Should External Funding Constraints Dictate What Problems We Dedicate Our Lives To Solving?
By Nnaemeka Emmanuel Nnadi @ 2025-08-31T00:24 (+6)
I’ve been thinking a lot about how much external funding availability should influence the problems we choose to dedicate our lives and careers to.
On the one hand, it seems natural to “follow the money.” If funders are supporting work in a particular area, then moving in that direction can help ensure sustainability, visibility, and a pathway to impact. On the other hand, some of the most neglected but urgent problems risk remaining neglected precisely because they don’t align with current funding priorities.
This raises a hard question: Should the availability of funds—or lack thereof—determine a person’s career trajectory?
To make this concrete: imagine someone working in an area that has the potential for extraordinary impact, such as developing new therapeutics for antimicrobial resistance. They believe their work could save lives and transform global health, but they repeatedly face the challenge of little to no funding, since the cause is not a current “priority area” for major funders.
- If they pivot toward a more fundable area, they may secure resources and recognition but risk leaving a vital neglected cause underexplored.
- If they persist, they may struggle to sustain their career, but could potentially generate outsized impact in the long run if they succeed.
So I’d love to hear the community’s thoughts:
- Should external funding constraints dictate what problems we pursue in our careers?
- How do we balance the need to survive and build a career with the desire to work on the world’s most neglected but impactful problems?
- In the absence of funding, what’s your best advice to someone who still wants to make the highest possible impact in their field?
I’m curious about perspectives both from those who have successfully navigated this tension and from those who have struggled with it.
Adrien Nana @ 2025-09-27T00:16 (+1)
Very interesting questions. All your questions are the result of your passion to bring change in your environment. But this goes beyong Sciences: To help you to figure out what I try to explain, these are also some useful questions to meditate upon:
- Why should all African research funding not internal?
- Who defined your subject as world’s most neglected problem?
- Is it "world’s most neglected problems "according to western world or is it the reality of all countries?
Shoul we need to survive while building a career with the desire to solve a local pertinent problem so call "world’s most neglected problems"?
This will help you understand that your questions is rooted on a fundamental problem of African base structure of governance and politic. Until there is a deep change of paradigm in our African leaders perspective and vision, research career will be mostly be influence by external.
The biggest challenge and the first step in maintaining your dream is therefore to raise or develop local funding that will support your research areas and subsequently your professional career.