The highs and lows of developing a transdisciplinary Research Centre and the importance of applied research

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Authors
Berry, Terri-Ann
Steinhorn, Gregor
Massey, Brenda
Hernandez, G.
Low, Joanne
Wallis, Shannon
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2021-12
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Conference Contribution - Oral Presentation
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Environmental Solutions Research Centre (Unitec Institute of Technology)
Unitec Institute of Technology
applied research
transdisciplinary research
research funding
industry and education partnerships
New Zealand
Citation
Berry, T.A., Steinhorn, G., Massey, B., Hernandez, G., Low, J., & Wallis, S.L. (2021, December). The highs and lows of developing a transdisciplinary Research Centre and the importance of applied research. Paper presented at the MIT/Unitec Research Symposium - Rangahau Horonuku Hou - New Research Landscapes., Unitec, Auckland.
Abstract
Unitec’s strengths lie in its applied and practical focus and its strong relationships with community and industry. In 2011 Unitec developed a procedure for establishing research centres; formally-constituted groupings of researchers who work together to collectively achieve defined research aims, including the transfer of knowledge to stakeholders. The Environmental Solutions Research Centre (ESRC) was established in 2019 to foster transdisciplinary, industry-engaged research to tackle waste and pollution challenges. Founded initially by three researchers, today it boasts 22 members, internal and external to Unitec, and directly employs six staff. Its membership includes chemists, biologists, engineers, computer scientists, and building and construction experts, alongside industry experts from waste management and minimisation, air quality, wastewater treatment and civil engineering. Meeting the global challenges of degrading environments, climate change and increasing greenhouse gas emissions requires new research and innovation. ESRC aims to respond to these challenges through an economic, social and environmental lens. Raising funds and finding partners to assist with complex and often controversial research is not easy. Since its establishment, ESRC has submitted 15 funding applications for funding, seven of which have been successful. Another four are awaiting outcomes and two are pending submission. Funding requested to date has amounted to ~$4m, with ~$600k having been secured. Funding sources include local and central government agencies and industry. Although securing funding from industry is sometimes seen as “easier” than applying to contestable funds, which are extremely competitive, it does require extensive communication and co-ordination with multiple stakeholders. The benefit though is that there is a direct transfer of knowledge which can affect changes to policy and standard operating procedures. The main aims of this research are to investigate the challenges of securing funding for environmental research and to compare alternative approaches for seeking funding from public versus industrial sources.
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