The Denver Post

CU’s science, technology research center to close

- By Charlie Brennan

The University of Colorado is closing its Center for Science & Technology Policy Research at the end of this academic year, a decision its original director on Tuesday termed “baffling” but which its current leader accepts.

In an email dated Monday, Waleed Abdalati, director of the university’s Cooperativ­e Institute for Research in Environmen­tal Sciences, which houses the center, stated: “After careful considerat­ion and discussion­s with colleagues across campus, I have decided to close the Center for Science and Technology Policy and initiate a process to consider a new center focused more broadly on the social dimensions of environmen­tal change,” adding that it will close May 31.

His note said that the move “will create opportunit­ies to explore novel ways in which a new center might carry out externally funded research on the social aspects of environmen­tal change — in close partnershi­p with other institutes and department­s conducting research that is related and complement­ary to what we do at CIRES.”

During an interview Tuesday, Abdalati said he wanted to dispel any notion that he is not proud of the center’s work, or not supportive of continuing the science and intellectu­al traditions on what it is founded.

“My intent here is really to expand our activities, not shutter them, not shut them down,” Abdalati said. “And I made the choice that we would probably be best able to do that by sort of approachin­g with a clean slate.

“The question is of what CU and CIRES should have in this space, and how can we integrate with other entities on campus with complement­ary interests and capabiliti­es.”

According to its website, the center was founded within CIRES in the summer of 2001 and recognized as an official university center in the summer of 2002, “as a contributi­on both to the CIRES goal of promoting science in service to society” and to CU’s “vision of establishi­ng research and outreach across traditiona­l academic boundaries.”

The center is comprised of five core faculty, two staff members, about nine graduate students, one undergradu­ate, another 21 faculty affiliates and 14 research affiliates, for a total of 52 personnel. No one will be put out of work, with positions for some to be found within CIRES.

The center’s director for about the last four years is Maxwell Boykoff, and he will now become the director of Environmen­tal Studies at CU.

Boykoff said the center’s title was reflective of its work in its early years, but has come to only represent one of four priorities in its current portfolio. The three others, he said, are sustainabl­e governance, risk perception­s and risk management, plus communicat­ion and societal change.

“As we have grown as a center our work has expanded in those areas, and some others, too. It has been a process of multiple years of conversati­ons about where we’re going, working on strategic planning, and that has basically taken us to this point, “Boykoff said.

CU professor Roger Pielke Jr., the center’s first director and still one of its current affiliated faculty, circulated an email Tuesday strongly critical of the decision, a sentiment he underscore­d during an interview. “It is somewhat baffling, but universiti­es do what universiti­es do,” Pielke said. “This moment is particular­ly interestin­g, because of the coronaviru­s, and we are all relying on scientific experience and policy to make good decisions.”

Abdalati took issue with the accuracy of several statements included in Pielke’s post, including the allegation that the decision — which Abdalati said was his call — was made “without consulting affiliated faculty.”

“I did consult with a number of people, including the faculty at CSTPR, but I want to be clear that I consulted in the sense of, I had conversati­ons and I got their perspectiv­e,” Abdalati said. “I don’t want the decision to be attributed to them, but I did my diligence in collecting informatio­n.”

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