Cuts to Marsden Funding for Humanities and Social Sciences
We Are The University
Wed Dec 11 2024 13:00:00 GMT+1300 (New Zealand Daylight Time)
Updates
The Royal Society, who administers the Marsden Fund, has released a statement in response to the cuts.
News coverage: Marsden Fund controversy: Peak science body urges PM to reconsider research funding cuts
We Are The University Open Letter
Cuts to Marsden Funding for Humanities and Social Sciences
This is an attack on students, evidence, the economy, and democracy. This is not hyperbole.
Judith Collins’ announcement that the Marsden fund would no longer support research in the Social Sciences and Humanities is a shortsighted political attack on dissenting voices against the fast-tracking, anti-evidence, tobacco-bought coalition government. The intention of this change is subtle, but the implication is long lasting. Marsden funding is a significant career stepping-stone for researchers to develop their research skills. This attack on the Marsden fund is an attack on students' ability to transition into research and ability to develop new knowledge. It is an attack on evidence and, in the long term, is an attack on students broadly. By tightening the bottleneck of researcher funding, Collins is crushing the ability for new ideas and new teachers to enter the realms of humanities and social sciences, consequently disincentivizing students' study of these subjects. A foolish move, this cycle will be difficult to reverse as our best & brightest in these fields leave overseas—as if enough of them hadn’t already.
The New Zealand government hugely subsidises humanities-based industries because they bring so much value to the country through film & media, tourism, diverse perspectives and, not to forget, export education. This strangling of key New Zealand industries is generational violence, yet another career pathway and export industry which improves the lives of all New Zealanders, destroyed for future generations by selfish politicians.
Self-directed research, such as previously enabled by the Marsden fund, allows academics to do their jobs. The freedom to investigate and share knowledge, including ‘inconvenient truths’, requires academic freedom. The right to academic freedom is the tool that enables researchers to do their jobs as the critics and conscience of society, a responsibility enshrined in the Education and Training Act 2020 and the 1989 Education Act prior. Being critics and conscience of society, academics are expected to illuminate obscured risks and provide evidence to support effective decision-making. This change is Judith Collins, an upper manager, interfering in the systems that allow our research workers to do their jobs.
In order to be critical, and honest, about the structures of society, the academy and its workers must have freedom from threat, particularly from the ruling government, which holds so much power over the economy and who benefits from it. The coalition government’s response to criticism from academics in these fields is tyrannical, cementing their position as authoritarian and anti-evidence. This is a hill we must be willing to die on, for if we play ball with authoritarianism now, it sets a devastating precedent. All institutions that hold power to account will be persuaded to ‘obey in advance’ to secure their jobs and careers. This, of course, is bad for science & research, but has flow-on effects for our democratic capacity as a country. This Trumpian politics is not one we want in Aotearoa.
As universities seek to increase their transdisciplinary research capacity, recognising the amplified value of intersectional ideas and research across the humanities, social sciences and STEM, the coalition government is disguising their attack on social sciences behind normative and unsubstantiated claims regarding economic return.
We will not stand for this one-term government.
We are the university.
More on the topic
- Letters to the Editor: the Marsden Fund and the hospital
- Humanities, social sciences, bring in dollars too
- Changes to govt science funding ‘cut to innovation’
- Not the Minister’s place
- What can we learn from Australia’s version of the Marsden Fund furore?
- Joint Statement by 80 Rutherford Discovery Fellows Denouncing the Minister’s Decision to Cut Humanities, Social Science, and Fundamental Science Funding
- Nic Smith – People can’t be measured on a balance sheet
- Selina Tusitala Marsh – Arts don’t just decorate knowledge, they deepen it
- Anne Salmond – Research cuts an own goal
- Jenny Sinclair – ‘Horrified’: researchers respond to Marsden Fund changes
- Atereano Mateariki – Māori research funding cuts don’t surprise experts
- Linda Waimarie Nikora – Fury over Marsden Fund cut
- Mary Argue – Researchers pen scathing open letter to Minister over Marsden Fund changes
- Matthew Scobie & Anna Sturman – We underestimated the scale of the attack
- Suze Wilson – Cuts to research funding will lead the country on to the rocks
- Shanti Mathias (The Spinoff) – The changes to research funding in Aotearoa, explained
- Juliet Gerrard (The Spinoff) – Funding the whole pie
- Anne Salmond (Newsroom) – Govt de-funding the mind
- Nicola Gaston (The Conversation) – Funding research for economic return sounds good, but that's not how science really works
- Tom Baker (Newsroom) – Marsden Fund cuts a win for convenient evidence
- Marsden Fund cuts will disproportionately affect Māori researchers – Expert Reaction
- Richard Easther – The Marsden Fund already provides economic returns, so don't break what isn't broken
- SAANZ – Statement on the disbanding of the humanities and social sciences panels of the Marsden Fund
- RNZ – Government's Marsden Fund cuts all humanities, social sciences research funding slashed
- Pretoria Gordon & Mary Argue (1 News) – Govt slashes Marsden Fund money for humanities, social sciences
- Science Media Centre – Govt cuts humanities and social science funding – Expert reactions
- Times Higher Education – Humanities expelled from key New Zealand research funding scheme
- Mirage News – Marsden Fund changes major setback
- Devdiscourse – Judith Collins announces updated Marsden Fund to focus on core scientific research
- Interest.co.nz – Government's Marsden and Catalyst changes are defunding our ability to understand and respond to the world
- NZCTU – Marsden Fund changes will undermine prosperity and social cohesion
- Danyl McLauchlan: Science or economics? Collins’ Marsden Fund shift raises questions
- Waatea News – Marsden Fund changes spark researcher backlash
- PRESS RELEASE Cuts to Humanities and Social Sciences Research Will Impact Māori Most
- PRESS RELEASE Cuts to Humanities and Social Sciences Research Will Impact Māori Most
- Labour Party – More cuts to research, science and innovation sector
- Richard Shaw (Massey University) – Opinion: The barbarians are inside the walls
- Pretoria Gordon & Mary Argue (RNZ) – Universities criticise Marsden Fund cuts, business group backs the move
- The Post – Devastating cuts to research which holds society together
- Universities NZ – Statement on cuts to Marsden Fund's humanities and social sciences
- NZ Herald – Government's Marsden Fund cuts all humanities, social sciences research funding slashed
- Bex Bell – Defunding the social sciences
- DASSH – Deans condemn Minister's cut to humanities and social sciences research funding
- Funding Fundamentals – Will the Marsden Fund refocus disproportionately affect early career researchers?
- Joshua Sarpong – Research and disciplinary differences versus funding allocation in New Zealand’s higher education system
- Corinne Seals – How Social Sciences and Humanities make our lives better (and why the Marsden Fund cuts are so harmful)
- Marsden Fund needed scrutiny only for the ‘silly’ projects, says Govt adviser
- NZARE – Responds To Marsden Fund Announcement
- QPEC Response – Skewing Marsden
- NZTEU – Marsden Fund Changes Disgraceful
- David Bilkey – Cuts to the Marsden Fund short-sighted
- Troy Baisden
- Tara McAllister
- Bronwyn Hayward
- Stephen Marshall
- Dr Paul Skirrow
- Peter Griffin
- Tahu Kukutai
- Michael Edmonds
- Bronwyn Hayward
- Annabel McAleer
- Simon Stewart
- Priscilla Wehi
- Dr. Temitope Adelekan