While the government investigates unidentified phenomena, academic researchers face stigma
Despite increasing government acknowledgment and investigation into Unidentified Anomalous Phenomena (UAP), academic research in the United States remains significantly hindered by stigma and a lack of institutional support. While the Pentagon's All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office (AARO) is handling over 2,000 reports dating back to 1945, and governments in Japan, France, Brazil, and Canada have formal UAP programs, major U.S. universities lack dedicated research centers, funding, and doctoral programs for UAP inquiry. Faculty express interest and curiosity in UAP but fear career repercussions, including funding loss, ridicule, and negative tenure reviews, with a 2023 survey indicating nearly 28% would vote against a colleague's tenure for UAP research. This academic reluctance contrasts with international efforts, such as Germany's University of Würzburg officially recognizing UAP research and Sweden's universities actively publishing peer-reviewed UAP studies, highlighting a critical gap in U.S. academic engagement that requires funding, methodological standards, and institutional affirmation to foster a legitimate scientific discipline.
Although government attention to UAPs has grown, U.S. academia faces stigma and inadequate institutional support as the Pentagon’s All-domain Anomaly Resolution Office reviews over 2,000 reports dating back to 1945, while Japan, France, … #aliens #germany #japan #ovni #ranked #uap #ufo #ufosky #usa