Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP)
The Human Frontier Science Program is a program of funding for frontier research in the life sciences. It is implemented by the International Human Frontier Science Program Organization (HFSPO) with its office in Strasbourg. Founded in 1989, HFSP is now 30 years old. The Program has undergone several changes over the years but still retains its original mission to promote excellence in basic research at the international level.
HFSP's Mission
In the thirty years since its creation, the Human Frontier Science Program (HFSP) has established its unique role as a funding organization at the frontiers of the modern life sciences. In this mission it has been extremely successful. While considerable efforts are undertaken around the world by organizations employing both public and private funds, often of an order of magnitude greater than those available to HFSP, the Program has established itself as a unique niche supporting frontier science.
Against this background, the strategic aims of HFSP are to:
- Support innovative, cutting edge research at the frontiers of the life sciences;
- Encourage high risk research;
- Promote international collaboration in the spirit of science without borders;
- Enable financial and intellectual independence for early career researchers;
- Raise the profile of HFSP and its work through an intelligent communication strategy;
- Foster inclusiveness by increasing participation by female scientists and
- Sustain the means of achieving its distinctive mission in the face of the rising cost of research.
In line with these goals, international research grants as well as postdoctoral fellowships are and remain the pillars of its portfolio. Rigorous peer review by international committees will remain its hallmark.
Due to its one-of-a-kind position, HFSP can observe, and stimulate changes in fundamental biological research worldwide. Thus, it provides its member organizations with a window through which they can assess their national programs.
It provides a forum for discussion about best practices as well as a common test bed for new initiatives, many of which have been adopted by the national agencies. It can also highlight communication problems between groups of scientists. As its awardees are highly mobile, the Human Frontier Science Program is aware of global movements of talent, and through its prestigious awards HFSP will help in the recognition of new centers of excellence as they arise worldwide.
The frontier of the life sciences is a rapidly moving target and thus resists clear identification. Nevertheless, the broader issues can be readily defined. Biology has become quantitative and systemic due to major contributions from mathematics, physics, chemistry, the computer sciences and methodological developments in DNA-sequencing, imaging and light microscopy. These developments now permit meaningful research at higher levels of complexity in bridging the existing gap between molecular biology and ecology or biodiversity. No doubt, others, like the influence of climate change on biological systems, will be added in the future.
In recent years, HFSP has continuously reviewed its instruments and processes in order to measure its impact on grantees and host institutions. Independent reviews have invariably and consistently underlined the high quality of the program. Nevertheless, procedures and instruments have to be adapted while the life sciences progress in a process which can only be described as revolutionary.
