So what has the ERC ever done for us? Quite a lot, say Cambridge academics, as they mark the 10th anniversary of Europe鈥檚 premier research-funding body

探花直播financial model offered by this sort of project enables us to do work that is 15 or 20 years ahead of the rest of the world. Britain and Europe are all the stronger for it.

Prof. Simon Goldhill, CRASSH

When European government representatives met in Lisbon in the year 2000, and expressed an aspiration that Europe should become the world's leading knowledge economy by 2010, they agreed on the need to create a body to 鈥渇und and co-ordinate basic research at European level鈥.

This was the impetus underlying the creation, in 2007, of the European Research Council (ERC).

Ten years after its foundation, the ERC has become a European success story. It has supported some 6,500 projects through its prestigious grants, and has become a unique model for the fostering and funding of innovative academic research.

To mark the anniversary, events are being held across Europe during ERC Week, running from 13-19 March. At the 探花直播 of Cambridge, various recipients of ERC grants will be sharing their findings with a wide audience in talks scheduled as part of the .

探花直播McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research will be joining in ERC Week celebrations by hosting a on Thursday, 16 March.

On the same day, a reception for Cambridge recipients of ERC grants, attended by ERC president Prof. Jean-Pierre Bourguignon, will be held at the Fitzwilliam Museum, which is currently showing the ERC-supported exhibition, 鈥: 探花直播Holy Home in Renaissance Italy鈥.

探花直播ERC supports outstanding researchers in all fields of science and scholarship. It awards three types of research awards (Starter, Consolidator, Advanced) through a competitive, peer-reviewed process that rewards excellence. Its focus on 鈥渇rontier research鈥 allows academics to develop innovative and far-reaching projects over five-year periods.

探花直播United Kingdom has been the largest recipient of ERC awards 鈥揵etween 2007 and 2015, it received 24% of all ERC funding.

To date, the ERC has supported 1524 projects by UK-based academics. Researchers at the 探花直播 of Cambridge have won 218 of those grants, in fields ranging from Astronomy听to Zoology.

鈥淲hat is special about an ERC grant?鈥, asks Dr Marta Miraz贸n Lahr, who was awarded an ERC Advanced Investigator Award for her project 鈥淚N-AFRICA鈥, which examines the evolution of modern humans in East Africa.

鈥淎n obvious side is that it鈥檚 a lot of money. But I think it鈥檚 more than just the money. Because it鈥檚 five years, the ERC grant allows you to get a group and build a real community around the project. It also allows you to explore things in greater depth.鈥

An ERC grant allowed Dr Debora Sijacki, at the Institute of Astronomy, to attract 鈥渁 really competitive and international team, which otherwise would have been almost impossible to get.鈥

Being funded for a five-year period, she adds, 鈥済ives you time to expand and really tackle some of the major problems in astrophysics, rather than doing incremental research.鈥

It also allowed her access to facilities: 鈥淚n my case, it was access to world-leading supercomputers. And without the ERC grant this would have been difficult.鈥

鈥淩eal progress in research is made when researchers can tackle big important questions," says Prof听David听Baulcombe, of the Department of听Plant Sciences, the recipient of two ERC grants. " 探花直播ERC programme invites researchers to submit ambitious, blue-skies, imaginative proposals. There aren鈥檛 many others sources of funding that allow one to do that sort a thing.鈥

Dr Christos Lynteris, of the Centre for Research in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences (CRASSH), is the recipient of an ERC Starting Grant for his project 鈥淰isual representations of the third plague pandemic.

鈥淎n ERC is a unique opportunity," he says: 鈥渋t fosters interdisciplinary work. It also fosters analytical tools and the creation of new methods.鈥

鈥淚t offers a great opportunity to work with other people, over a period of 5 years, which is something very unusual, and with quite a liberal framework, so you are able to change and shift your questions, to reformulate them. For me, it means freedom, above everything.鈥

For Prof. Ottoline Leyser, Director of the Sainsbury Laboratory, it is the 鈥淓RC ethos鈥 and its 鈥渆mphasis on taking things in new directions鈥 that has made all the difference.

探花直播ERC values an innovative, risk-taking approach 鈥渋n a way that conventional grant-funding schemes don鈥檛 鈥搕hey usually want to see that slow build rather than the risky step into the unknown.鈥

Prof. Simon Goldhill, Director of CRASSH, was awarded an ERC Advanced Investigator Award for his project 鈥淏ible and Antiquity in 19th Century Culture鈥. It has given him 鈥渢he unique opportunity to do a genuinely interdisciplinary collaborative project with the time and space it takes to make such interdisciplinarity work.鈥

鈥淢ost importantly,鈥 he adds, 鈥渢he financial model offered by this sort of project enables us to do work that is 15 or 20 years ahead of the rest of the world, and Britain and Europe are all the stronger for it.鈥

探花直播sentiment is echoed by Prof. Ruth Cameron, of the Department of Materials Science and Metallurgy. 探花直播impact of an ERC grant for her project 鈥3D Engineered Environments for Regenerative Medicine鈥 has, she says, 鈥渆xceeded expectations鈥.



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