Senior scientists have denounced a potential move to
“muzzle” colleagues whose findings are disliked by the government. The proposal
announced by the Cabinet Office earlier this month – would block researchers
who receive government grants from using their results to lobby for changes to
laws or regulations. The Cabinet Office wants a special clause inserted into
all new and renewed grant agreements involving government money that would
block recipients from using any of those funds for lobbying. It is the sweeping
nature of this regulation that has alarmed academics. The clause is expected to
come into force in May. According to the Cabinet Office, it is intended to
broaden government action aimed at stopping NGOs from lobbying politicians and
Whitehall departments using the government’s own funds.
For example, an academic whose government-funded research
showed that new regulations were proving particularly harmful to the homeless
would not be able to call for policy change. Similarly, ecologists who found
out that new planning laws were harming wildlife would not be able to raise the
issue in public, while climate scientists whose findings undermined government
energy policy could have work suppressed.
James Wilsdon, chair of the Campaign for Social Science explained “This has sweeping implications for the way we do research in this country and
the way we try to make it relevant to the nation. This is an attempt to muzzle
scientists and social scientists… Under this new regulation, if it is found
their work has impact or relevance, they will now want us to keep quiet about
it, it appears.” Wilsdon has written a letter – with his counterpart, Dr Sarah
Main, director of the Campaign for Science and Engineering – to Matthew
Hancock, minister for the Cabinet Office. They are demanding an urgent meeting
with him to discuss the removal of the clause because they “fear it may have
unintended consequences”.
Bob Ward, policy and communications director at the Centre
for Climate Change Economics and Policy. “These sudden and drastic restrictions
on research grants will have an immensely damaging impact on key areas of
public policy, such as fighting climate change. They will make it much more
difficult for independent university experts to advise ministers and civil
servants, and hence make it easier for lobbyists, companies and campaign groups
to divert policies towards their vested interests instead. This will be bad for
policymaking, bad for democracy and bad for the public interest.”
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