Figuring Out the Future

Any researcher in the United States who is dependent on government funding knows first-hand the devastation that the sequestration wrought. Some have found ways, temporarily, to do more with less money, while others have had to pack up their research tents for good.

Written byPamela Ahlberg
| 2 min read
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This month’s cover story looks at both of those scenarios and makes recommendations for moving forward. One of those recommendations is for those in the scientific trenches to get more involved in letting the general public know what they do and why it matters.

Andrew Rosenberg, director, Center for Science and Democracy, Union of Concerned Scientists, believes that scientists need to be involved in the public debate. “Scientists should be talking not only to other scientists but also to the wider community—saying this is what I do and why I do it,” he says.

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