One year after the landmark Polish elections that saw the populist Law and Justice (PiS) party lose power, academics have mixed feelings about progress under the coalition government led by prime minister Donald Tusk, with relief at freedom from âideological pressuresâ accompanying frustrations over insufficient research funding.
âWe were very optimistic about the possibility for change, but today there is slight disappointment among Polish academics,â MichaĆ Bilewicz, director of the Center for Research on Prejudice at the University of Warsaw, told Times Higher Education. âWhat we received is a situation where science is not perceived as a priority by the government.â
With the end of eight years of PiS rule came the end of the âopen harassmentâ of academics researching subjects the government considered to be âanti-Polishâ, Dr Bilewicz said, such as the role of the countryâs non-Jewish population in the genocide of Polish Jews during the Holocaust. Dr Bilewicz himself has seen his promotion to full professor repeatedly blocked by Polandâs president, Andrzej Duda, from PiS, whose term will end in 2025.
The new coalition government does not appear to be immune, however, to political interference in academia, Dr Bilewicz said, pointing to the replacement earlier this year of computer scientist Piotr Sankowski as head of the Ideas NCBR research institute for artificial intelligence.
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Subsequently, science minister Dariusz Wieczorek announced that a new AI research institute would be established under Professor Sankowskiâs leadership, a move Dr Bilewicz described as âpromisingâ.
Dariusz Stola, a history professor at the Polish Academy of Sciencesâ Institute of Political Studies, said planned reforms of the academy, via a draft law released in July, prompted fears that the government âwanted to reduce the autonomyâ of the institution. The proposed law âwas really poorâ, Professor Stola said, while noting that the government appeared to have abandoned the plans after âwidespread outcryâ.
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Natalia Letki, an associate professor at the University of Warsawâs Faculty of Political Science and International Studies, said some of the coalitionâs pledges to undo the work of its predecessor have yet to come to fruition. For instance, under former science minister PrzemysĆaw Czarnek, Polandâs research evaluation framework heavily promoted journals and publishers that were ideologically aligned with PiS.
âThe academic community has hoped for a reform of the evaluation system to correct for [Professor Czarnekâs] modifications, but despite the ministerâs promises, this is still to happen,â Dr Letki said.
Low pay remains a concern across academia, said Dr Letki. âThe academic sector has received a substantive salary rise by about 30 per cent, but this has only really corrected for inflation,â she said. Professor Stola, meanwhile, described âa humiliating discrepancy between the funding for humanities and the funding for hard sciencesâ.
âItâs difficult, but they could have started some sort of systematic, comprehensive effort to produce a better funding system,â he said.
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The proposed budget for 2025 will not boost investment in the National Science Centre, Polandâs main research funder, Dr Bilewicz said, while the institutes of the Polish Academy of Sciences âare performing very high-quality research, but theyâre not receiving sufficient fundingâ. Ministers, he said, âdonât really view research and development as an opportunity for the economic growth of the countryâ.
Next yearâs presidential elections could prove the real test for Mr Tusk's government: with constitutional limits necessitating the departure of Mr Duda, 2025 could see the appointment of a liberal candidate, leaving PiS unable to block any coalition reforms.
âIf they win the presidential election, we will see how much determination they have to restore democratic principles, as they promised last year,â Professor Stola said.
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