evitar o "brain drain"

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evitar o "brain drain"

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POLICY, RESEARCH

Title Spain revamps its postdoc repatriation scheme


Like most – if not all – EU members, the Spanish government has taken onboard the Lisbon and Barcelona strategy in an effort to boost innovation and its knowledge-based society. One key element in this, as confirmed by a Commission-appointed expert group last year, is ensuring there are sufficient human resources in science and technology. A recent Spanish scheme targets the postdoctoral research job market.


Spain’s Education and Science Ministry has announced a new scheme which aims to provide postdoctoral researchers greater job security, especially for those returning from study abroad. A total of 900 permanent positions will be created, reports say.

In the plan unveiled on 15 December 2004, 300 permanent positions at universities and research centres will be created annually over a three-year period for postdocs with four or more years of successful research under their belts. To fund the scheme, the ministry will set aside up to €10 million a year for different regional governments.

According to The Scientist on-line, the government has been trying to plug the brain drain since 1992, when it set up a reintegration programme to provide work for Spanish scientists who had received postdoctoral training elsewhere. Under this scheme, the researchers were given three-year repatriation posts.

Lured back
However, some tweaking was needed to this scheme, so between 2000 and 2003, Spain launched its Ramón y Cajal programme to lure back top junior scientists. The 2 000 applicants who qualified for it had to prove they spent at least 18 months working as postdocs abroad. The programme included a tenure-track system, but no guarantees of a permanent place afterwards, according to reports.

The latest plan is intended to address this problem by boosting the number of postdoc positions and giving some stability to the research job market, the ministry suggested. Although the details of the plan have yet to be ironed out, the government told The Scientist that decisions about individual appointments will be made by the contracting research centre, not the ministry. From January, the ministry will be negotiating the details of the first posts to be advertised with regional governments.

Early reactions to the news in Spain’s scientific community have been positive but guarded. Several researchers are quoted in The Scientist as saying that the scheme is a step in the right direction but that 900 posts may not be enough. One stem cell researcher asked what would happen, for example, to the other half of the scholars in the Cajal programme, adding that a definition for “scientific careers” in Spain was still lacking.

http://europa.eu.int/comm/research/head ... 14_en.html

To halt brain drain, Germany adopts 'competition' mantra


A German court last week lifted a ban on tuition. 'Elite' is in; 'egalitarian' is out.

By Isabelle de Pommereau | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor
FRANKFURT – Like many of Germany's top-notch scientists, Dirk Krueger left his homeland for the United States, attracted by higher salaries and better research opportunities. But this past fall, the economist gave up a plum assistant professorship at Stanford University and returned home to become a full professor at Frankfurt University.

By offering him swift advancement, the university broke tradition in a system where scholars face a bureaucratic, rung-by-rung climb up

Krueger's homecoming represents a success story for German higher education, which is trying to reverse decades of brain drain by attracting global talent, including its own academic expatriates. Recruitment drives may get more muscle after a German court ruling last weekpaved the way for new tuition fees.

In the postwar decades, Germany's academic talent left in droves for the US. In fact, 1 in 7 students who complete a doctorate in Germany moves to the US, and 30 percent of them stay there.

The 20,000 German scholars in the US enhance America's leadership in the global education marketplace at the expense of German taxpayers who subsidized their training. With unemployment soaring and jobs leaving for Eastern Europe, a move is under way to treat higher education as a production factor and win back Germany's best minds.

"Germany and the whole of continental Europe are now aware that higher education is a main source for success," says Thomas Straubhaar, head of the Institute of International Economics in Hamburg. "We need competition between ideas."

Mr. Straubhaar, along with other leading German scientists and scholars, launched a "brain drain, brain gain" campaign featuring a brain packed in plastic accompanied by the words: "Origin: Germany. Our most expensive article."

A year ago, Chancellor Gerhard Schröder pledged to inject $250 million into five "elite" universities that would attract world talent. While they welcome the focus on the word "elite," saying it breaks taboos in a country that emphasizes egalitarianism, experts here say that greater autonomy, not government intervention, would make Germany's universities more globally competitive.

Government regulations, they say, are stifling growth. Schools cannot select their own students; a central agency dispatches students to universities. Nor can schools set salaries or tuition fees.

But that's beginning to change. Germany's highest court last week ruled that a law banning states from charging tuition fees was illegal. It is a major shift for Germans, who are used to college being essentially free.

The decision, which was condemned by many students' groups, will force universities to compete with one another, says Straubhaar.

"What's going to happen more and more is that most universities will continue offering good, basic education to the masses and some elite universities will be able to play first league, if not champion league," Krueger says.

What pulled Krueger to Frankfurt was its newly created PhD economics department - for him a stamp of quality for research. Increasingly, institutions are using American methods to attract top researchers, including expatriate scholars, beckoning them with fast tracks to top positions, building a specialty profile, and going out to job markets to recruit lecturers instead of hiring from within.

But Walter Trockel, head of the University of Bielefeld's mathematical economics department, sees the University of Frankfurt as an isolated case. The school is able to burnish its reputation as a top-notch financial center because of its proximity to the European Central Bank. He argues that massive increased government funding is needed to make German universities attractive worldwide.

"But the new trend I see is on the other side of the Atlantic," says Mr. Trockel, noting that, for historical reasons, Germans traditionally shun patriotic behavior. "Ten years ago German scholars vanished in the American environment, they weren't interested in keeping their identity.... Now there is an increasing tendency for them to want to spend time in [Germany]."

To capitalize on this potential, Trockel organized a networking economic conference in Bielefeld in December to help expatriate researchers reestablish contact with German academia. "That would have been impossible 10 years ago," says Trockel.

Michele Tertilt, a German-born assistant professor at Stanford, responded to Trockel's effort. "A lot of us are considering going back," says Ms. Tertilt. Although she deplores how German bureaucracy deprives her of research time, she is warming to the prospect of returning home. "It's important to improve ties with Germany," she says.

Even as more German scholars consider returning, it has become more cumbersome to work as a foreign-born scholar in the US, due to tightened visa restrictions after Sept. 11, 2001. The German Academic Exchange Service, a nonprofit organization promoting German education abroad, reports that the number of international students enrolled at German universities has soared since then.

Krueger likes being home, but says his research will be more limited. "Everything is a trade off," he says. The birth of his son eased the decision. "I started thinking: 'Now is the time to consider coming back.' "

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0201/p07s01-woeu.html

Mais informações: http://www.biomedcentral.com/news/20041223/02
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