Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMercy Tamsyn Hampton Modified over 9 years ago
1
Advocacy in Science: Opportunities, Limits, Responsibilities and Risks FASEB: A Public Policy Voice for Biological and Biomedical Researchers Howard Garrison February 11, 2008
2
Advocacy Is A Core Part of Our Mission Pre-1989 Six member societies Centralized organization Major scientific meeting Post-1989 Public affairs emphasis New governance Rapid growth
3
What We Do Policy development Government liaison and advocacy Policy research Communications Coalition building Public outreach
4
How We Operate Emphasis on working scientists Consensus-based Empirically-supported Outcome-oriented
5
Policy Development Mechanisms Consensus Conferences Subject matter experts Face-to-face interaction Science Policy Committee Organized into issue-based subcommittees Staffed by professionals Ultimate Oversight by FASEB Board
6
Breakthroughs in Bioscience Animals in Research & Education Stem Cells/SCNT Clinical Research Educating about Evolution Peer Review NSABB (Biosecurity) Enhanced Public Access NIH Issues Training & Career Opportunities Standing Subcommittees Ad Hoc Subcommittees FASEB’s Policy Think Tank: Science Policy Committee SCIENCE POLICY COMMITTEE
7
FASEB Member Societies Science Policy Committee Consensus Conference Board of Directors FASEB Policy Public Affairs Committee From Good Idea to Good Policy: Policy Development Process
8
Strengths and Limitations of Consensus Based Approach to Policy Advantages Informed by many perspectives Strong basis for building larger coalitions Limitations Deliberations take time Tension between local and global issues Actions are limited to those on which there is a broad consensus Undercuts ability to negotiate
9
Core Public Policy Issues Federal funding for research Protect the environment for research Create the next generation of scientists Fight regulatory burden Animal research Stem cell research Research misconduct Conflict of interest Biosecurity Challenge political interference in Peer review Science education
10
Major Successes Five year doubling of NIH budget Increased funding for USDA, NSF and other research agencies Prevented Animal Welfare Act inclusion of rats, mice and birds NIH ethics policies Defended peer review at VA and other agencies Kept biosecurity funding at NIH
11
Recent Accomplishments NIH Reauthorization Communications Grass roots advocacy for NIH Educating about evolution Training slides Conflict of interest initiative Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act Stem cell legislation passed House and Senate
12
Office of Public Affairs Federal funding Animals in research Training / careers Research integrity Stem cells / SCNT Publication Homeland security Regulatory burden Conflicts of interest Technology transfer Politicization of science Peer review Indirect costs Genetic nondiscrimination Agency reauthorization
13
Risks of Activism Mission creep Demands on time of volunteers Cost associated with advocacy Expanding number of issues Competing priorities Altered public image Organization Profession
14
Current Legislative Priorities Hold meetings/ issue letters Reauthorization Appropriations Coordinate freshman briefing Build Congressional database Work with patient groups More visible “thank you” and “spank you” actions
15
Communications Initiatives Washington Update Breakthroughs in Bioscience State Advocacy PowerPoints E-action alerts Subscribers Mass alerts Voter Engagement Campaign
16
Science Policy Priorities Training & Workforce Animal Research Biosecurity Conflict of Interest Clinical Research Stem Cells Evolution Education
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.