Scientists

Scientists

For science to make the news in a rigorous and attractive way, good sources are needed. Because access to scientific knowledge is a citizen's right.

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Help science make headlines with rigour and context. We’ll ask you for feedback on current events in your field and you can participate in the briefings we’ll organise. Need to prepare for an interview? Use our resources on science communication.

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Cómo trabajamos

We’re on the lookout for controversial information about science and we will contact you for your analysis in your area. Do you want to be part of our sources? Contact us. We will not pass your contact details on to anyone else. You can find out more about how we work here.   

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Reaction to the new Spanish covid-19 prevention and control strategy

The Public Health Commission has updated the Covid-19 Surveillance and Control Strategy, which will come into force on Monday 28 March. From then on, as long as indicators of healthcare utilisation are at low risk, diagnostic testing will focus on vulnerable individuals and settings and severe cases. Surveillance will focus on these groups.

The key points to the forthcoming IPCC report on climate change mitigation, which will tell whether the Paris Agreement is working

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is meeting between 21 March and 1 April to approve the study on measures to curb the climate crisis, on which more than 200 authors from all over the world have been working for three years. The text will be published on 4 April.

From pandemics to volcanoes or when good crisis communication saves lives

Journalists are not the only generators of information content, but they certainly are the ones who are trained to select, channel, and amplify truthful information and combat misinformation. In crisis situations, where scientific evidence guides decision-making, science communication to society takes on an almost strategic role. Here are some key points for scientists talking to journalists at such times.

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Is my research result newsworthy and can it be the subject of a press release?

Every day, all over the world, hundreds of press releases about scientific studies travel from the communication offices of research centres to the computers of journalists. Their mission is to attract the attention of their recipients and eventually get their stories published by the media. Here are some tips on this process.

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Why journalism and popularisation are not the same thing

More and more scientists are becoming aware of the need to improve the relationship between the public and science, and of the fact that contributing to improving the scientific culture of society is for the good of all of us. The popularisation of science is experiencing a magnificent golden age. It is, however, a different activity from science journalism. Here we explain why. 

 

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Europe's scientific cooperation with Russia halts in response to the war

The European spacecraft that was to investigate whether Mars harboured life in the past will no longer fly. The satellite that was to study dark energy in the universe is delayed and a robotic telescope at the Teide Observatory stops working. Europe used to spend tens of millions of euros on scientific collaboration with Russia. But no more.