• The first American scientific refugees arrive in France

    From Marmalade King@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jul 31 17:36:23 2025
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    The first American ‘scientific refugees’ arrive in France
    Aix-Marseille University is wooing researchers who feel targeted by the
    Trump administration.
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    Safe place science
    U.S. researcher Brian Sandberg applied for the “Safe Place for Science" program. He said the U.S. research and education systems were "really
    under attack." | Victor Goury-Laffont/POLITICO
    July 1, 2025 4:22 am CET
    By Victor Goury-Laffont
    MARSEILLE, France — The first American academics fleeing Donald Trump's
    America for France have arrived.
    Aix-Marseille University last week introduced eight U.S.-based
    researchers who were in the final stage of joining the institution's
    “Safe Place for Science" program, which aims to woo researchers who have experienced or fear funding cuts under the Trump administration. AMU
    offers the promise of a brighter future in the sun-drenched
    Mediterranean port city.
    While both France and the European Union have launched multimillion-euro
    plans to woo researchers across the pond since Trump assumed the U.S. presidency in January, AMU's initiative was the first of its kind in the country — meaning the eight researchers who were welcomed are the first academic refugees planning to trade the United States for France.
    Speaking from the university’s hilltop astrophysics lab, AMU President
    Eric Berton likened the situation to that of European academics who fled persecution by Nazi Germany both before and during World War II.
    “What is at play here today is not unrelated to another dark period of
    our history,” he said.
    Berton and former French President François Hollande have pushed for the creation of a "scientific refugee" status.
    As most of the researchers who attended Berton’s speech had not yet
    signed their contracts with AMU, they requested anonymity to protect
    their stateside research positions if they ended up not being admitted
    or declining the offer.
    Among the applicants were James, a climate scientist at a reputable
    research university, and his wife, who studies the intersection of
    judicial systems and democracies. James said they had applied because
    they were “working in areas which are targeted” and could be prone to
    funding cuts.
    While James, who didn't want his surname used, said he doesn't think of
    himself and his fellow academics as "refugees," he voiced deep concern
    about the future of academic research under Trump.
    Brian Sandberg, a professor of history at Northern Illinois University
    who researches climate change during the Little Ice Age period from
    roughly the 16th to 19th centuries, had already been set to spend a year
    in Marseille as a visiting professor. While taking part in a workshop in
    the city in March, he learned of AMU’s program and decided to apply.
    "The entire system of research and the entire education in the United
    States is really under attack," Sandberg said.
    AMU said 298 researchers from prestigious universities including
    Stanford and Yale had applied, despite the university's lack of name recognition outside France compared to some of its Parisian
    counterparts. Berton said the high volume of applicants spoke to the
    "urgency" of the situation across the Atlantic.
    The university’s president insisted that participants in the “Safe Place
    for Science” program would be paid the same wages as French researchers.
    | Clement Mahoudeau/AFP via Getty Images
    The school has already put up €15 million to pay for the program and is lobbying the French government to match that figure, which would enable
    it to nearly double its planned hires from 20 to 39.
    Still, moving to a new country where English is not the official
    language a big step. There's also the issue of salaries, which are lower
    for academics in France than in the United States, and the fact there's
    less money for research.
    An early-career biological anthropologist said she was still awaiting
    contract details from AMU before putting pen to paper because of salary discrepancies, though she took comfort in the fact that the cost of
    living is lower in France — especially considering that education for
    her two children, who she said were eager to settle in Marseille, would
    be free.
    The university’s president insisted that participants in the “Safe Place
    for Science” program would be paid the same wages as French researchers.
    The statement sought to appease concerns within France’s academic
    community that money would now be focused on drawing U.S. scientists
    whereas local researchers have long complained of insufficient funding.
    But the biological anthropologist said a more carefree life could
    compensate for a lower salary. "There’ll be a lot less stress as a
    whole, politically, academically," she reflected.


    https://www.politico.eu/article/meet-first-academic-refugees-fleeing-us- france-science-program/

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