Abstract

In the current research landscape, there are increasing demands for research to be innovative and cutting-edge. At the same time, concerns are voiced that as a consequence of neoliberal regimes of research governance, innovative research becomes impeded. In this paper, I suggest that to gain a better understanding of these dynamics, it is indispensable to scrutinise current demands for innovativeness as a distinct way of ascribing worth to research. Drawing on interviews and focus groups produced in a close collaboration with three research groups from the crop and soil sciences, I develop the notion of a project-innovation regime of valuation that can be traced in the sphere of research. In this evaluative framework, it is considered valuable to constantly re-invent oneself and take ‘first steps’ instead of ‘just’ following up on previous findings. Subsequently, I describe how these demands for innovativeness relate to and often clash with other regimes of valuation that matter for researchers’ practices. I show that valuations of innovativeness are in many ways bound to those of productivity and competitiveness, but that these two regimes are nevertheless sometimes in tension with each other, creating a complicated double bind for researchers. Moreover, I highlight that also the project-innovation regime as such is not always in line with what researchers considered as a valuable progress of knowledge, especially because it entails a de-valuation of certain kinds of long-term epistemic agendas. I show that prevailing pushes for innovativeness seem to be based on a rather short-sighted temporal imaginary of scientific progress that is hardly grounded in the complex realities of research practices, and that they can reshape epistemic practices in potentially problematic ways.

Highlights

  • In the current research landscape there is, along with the discourse on “excellence” and “frontier research”, a growing demand for research to be innovative, pioneering, or cutting-edge

  • While innovativeness and originality are central criteria in the peer review of publications (Siler and Strang 2017), and even associated with the moral qualities of a researcher herself (Guetzkow et al 2016; Lamont 2010), positive valuations of being innovative are institutionally embedded in the funding landscape through an increase in funding schemes, such as the European Research Council (ERC), that are explicitly oriented towards supporting “unconventional, innovative approaches and scientific inventions” (ERC 2019: 8) and research that is “ground-breaking” or “high-risk” (Heinze 2008; Laudel and Gläser 2014; Philipps and Weißenborn 2019)

  • I describe how valuations of innovativeness are related to, and sometimes in tension with another evaluative regime that was very important to my interlocutors, namely the progress of knowledge, and I relate this to conflictual temporal imaginations embedded in these two regimes

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Summary

Introduction

In the current research landscape there is, along with the discourse on “excellence” and “frontier research” (see e.g. Flink and Peter 2018), a growing demand for research to be innovative, pioneering, or cutting-edge. Scholars have suggested that as project frameworks and competitive performance metrics create structural ties between epistemic uncertainties and personal risks (Sigl 2016), researchers are deterred from taking daring epistemic decisions where publishable output might not be guaranteed within a given timespan—thereby impeding “risky intellectual breakthroughs” (Fochler, Felt, and Müller 2016: 198; Müller and de Rijcke 2017). In this body of work, “innovative research” or “scientific innovation” are often evoked as desirable goals, and as the red flag that is waved to highlight the problematic consequences of the dominant evaluative logics of the current research

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