Some thought that 1993 would be the end of UNESCO, the
UN organization for Science. The reason: UNESCO decided then that members of its
Executive Board no longer needed to be expert in all UNESCO’s fields of work (education, culture, science,
communication and information) but only in one
of them. This meant that a UNESCO Board member with no experience in the field
of science still had full decision power with regard to UNESCO’s oceanographic
strategy and activities.
In the eyes of experts
this meant the downgrading of UNESCO from a key scientific forum of experts
to a talk-shop of bureaucrats who don’t really know what they’re talking about.
The scenario was considered catastrophic: as if in the hospital decisions were
no longer taken by the Chief Heart Surgeon but by the Financial Director!
Science – a long-term and winding process by nature – would become the victim
of short-term cost-benefit analyses and political whims.
The decision-makers
on the other hand seemed to be happier because they received more freedom to
appoint Board members. However many kept complaining about a disconnect between
science and politics: they felt that scientists kept on doing too much “their
own thing”. As a consequence they also experienced a lack of accountability.
How can we overcome this gap between those who do
(scientists) and those who decide (policy-makers)? I think this can be done if
both parties are willing to learn each other’s language.
Decision-makers need to learn the
scientific language of serendipity and patience. Without these concepts it is
impossible to understand that it takes decades of research to provide society
with “societal relevance”. Three examples. Firstly, nobody knew that the
microchip – present everywhere in our environment – would be a byproduct of a
scientific project that was launched…. to put a man on the moon! Secondly,
nobody knew that the invention of the mobile phone would totally revolutionize
the way we live and interact with each other. It’s even funny to see how Dutch
people reacted in this video from 1999 when they were asked if they wanted a “mobile
phone”. They were surprised and not interested at all. Imagine what
policy-makers would have written if they had to assess a scientific project
launched to create “mobile phones”. And lastly, when UNESCO created CERN in
1954, nobody knew that 45 years later CERN scientist Tim Berners-Lee would invent
the world wide web which allows all computers in the world to communicate via
the internet. Nobody ordered the world wide web, it just popped up and it
changed the world forever.
Scientists need to learn the political
language of changing winds and impatience. Not to accelerate science or to
adapt it to changing political winds, but to be better motivated and equipped
to explain how science really works and what can be expected from it. Instead
of blaming policy-makers for their impatience, scientists must explain to them why it’s a bad idea to be impatient with
science and foremost what this means
in terms of infrastructure investments and performance indicators. What are the right performance indicators according to scientists?
Once policy-makers and scientists will speak each
other’s language, a constructive dialogue can follow. Policy-makers will
understand better that it takes more than counting publications to capture the
true value of science. Scientists will understand that their help is needed to design more sophisticated indicators to describe the value of science better. For
example: are scientists invited to participate in relevant decision-making
bodies? Does their research contribute to debates in society? Does it provide
relevant advice to the government? Does it spark new insights and developments,
contribute to innovations, improve interdisciplinary cooperation, or increase
our data monitoring capacity? Does it help the international community?
This policy-science dialogue will help policy-makers
to communicate better to scientists about their needs. What are the challenges
they face in running the country? Together with scientists they can identify
the corresponding knowledge gaps. This is where UNESCO’s 5 scientific programmes can be especially helpful to the international community. Because they address challenges that can’t be solved by one country, not even
by one continent on its own. Examples are the rise and acidification of our
oceans which will be addressed during the upcoming General Assembly of UNESCO’s
Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission from 18-25 June 2015.
If scientists and policy-makers can find a common language in Paris to agree about the political need to
take action and about the scientific (and economic!) consequences of this
action, the world might remain a safe place for another couple of decades.
This blog is a plea for a meaningful dialogue between
scientists and policy-makers, nothing more and nothing less. It doesn’t pretend
that the value of science can be measured
exactly, let alone be predicted for the decades to come. But this
doesn’t mean that it’s impossible to at least indicate
the value of science and that consequently science-policy can only mean “carte
blanche”. We can indicate the value of science if only we make the effort to
develop the right language to discuss it: a language that expresses
intellectual perseverance, real world challenges, performance indicators (yes)
and, to quote former Dutch Ambassador Dirk-Jan Van den Berg, some “adequate
free space to foster the unimaginable in order for the science system to work”.
Twitter: @Oosterenvan
Twitter: @Oosterenvan
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