17 November 2019
Politicians, scientists and civil society need to defend evidence-informed policy as a cornerstone of liberal democracy.
This was the #1 message to send to the new European Commission, as voted by Europe’s science advice community at a major event in Helsinki.
Some 150 of Europe’s science advisors, government officials, researchers, politicians, academy representatives and members of the public met on 13 November to discuss the future of science advice and the role of scientific evidence in good governance.
The event was co-organised by SAPEA, the Finnish Academy of Sciences and Letters and the Academy of Finland. It was hosted by the Office of the Prime Minister of Finland, the country that holds the rotating presidency of the Council of the European Union.
Key elements of the event included:
- A dialogue on the future of European science advice between Pearl Dykstra, deputy chair of the Commission’s Group of Chief Scientific Advisors, and Wim van Saarloos, president of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Seven parallel workshops on best practices in science advice, hosted by different organisations, including young academies, the and the European Commission’s Joint Research Centre
- A detailed presentation on the Finnish science advice ecosystem
- Live auditing and in-event feedback from representatives of civil society organisations, including citizen science and science communication experts