to take a āmore thoughtful approach to placeā, which will involve creating series of āopen and transparentā audits that map strengths in science and innovation across the country.
āThese deep dives will provide a new way to identify and build on areas of greatest potential in every regionā¦They will help local areas to identify emerging scientific strengthsā he explained.
The audits will also give government āthe tools to recognise and reward excellent research proposals that reflect local strengths and leverage local fundsā, Mr Johnson added.
The second part of the new approach will look at the people working in science. He said that research council diversity data shows that for the most part women are underrepresented in grant applications when compared with their proportion in the population of researchers.
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āWe now have three years of research council grant application and peer review data that analyses success rates by diversity. I have asked the research councils to give me an action plan to address this by December,ā he said.
Mr Johnson commended universities for the recent spate of women appointed to vice-chancellorships, but added that there was still work to be done.
āThese appointments mean that the number of women leading universities will increase by about 20 per cent compared with last year, but still represent less than a quarter of university leaders.ā
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He also announced a Ā£1.6 million grant for the University of Sheffield from the Higher Education Funding Council for England to expand the AMRCās programme to create degree-level apprenticeships.
Responding to Mr Johnsonās speech, Chuka Umunna, theĀ shadow business secretary, said that last weekās Budget had āvery little new to say on science and innovationā.
āMinisters tore up Labourās long-term funding plan for science, and weāve seen funding for research eroded and whittled away. Without a strategic approach which underpins certainty, we risk falling behind,ā he added.
He said that although teaching should be considered as part of the way universities are assessed, this should not āundermine the vital role of researchā.
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