The University of Rhode Island President Marc B. Parlange, in an editorial published in Science on Thursday, cautioned that research universities, central engines of almost all modern innovation, are facing unprecedented challenges. He warned that what appears to be an attack on higher education is, in truth, a threat to national and global progress.
“Research universities are behind the breakthroughs that shape daily lives,” Parlange asserts. “Undermining them doesn’t just jeopardize higher education, it threatens national and global strength.”
Parlange highlights how these institutions play an outsized role in cultural, economic, and scientific advancement. Advanced medicine, clean energy technologies, artificial intelligence, climate science, and even global security trace their roots to breakthroughs incubated on university campuses. Universities not only train future leaders but also serve as hubs for entrepreneurship, attracting venture capital and fostering startups.
Yet, funding pressures—from both state and federal budgets—have increasingly eroded support for such foundational research. Public skepticism and political attacks on academic freedom and institutional values have only intensified the strain. “Years of disinvestment … growing public distrust and attacks on academic freedom are testing our institutions,” Parlange recently told faculty members at URI during a town hall meeting .
The consequences of diminishing support for universities stretch far beyond graduation rates. Declining federal research investment risks slowing innovation at a time when global competition is intensifying. Without momentum from university-led research, new treatments, technologies, and policy solutions could be delayed—or lost. Moreover, the international stature of American science and global partnerships may suffer.
Parlange warns that reduced research capacity could weaken U.S. competitiveness at home—weakening job growth and economic vitality—and erode influence abroad. As emerging economies invest heavily in their educational systems, allowing U.S. research institutions to fall behind could have dire strategic consequences.
In his editorial, Parlange calls for strong bipartisan support to restore research funding, strengthen protections for academic freedom, and reaffirm the value of higher education in national policy. He urges university leaders, lawmakers, industry, and the public to recognize the existential stakes of eroding the nation’s research infrastructure.
“We need investment in people and ideas now,” he argues. “Without it, we risk losing the breakthroughs that have defined American leadership for decades.”
The piece has already triggered responses in Washington and the academic world. A group of senators, led by a bipartisan coalition, announced they will soon introduce legislation aimed at reversing recent budget cuts and reinforcing protections for academic inquiry. Meanwhile, university presidents from around the country are organizing open letters and campus-based action campaigns echoing Parlange’s concerns.
For institutions like URI, whose president authored the editorial, the editorial marks a turning point—aligning campus voices with national discourse. As Parlange writes, “This is not just about universities. It’s about the foundations of progress and prosperity for future generations.”

