Abstract

Is it appropriate for scientists to engage in political advocacy? Some political critics of scientists argue that scientists have become partisan political actors with self-serving financial agendas. However, most scientists strongly reject this view. While social scientists have explored the effects of science politicization on public trust in science, little empirical work directly examines the drivers of scientists’ interest in and willingness to engage in political advocacy. Using a natural experiment involving the U.S. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (NSF-GRF), we causally estimate for the first time whether scientists who have received federal science funding are more likely to engage in both science-related and non-science-related political behaviors. Comparing otherwise similar individuals who received or did not receive NSF support, we find that scientists’ preferences for political advocacy are not shaped by receiving government benefits. Government funding did not impact scientists’ support of the 2017 March for Science nor did it shape the likelihood that scientists donated to either Republican or Democratic political groups. Our results offer empirical evidence that scientists’ political behaviors are not motivated by self-serving financial agendas. They also highlight the limited capacity of even generous government support programs to increase civic participation by their beneficiaries.

Highlights

  • Other scientists defend colleagues’ political engagement [4]

  • Contrary to partisan critiques of scientists’ political behavior, our study finds no robust evidence that scientists’ motivations to engage in science-related and non-science-related political advocacy are a function of individual-level government benefits provision

  • Our empirical strategy leverages a natural experiment that uses the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (NSF-GRF) to examine whether receiving government benefits shapes scientists’ willingness to engage in political advocacy

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Summary

Introduction

Other scientists defend colleagues’ political engagement [4]. These scientists believe passive information provision is insufficient in a world where objective facts are the subject of politica. Scientists’ political behaviors are not driven by individual-level government benefits debate [5, 6]. We use a natural experiment to test whether a major government subsidy for science education, the National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship (NSF-GRF) Program, increased civic engagement by scientists.

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