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My advisor and I have decided to present some resent research results in a well-known conference, selected based on our discussions. Now the aforementioned joint paper has been accepted and the clock's ticking to consider the payment of the registration. We have never talked about the financial aspect of this process. The cost associated with registration and transportation is quite high, but my advisor has not yet told me anything about any plan to take that into account and there are just a couple of days left until the payment deadline. I am wondering if he assumes that I myself must pay the fee, but I cannot afford the whole cost . If he expects me to pay all of that registration fee, I have to get over finalizing the registration and the conference, at all. In my perspective, the 50-50 code of ethics sounds fair enough.

Is it ethical to talk about such a thing with the advisor?

If so, how would I supposed to explain and handle the case?

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    We have never talked about the financial aspect of this process - no time like the present.
    – ff524
    Commented Nov 19, 2015 at 16:08
  • @ff524: So, how such aspects would be handled, automatically?! How is the fee supposed to be paid?
    – user41207
    Commented Nov 19, 2015 at 16:14
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    @Matinking: Supposed to? Preferrably, the university fully pays for it as a part of the travel expenses for the business trip to the conference. But maybe some universities do not do this. Commented Nov 19, 2015 at 16:18
  • My point was that you should talk to your advisor about it as soon as possible. How else would you find out how financial aspects of publication are handled in your department, but by asking about it? "No time like the present" means something should be done as soon as possible.
    – ff524
    Commented Nov 19, 2015 at 16:49
  • I'm voting to close because your question is unclear as it stands. I can understand your intention well enough to edit into clear, standard English except for your expression "get over". What do you mean by that? Commented Nov 21, 2015 at 10:11

1 Answer 1

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Talk to your advisor, now. Dealing with funding and finances are a significant part of academic life; they aren't some shameful taboo thing.

Most academics don't pay for professional travel, including conferences, out of their own pockets; often funds are available from your institution, or from any grants that may be funding your project, or from the conference itself. It's entirely reasonable to ask your advisor about funding sources that might be able to pay the cost for you attending this conference; you should also research possible funding sources yourself.

If funding isn't available, or can't cover the full cost, it's up to you to decide whether you want to spend your own money to go. If you decide that you can't, that's okay; you just won't go. I don't think people would see this as stinginess on your part, but rather a misfortune that no other funds were available.

However, by the same token, if your advisor tells you that he doesn't have any funds available to pay, you shouldn't expect him to dip into his own pocket.

Ideas like your "50/50 split" don't usually come up, unless there are multiple outside funding sources that could pay, and the question is how to apportion the costs between them.

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    just to supplement the middle paragraph, another potential source of funding is a travel grant from the conference itself.
    – Phil
    Commented Nov 19, 2015 at 17:38
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    Strongly agree. Unless the costs for attending are quite low is very rare (in Math in the US) for any attendee or presenter or etc. to pay even a significant part of their expenses. Your area or country may have different customs, but this is normal for us, and you should find out. Commented Nov 19, 2015 at 19:50

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