More and more researchers and students in the United States are considering moving abroad. This has to do with, among other things, the fact that funds and fairs have been removed. “People are so scared,” said scientist Daniella Fodera of Columbia University in New York.
It investigates benign growths in the womb, so fibroids affected. Since its own research fair has been removed, Fodera has been looking around at possible places or elsewhere abroad, in which she could continue her postdoctoral training. According to a survey published at the end of March, more than 75 percent of scientists in the United States think to move abroad. This includes above all that are at the start of their career, according to the Science Magazine.
“Everyone talks about it,” said PhD student JP Flores, who specializes in genetics. There is concern about academic freedom, the financing of universities and other research institutions, as well as your own workplace.
Initiatives to attract researchers
An example is to shorten the funds for Colombia University, because according to the US government it has failed against anti -Semitism in the protection of Jewish students. “What Trump’s government does is fascism,” said philosopher Jason Stanley of the US Elite University Yale, who is considering moving to Canada.
Other countries hope to take advantage of emigration. Universities in Canada and Europe, including Austria, have already launched initiatives to attract researchers. Some have already received a few applications from the US. The emigration problem will become clear in ten years if the country has not made the necessary progress, said leukemia researcher Gwen Nichols.
Source: Krone

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