Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
EU United Kingdom Science

EU Scraps 115 Grants For UK Scientists And Academics Amid Brexit Row (theguardian.com) 183

British scientists and academic researchers have been dealt a blow after 115 grants from a flagship EU research programme were terminated because of the continuing Brexit row over Northern Ireland. From a report: One academic said he was "relieved" to be exiting the country and feared the UK was going down a "dark path" like Germany in the 1930s. One hundred and fifty grants were approved for British applicants after the then Brexit minister, David Frost, successfully negotiated associate membership of the $95.3bn Horizon Europe programme but most will now be cancelled. Beneficiaries in the UK were told by the European Research Council (ERC) that unless associate membership had been approved by 29 June, the grants would not be available unless the researchers moved their work to a European institution.

Ratification of the membership has been in abeyance because the UK has not implemented the Brexit trading arrangements agreed under the Northern Ireland protocol. With the deadline passed, it has emerged that just 18 of the 150 academics will take up the grants but must move to an EU institution to get the funds. Thiemo Fetzer, a professor of economics at the University of Warwick who was approved for $1.53m of funding for research into media and geopolitics, confirmed he was one of the 18 who had reluctantly decided to move to the EU. He said: "I am relieved as this whole Brexit process has eroded my trust in the UK's institutions and this Horizon Europe association was just another incarnation of this."

This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

EU Scraps 115 Grants For UK Scientists And Academics Amid Brexit Row

Comments Filter:
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2022 @03:24PM (#62679206)
    that's the lesson I learned here. Brexit passed in large part due to a large number of "protest" votes. Votes from people who didn't actually support existing the EU, but who were pissed off at their gov't for screwing them over since Thatcher.

    Protests votes do not end well. They are not how you give the ruling class the middle finger. There are 3 main ways to do that:

    1. Have as few kids as possible ("We Are The Last Generation", /.ers are way ahead on this one).

    2. Vote against pro-corporate candidates.

    3. Talk to your friends and family about not voting for pro-corporate candidates.
    • by nagora ( 177841 )

      that's the lesson I learned here. Brexit passed in large part due to a large number of "protest" votes.

      I'm not sure that's true. I think Farrage lost the Leave campaign votes over all and his whole platform was protest voting.

      A bigger problem, IMO, is that when you have an agreement that something is bad, that doesn't map to an agreement about what is better.

      • that it wouldn't have passed without the protest votes. People didn't think EU membership was bad, at least not enough to pass Brexit. They were pissed off at their government and wanted to say "fuck you" in the clearest way possible.
        • by nagora ( 177841 )

          that it wouldn't have passed without the protest votes. People didn't think EU membership was bad, at least not enough to pass Brexit.

          I really think you're waaaay off on that.

          Cameron knew that the anti-EU vote was falling and miscalculated how far. But the actual vote represented a dip in Leave, not some sort of miracle boost.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          The margin was so thin that it wouldn't have passed without the illegal abuse of Facebook data and targeted ads.

          The margin was so thin that it wouldn't have passed without help from Russia. I don't know why Putin didn't just give up after brexit, that could have been his great legacy - the destruction of the United Kingdom.

    • 1. Have as few kids as possible

      Checked. "I'm doing my part!"

      2. Vote against pro-corporate candidates

      Who?

      3. Talk to your friends and family about not voting for pro-corporate candidates

      See point one. Outside of a nephew and two nieces who think I'm a dinosaur, everyone else in the family is dead. So I guess checked?

      • lots of pro-worker candidates there. They don't have a lot of money, so they lose out on name recognition. Too many primary votes are just showing up without knowing who's who. So they vote based on name recognition, which really means "who could buy the most roadside signs).

        That's where talking to your family and friends comes in. Get them voting, and make sure the ones who _do_ vote understand the tricks used to manipulate them.
    • As an American, I feel it's not really my place to speak for or against Brexit. I don't get why so many others do. It feels a bit arrogant and pretentious to sit here in my chair, having nothing at all to do that country, and telling them how they should vote for their own internal issues that affect their daily life, even when they have nothing to do with mine.

      So why the hell do you do it?

      Speak of this, the government is a corporation. Do you want politicians that will abolish that too? Oh wait, silly me,

      • Well you certainly don't get a vote in it the decision affects you directly because we all live in a global economy. That means you can and should have an opinion on all matters. You should of course try to avoid knee-jerk reactions but this shouldn't stop you from forming an opinion.

        In the case of brexit as an American it benefits you financially for the United Kingdom to exit the Union. The European Union is a trade organization that exists so that the individual countries of Europe don't get picked a
  • by RoccamOccam ( 953524 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2022 @03:26PM (#62679212)

    One academic said he was "relieved" to be exiting the country and feared the UK was going down a "dark path" like Germany in the 1930s.

    It's a bit unusual for the summary to tread so closely to the Godwin rule, but I guess that's the new norm in online discourse.

    Clearly, with such divisive writing, Slashdot editors are following in Goebbels' footsteps!!

    • by ranton ( 36917 )

      It's a bit unusual for the summary to tread so closely to the Godwin rule, but I guess that's the new norm in online discourse.

      Mike Godwin himself has said he is fine for calling Trumpists like those in Charlottesville Nazis, and that it does not violate his "rule". I doubt he would have any trouble with calling out populists in the UK during Brexit either. He said he never intended his statements to mean you could never call out populists and fascists anymore.

      If you cannot call out populist leaders in the US and UK, you are just asking for parties like the Nazis to get into power.

    • It's a bit unusual for the summary to tread so closely to the Godwin rule

      There's nothing usual about a wealthy western nation so self absorbed in nationalism in the 21st century that they would voluntarily screw themselves out of lucrative trading partnerships. Mind you there's nothing usual about what was going on in the USA either, Jan 6 is clearly evidence that.

      Godwin's law is a law about discussion ad absurdum. The idea that invoking Hitler is stupid. It's not Godwin's law to point out that insane nationalism is precisely what lead to the rise of Nazi Germany, that's teachin

    • by UpnAtom ( 551727 )

      Since Britain is trying to scrap the right to protest and is sending refugees to Rwanda, you can kinda see his point.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      It is/was a reasonable fear.

      It might be past tense now because Boris Johnson just announced he is stepping down as PM. The fish rots from the head and whoever takes over might steer the UK away from the Trumpian lies and authoritarianism. Might.

      Either way the UK is still screwed.

  • The sheer volume of regulations you have to commit to (having primacy over your own countries constitution) are mind boggling.

    • Then why did they vote to join the first place? Brexit sure is going splendidly for the brits. Like all those expats living in Spain who were flabbergasted when they had to leave.

      I thought brexit meant less brown people! What do you mean I have to apply for a visa! This isn't what I meant...

      • Then why did they vote to join the first place? Brexit sure is going splendidly for the brits. Like all those expats living in Spain who were flabbergasted when they had to leave.

        I thought brexit meant less brown people! What do you mean I have to apply for a visa! This isn't what I meant...

        The incredible number of unintended consequences - or unexpected ones, I should say - doesn't speak well to the smarts of the majority of British voters.

        The ripple effects of the once simplified travel is one. The ripple effects of the now cancelled Horizon Europe program is another.

        But make no mistake - I will be called out by the pro Brexiteers, and that merely shows that as people who are smarter than anyone else, they saw all the consequences, and approve of all of them.

      • Then why did they vote to join the first place? Brexit sure is going splendidly for the brits. Like all those expats living in Spain who were flabbergasted when they had to leave.

        A lot has changed over the last 40 years. The UK started in the EU in the 70s when it was just an economic union. It has metastasized quite substantially since that time with tens of thousands of new binding laws coming from Brussels.

        • And throughout these changes the UK was a member of the EU and wielded enormous power due to being one of the most populous and one of the economically most powerful members of the EU:

        • It has metastasized quite substantially since that time with tens of thousands of new binding laws coming from Brussels.

          Laws we often proposed and very often voted for.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          Brussels doesn't actually make laws. The EU has directives, which member states then integrate into their own laws. They have a lot of leeway in how they implement directives. In practice they can often just ignore ones they don't like, and eventually the EU compromises with them.

          That said, the UK voted in favour of almost all new EU directives anyway. It's not like we even wanted to diverge from them, until suddenly that became a justification for brexit.

    • Most leadership is not opposed to more regulations as a matter of principle, but only to those regulations that go against their national strategy. It was the political ("federalist") integration that caused UK to take the step, not "the sheer volume of regulations." Also regulations are negotiated in backrooms for months and years to adapt to everybody's needs before presented to approval, which is what keeps the leaders satisfied for as long as they don't oppose *the principle* of these regulations and ar

    • a) EU regulations don't spring forth fully formed form the mind of Zeus. They are agreed upon by the EU members. A member country of the EU gets a say in what the EU regulations are.

      b) EU regulations have effect *because of* each member's constitution. Every regulation is implemented by laws in each member country, they are not imposed.

      • a) EU regulations don't spring forth fully formed form the mind of Zeus. They are agreed upon by the EU members. A member country of the EU gets a say in what the EU regulations are.

        If your country does not favor a particular piece of legislation or changes their mind and a majority votes for it anyway it is still imposed on you and binding nonetheless.

        b) EU regulations have effect *because of* each member's constitution. Every regulation is implemented by laws in each member country, they are not imposed.

        Yea like one of those open ended "I agree" click wraps that stipulates the deal can be changed at any time. It's not like the EU has an enforcement mechanism to "impose" its laws or anything...

        https://ec.europa.eu/info/law/... [europa.eu]

        • If your country does not favor a particular piece of legislation or changes their mind and a majority votes for it anyway it is still imposed on you and binding nonetheless.

          You are pointing out at one of the core concepts of democracy. I find it unsettling that this is the feature that you chose to criticize. Your city council, regional authorities, national legislature, and the UN General Assembly also work by majority vote that are binding to your neighborhood, district, region, nation, even when your particular elected Representative opposed it or voted in favor then changed their mind. Why would the EU work any differently?

          The only good reasons I can figure are:
          1) if you f

          • You are pointing out at one of the core concepts of democracy. I find it unsettling that this is the feature that you chose to criticize. Your city council, regional authorities, national legislature, and the UN General Assembly also work by majority vote that are binding to your neighborhood, district, region, nation, even when your particular elected Representative opposed it or voted in favor then changed their mind. Why would the EU work any differently?

            The structure of the system - what powers are concentrated at what level matters not simply abstract ideas and labels.

            While I think you can scale governance so that power is concentrated locally with fewer collective rules globally I don't support or believe that the opposite works. It's the structure and details that matter.

            Take the UN for example. It's little more than a forum for those with power to communicate. By itself it holds no real power. If however this were not the case and the UN promulgate

            • Lets say the EU didn't exist at all. Would things meaningfully be any different? Would countries stop trading with each other or would you have arrangements similar to the early days in previous incantations of the EU? Wouldn't it be better if everyone could conduct commerce without the unnecessary meddling?

              Trading would be worse for (most of) the current EU members. Each individual country is in a weaker position to negotiate trade deals than the EU as a whole.
              Countries would be trading, but they would gain less and lose more.

              Note that trade deals often don't just contain rules about trade itself but the stronger partner often uses the chance to push other changes in the fields of economy, politics, health and environmental standards unto the weaker partner.

            • This is my problem with the EU. Continuous scope creep over the decades.

              Creating a "wider and deeper community" that goes beyond "economic unification" is in the Schuman Declaration from 1950 and the political nature of the ECC was explicit in the debate for the accession of the UK in 1972. The creep you mention is intentional, it is part of the plan to slowly make it a country. As of today the EU fulfils the definition for a confederation, and the push to call it a federation only failed due to the opposition of UK. There is no need to call it a country, but this explains the

    • The sheer volume of regulations you have to commit to (having primacy over your own countries constitution) are mind boggling.

      The regulations you have to commit to you do so anyway thanks to the desire to trade with the world's largest and wealthiest trading block. The price of admission compared to the benefits is incredibly low.

      You said you're surprised more countries don't leave, why not instead ask yourself why so many other countries are keen to join. Why not ask yourself, why does it make sense for your own regulations (or lack of regulations) to differ from those from a potential customer only hundreds of km away.

      That's the

    • The sheer volume of regulations you have to commit to (having primacy over your own countries constitution) are mind boggling.

      This is disingenuous. There is nothing stopping countries passing any laws they like, but with the freedom to break agreements, there's a freedom to take the consequences.

      So why have all these regulations? Welcome to the world of international trade agreements, where the answer is simple, NON TARIFF BARRIERS. To given an example, I want to sell you 10 tons of bananas we need to agree:

      • What is a banana aka what kind of banana it should be (If I'm expecting yellow bananas and you give me blue I'll be upset
      • How
  • Who cares about what these UK scientists have to contribute to knowledge in the EU?
    All that matters is that we all fall in line with the wishes of the Leadership.
    1984 is already way behind us.

    • The wishes of the leadership are that we stick to the deals we signed.

      You're a fuckwit if you think that being given the cold shoulder for reneging on a deal signed a little over a year ago is "1984".

      Then again, the current opinion of the right is that free association isn't a right: you should be able to say and do anything with no consequences and people must be compelled to give you the time of day.

  • There is no point in reading Slashdot anymore it's like a reprint of the Guardian.

"I got everybody to pay up front...then I blew up their planet." "Now why didn't I think of that?" -- Post Bros. Comics

Working...