A series of planned reforms of the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAN) shows a âlack of trustâ and risks undue political influence over the body, its leaders have warned.
A draft law proposed earlier this month by the countryâs Ministry of Science and Education cited issues including a âdefectiveness of management processesâ and a lack of efficiency for the changes, which include the transfer of its supervision from the prime minister to the minister of science, as well as a revised organisational structure.
MirosĆawa Ostrowska, PANâs vice-president, told Times Higher Education that the amendment would result in the âfull, even excessive, subordination of scientific institutions to the ministry, far beyond the necessary administrative oversightâ, adding that the proposed changes âclearly indicate a lack of knowledge about the functioning of our institutionâ.
âThe entry into force of such a law will not only disorganise the Polish Academy of Sciences and prevent a healthy relationship between the corporation and the scientific institutes, but will also make it vulnerable to the political influence of changing political authorities,â Professor Ostrowska added.
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Jerzy DuszyĆski, a former PAN president and adviser to its current president, Marek Konarzewski, said that the proposal showed a âlack of trust in the academyâs authorities and staffâ.
âTheir activities will be subjected to constant scrutiny, to continuous oversight, and frequent reports and audits will be required,â Professor DuszyĆski said. âThere will not be much time left for substantive activities.â
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Both professors also said the academy was experiencing issues with funding. In January, national pay rises came into force, with the salaries of academic teaching staff increasing by 30Â per cent, but the salaries of non-teaching staff â including those at PAN research institutes â rising by only 20Â per cent.
Marcin PaĆys, chair of Polandâs Central Council of Science and Higher Education, said the pay rises only âpartially compensated for inflationâ, noting that âPoland still has one of the lowest public spending [outlays] in the European Union on science and higher educationâ.
âThis causes an outflux of young talents, either to the business sector or abroad, and a growing generation gap in academia,â he said.
While objecting to the reforms of the established academy, scientists have welcomed , which was established in 2022 under the previous science minister, PrzemysĆaw Czarnek of the populist Law and Justice party.
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âThe establishment of the Copernican Academy was perceived by many as yet another attempt to distribute money, positions and prestige to those loyal to the ruling party,â said Marta WrĂłblewska, a higher education scholar at SWPS University.
In a draft bill, the Ministry of Science and Education said the Copernican Academy had been largely assigned âduplicatedâ tasks already performed by other entities, while its grant-awarding policy âdoes not correspond to best practicesâ. Criticising the institutionâs inefficiency, the bill said its activities âcontribute to the dispersionâ of available resources, ultimately recommending that it be âliquidatedâ.
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