En savoir plus
Following on from previous publications in 1997, 2000, 2003 and 2006, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) presents its fifth "Funding Ranking", an overview of the distribution of awards to universities and non-university research institutions in Germany. The scope of the report has increased considerably compared to previous editions. Alongside the report's central indicator - DFG awards per individual research institution - the document also covers a wide range of additional indicators regarding publicly financed research in one of the world's leading industrial countries.For the first time, the report also includes information on R&D funding for selected federal programmes, for thematic priorities within the European Union's Sixth Framework Programme, and for collaborative industrial research funded by the German Federation of Industrial Cooperative Research Associations "Otto von Guericke". The third party funding indicators, which each depict individual aspects of publicly financed research, represent in total approximately 80 percent of all public third party funding for university research.
Table des matières
IntroductionFunding-Based Research Indicators - Basis and BackgroundResearch Profiles of Higher Education Institutions and RegionsIndicator Comparison at the Level of Research Area and Funding AreaOverviewSources and ReferencesAppendix
A propos de l'auteur
The Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) is the central, self-governing research funding organisation that promotes research at universities and other publicly financed research institutions in Germany. It is the largest German funding institution. The DFG serves all branches of science and the humanities by funding research projects and facilitating cooperation among researchers.
Résumé
Following on from previous publications in 1997, 2000, 2003 and 2006, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (German Research Foundation) presents its fifth "Funding Ranking", an overview of the distribution of awards to universities and non-university research institutions in Germany. The scope of the report has increased considerably compared to previous editions. Alongside the report's central indicator - DFG awards per individual research institution - the document also covers a wide range of additional indicators regarding publicly financed research in one of the world's leading industrial countries.
For the first time, the report also includes information on R&D funding for selected federal programmes, for thematic priorities within the European Union's Sixth Framework Programme, and for collaborative industrial research funded by the German Federation of Industrial Cooperative Research Associations "Otto von Guericke". The third party funding indicators, which each depict individual aspects of publicly financed research, represent in total approximately 80 percent of all public third party funding for university research.