Scholars in Hong Kong fear that erosion of the research funding firewall between China and Hong Kong could diminish academic freedom in the region.
In a policy shift unveiled in May 2018, China announced that it would allow Hong Kong researchers to apply directly to Beijing for funding. The change followed a relaxation over the past decade whereby China funded more than a dozen 鈥渟tate key laboratories鈥 in Hong Kong.
Another change saw researchers from both jurisdictions bankrolled from a joint scheme run by the National Natural Science Foundation of China and Hong Kong鈥檚 Research Grants Council. Such arrangements have eroded a funding firewall between Hong Kong and mainland China.
Many university leaders have welcomed the increased funding.
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鈥淲e look forward to seeing more of these policy modifications,鈥 said Wei Shyy, president of Hong Kong University of Science and Technology. 鈥淚t will have impact in terms of the support we have to do basic research.鈥
But other scholars are cognisant of the impact that funding from Beijing could have on academic freedom.
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Hong Kong university leaders say that they have considerably more institutional autonomy than their peers in places such as Japan, Taiwan and Singapore, not to mention mainland China itself 鈥 a trait that they say has helped the territory cultivate more top-200 universities than any other city apart from London.
Ian Holliday, vice-president of the University of Hong Kong, said that direct intervention by Chinese authorities remained unlikely. But he added that universities were vulnerable to 鈥渟ubtle鈥 influences 鈥 ranging from mainland Chinese studying in the territory鈥檚 universities to alumni who wanted more engagement with the mainland.
鈥淚t鈥檚 very diffuse, but nevertheless quite powerful,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here are many forces in society that drive conformity with Beijing鈥檚 agenda.鈥
Professor Holliday said that professors running labs replete with postdocs and PhD students needed 鈥渂ig鈥 money. 鈥淚ncreasingly that鈥檚 available from Beijing rather than Hong Kong," he said.
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鈥淢any of our professors would not want HKU to get a black mark because, and I鈥檓 speculating, it might jeopardise future funding streams. There are topics that maybe some academics choose not to pursue because they see their future in Hong Kong rather than elsewhere.鈥
Gerard Postiglione, coordinator of HKU鈥檚 Consortium for 糖心Vlog Research in Asia, said that the Chinese political environment had 鈥渢ightened up increasingly鈥 and could affect Hong Kong universities鈥 standing in global rankings.
鈥淲ithout a doubt, their success has been due to an open intellectual atmosphere, free global interchange and unimpeded academic and scientific cooperation,鈥 he added.
Professor Postiglione said that he was frequently asked whether that tradition was at risk. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something we don鈥檛 know,鈥 he confessed.
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鈥淗ong Kong has its own Constitution. If it鈥檚 interpreted and defended in the way it was intended to be, the universities will remain as open and professionally autonomous as ever.
鈥淚f they have to closely integrate into the mainland university system, they may lose their edge in certain areas of the social sciences and the humanities. But if they retain academic openness and intellectual freedom, they won鈥檛 lose their edge. And there鈥檚 a great deal to gain in terms of generous research funding and opportunities to work with big data and artificial intelligence.鈥
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