Science policy and research in Finland

We investigate the evolution of Finnish science policy and its impact on universities and scientific research. Finnish research is currently enjoying far greater international visibility, impact, and esteem than previously. The role of universities in society has broadened. Apart from their traditio...

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Main Authors: Kai Husso, Pauliina Raento
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Geographical Society of Finland 2002-01-01
Series:Fennia: International Journal of Geography
Online Access:https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/3783
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spelling doaj-2c8a311632354ed883ebe208001bc1b92020-11-25T03:28:25ZengGeographical Society of FinlandFennia: International Journal of Geography1798-56172002-01-011801-2Science policy and research in FinlandKai Husso0Pauliina Raento1Academy of FinlandUniversity of HelsinkiWe investigate the evolution of Finnish science policy and its impact on universities and scientific research. Finnish research is currently enjoying far greater international visibility, impact, and esteem than previously. The role of universities in society has broadened. Apart from their traditional tasks of research and teaching, universities have established closer links with business and responded to regional needs. A number of national reforms carried out in the 1990s launched a heated debate between universities and public authorities. Contested topics include the ‘centre of excellence’ policy, large-scale research programmes, and graduate schools. These reforms injected new dynamism into Finnish universities, but created new challenges as well. The structure of university research funding changed significantly during the 1990s. In real terms, research expenditure covered from Government budget sources increased by 17 percent, while external, often competitive funding increased by twofold. We believe that this dependency on outside funding may make research more short-sighted and vulnerable over the long run. In order to maintain the quality of Finnish research, science policy ought to be anchored to the needs of universities and scientific research more firmly than during the 1990s and budget funding ought to be increased. These actions would guarantee a more stable development of scientific enterprise and thus strenghten the positive socio-economic impact of research on regions and on society as a whole.https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/3783
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kai Husso
Pauliina Raento
spellingShingle Kai Husso
Pauliina Raento
Science policy and research in Finland
Fennia: International Journal of Geography
author_facet Kai Husso
Pauliina Raento
author_sort Kai Husso
title Science policy and research in Finland
title_short Science policy and research in Finland
title_full Science policy and research in Finland
title_fullStr Science policy and research in Finland
title_full_unstemmed Science policy and research in Finland
title_sort science policy and research in finland
publisher Geographical Society of Finland
series Fennia: International Journal of Geography
issn 1798-5617
publishDate 2002-01-01
description We investigate the evolution of Finnish science policy and its impact on universities and scientific research. Finnish research is currently enjoying far greater international visibility, impact, and esteem than previously. The role of universities in society has broadened. Apart from their traditional tasks of research and teaching, universities have established closer links with business and responded to regional needs. A number of national reforms carried out in the 1990s launched a heated debate between universities and public authorities. Contested topics include the ‘centre of excellence’ policy, large-scale research programmes, and graduate schools. These reforms injected new dynamism into Finnish universities, but created new challenges as well. The structure of university research funding changed significantly during the 1990s. In real terms, research expenditure covered from Government budget sources increased by 17 percent, while external, often competitive funding increased by twofold. We believe that this dependency on outside funding may make research more short-sighted and vulnerable over the long run. In order to maintain the quality of Finnish research, science policy ought to be anchored to the needs of universities and scientific research more firmly than during the 1990s and budget funding ought to be increased. These actions would guarantee a more stable development of scientific enterprise and thus strenghten the positive socio-economic impact of research on regions and on society as a whole.
url https://fennia.journal.fi/article/view/3783
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