Ƶ

Project

New Models for U.S. Science and Technology Policy

Overview

Scientific and technological advances are fundamental to the prosperity, health, and security of America. Innovation and rapid integration of new knowledge and technologies emerge from investments in research and development, and rely on the partnership between universities, federal and state governments, and industry. Staying globally competitive will require a stronger partnership and a greater focus on long-term planning in scientific and engineering research.

The Restoring the Foundation report in 2014 and The Perils of Complacency report in 2020 offer actionable recommendations for the long-term sustainability of the U.S. science and engineering research system to ensure a healthy research enterprise that continues to benefit the American people.

People

People

Committee Members

Nancy C. Andrews

Boston Children's Hospital
Dean Emerita & Vice Chancellor Emerita; Nanaline H. Duke Professor
Ƶ Member

Steven Chu

Stanford University
William R. Kenan, Jr., Professor of Humanities and Sciences
Ƶ Member

Jared Leigh Cohon

Carnegie Mellon University
President Emeritus and University Professor
Ƶ Member

M.R.C. Greenwood

University of California System
President Emerita; Professor of Medicine
Ƶ Member

John L. Hennessy

Stanford University
President Emeritus and Shriram Family Director of the Knight-Hennessy Scholars Program
Ƶ Member

Peter S. Kim

Stanford School of Medicine
Virginia and D.K. Ludwig Professor of Biochemistry at Stanford University
Ƶ Member

Dana G. Mead

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Former Chairman of the MIT Corporation
Ƶ Member

C. Dan Mote

University of Maryland
Regents Professor & Glenn L. Martin Institute Professor of Engineering and Former President
Ƶ Member

Robert F. Sproull

University of Massachusetts Amherst
Adjunct Professor, Computer Science
Ƶ Member

Subra Suresh

Massachusetts Institute of Technology
President
Ƶ Member

Shirley M. Tilghman

Princeton University
President Emerita and Professor of Biology and Public Affairs
Ƶ Member
Project Advisors

John C. Crowley

Charlottesville, VA

Kirstin Matthews

Rice University
Publications

Publications

News & Updates

News & Updates

Events

Events

Project Outcomes

Project Outcomes

Since the release of Restoring the Foundation, the Ƶ has built support for the report’s recommendations among stakeholders in government, industry, academia, and philanthropy. The project’s efforts included collaborations with scientific and business organizations; media outreach; conversations with leaders in Congress and at federal research agencies; and forums, roundtable discussions, and symposia at universities and public halls across the nation.

Project members participated in over 150 meetings with congressional offices and testified before the Senate Commerce Committee before the release of the Restoring the Foundation report in 2014 and again in 2016. A working group of partner organizations, including the Ƶ, issued “,” a public statement of support for recommendations from Restoring the Foundation. It was signed by CEOs and chairs from nine major corporations as well as more than 500 leading organizations from American industry, higher education, and science and engineering organizations. “Innovation: An American Imperative” was endorsed in a bipartisan, bicameral “Dear Colleague” letter circulated in Congress. These activities provided input to the 2016 American Innovation and Competitiveness Act passed by Congress.

Successes to date include congressional actions to: increase investment in some of the federal research institutes; make permanent and extend the federal R&D tax credit; reaffirm merit-based peer review; eliminate, reduce, and streamline research-related regulations; and further support domestic advanced manufacturing. The efforts of the project members and the working group helped support this progress.

Learn more about the influence of Restoring the Foundation and “Innovation: An American Imperative.”

Outreach Activities & Impact

Media Coverage