Beyond a Year of Sanctions in Science
M. Albrecht, A. Ali, M. Barone, S. Brentjes, M. Bona, J. Ellis, A., Glazov, H. Jung, M. Mangano, G. Neuneck, N. Raicevic, J. Scheffran, M. Spiro,, P. van Mechelen, J. Vigen

TL;DR
This paper discusses the impact of political sanctions on scientific collaboration, especially in the context of the Ukraine war, highlighting challenges to international scientific exchange and the importance of maintaining peace through science.
Contribution
It provides an analysis of recent sanctions in science related to the Ukraine conflict and documents a panel discussion on their implications for international scientific cooperation.
Findings
Sanctions have disrupted international scientific collaborations.
Some institutions have banned joint publications and conference participation.
The discussion emphasizes the importance of scientific exchange for peace.
Abstract
While sanctions in political and economic areas are now part of the standard repertoire of Western countries (not always endorsed by UN mandates), sanctions in science and culture in general are new. Historically, fundamental research as conducted at international research centers such as CERN has long been seen as a driver for peace, and the Science4Peace idea has been celebrated for decades. However, much changed with the war against Ukraine, and most Western science organizations put scientific cooperation with Russia and Belarus on hold immediately after the start of the war in 2022. In addition, common publications and participation in conferences were banned by some institutions, going against the ideal of free scientific exchange and communication. These and other points were the topics of an international virtual panel discussion organized by the Science4Peace Forum together…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic Sanctions and International Relations · Nuclear Issues and Defense · Security, Politics, and Digital Transformation
