Participate in the Next Generation for Biosecurity Competition

By jtm @ 2022-03-10T14:49 (+61)

This week, the 6th iteration of the Next Generation for Biosecurity Competition was announced by the Nuclear Threat Initiative, Next Generation for Global Health Security Network, the iGEM Foundation, SynBio Africa, and the Global Health Security Network.

Along with Harshu Musunuri and Jonas Sandbrink, I participated in the 2020 version of the competition (and won!) , and I would highly recommend students and early-career folks focused on biosecurity to participate this year. 

I think our team spent about 45-65 hours writing up the paper between the three of us (including meetings), over the course of 2-4 weeks and I think that’s fairly representative of what you could expect.

The competition

From the announcement:

“The competition aims to cultivate the next generation of global leaders in biosecurity. We seek innovative and creative papers focused on verification measures for the Biological Weapons Convention (BWC).

Winners of the Next Generation for Biosecurity Competition will receive:

(...)

ELIGIBILITY

(...)

DEADLINE

Submission deadline is April 18, 2022 at 11:59PM ET. Submissions should be sent to nti-bio@nti.org. Winners will be announced in June 2022.

NEED A TEAM?

Participants can find teammates by:

Some good reasons for participating

I was reluctant about participating in the competition during a busy summer but am really happy that I did.[1] Below are some of the things that I got out of it that I think you could, too.

I should note that people's experience probably depends a lot on how well they get along with their team.

Some benefits may be especially large if you manage to win the competition, though I expect all of the above to be fairly independent of winning – though, to some extent, with the exception of #2.

Go forth and make the world biosecure!

Good luck to anyone participating this year! Feel free to post any questions in the comments and I'll try my best to answer them.

Also, feel free to leave a comment if you're looking for teammates!

Note: I currently work as a consultant with the Nuclear Threat Initiative, one of the organisers of this competition. I write this in a personal capacity. I thank Gabby Essix for input on this post.

 

  1. ^

    Thanks to Jonas Sandbrink for talking me into it!


James Lin @ 2022-03-10T15:37 (+6)

This sounds super exciting! Despite working in biosecurity field-building, for some reason running paper-writing competitions never occurred to me, but I think this seems like a promising direction to point biosecurity-keen students towards.

You mentioned that writing the paper took 40-60 hours, but what about the time commitment for reading papers / talking with experts?

jtm @ 2022-03-11T09:29 (+2)

Hi James!

Good question. That estimate was for our entire process of producing the paper, including any relevant research. We wrote on a topic that somewhat overlapped with areas we already knew a bit about, so I can imagine there'd be extra hours if you write on something you're less familiar with.  Also, I generally expect that the time investment might vary a lot between groups, so I wouldn't put too much weight on my rough estimate. Cheers!

jtm @ 2022-03-22T09:26 (+1)

In case you (or anyone else) is interested, there'll be a panel discussion with a few biosecurity experts this Thursday: 2022 Next Generation for Biosecurity Competition: How can modern science help develop effective verification protocols to strengthen the Biological Weapons Convention? A Conversation with the Experts