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Given the recent re-evaluation of research funding policy as an
issue central to national governments and the EU, it is imperative
that underlying rationales and channels for investment in research
and development are examined. A pioneering analysis of the
complexity, allocation and management of public funding of
research, this Handbook explores the strategies whereby research
can be successfully targeted and supported to resolve problems of
broad public concern. Used effectively, the Handbook finds,
research has the potential to support economic growth, create jobs,
enhance social welfare, protect the environment and expand the
frontiers of human knowledge. Taking a multi-level approach,
chapters strategise ways to address various funding objectives
through analysis of policy design, policy instruments, research
organisations, and researchers, while remedying disparities
resulting from the distribution of research funds. The Handbook's
expansive scope, which covers variation in goals and instrument
management over time and across countries, facilitates an approach
that not only scrutinises existing paradigms of public research
funding but also looks to the future. With authoritative analysis
and theoretical frameworks by leading scholars, the Handbook
employs an interdisciplinary approach that combines sociology of
sciences, political sciences and economics. It will prove a useful
resource for scholars and researchers in science policy studies,
alongside policy analysts in ministries and research funding
organisations seeking to better understand their working
environment.
This book asks how modern universities are organized and managed,
and questions whether 30 years of university reforms have resulted
in stronger managerial structures and leadership control. It
further asks whether current organisational and decision-making
structures can be explained by public reform policies. The book
offers a coherent, empirically grounded and theoretically driven
presentation of data and core ideas behind a large scale
comparative study of 26 universities across eight European
countries. It focuses on the strength of university managerial
structures, the role of academics, and how universities relate to
and depend on their environment: to governments and other actors;
to funders; to evaluators; and to external stakeholders. It further
explores how higher education policies are shaped by and affect
universities. Written by a cross-disciplinary team of European
scholars, this book is unique both in its wide coverage and the
depth of its analyses. It will be of great interest to scholars,
graduate students and advanced undergraduates in the fields of
organisation theory and sociology, policy studies, comparative
public policy and administration, and higher education studies. It
will also be of interest to higher education policy makers and
administrators.
Even if in most countries non-university higher education
institutions did not have originally a research mandate, it is well
known that in most cases these institutions have progressively
developed research activities and, at least in some countries, the
State now has recognized the research role of these institutions
and provided support and funding. Moreover, in many countries the
role of research in polytechnics, 'fachhochschulen', 'hogescholen',
university colleges, etc is on the political agenda. Despite the
importance of the issue, there are very few in-depth studies of
research in the non-university sector. These studies show that the
development of research in these institutions leads to quite
complex interactions with universities, both in the sense of
convergence (academic drift) and/or of differentiation of a
specific research mandate oriented towards the regional economy.
Therefore, this book aims to fill this gap by first analysing a
number of transversal issues related to the research mission of
these institutions. In its second part it gives an overview of the
state of the art in eight European countries.
Even if in most countries non-university higher education
institutions did not have originally a research mandate, it is well
known that in most cases these institutions have progressively
developed research activities and, at least in some countries, the
State now has recognized the research role of these institutions
and provided support and funding. Moreover, in many countries the
role of research in polytechnics, 'fachhochschulen', 'hogescholen',
university colleges, etc is on the political agenda. Despite the
importance of the issue, there are very few in-depth studies of
research in the non-university sector. These studies show that the
development of research in these institutions leads to quite
complex interactions with universities, both in the sense of
convergence (academic drift) and/or of differentiation of a
specific research mandate oriented towards the regional economy.
Therefore, this book aims to fill this gap by first analysing a
number of transversal issues related to the research mission of
these institutions. In its second part it gives an overview of the
state of the art in eight European countries.
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