“…But the integration of sex/gender perspectives suffers a paradoxical mandate: on the one hand, it is essentially a critique of gaps in the knowledge production by pointing out the limitations of believing in gender-neutral scientific truth , while demanding the inclusion of sex/gender and avoidance of (erroneous) gender-binary assumptions, and at the same time taking intersectionality into account as well. So, if we agree upon the necessity to add such complex understandings of sex and gender to produce better science, we require nothing less than the ‘transformation of epistemological frames’ in research and policy advice (Sauer 2018, 441). For providing sound and effective policy advice, our citizens depend on such open-minded, innovative research, and on the research communities at the UBA and beyond that are able to deliver state-of-the-art knowledge.…”