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Energy transition scientist Chen Peipei leaves Cambridge to build her own lab in Hong Kong
HK🏛️ Politics8 hr. ago

Energy transition scientist Chen Peipei leaves Cambridge to build her own lab in Hong Kong

Energy transition scientist Chen Peipei has left her position at the University of Cambridge to take up a presidential assistant professorship at the City University of Hong Kong. She cites the lack of research funding and support for young faculty in Britain as reasons for her move. In Hong Kong, she gains access to research budgets and PhD student recruitment quotas needed to establish her own laboratory. The article highlights broader challenges facing British academia, including reduced research funding and staff cuts, with a survey showing many universities have scaled back research activities and implemented hiring freezes.

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1 reports

South China Morning Post logoSouth China Morning PostIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 758 hr. ago
Energy transition scientist Chen Peipei leaves Cambridge to build her own lab in Hong Kong

Energy transition scientist Chen Peipei has left her position at the University of Cambridge to take up a presidential assistant professorship at the City University of Hong Kong. She cites the lack of research funding and support for young faculty in Britain as reasons for her move. In Hong Kong, she gains access to research budgets and PhD student recruitment quotas needed to establish her own laboratory. The article highlights broader challenges facing British academia, including reduced research funding and staff cuts, with a survey showing many universities have scaled back research activities and implemented hiring freezes.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a balanced view of the challenges faced by researchers in Britain and the opportunities available in Hong Kong. It does not overtly favor one region or ideology over another, focusing instead on the structural issues within academia. The framing remains neutral, discussing bothf

Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 75): Factuality is high as the article accurately reports Chen Peipei's move and provides context about research funding challenges in British academia. It cites a survey by Universities UK and mentions specific universities affected by budget cuts. Objectivity is slightly lower due to the article's focu

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