• A
  • A
  • A
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • ABC
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
  • А
Regular version of the site

ERC Grants: Options and Opportunities

On September 18th 2012, a delegation from the European Research Council (ERC) visited the Higher School of Economics. ERC representatives spoke about how Russian researchers can access the grant programme of the Council.

The European Research Council is a pan-European organization which was founded in 2006 with the aim of developing research within the EU. Its seven-year-budget (2007-2013) was about 7.5 billion Euros, over a billion Euros annually. The ERC is administrated by an independent Scientific Council of 22 people who define the organization’s grant strategy and operational management, while the processing and evaluating of grant applications is carried out by the ERC Executive Agency.

While the funds for the programme are assigned by the European Union, researchers from any country can receive grants, providing that he or she works on the project at an institution located in Europe and spends at least half the term of the grant period there.

In order to further widen the geography of grant holders and to attract more talented researchers to Europe, the ERC has launched the ERC Goes Global project. Delegations from the Council have already visited research centers in Canada, Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Japan and South Korea, and they are planning to give presentations in the USA, China, India and Australia. In September 2012 the delegation is visiting Russia, speaking at leading universities and research organizations in Moscow, Saint Petersburg and Novosibirsk.

The presentation of the ERC and its grant project at the Higher School of Economics was given by

Pavel Exner, Donald  Dingwell and Leonid Gokhberg
Pavel Exner, Donald Dingwell and Leonid Gokhberg
, ERC Secretary General, Pavel Exner, Vice-President of the ERC Scientific Council, and Sergey Zilitinkevich, professor of meteorology from Finland and ERC grant holder.

Over the first five years of the ERC’s work (2007-2011), about 3000 researchers from 56 countries have received grants, and these recipients have worked in over 500 European research institutions. Grant holders from past years include 4 Nobel Prize laureates and 3 Field Medal laureates.

The ERC’s grant scheme can be divided into three main parts. Starting Grants are aimed at researchers who have recently (2 to 7 years ago) received their PhD. In this case, the size of the grant can be as much as 2 million Euros and is given for 5 years. Consolidator Grants are for experienced researchers (7 to 12 years since their PhD) and are up to 2.75 million Euros for a term of 5 years. The third key group of grants is Advanced Grants. Researchers who have been involved in outstanding scientific achievements over the last 10 years can apply for these grants. In this case, academic degrees or age are not important. These grants can be up to 3.5 million Euros for a period of 5 years.

The competition for ERC grants is high. In average, over the last years, grant support has been received by 10.6% of Starting Grants applicants and 14.3% of Advanced Grants applicants. And in 2011 the number of applications for these grants was 4080 and 2284 respectively. Most of the grant holders are from EU countries. Among non-European grant recipients the majority of researchers are from the USA, and Russians share second place with Australians and Canadians. Over recent years, 17 Russians have become ERC grant holders, and three of them specialize in social and human sciences, such as economics, history and cultural studies.

Oleg Seregin, HSE News Service

Photos by Nikita Benzoruk

See also:

‘We Live in a World with Imperfect Information. Network Theory Can Help’

Mariya Teteryatnikova, Associate Professor at the Department of Theoretical Economics at the Faculty of Economic Sciences (FES), talks about building an academic career in economics, European students and teaching in Vienna, the role of network theory in different contexts, international recruiting and more.

HSE Faculty of Mathematics Receives Mega-Grant from the Russian Government

43 projects from all over the country were awarded grants in Russia’s Eighth Mega-Grant Competition. HSE University’s application in support of the creation of a world-class laboratory in mathematics was among the winners. The academic supervisor of the new laboratory will be Professor Michael Shapiro of Michigan State University (USA).

From Application to Grant: How HSE University Prepares Future Researchers

In the beginning of 2020, six student research projects received funding from the HSE Centre for Student Academic Development (CSAD). The projects had been selected in a competition in which participants presented their research plans and the expected outcomes. At a reporting online seminar in July, team leaders summarized their achievements over the six months and spoke about how their work has been impacted by the pandemic.

HSE University Researchers Receive Fifteen Grants from the Russian Science Foundation

The Russian Science Foundation has announced the winners of four 2020 competitions. Some of the winners are from HSE University. They have received grants of 12 to 24 million roubles, for a term of two to four years.

Two HSE Projects Win ‘Mega-Grant’ Competition

A ‘Mega-Grant’ Competition for ground-breaking research projects funded by the Russian Ministry of Science and Higher Education was held for the seventh time, and this year’s competition winners included two projects that will be based at HSE University campuses. One research group will study dynamic systems at HSE – Nizhny Novgorod, and a new social neurobiology laboratory will begin work at HSE University in Moscow.

Forty HSE Doctoral Students Win Russian Foundation for Basic Research Competition

The Russian Foundation for Basic Research announced the results of the first project competition for doctoral students studying in Russian universities and research organizations. Among the winners are forty doctoral students from HSE University, whose projects will receive support over the next two years.

HSE Researchers Receive Grants in Russian Science Foundation Competitions

The Russian Science Foundation announced the results of its 2019 competitions for support from the Presidential Research Project Programme. One competition was for grants in support of research initiatives by early career researchers, and another was in support of research conducted by research groups headed by early career scholars.

Alexander Milkus, Laboratory Head at HSE, to Chair a Public Council at the Ministry of Education

A public council for the independent evaluation of the quality of education conditions has been created at the Ministry of Education of the Russian Federation. Alexander Milkus, Head of the HSE Laboratory for Educational and Youth Journalism, has been unanimously elected as its chair.

HSE Establishes Semyonov Award for Early-career International Researchers

Semyonov Award is designed as an internship at the HSE Laboratory for University Development and support to early-career scholars for participation in joint research.

European Research Council Provides Public Funding for Research & Innovation

On Wednesday, 16 May 2018, the President of the European Research Council (ERC), Professor Jean-Pierre Bourguignon, gave an open lecture at HSE on ‘Public funding for research & innovation: The experience of the European Research Council’. The lecture was organized by HSE together with the Delegation of the European Union to the Russian Federation.