The Irish Research Council was created in 2012 by the
Department of Education and Skills by merging two existing research councils: the Irish Research Council for Science Engineering and Technology (IRCSET) and Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences () (IRCHSS). The Social Science Research Council (Ireland) was part of the Royal Irish Academy and it functioned from 1995 until 1999. In 1999 the SSRC was dissolved in order to create the Irish Research Council for Humanities and Social Sciences (IRCHSS). The IRCHSS later merged in 2012 with the Irish Research Council for Science Engineering and Technology (IRCSET) to form the Irish Research Council. Prior to this, other higher education funding institutions existed in Ireland. • 1995: Establishment of the Social Science Research Council (Ireland) (SSRC) of the
Royal Irish Academy, a forerunner of the IRCHSS. The SSRC provided scholarship and fellowships for research in Social Sciences up until the creation of the IRCHSS. • 1999: Minister for Education and Science, Mr
Micheál Martin, TD, formally establishes the IRCHSS in December. This followed the recommendations set in a report by Dr Maurice J. Bric. • 2001: The IRCSET was established in June by the Minister for Education and Science. Launched the basic research grant scheme, jointly with
Enterprise Ireland in December. • 2002: The IRCSET launched the Embark scholarships for
postgraduate research. • 2003: The IRCSET launched the Empower postdoctoral fellowship awards. • 2004 The IRCSET launched the Enterprise Partnership Scheme, which co-funded postgraduate scholarships and postdoctoral fellowships along with small and large companies. • 2006: The IRCSET launched the Graduate Research Education Programme exploratory grant awards, adopted a new approach to PhD funding to add to the Embark scholarships. • 2007: Launched the call for funding for the Graduate Research Education Programme. • 2012: The IRCSET and the IRCHSS merge to form the Irish Research Council, Director Dr Eucharia Meehan appointed. • 2016: The Irish Research Council awarded projects worth in excess of €100 million. It directly funded 298 postdoctoral fellows and 1,067 postgraduate students. In November 2023,
Simon Harris, the
Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science, announced the intention of the government to establish
Taighde Éireann as a successor body to both
Science Foundation Ireland and the Irish Research Council. This was implemented by the Research and Innovation Act 2024.
Patrick O'Donovan, Harris's successor as minister, set 1 August as the establishment date of Taighde Éireann. ==References==