http://thejakartaglobe.com/national/association-formed-to-unite-domestic-overseas-researchers/317901

July 13, 2009 
Anita Rachman

Association Formed to Unite Domestic, Overseas Researchers
A forum to unite Indonesian researchers at home and overseas in a bid to 
support domestic research activities has been established under the name of the 
International Indonesian Research Association. 

Fasli Jalal, director general of higher education at the Ministry of National 
Education, said on Monday the association had been formally established in The 
Hague last week. 

The declaration was made to improve cooperation among Indonesian researchers, 
university students, lecturers and Indonesians who are currently holding 
important positions in prominent companies overseas. 

"This is one way to bring together all the country's academics and researchers 
working overseas," Fasli said. 

"We will soon follow this up with the release of an online portal that will be 
able to keep their individual data online." 

He said the new association would function as a forum to achieve synergy 
between researchers inside and outside the country. Fasli added that hundreds 
of Indonesian researchers worked overseas - about 200 at the moment - with many 
of them having secured patents. 

Fasli said the government hoped that through well-maintained relationships, 
Indonesian researchers overseas could still contribute to national development. 

"For example, contributions can be made through the portal," he said. "With a 
portal, Indonesian universities can look for research partners or invite 
researchers as visiting lecturers to Indonesia." 

Fasli said the ministry supported the efforts of researchers to increase their 
knowledge and experience in foreign countries. 

He said that researchers who studied or worked overseas were "fighting" for 
Indonesia by passing on their experiences when they return home. 

However, he said the government needed to tap the potential of these people by 
setting a clear agenda for them. 

"Some people might not feel like returning because of the poor research culture 
in the country or because they are less appreciated," Fasli said. "But we will 
fix this, we are now putting some new programs together." 

He said that domestic universities would prepare a program for returning 
lecturers and researchers. 

Fasli said that six months prior to returning from overseas studies, the 
researchers would be asked to draft a plan with their institutions, such as 
whether they would teach certain subjects or be responsible for research 
projects. If governmental funding was available, he said, a special research 
financing scheme would be created. 

Nurul Taufiqu Rochman, the chairman of the Indonesian Society of Nanotechnology 
Studies and a researcher at the Indonesian Institute of Sciences, who spent 14 
years in Japan, said it was not easy to finally decide to pack up and return 
home. He said that when he was preparing to return from Japan, he was aware of 
the gap between that country and Indonesia in terms of research work. 

"I was shocked when I first got back home," Nurul said. "There were few 
facilities and little appreciation for our work." 

Indonesian researchers, he said, needed to be more creative and to see 
obstacles as challenges.




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