Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2007-09-26-Speech-3-108"
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"en.20070926.14.3-108"2
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Our position on the creation of the European Institute of Technology is highly critical as a result of the position taken by various research organisations. For example, last year the League of European Research Universities presented a study which concluded that the plan for the European Institute of Technology was ‘misconceived and doomed to failure’. Euroscience, a European organisation of scientists and political experts, called it ‘a politically motivated idea, starting from a wrong premise’. The United Kingdom’s science adviser, Robert May, said that ‘it is based on a misunderstanding’ about innovation.
This Institute will be virtual, composed of scientists based at EU universities, research laboratories and companies, and will not grant qualifications, contrary to what was originally proposed. Following pressure from various countries that wanted to host the Institute, this became virtual, a type of gateway for consulting scientific communities in different areas. The European Parliament has just adopted several amendments to the Commission proposal, but in our opinion these are insufficient to straighten something which was born crooked.
As for the funding, one of the options is the Community budget, including appropriations intended for research, which may end up being just another way of supporting the developed countries and thus worsening the inequalities."@en1
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