PA31D-04
Does Funding for Arctic Research Align with Research Priorities and Policy Needs? Trends in the USA, Canada and Europe
Wednesday, 16 December 2015: 08:45
103 (Moscone South)
Gabriela Ibarguchi1, Maribeth S Murray1, Vinay Rajdev1 and ISAC International Program Office, (1)Arctic Institute of North America, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada
Abstract:
Over the past twenty years, increasing awareness and understanding of changes in the Arctic system, the stated desires of Arctic Peoples to be engaged in the research process, and a growing international interest in the region’s resources have informed various stakeholders to undertake many Arctic science planning activities. Some examples of science planning include priority-setting for research, knowledge translation, stakeholder engagement, improved coordination, and international collaboration. The International Study of Arctic Change recently initiated an analysis of the extent to which alignment exists among stated science priorities, recognized societal needs, and funding patterns of the major North American and European agencies. In this paper, we present a decade of data on international funding patterns and data on two decades of science planning. We discuss whether funding patterns reflect the priority research questions and identified needs for information that are articulated in a myriad of Arctic research planning documents. The alignment in many areas remains poor, bringing into question the purpose of large-scale science planning if it does not lead to funding of those priorities identified by Arctic stakeholder communities (scientists, Arctic Peoples, planners, policy makers, the private sector, and others).