domingo, 14 de junho de 2026

Harvard University Falls from First Place for the First Time in More Than a Decade

 

For the first time in more than a decade, Harvard University is no longer the world’s leading university for high-quality research output, according to one influential index. In the Nature Index 2026 Research Leaders rankings, first place among universities now belongs to Zhejiang University. https://www.scmp.com/news/china/science/article/3356931/chinas-zhejiang-university-tops-harvard-nature-index-world-academic-rankings

This is not a routine reshuffling of a league table. It is another sign that the symbolic geography of global science is being redrawn. Harvard remains an extraordinary institution — that is not in question. The real question is what a ranking like this actually measures. Pure scientific excellence? Or scale, state strategy, institutional concentration, funding power and the capacity to transform thousands of researchers into visible, countable, indexed output?

This is not the first warning. In an earlier post, The Decline of the Great American Research University, I argued that China’s rise should be taken seriously without being romanticised. It reflects strategic investment, institutional scale and aggressive talent attraction, but also a system still burdened by research-integrity problems and real limits to deep, original creativity. That is exactly why Harvard’s fall is so revealing: not because China has solved the problem of scientific excellence, but because the West has spent too long pretending that inherited prestige could substitute for strategy.

Scientific leadership is not inherited like an aristocratic title; it is built — won by those who invest, plan, protect talent, concentrate resources, and create systems capable of producing knowledge at scale. For decades the West admired its reflection in rankings it largely designed, assuming the world would stay permanently cast as supplier, imitator, or junior partner from a permanently subordinate position. That comfort is now becoming expensive. 

The myth that weakened this week is not that the West still does great science — of course it does — but that it would always do the best science simply because it once did. That is not confidence; it is intellectual laziness dressed as civilisation, marketed as historical inevitability. Real decline begins there: defending superiority with memories, slogans, and institutional nostalgia while others build their future with laboratories, researchers, funding, and policy. Prestige can perfume decay with ceremony for a while. It cannot stop the rot.

Declaration of competing interests - I am an editorial board member of the Journal of Zhejiang University-SCIENCE A Applied Physics & Engineering 

PS — Mario Draghi’s report on European competitiveness now reads less like a policy document and more like an early autopsy warning written before the funeral. https://19-pacheco-torgal-19.blogspot.com/2024/12/where-is-courage-ercs-maria-leptin.html

quinta-feira, 11 de junho de 2026

A TU Munich Study Shows German Smart Cities Are Smarter on Paper Than in Practice

 

A recent study in npj Urban Sustainability analysed 61 smart city strategy documents from major German cities against 30 criteria for sustainable-digital transformation, sorting them into front-runners, middle range, and laggards. The result should make urban technocrats rather mercilessly uncomfortable: everyone has learned to say “sustainability”; far fewer have learned to build it into strategyhttps://www.nature.com/articles/s42949-026-00418-w

What separates the front-runners is not the digital vocabulary, the dashboards, or the ritual invocation of sensors that consultants bill by the hour. It is governance: alignment with supra-regional policy frameworks, citizen participation that is institutionalized rather than decorative, and impact measurement built into the strategy itself — so that when promises fail, the failure has an address before the next press release, not just another invoice in disguise.

The most revealing finding lies in the regression analysis. Population size? Not significant. Economic development? Not significant. Political composition of the city council? Not significant. The only factor positively associated with an integrated strategy was participation in the smart city funding programme — external money arriving with conditions and reporting obligations. Cities did not do better because they were big, rich or governed by the “right” party. They did better when someone upstream forced them to think before they spent.

Yes, the study scores documents, not outcomes. That makes the result worse, not better: these are the cities’ self-portraits, written with every incentive to flatter, and many still could not fake coherence. A city does not become smart by collecting data, any more than a university becomes excellent by collecting rankings. It becomes smarter when digitalization is forced to serve social justice, ecological responsibility and democratic accountability. Strip that away, and the “smart city” is the most expensive euphemism urban marketing invented.

P.S. - But perhaps Germany is not the scandal here. Perhaps Germany is the warning. If this happens with a national Smart City Charter, federal funding and a reputation for administrative seriousness, imagine what the same audit — if anyone dared to run it — would find where "smart city" is just a password for EU money — and no one checks the work.

quarta-feira, 10 de junho de 2026

A Universidade que premeia quem sempre se cala e castiga quem ainda ousa pensar


Depois de dois posts anteriores com títulos tão pouco equívocos como um publicado no dia 25 de Maio, A quem interessa fabricar uma Academia que ladra baixinho e nunca morde?, que se tornou o 5.º mais visualizado nos últimos trinta dias, ou um outro, publicado no dia 29 de Maio, que conseguiu tornar-se muito rapidamente o 2.º mais visualizado no mesmo período, sobre “A extraordinária falta de vergonha de uma conhecida universidade pública”, é quase reconfortante porém nada surpreendente ler, na primeira semana de Junho, um artigo da revista Sábado intitulado O medo na academia, o espelho do país.

O autor escreve sobre uma academia asfixiante, onde a crítica deixou de ser entendida como dever intelectual e passou a ser tratada como delito disciplinar informal. Um espaço onde quem ousa discordar arrisca isolamento, o silêncio administrativo, a exclusão de redes, o bloqueio de oportunidades e outras formas higiénicas de punição institucional, discreta, eficaz, cobarde, rotineira, silenciosa e exemplar que raramente deixam impressões digitais.

Mas o ponto mais inquietante suscitado pelo artigo é outro: este medo não fica fechado dentro das universidades. Transborda para a sociedade. Quando os académicos se calam por receio de represálias, os cidadãos percebem que até aqueles que deveriam pensar livremente aprenderam a falar em voz baixa. E quando a inteligência pública se ajoelha diante do medo disciplinador, a confiança nas instituições não pode senão apodrecer.

Não admira por isso que numa lista dos países cujos cidadãos mais confiam nas instituições públicas, Portugal nem sequer consegue aparecer entre os 20 primeiros colocados. Afinal, que confiança merecem as instituições públicas se até a academia que devia vigiá-las e expor os seus abusos se domesticou ao ponto de transformar a autocensura em método, o silêncio em carreira e a cobardia em prudência institucional, respeitável e conveniente?

PS - É curioso, ou talvez apenas deprimente, ver como o tema não envelhece. Há cinco anos questionei: "Como pode a Universidade interpelar a sociedade se os próprios professores têm medo de falar?". Cinco anos depois, a pergunta morreu de excesso de evidência. O medo deixou de ser sintoma para ser regime. A liberdade académica continua lá, claro — embalsamada com todas as honras, nos regulamentos, nos discursos solenes, e nas cerimónias oficiais. Existe onde não incomoda. Onde seria necessária, faz-se cadáver.