A roundtable discussion on young researchers’ careers in the Nordic countries with perspectives from the social sciences and humanities.
In several Nordic countries as well as in the EU, several reports point to challenges for young researchers in the social sciences and humanities (SSH). In this seminar, we would like to approach two over‐arching issues.
First, over the last decades, challenge‐ and mission‐driven research has become increasingly important. This tendency has many beneficial effects, for instance in establishing closer connections between private and public partners or in aiding to make research agendas more agile and flexible. However, this tendency may also be understood as increasingly eclipsing more open‐ended, blue‐sky research. This is especially challenging—some would say worrisome—within the SSH field.
Second, academic career paths for young SSH researchers in the Nordic countries are under pressure from a range of sources. Such pressure includes the lack of sufficient research funding, as well as the disconnect between an increasing number of temporary research positions and a stable or decreasing number of permanent academic positions.
Seeking possible solutions to these problems, we ask:
- How should the Nordic countries meet this challenge to curiosity‐driven, basic research?
- In what ways can we ensure, politically and financially, that the SSH field become more robust and thriving?
- What potential role can collaboration between SSH and other disciplines play?
- More broadly, what challenges, opportunities and risks does the future hold for young SSH researchers?
- What new alliances can be forged within and between the Nordic countries, in order to support young scholars within these fields?
- How can we strengthen the SSH field in Nordic research and education?
- What roles do higher education institutions play in preparing young SSH researchers for the Nordic labour market?
Moderator of the event is Hilde Sandvik.
Programme
09:00 – 09:10 Formal opening
by Rector of the University of Bergen Margareth Hagen.
09:10 – 09:35 “Norwegian and Nordic Research and Young Researchers in the Humanities and Social Sciences”
Introduction by Norwegian Minister of Research and Higher Education Ola Borten Moe
Key questions:
- How do we build better cooperative structures for supporting young SSH researchers across Nordic borders and beyond?
- What new alliances can and should be forged within and between the Nordic countries, in order to support young scholars in SSH?
- How can we ensure, politically and financially, that the SSH research fields become robust and thriving?
Q & A
09:35-10:40 PANEL 1: “Research Careers in the Humanities and Social Sciences: Perspectives from Nils Klim Laureates”
Key questions:
- Which supportive frameworks are needed to enable excellent research for young scholars in the Nordic countries?
- What role does research mobility between the Nordic countries play?
- What is the importance of available blue sky, open-ended research for young researchers?
Participants:
- Assistant Professor at the University of Helsinki and 2021 Nils Klim Laureate Daria Gritsenko
- Professor at Umeå University and 2007 Nils Klim Laureate Carina Keskitalo
- Head of NOS-HS (NordForsk) and 2014 Nils Klim Laureate Terje Lohndal
- Representative from the Young Academy of Norway and Researcher at the Centre for Technology, Innovation and Culture, University of Oslo, Hilde Reinertsen
10:40 – 11:05 Break
11:05 – 11:55 PANEL 2: “Career Paths for Young Researchers in the Nordic Countries: Challenges and Opportunities”
Key questions:
- What responsibility do universities and funders have to support research in the humanities and social sciences?
- How can we secure that perspectives from the humanities and social sciences to a greater extent become integral parts of challenge- and mission-driven research?
- What roles do higher education institutions play in preparing young SSH researchers for the Nordic labour market?
Participants:
- Rector of the University of Bergen, Margareth Hagen
- Associate Professor at Aarhus University and 2022 Nils Klim Laureate Elisa Uusimäki
- Executive Director – Societal development and digitalisation at the Norwegian Research Council, Jesper Simonsen
11:55 – 12:00 Closing remarks
by Professor at the University of Bergen and Chair of the Holberg Prize Board Kjersti Fløttum.
This round-table discussion is part of the 2022 Holberg Week, which takes place from 7 to 10 June, and it is organized by the University of Bergen in collaboration with the Holberg Prize and the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research.
About the event
The event is also part of the official programme for the Norwegian Presidency of the Nordic Council of Ministers in 2022, and is relevant to both national and Nordic policy development. In 2022, the Norwegian Ministry of Education and Research presented a national strategy on recruitment of researchers and on researchers’ career paths. The Norwegian White Paper on Humanities (2017) also points out the value of social sciences and the humanities in solving grand societal challenges. Within the remit of the Nordic Council of Ministers, social sciences and the humanities are specifically highlighted through research calls in NordForsk as well as the The Joint Committee for Nordic Research Councils in the Humanities and Social Sciences (NOS-HS).