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Academy of Finland 2012: Research knows no boundaries. Academy of Finland 2013: Research knows no boundaries. Tiina Jokela PhD, Programme Manager, Programme Unit. Public R&D funding actors. Public research funding in Finland. Valtion tutkimusmenot 2012. R&D budget 2013. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Academy of Finland 2013: Research knows no boundaries
Tiina Jokela PhD, Programme Manager, Programme Unit
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Public research funding in Finland
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R&D budget 2013
Total €2 billion Source: Statistics Finland 2013
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Academy of Finland
The Academy promotes scientific research and its application by:
• awarding funding for scientific research and researcher training
• advancing and engaging in international scientific collaboration
• providing expertise in science policy
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Academy of Finland
• Four research councils, covering all scientific disciplines
• Funding for scientific research, researcher training and the development of research capacities (€317 million in 2013)
• Each year, some 8,000 people benefit from Academy funding
• A staff of around 140
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Organisation
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Organisation
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Academy funding 1997–2012
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Academy research funding
• Open competition, fixed-term funding
• Total value of funding decisions roughly €317 million (2013)• some 3,700 applications for about €1.5 billion (2012)• success rate less than 22%
• Funding granted to the best researchers and the most promising young researchers for cutting-edge research
• Decisions based on• science policy lines adopted by the Academy Board• Academy document “Criteria for research funding decisions”• independent and scientific peer review of the research plan and the applicant• open and transparent decision-making: criteria, processes and decisions all public• equal treatment of applicants
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Academy funding opportunities
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Academy funding 2012
Total €327 million
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Academy funding for research career
Academy Professors (40):• are top researchers who contribute to the progress of research
within their field of research• are granted funding for a maximum of five years at a time
Academy Research Fellows (296):• are granted funding for independent scientific work as laid down
in the research plan• are granted funding for a maximum of five years
Postdoctoral Researchers (600)• A maximum of four years after gaining the doctorate• Are granted for three years
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Finland Distinguished Professor (FiDiPro) Programme
• Joint Academy-Tekes funding programme for recruiting foreign or expatriate Finnish top researchers to Finland
• Recruited to scientifically, technologically and industrially relevant fields
• Applicant is a Finnish university or research institute
• Competition-based and fixed-term funding, highly flexible
• The Academy has funded 35 FiDiPro Professors, Tekes 52 FiDiPro Professors and 14 FiDiPro Fellows
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FiDiPro funding
• Funding is awarded to research projects for a fixed term with a funding period of 2 to 5 years.
• Funding may cover expenses such as:• salary and travel of the visiting top researcher• costs of a possible research team to be set up• expenses of accompanying family members • FiDiPro researchers may bring along a key member or key members
of their own research team, whose expenses may also be partially covered.
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Centres of Excellence (CoE) in ResearchObjectives:• to raise the quality standards of research and improve international competitiveness • to increase visibility and esteem• to embed leading-edge research in research, education and technology policy• to develop top-level, innovative and efficient research and researcher trainingenvironments
Finnish CoE programmes since 2000:• 2000–2005 (26 CoEs)• 2002–2007 (16 CoEs)• 2006–2011 (23 CoEs)• 2008–2013 (18 CoEs)• 2012–2017 (15 CoEs)• 2014–2019 (open for application)
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Research programmes in 2012• Climate Change, FICCA (2011–2014)• Computational Science, LASTU (2010–2015)• Nutrition, Food and Health, ELVIRA (2006–2014) • Photonics and Modern Imaging Techniques (2010–2013)• Responding to Public Health Challenges, SALVE (2009–2012)• Sustainable Energy, SusEn (2008–2012) • Sustainable Production and Products, KETJU (2006–2013) • The Future of Living and Housing, ASU-LIVE (2011–2015) • The Health and Welfare of Children and Young People, SKIDI-KIDS (2010–2014)• Ubiquitous Computing and Diversity of Communication, MOTIVE (2009–2012)
Programmable Materials, OMA (2012-2016)•Sustainable Governance of Aquatic Resources, AKVA (2012-2016)• The Human Mind, MIND• Synthetic Biology (FinSynBio) • The Future of Learning, Knowledge and Skills, TULOS
In preparation: • Arctic Research• Energy Research
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Research programmes
• Respond to topical issues in science and the grand challenges faced by society
• Are clusters of research projects focused on a defined subject area or a set of problems, funded for a fixed period, and operated under a coordinated management
→ Greater added value than through normal project funding
• Provide cooperation platforms for researchers in different disciplines, end-users of research knowledge and research funding bodies
• Promote international collaboration:
• international networking of programmes• co-funded international research projects
Added value• multidisciplinarity• internationality• cooperation• impact
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Evaluation activities
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Application processing – Who does what?
Processes the application
Prepare a scientific review (report) on the application; an international panel
Makes the funding decision on the application; panel report of key importance
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Review of applications: criteria
• Scientific quality and innovativeness of the research plan
• Competence of the applicant/research team• Feasibility of the research plan
• Quality of the research environment and its strengthening
• International and national research collaboration and researcher mobility
• Significance of the project for the promotion of professional careers in research and for researcher training
• Other research-policy objectives adopted by the Academy
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Internationalisation and researcher mobility
Supported in all funding opportunities, such as:
• Academy Projects• Research programmes and Centre of Excellence Programmes:
joint calls and networking• Academy Research Fellows and Postdoctoral Researchers
• Finland Distinguished Professor Programme, FiDiPro
• ERA-NET calls
• International joint calls with foreign funding agencies
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Collaboration with the National Science Foundation (NSF):
• Graduate Research Opportunity Worldwide (GROW) for NSF Graduate Fellows: Since 2008, the Academy has offered cooperation opportunities for the Fellows within projects run by the Academy’s Centers of Excellence and Academy Professors. The aim is to enable researchers to build international contacts at an early stage of their careers.
• Virtual Center SAVI (Science Across Virtual Institutes):
• Projects funded together with The Academy of Finland, Tekes and NSF
• WiFiUS (Wireless Innovation between Finland and US established 2011,
• WiFiUS 2, 2012
• Innovations in learning and education, 2012
Cooperation with USA
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Academy of Finland: Advancing science and research
More information:
•Academy of Finland: www.aka.fi/eng
•Finnish science policy: www.research.fi/en
•Finnish science and research Academy newsletter
•For mobile researchers: www.euraxess.fi
•Facebook, Twitter, Linkedln, YouTube, SlideShare