Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Following up the experience

June 5, 2008

I’m in London now, having spent a couple of weeks in Brussels since arriving backfrom the Eisenhower thing. I started getting the house sorted, went down to France to sort things out with the house purchase there, and then had to pack for the move to London. One of my action points in my final report was to set up a blog to write about my work in London, after the great experience I had writing this one, and that has now been set up. You can view it at http://euonym.wordpress.com/. Hope it will have half the success of this one!

I’ve also got on with putting in place structures to allow the MNP class of 2008 to stay in touch. The yahoo groups had quite a few people signing up in the first days, but has gone quiet now. Facebook seems to be pulling them in though, and so we are building up the group there. So at least a har core of us will be in touch. Got to start planning that reunion now!

St Louis Day 2

April 12, 2008

St Louis gained huge brownie points last night for providing a great night of R&B after our Brazilian dinner organised by Rob Fruend, one of the 2008 US Fellows. This morning we started with breakfast from another 2008 US Fellow, Rachel Storch, who is in the state legislature. She told us that there was an attempt to criminalise human embryonic stem cell research in Missouri recently. Criminalise it. Not “not allow it with federal/state funds” but put scientists in prison. I find that quite shocking. I mean, there have to be limits. But the vast majority of the people involved in this, like many of the people at Monsanto, are doing this because they believe they are doing something good. In fact, this seems to be a state with many issues bubbling beneath the surface. A little more on that later.

I spent today at the St Louis Science Centre. The morning was great, particularly the meeting with the Associate Director, Carol Valenta. It does seem that there is a change underway in the American science museum world, a recognition that they cannot rely on things that spin and flashing lights and “edutainment”. They need to focus on real science and also look to the future, not just represent the past. I found this in my meetings in Washington and North Carolina and St Louis said it too. I was interested to talk to them about the involvement of industry. The centre is a source of information for people from a source they rely on to be objective. So how can that square with being paid by comapnies. For the moment, the answer lies in the American civil society – the support for exhibits comes from companies’ philanthropic dollars, not their marketing dollars. But the former is shrinking, so what will happen then? They have also had to adapt to the fact that one-third of their visitors are not accompanied by children. Does that show a thirst among some of American society, at least, in finding out the facts behind the scientific myths?

Well, that was all fascinating enough, but then I had lunch with Diane Miller, who heads up the Taylor Centre, an outreach programme of the science centre. They work with kids from neighbourhoods dominated by ‘under-represented groups’, which translates here as African-American kids. The teenagers come to the centre on Sundays and they work on various projects – building greenhouses and growing plants for old people’s homes, working in schools, designing communal spaces in community groups to make them more open for minority groups. These are kids from areas with huge levels of drop-outs and yet there are kids there who don’t just graduate from high school but go on to college. Almost the best bit was discussing with her some of the issues relating to race relations in the US and in St Louis in particular. It’s astonishing to think that it can still be the case where people can’t buy a house or send their child to a private school because of their skin colour. But I”ve heard both of those stories today, from different people. This all links into the panel we had this afternoon on healthcare, with Rob, Rachel, Bolormaa and Sam. Because public health, primary care and particularly prevention seem to me to be part of a cycle of education and access that have a lot to do with money here. Apparently in poor (i.e black) areas of St Louis there are no proper supermarkets. Couple that with a lack of public transportation and of course families on welfare in those areas end up buying processed foods that are easy to carry and mean they don’t have to go to the supermarket reguarly. And a lack of basic scientific knowledge means that myths build up around how health issues arise that are very difficult to challenge.

Over dinner Bolormaa and I discussed some of these issues, primarily in the context of the delivery of healthcare and the idea of a social contract that prevails in our societies - there are some things that are about more than the individual, and rather about our responsibility to each other within a society. I think that’s maybe at the core of our differences. So, still learning about this place!

North Carolina Day 2

April 9, 2008

An early-ish start this morning to head out to the Research Triangle Park proper to visit the North Carolina Biotechnology Centre (where we will be tomorrow again). Unfortunately Iyad’s rental car’s battery was completely flat, so we had to cab it out, which was a shaky beginning! The meeting itself was very interesting though, especially on the way that North Carolina has identified the need to look at the chain of biotechnology not just elements. You’re never going to build a biotech industry by neglecting research, your research won’t mean much without tech transfer and none of it means anything without looking at the public implications. All ideas to build on in discussions there tomorrow.

I had a bit of a break during the middle of the day, which I used for errands (sending literature back to EF house in Philadelphia, going for lunch at the Raleigh institution that is Big Ed’s!). Then we all headed out to SAS, the analytical and software company. We touched on some interesting issues, but I did wish I could have had time with their Chief Technology Officer on my own to talk over some of the issues relating to tech transfer (and the Bayh-Dole act, which you’re all very familiar with now!). But it was one of those occasions where you don’t want to hog the conversation (yes I sometimes think about that!). The best bit of the whole day though as visiting a working quarry on the way back – we stopped in and their sales manager showed us around. It was amazing! Not least from a geology perspective – you don’t often get to see huge rock faces like that. and certainly not going so deep. Fantastic (as David would say).

Dinner with the alumni fellows from North Carolina tonight. Some really nice people, and some interesting conversations had. Now it’s time to pack those suitcases again, as we’re shipping out tomorrow and heading to St Louis. Just call me Judy Garland! And think of poor Gil who will be subjected to my driving!