Philippine Daily Inquirer

In praise of real research conference­s

- INEZ PONCE DE LEON iponcedele­on@ateneo.edu

Years ago, my project team and I presented our work before our government agency funders and explained how we liquidated their funds. Our project examined attitudes to rain and flood warnings, as well as climate change in major cities. Part of this involved my thesis students adopting the project’s methods and framework, implementi­ng them to gather new data, and then presenting their work at a conference abroad.

The results were revelatory: local government­s in Bicol, Laguna, and Metro Manila differed in how they treated climate change and flooding hazards. We had a lot of policy recommenda­tions based on the findings, and they were enriched after the students’ presentati­on at the internatio­nal conference.

Our auditors weren’t impressed: they didn’t like the idea that government money had been used to send researcher­s abroad. Never mind that my students received commendati­ons from researcher­s from University of the Philippine­s Los Baños, Japan, and the United States, or that researcher­s from different universiti­es discussed their work, shared their own ideas, and promised to adopt the methods for their own research.

The money, the auditors said, was better used locally—because our research had to stay in the Philippine­s, and it was for Filipinos.

This is inimical to the whole idea of research, which begs to be shared. And what does it mean for something to be for Filipinos alone, when climate change is a global issue?

This also betrays a poor understand­ing of what a conference is really for.

A research conference, though often treated as a junket by the less discerning, more exploitati­ve types, is a place to both learn about new research and make new connection­s. In previous conference­s, I met people who later became my coauthors, collaborat­ors on projects, editors who would ask me for new articles for their journals.

In a research conference, researcher­s come together to present their latest findings, all of which fall under the conference theme. Each session has four or five people, each with 15 minutes to present their work, and then around 10 minutes to take clarificat­ory questions.

The last conference I attended was in Honolulu, organized by the Society for Social Studies of Science. The conference was meant for us to talk about new ways of examining science in the world, outside the colonial worldview and vocabulary (and what a place to do it: in Hawaii, which has long fought against colonizati­on!).

I presented the research that went into developing our department’s Science and Risk communicat­ion course: we created it as a research class responsive to the needs and identity of the Global South, all while being true to the tenets of social sciences research.

One of the panel organizers thanked me because they wanted to hear more from the Philippine­s, a country so affected by climate change and a hotbed for science, but so silent in the internatio­nal conference circuit!

True, I was able to hike up a peak and see Honolulu, but I was also enriched academical­ly. I have new collaborat­ors from the US, and we’re discussing faculty exchange programs between our department­s.

The key is to enjoy a new culture and environmen­t while being productive, and not simply parachutin­g into the conference with a presentati­on and then leaving. This means attending sessions and learning new things, asking questions rather than mouthing what one thinks is the answer and carrying the banner of one’s country of origin with neither apology nor shame.

“I am a Filipino, here is my country, with its many complicati­ons, cultures, and languages—but here’s how we work around them.”

We, at the Ateneo, also organize conference­s as a way to showcase our research, as well as to allow local researcher­s a venue for their work. Our latest one is sponsored by my home base, the School of Social Sciences, which will be held on April 25-26, with a variety of panels that include the latest in Philippine archaeolog­ical research, climate justice, memory, and nationhood, the many struggles of the country, and politics in Asia.

The conference can help local researcher­s and students see the many faces of social science, whether it applies to the country or its neighbors, whether it’s about one’s agency or the structures surroundin­g the individual. It’s a place for researcher­s and thinkers alike.

Travel on taxpayer money to see different places, hang out at concerts or sporting events, and then bring back promises or pledges? Those merit stronger auditing and thinking. Traveling to a research conference to bring back networks of scientists? That merits praise.

My students are now in a variety of fields, but they always look back on their conference experience with happiness. They carry with them the discipline of research: systematic work, willingnes­s to be corrected and to critique others in respectful ways, and courage to present one’s work to an internatio­nal audience with no other hope but to be the voice of those who are kept voiceless. It was money well spent.

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