Reassurances from the chap in charge of government spending have not assuaged researchers’ concerns that Britain’s science budgets will be cut.
Daily News Roundup
Reassurances from the chap in charge of government spending have not assuaged researchers’ concerns that Britain’s science budgets will be cut.
Following criticism of a National Cancer Institute communications office budget, biologists defend the spending.
The cost of DNA sequencing has gotten more expensive for the first time since records have been kept.
The Howard Hughes Medical Institute has tapped 27 biomedical researchers for their scientific excellence.
Representative Lamar Smith (R-TX) is writing legislation to change the rules of the NSF’s grant review process.
The National Research Council of Romania is looking to replace the 19 members that resigned last week in protest of retroactive budget cuts to existing grants.
Texas’s top officials have authorized the state's troubled cancer research institute to award $71.8 million in recruitment grants that have been on hold since last December.
Under new plans to reduce the European Union’s overall spending, science funding did relatively well, but research leaders want more—and they may well get it.
A new study disputes findings of a 2011 analysis suggesting that black researchers are funded less than their equally qualified white peers.
The Cancer Prevention and Research Institute of Texas has agreed to stop awarding new grants until it addresses concerns about the integrity of is review process.