The construction of new scientific norms for solving Grand Challenges
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/15294Dato
2018-05-01Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
There is an increasing recognition that there is a class of problems that society
must solve urgently in the twenty-first century if humanity is to survive into the twentysecond century—the so-called ‘Grand Challenges’. Science policymakers have been active in
recognising these challenges and the attendant need to develop new multidisciplinary ways of
working. But embracing multidisciplinarity is not a straightforward choice for scientists, who
individually are strongly steered by norms and values inculcated through their past scientific
experiences. In this paper, therefore, we ask whether new funding approaches can contribute
to creating new ways of working by scientists towards challenge-driven research, specifically
by changing scientists’ expectations and beliefs. We address this research question with
reference to a single new experimental method, the ‘research sandpit’, implemented
experimentally in a single national science system, Norway. Our data are derived from
interviews with scientists involved in the five research projects funded as a result of the first
sandpit, called ‘Idélab’ (idea lab) and held in 2014, and with the Research Council of Norway.
We conclude that the sandpit approach appeared to shift research perceptions of individual
scientists, particularly around long-term belief structures. This implies that, when well
managed, the sandpit model can indeed be useful to generate multidisciplinary research as
part of a multifaceted approach to funding scientific research.
Beskrivelse
Published version, licenced CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Source at https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-018-0105-9.