The South Korean university leader at the centre of a government investigation has said that research institutions in the country still need to fight for their freedom but that his ordeal could pave the way for improved international collaboration.
The Ministry of Science demanded last year that the Korean Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) suspend Shin Sung-chul, its president, after alleging that he embezzled public research funds in his previous job as leader of the Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science and Technology (DGIST). The case remains unresolved.
One of the allegations centred on payments that Professor Shin made to the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California to secure South Korean scientistsâ access to one of its facilities.
Professor Shin told Times Higher Education that he stood by his decision to âinvest fundingâ in the collaboration, saying that it âturned out to be a very successful projectâ that produced more than 1,000 research papers.
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âItâs a decision [for] a university presidentâ, not a government, he added.
Professor Shin said that the âmisunderstandingâ was ânot over yetâ but âshould be cleared in the near futureâ, and he was hopeful that the disagreement âmight be a good thing for future collaborations between Korea and foreign countriesâ.
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âInternational collaboration is not that common for the Korean government and Korean scientists yet. They might need some time to understand this international collaboration,â he said. âYou have to pay some money to use international facilities. Thatâs quite normal for scientists, but itâs not understood by the government.â
Experts had claimed that the effort to remove Professor Shin, who was hired to lead KAIST in 2017 under the previous administration, was the latest episode in a long tradition of political interference in university governance and one that risked destroying trust between scientists and the government and slowing the nationâs research progress.
Professor Shin said that government-driven policy and industry-funded research had enabled Korea to make âmiraculous progressâ over the past 50 years, but now that the country had advanced, universities required autonomy and money for curiosity-driven research to âcompete with the best countriesâ.
He said that the government was starting to âtransition from its role as a control tower to becoming a supporting towerâ, highlighting that KAIST had received block funding for research, as opposed to funding for specific projects, for the first time this year. Nevertheless, he added, âitâs still a struggle over how much freedom we have between government and universitiesâ.
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âFrom next year, weâre implementing a cross-disciplinary major for our undergraduate programme. We should have the autonomy [to do this], but we have to discuss it with the governmentâŠIt took one year to pressure them,â Professor Shin said.
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Print headline: After cloud, leader hopes for silver lining
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