-------- Original Message --------
Subject: National Science Foundation SBE 2020 Announcement
Date: Wed, 11 Aug 2010 10:17:33 -0400
From: Lee Herring Herring@asanet.org
To: Lee Herring Herring@asanet.org
Dear ASA Section Officer and Other ASA Leadership,
Below is a message from the head of the National Science Foundation's
Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences Directorate that may be of
significant interest. Please feel free to distribute further including to
your ASA Section's listserv list.
Lee
Lee Herring
Director of Public Affairs & Public Information
American Sociological Association
1430 K St., NW, #600
Washington, DC 20005
202-383-9005 x-320, 202-527-7877 (fax)
www.asanet.orgoutbind://47/www.asanet.org
From: Gutmann, Myron P.
Sent: Wednesday, August 11, 2010 9:08 AM
To: SBE ALL
Subject: SBE 2020 Announcement
Dear Colleagues,
Yesterday we made the next step on our efforts to ask for the scientific
community's advice in shaping our priorities for the future. The letter
opens with this observation:
At the end of the first decade of the 21st century, the social,
behavioral, and economic sciences face extraordinary opportunities to
address next-generation research challenges. The landscape is vast and
complex, stretching across temporal and spatial dimensions and multiple
levels of analysis -- from studying the human brain to implications of
decision making in a dynamic and fragmented yet interconnected world. As
we look forward 10 or even 20 years, the Directorate for the Social,
Behavioral, and Economic Sciences of the National Science Foundation
(NSF/SBE) seeks to frame innovative research for the year 2020 and beyond
that enhances fundamental knowledge and benefits society in many ways.
This request is part of a process that will help NSF/SBE make plans to
support future research. Other activities will include a report by the
Directorate's Advisory Committee about the grand challenges facing the SBE
sciences over the next decade and recommendations from the Directorate's
staff. The insights resulting from this process are threefold: They will
inform the substance of future research, the capacities to pursue that
research, and the infrastructure to enable investigations that will be
increasingly interdisciplinary and international and will involve multiple
perspectives and intellectual frameworks, differing scales and contexts,
and diverse approaches and methodologies.
I am writing to request your help in disseminating our request for advice
to the largest audience possible. Could you send this out to whatever
individuals or groups you think would be useful to ask for contributions?
Because the deadline is short (September 30, 2010), we are especially eager
for your assistance.
The DCL, which, I've also attached to this email, can be found at this
URL:
http://www.nsf.gov/publications/pub_summ.jsp?ods_key=nsf10069
Individuals and groups who wish to suggest ideas to SBE should do so at
this web site, following the instructions there:
http://www.nsf.gov/sbe/sbe_2020/
Thank you for your help in getting the word out. Please don't hesitate to
let me know if you have questions.
Best regards,
Myron
Myron P. Gutmann
Assistant Director, Social, Behavioral and Economic Sciences
National Science Foundation
e-mail: mgutmann@nsf.gov
Phone: 703-292-8700