Crowdfunding: A Threat or Opportunity for University Research Funding?

R. Baskerville, C. Cordery
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However it is unclear whether the development a crowdfunding market will complement, supplement or crowd-out other funding. In addition, the marketability of certain projects may crowd-out less popular projects and further reduce the viability of necessary research.The research question addressed in this study is: does crowd-funding represent a threat or opportunity to the continuation of more traditional research funding sources for the University sector? This paper reviews recent research in the evolution of crowdfunding, legislation governing crowdfunding, and then examines in detail the University crowdfunding sites which are used to generate funds for staff research. This paper describes a few successful University projects which have raised research funds for staff on such sites, and also sought to review both the disadvantages and advantages of this funding method. Advantages include the potential to break the stranglehold on research funding from hyper-bureaucratic organisations. But the downside may be (as conjectured in this paper) that the purported democratization of research is both a dumbing-down and homogenization, a beauty pageant, where those more attractive and popular will be 'winners', and those who cannot position themselves to curry popular favour are losers in this game. The appeal of such a market-led mechanism for university research funding may, in time, lead away from Government funding for the authentic assessment of (at times) apparently unpopular but genuine projects where outcomes are highly technical, may involve a large amount of intellectual property rights, and their funding depends on the open minds of highly experienced and informed decision makers, not those at the other end of a computer mouse. The research question addressed in this study is: does crowd-funding represent a threat or opportunity to the continuation of more traditional research funding sources for the University sector, responding to calls that academics could collect and research crowdfunding, and also increase interest in educating our students as to its evolution and characteristics. The use by Universities to raise material amounts of research funding by such means is scare. This is a surprising result, given how long crowdfunding has 'been around'. Crowdfunding has the potential to tap into previously inaccessible funds, as the characteristics of many donors are those of a generation responding to social media and an internet-based philosophy to banking activity and funding decisions. This study concludes that the Ivory Towers are alive and well as far as research funding is concerned for all by a handful of tertiaries. But even as we write-up this study, we have no doubt that some universities will be actively packaging research into discrete parcels to commence marketing to alumni and other supporters in this manner. It remains unclear at this point whether the development of a crowdfunding market in the tertiary sector will complement, supplement or crowd-out other more traditional patterns of allocation of scarce funding, and relationships with very large funding bodies such as the UK Economic and Social Research Council and the EU European Research Council. Neither of these bodies carry any reference on their sites to research on this activity, appearing on the funding landscape as further two Ivory Towers. We hope that our other studies currently underway will shed light on such evolution and growth of this distinctive funding sources for core university research.","PeriodicalId":140847,"journal":{"name":"ERPN: Corporate Law (Other) (Sub-Topic)","volume":"25 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2014-06-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ERPN: Corporate Law (Other) (Sub-Topic)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2458638","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5

Abstract

Universities, like many other organisations, have an insatiable need for funding. It appears that student fees, government funding, alumni support and endowments are insufficient to fund the expectations that universities will undertake myriad research projects, knowledge dissemination and staff and student development. Rather than depending on multi-millionaire donors or company commissions, universities may seek to package research into discrete parcels to market to enthusiastic supporters. Thus they will require a funding platform which draws on a multitude of smaller investors/donors. Klaes (2012) notes that crowdfunding, a vehicle through which this can be achieved is a disruptive technology of financial intermediation. However it is unclear whether the development a crowdfunding market will complement, supplement or crowd-out other funding. In addition, the marketability of certain projects may crowd-out less popular projects and further reduce the viability of necessary research.The research question addressed in this study is: does crowd-funding represent a threat or opportunity to the continuation of more traditional research funding sources for the University sector? This paper reviews recent research in the evolution of crowdfunding, legislation governing crowdfunding, and then examines in detail the University crowdfunding sites which are used to generate funds for staff research. This paper describes a few successful University projects which have raised research funds for staff on such sites, and also sought to review both the disadvantages and advantages of this funding method. Advantages include the potential to break the stranglehold on research funding from hyper-bureaucratic organisations. But the downside may be (as conjectured in this paper) that the purported democratization of research is both a dumbing-down and homogenization, a beauty pageant, where those more attractive and popular will be 'winners', and those who cannot position themselves to curry popular favour are losers in this game. The appeal of such a market-led mechanism for university research funding may, in time, lead away from Government funding for the authentic assessment of (at times) apparently unpopular but genuine projects where outcomes are highly technical, may involve a large amount of intellectual property rights, and their funding depends on the open minds of highly experienced and informed decision makers, not those at the other end of a computer mouse. The research question addressed in this study is: does crowd-funding represent a threat or opportunity to the continuation of more traditional research funding sources for the University sector, responding to calls that academics could collect and research crowdfunding, and also increase interest in educating our students as to its evolution and characteristics. The use by Universities to raise material amounts of research funding by such means is scare. This is a surprising result, given how long crowdfunding has 'been around'. Crowdfunding has the potential to tap into previously inaccessible funds, as the characteristics of many donors are those of a generation responding to social media and an internet-based philosophy to banking activity and funding decisions. This study concludes that the Ivory Towers are alive and well as far as research funding is concerned for all by a handful of tertiaries. But even as we write-up this study, we have no doubt that some universities will be actively packaging research into discrete parcels to commence marketing to alumni and other supporters in this manner. It remains unclear at this point whether the development of a crowdfunding market in the tertiary sector will complement, supplement or crowd-out other more traditional patterns of allocation of scarce funding, and relationships with very large funding bodies such as the UK Economic and Social Research Council and the EU European Research Council. Neither of these bodies carry any reference on their sites to research on this activity, appearing on the funding landscape as further two Ivory Towers. We hope that our other studies currently underway will shed light on such evolution and growth of this distinctive funding sources for core university research.
众筹:大学科研经费的威胁还是机遇?
大学和许多其他组织一样,对资金有着永不满足的需求。学费、政府资助、校友支持和捐赠似乎不足以满足人们对大学承担无数研究项目、知识传播、员工和学生发展的期望。大学可能会寻求将研究打包成独立的包裹,向热情的支持者推销,而不是依赖千万富翁捐赠者或公司佣金。因此,他们将需要一个融资平台,吸引众多较小的投资者/捐助者。Klaes(2012)指出,众筹是实现这一目标的一种手段,是金融中介的颠覆性技术。然而,目前尚不清楚众筹市场的发展是否会补充、补充或排挤其他融资。此外,某些项目的适销性可能会挤掉不太受欢迎的项目,并进一步降低必要研究的可行性。本研究解决的研究问题是:众筹对大学部门的传统研究资金来源的延续是一种威胁还是机会?本文回顾了最近关于众筹演变的研究,众筹立法,然后详细检查了用于为员工研究提供资金的大学众筹网站。本文描述了一些成功的大学项目,这些项目为这些网站的工作人员筹集了研究资金,并试图审查这种资助方法的缺点和优点。其优势包括有可能打破超级官僚机构对研究经费的束缚。但不利的一面可能是(正如本文所推测的那样),所谓的研究民主化既是一种简化,也是一种同质化,就像一场选美比赛,那些更有吸引力、更受欢迎的人将成为“赢家”,而那些无法定位自己以讨好大众的人则是这场比赛中的输家。这种以市场为导向的大学研究经费机制的吸引力,可能会及时导致政府不再资助那些(有时)表面上不受欢迎但真正的项目,这些项目的结果是高度技术性的,可能涉及大量的知识产权,它们的资助取决于经验丰富、见多识广的决策者的开放思想,而不是那些坐在电脑鼠标另一端的人。本研究解决的研究问题是:众筹对大学部门的传统研究资金来源的延续是一种威胁还是机遇,回应了学术界可以收集和研究众筹的呼吁,并增加了教育学生了解其演变和特征的兴趣。大学通过这种方式筹集大量的研究经费是可怕的。考虑到众筹“存在”的时间,这是一个令人惊讶的结果。众筹有潜力利用以前无法获得的资金,因为许多捐助者的特点是,他们是对社交媒体和基于互联网的理念对银行活动和融资决策做出反应的一代人。这项研究的结论是,就少数高等院校的研究经费而言,象牙塔仍然存在。但即使在我们撰写这项研究时,我们也毫不怀疑,一些大学将积极地将研究打包,以这种方式开始向校友和其他支持者推销。目前尚不清楚第三产业的众筹市场的发展是否会补充、补充或挤出其他更传统的稀缺资金分配模式,以及与英国经济和社会研究理事会、欧盟欧洲研究理事会等大型资助机构的关系。这两个机构都没有在他们的网站上提供任何关于这一活动研究的参考资料,在资金领域出现了另外两座象牙塔。我们希望我们目前正在进行的其他研究能够揭示这种独特的大学研究资金来源的演变和增长。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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