European universities offer 'scientific asylum' to US researchers fleeing Trump's cuts
Source: The Guardian
Tue 25 Mar 2025 01.00 EDT
Last modified on Tue 25 Mar 2025 10.31 EDT
Laced with terms such as “censorship” and “political interference”, the Belgium-based jobs advert was far from typical. The promise of academic freedom, however, hinted at who it was aimed at: researchers in the US looking to flee the funding freezes, cuts and ideological impositions ushered in by Donald Trump’s administration.
“We see it as our duty to come to the aid of our American colleagues,” said Jan Danckaert, the rector of Vrije Universiteit Brussel (VUB), in explaining why his university – founded in 1834 to safeguard academia from the interference of church or state – had decided to open 12 postdoctoral positions for international researchers, with a particular focus on Americans.
“American universities and their researchers are the biggest victims of this political and ideological interference,” Danckaert said in a statement. “They’re seeing millions in research funding disappear for ideological reasons.” The university is among a handful of institutions across Europe that have begun actively recruiting US researchers, offering themselves as a haven for those keen to escape the Trump administration’s crackdown on research and academia.
Since Trump took power in late January, researchers in the US have faced a multipronged attack. Efforts to slash government spending have left thousands of employees bracing for layoffs, including at institutions such as Nasa, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the US’s pre-eminent climate research agency. The government’s targeting of “wokeism” has meanwhile sought to root out funding for research deemed to involve diversity, certain kinds of vaccines and any mention of the climate crisis.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/mar/25/europe-universities-us-researchers-trump-administration-science

alwaysinasnit
(5,373 posts)redstatebluegirl
(12,630 posts)They are fishing with big money. Universities have been a mess for a while with the "business model" of management.
It will take decades to repair this mess.
sinkingfeeling
(54,825 posts)electric_blue68
(20,603 posts)"We're No 1!"...."We're No 1!"..."We're No 1!" ....."We're N......Uhhh, wait....not so much anymore...".
I was never that linguistic. Sometimes we were No 1 (in a good way), and I never any problems accepting other countries were better at other things.
Hekate
(96,986 posts)Old Crank
(5,464 posts)I predicted that many who would normally come to the US would stay home or find another country.
I didn't predict that there would be semi-official offers made so people could jump.
If you have an advanced degree it is easy to get a work permit in Germany, and probably most of the EU. I'm sure England is looking to poach some talent also.
This is going to set US scientific research back at least 10 years.