Germany’s Max Planck Society has recorded a dramatic threefold increase in applications from the United States, reflecting growing unease among American scientists over the future of research under President Donald Trump’s administration. The spring 2025 recruitment round saw 81 applications from early-career women scientists in the US, compared to just 25 in the previous year as reported by Reuters.
“Applications from other parts of the world have remained constant. The surge is distinctly American,” confirmed Max Planck president Patrick Cramer.
Top US institutions at the center of the exodus
Almost half of the new US applicants are affiliated with just five institutions—Harvard University, Stanford University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the University of California.
The Max Planck Society, a German state-funded research network with 84 institutes, a €2 billion annual budget, and 39 Nobel laureates, is now considering hiring 20 candidates, up from the originally planned 12, if the quality threshold is met.
Research crackdown and the Harvard controversy
The migration of talent follows the Trump administration’s revocation of Harvard University’s certification to host international students, a move currently blocked by a federal court. The policy mandates that foreign students either transfer to compliant institutions or lose their legal status in the US. The White House has indicated intentions to broaden the restrictions to additional universities.
These developments have sent shockwaves through the global academic community, especially as prominent scholars, such as Yale historian Timothy Snyder, have already resigned in protest and relocated to institutions abroad.
Europe seeks to absorb displaced talent
Cramer, recently returned from discussions in the US, revealed to Reuters that international research leaders are increasingly focused on safeguarding academic talent. “Our main concern is that a whole generation of scientists may be lost to global science,” he said. “Europe must become a safe haven and help bridge the years ahead.”
The German government is preparing a national initiative, tentatively titled the “1,000 Brains” programme, to expand research infrastructure in anticipation of an influx of international academics fleeing US policy disruptions.
Germany’s call to action: A wounded scientific benchmark
Petra Olschowski, the research minister of Baden-Württemberg—home to four of Germany’s 11 top-tier universities—warned that the global research ecosystem could suffer if American institutions continue to lose credibility. He said in an interaction with Reuters,
“Harvard and other major US universities are our benchmarks,” she said. “That very standard is now under threat.”
Global science at a crossroads
Despite European enthusiasm to accommodate affected scholars, budgetary constraints remain a concern. Still, research organisations across the continent are aligning their efforts to counterbalance the instability in the US.
As Trump’s education policies grow increasingly nationalistic, Europe is positioning itself not just as an academic alternative, but as a sanctuary for scientific inquiry in peril .
“Applications from other parts of the world have remained constant. The surge is distinctly American,” confirmed Max Planck president Patrick Cramer.
Top US institutions at the center of the exodus
Almost half of the new US applicants are affiliated with just five institutions—Harvard University, Stanford University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), the National Institutes of Health (NIH), and the University of California.
The Max Planck Society, a German state-funded research network with 84 institutes, a €2 billion annual budget, and 39 Nobel laureates, is now considering hiring 20 candidates, up from the originally planned 12, if the quality threshold is met.
Research crackdown and the Harvard controversy
The migration of talent follows the Trump administration’s revocation of Harvard University’s certification to host international students, a move currently blocked by a federal court. The policy mandates that foreign students either transfer to compliant institutions or lose their legal status in the US. The White House has indicated intentions to broaden the restrictions to additional universities.
These developments have sent shockwaves through the global academic community, especially as prominent scholars, such as Yale historian Timothy Snyder, have already resigned in protest and relocated to institutions abroad.
Europe seeks to absorb displaced talent
Cramer, recently returned from discussions in the US, revealed to Reuters that international research leaders are increasingly focused on safeguarding academic talent. “Our main concern is that a whole generation of scientists may be lost to global science,” he said. “Europe must become a safe haven and help bridge the years ahead.”
The German government is preparing a national initiative, tentatively titled the “1,000 Brains” programme, to expand research infrastructure in anticipation of an influx of international academics fleeing US policy disruptions.
Germany’s call to action: A wounded scientific benchmark
Petra Olschowski, the research minister of Baden-Württemberg—home to four of Germany’s 11 top-tier universities—warned that the global research ecosystem could suffer if American institutions continue to lose credibility. He said in an interaction with Reuters,
“Harvard and other major US universities are our benchmarks,” she said. “That very standard is now under threat.”
Global science at a crossroads
Despite European enthusiasm to accommodate affected scholars, budgetary constraints remain a concern. Still, research organisations across the continent are aligning their efforts to counterbalance the instability in the US.
As Trump’s education policies grow increasingly nationalistic, Europe is positioning itself not just as an academic alternative, but as a sanctuary for scientific inquiry in peril .
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