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ARC News
- $31M for hands-on research grants. (18/11/08)
- The Linkage Infrastructure, Equipment and Facilities Funding Outcomes for 2009 are now available. (18/11/08)
- Australian Laureate Fellowships GAMS Application Form for funding commencing in 2009 is now available. (11/11/08)
- ARC Future Fellowships Frequently Asked Questions document has been updated. (5/11/08)
- ARC Annual Report 2007–08 now available (22/10/08)
- The announcement kit for the ARC Major Grant Announcements for funding commencing 2009 is now online. (15/10/08)
- Funding Outcomes for funding commencing in 2009 (15/10/08)
Key Publications
Welcome to the Australian Research Council website
The ARC is a statutory authority within the Australian Government's Innovation, Industry, Science and Research (IISR) portfolio. Its mission is to deliver policy and programs that advance Australian research and innovation globally and benefit the community.
In seeking to achieve its mission, the ARC provides advice to the Government on research matters and manages the National Competitive Grants Program (NCGP), a significant component of Australia's investment in research and development.
Through the NCGP, the ARC supports the highest-quality fundamental and applied research and research training through national competition across all disciplines, with the exception of clinical medicine and dentistry.
Major Grant Announcements for funding commencing 2009
The Minister for Innovation, Industry, Science and Research, Senator Kim Carr, today announced funding of over $363 million for research that will produce significant national benefit.
The ARC Major Grant Announcements media kit is now available.Outcomes: Results of research in the real world
Sometimes people forget that research is important, but just about everything in our modern world is the result of knowledge gained through research.
For example, in our every day lives, many of us access the Internet, take medicine, turn on a heater or air conditioner, exercise at the gym, travel by various modes of transport, eat foods grown with the aid of fertilisers or manufactured by machines, wear synthetic or a mixture of natural and synthetic fibres, and use toothpaste to brush our teeth.
We do all these things and more without necessarily asking ourselves why or how we are able to do so.
Thinking 'bigger picture', we can travel into space, modify genes, predict the weather, get a heart transplant, explore shipwrecks at the bottom of the ocean, date fossils and artefacts that have been around for thousands of years, create environmentally safe alternatives to pollutants, and use DNA to solve crimes.
And the reason we can do all of these things, of course, is research.
Outcomes: Results of research in the real world has been produced by the ARC in partnership with Palamedia Ltd as a companion publication to the inaugural ARC Graeme Clark Research Outcomes Forum to showcase examples of Australian research that are making a difference in our lives right now.
15/10/08
