Title 42 › Chapter CHAPTER 163— - RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT, COMPETITION, AND INNOVATION › Subchapter SUBCHAPTER III— - NATIONAL SCIENCE FOUNDATION FOR THE FUTURE › Part Part G— - Directorate for Technology, Innovation, and Partnerships › § 19107
The Director must pick and keep up to 5 U.S. societal, national, and geostrategic challenges and up to 10 key technology focus areas, and review them every year with the Assistant Director, the Board, and an interagency working group. The first set of challenges are: United States national security; United States manufacturing and industrial productivity; United States workforce development and skills gaps; climate change and environmental sustainability; and inequitable access to education, opportunity, or other services. The first set of technology focus areas are: artificial intelligence and related advances; high performance computing and semiconductors; quantum information science and technology; robotics, automation, and advanced manufacturing; natural and human-caused disaster prevention or mitigation; advanced communications and immersive technology; biotechnology, medical tech, genomics, and synthetic biology; data storage, data management, distributed ledger technologies, and cybersecurity (including biometrics); advanced energy and industrial efficiency technologies such as batteries and advanced nuclear technologies for electric generation; and advanced materials science, including composites, 2D materials, and other next‑generation materials. When updating the lists, the Director must study national and global technology trends and think about how the chosen technologies affect the listed challenges. The Director may make limited investments outside the lists. Each year the Director must review the tech focus areas with the interagency group and consult the Director of National Intelligence and the FBI, consider input from industry and relevant reports (including reports under sections 6615 and 6615b and defense/intelligence trend reports), and may add or remove areas within the limits above. After the annual review the Director must send Congress a report that explains the tech focus areas and why they were chosen, the challenges and why they were chosen, the Foundation’s role, how any changes affect academic research, and the Directorate’s activities and private‑sector partnerships. The National Science Foundation must work with the Office of Management and Budget to include in their annual budget requests a detailed description of planned activities and how the funding will not duplicate other federal programs. Not later than 5 years after August 9, 2022, the Director must hire the National Academies to review the focus areas and challenges, including assessments of the selection process; relevance to the Directorate’s purposes; whether federal investment created new domestic manufacturing and jobs; any new emerging areas; investments in education and workforce development; and the balance of leadership among the United States, allied and partner countries, and the People’s Republic of China.
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The Public Health and Welfare — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
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Citation
42 U.S.C. § 19107
Title 42 — The Public Health and Welfare
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73