Jadavji Laboratory



Biomedical Sciences

Southern Illinois University



Towards inclusive funding practices for early career researchers


Journal article


Charlotte M. de Winde, S. Sarabipour, H. Carignano, Sejal Davla, D. Eccles, Sarah J. Hainer, Mansour Haidar, V. Ilangovan, N. Jadavji, Paraskevi Kritsiligkou, Tai-Ying Lee, Freyja Ólafsdóttir
Journal of Science Policy & Governance, 2020

Semantic Scholar DOI
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APA   Click to copy
de Winde, C. M., Sarabipour, S., Carignano, H., Davla, S., Eccles, D., Hainer, S. J., … Ólafsdóttir, F. (2020). Towards inclusive funding practices for early career researchers. Journal of Science Policy &Amp; Governance.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Winde, Charlotte M. de, S. Sarabipour, H. Carignano, Sejal Davla, D. Eccles, Sarah J. Hainer, Mansour Haidar, et al. “Towards Inclusive Funding Practices for Early Career Researchers.” Journal of Science Policy & Governance (2020).


MLA   Click to copy
de Winde, Charlotte M., et al. “Towards Inclusive Funding Practices for Early Career Researchers.” Journal of Science Policy &Amp; Governance, 2020.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{charlotte2020a,
  title = {Towards inclusive funding practices for early career researchers},
  year = {2020},
  journal = {Journal of Science Policy & Governance},
  author = {de Winde, Charlotte M. and Sarabipour, S. and Carignano, H. and Davla, Sejal and Eccles, D. and Hainer, Sarah J. and Haidar, Mansour and Ilangovan, V. and Jadavji, N. and Kritsiligkou, Paraskevi and Lee, Tai-Ying and Ólafsdóttir, Freyja}
}

Abstract

Securing research funding is a challenge faced by most scientists in academic institutions worldwide. Funding success rates for all career stages are low, but the burden falls most heavily on early career researchers (ECRs). These are young investigators in training and new principal investigators who have a shorter track record. ECRs are dependent on funding to establish their academic careers. The low number of career development awards and the lack of sustained research funding result in the loss of ECR talent in academia. Several steps in the current funding process, from grant conditions to review, play significant roles in the distribution of funds. Furthermore, there is an imbalance where certain research disciplines and labs of influential researchers receive more funding. As a group of ECRs with global representation, we examined funding practices, barriers, and facilitators to the current funding systems. We also identified alternatives to the most common funding distribution practices, such as diversifying risk or awarding grants on a partly random basis. Here, we detail recommendations for funding agencies and grant reviewers to improve ECR funding prospects worldwide and promote a fairer and more inclusive funding landscape for ECRs.