This document discusses challenges of inequality in science, technology, and innovation policy at the national, European, and international levels. It describes how the goal of social cohesion, which aims to reduce inequalities and spread benefits more evenly, relates to but differs from the dominant competitiveness agenda. While human resource, innovation, research, and regulatory policies at the national level and frameworks at European and international levels have begun incorporating social cohesion objectives, there remains significant room to expand the scope and strengthen the tools to further this emerging agenda.
Characterization Of Oedipus Rex - Presentation Slides - By Rehan ButtRehan Butt
Oedipus Rex by Sophocles tells the story of Oedipus, ruler of Thebes. An oracle predicts that Oedipus will kill his father and marry his mother. As an infant, Oedipus is given to a shepherd and adopted by Polybus and Merope. As an adult, Oedipus leaves Corinth after learning he is not their biological son. On the road to Thebes, he kills a man at a crossroads who is actually his biological father, King Laius. Oedipus solves the riddle of the Sphinx and becomes ruler of Thebes, marrying the widowed queen Jocasta, who is actually his mother. When a plague
Sophocles was an ancient Greek tragedian who wrote over 120 plays, though only seven have survived in their entirety. His most famous works are the Theban plays, which include Oedipus Rex and Antigone. Sophocles had a significant influence on later playwrights through his development of tragedy and the concept of catharsis. He competed in dramatic festivals in Athens and helped establish the genres of tragedy, comedy, history, and satire in plays.
(Psychoanalytic Theory) Literature - By Nisa Kae Anne and Fatimah Nur Khairunnisa
The document provides background information on psychoanalytic criticism and summarizes key concepts from Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung's theories. It then provides two examples analyzed through a psychoanalytic lens: the short story "The Yellow Wallpaper" and the poem "Because I could not stop for Death". Both works are examined in terms of Freudian concepts like the unconscious mind, repression, and death drive. Jung's idea of archetypes is also applied to interpret symbolic elements in "The Yellow Wallpaper".
Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) was an influential English poet and author. He is considered the father of English literature and was one of the earliest English poets to influence the development of the English language. Some of his most notable works include The Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Criseyde, and The Parliament of Fowls. He brought a new realism to English poetry by depicting realistic characters and themes from everyday life. The document provides biographical details about Chaucer and discusses his major works and his significant contributions to early English literature.
Dante Alighieri was an Italian poet best known for his epic poem "The Divine Comedy." The poem is an allegorical journey through Hell, Purgatory and Heaven. While not a work of literary criticism, the poem contains social/political commentary and explores moral/theological themes through symbolism and allegory. Dante helped establish Italian as a literary language and viewed poets as guides to wisdom and truth.
The document summarizes Antony Easthope's critique of the paradigm of literary studies and his argument for a transition to cultural studies. Some key points:
1. Easthope argues the traditional paradigm of literary studies, which separated high/canonical texts from popular culture, has collapsed due to postmodern and post-structuralist challenges to notions of a unified self and text.
2. The paradigm was based on an empiricist view of literary texts as self-contained works expressing an author's imagination, and a method of "modernist reading" that sought to demonstrate a text's unity.
3. Easthope contends cultural studies must consider all signifying practices, not just canonical texts, and study the disc
The document provides a history of literary criticism from ancient times through modern eras. It discusses how classical philosophers like Aristotle and Plato developed early philosophical theories of poetry. It notes key developments in literary criticism during the Renaissance, Enlightenment, and Romantic periods. The document also outlines various theories and approaches that emerged such as structuralism, biographical criticism, new criticism, and postmodern theories.
Quintilian was a prominent Roman rhetorician and educator in the 1st century CE who wrote the influential work "Institutio Oratoria". This extensive 12-book treatise covered various aspects of rhetoric, including literary criticism. Quintilian believed rhetoric and literature were closely related and emphasized studying great works to learn style. He advocated literature that inspired virtue and saw criticism as both analytical and ethical in assessing a work's influence on society. "Institutio Oratoria" had significant influence on rhetorical practices and education for centuries.
Characterization Of Oedipus Rex - Presentation Slides - By Rehan ButtRehan Butt
Oedipus Rex by Sophocles tells the story of Oedipus, ruler of Thebes. An oracle predicts that Oedipus will kill his father and marry his mother. As an infant, Oedipus is given to a shepherd and adopted by Polybus and Merope. As an adult, Oedipus leaves Corinth after learning he is not their biological son. On the road to Thebes, he kills a man at a crossroads who is actually his biological father, King Laius. Oedipus solves the riddle of the Sphinx and becomes ruler of Thebes, marrying the widowed queen Jocasta, who is actually his mother. When a plague
Sophocles was an ancient Greek tragedian who wrote over 120 plays, though only seven have survived in their entirety. His most famous works are the Theban plays, which include Oedipus Rex and Antigone. Sophocles had a significant influence on later playwrights through his development of tragedy and the concept of catharsis. He competed in dramatic festivals in Athens and helped establish the genres of tragedy, comedy, history, and satire in plays.
(Psychoanalytic Theory) Literature - By Nisa Kae Anne and Fatimah Nur Khairunnisa
The document provides background information on psychoanalytic criticism and summarizes key concepts from Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung's theories. It then provides two examples analyzed through a psychoanalytic lens: the short story "The Yellow Wallpaper" and the poem "Because I could not stop for Death". Both works are examined in terms of Freudian concepts like the unconscious mind, repression, and death drive. Jung's idea of archetypes is also applied to interpret symbolic elements in "The Yellow Wallpaper".
Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) was an influential English poet and author. He is considered the father of English literature and was one of the earliest English poets to influence the development of the English language. Some of his most notable works include The Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Criseyde, and The Parliament of Fowls. He brought a new realism to English poetry by depicting realistic characters and themes from everyday life. The document provides biographical details about Chaucer and discusses his major works and his significant contributions to early English literature.
Dante Alighieri was an Italian poet best known for his epic poem "The Divine Comedy." The poem is an allegorical journey through Hell, Purgatory and Heaven. While not a work of literary criticism, the poem contains social/political commentary and explores moral/theological themes through symbolism and allegory. Dante helped establish Italian as a literary language and viewed poets as guides to wisdom and truth.
The document summarizes Antony Easthope's critique of the paradigm of literary studies and his argument for a transition to cultural studies. Some key points:
1. Easthope argues the traditional paradigm of literary studies, which separated high/canonical texts from popular culture, has collapsed due to postmodern and post-structuralist challenges to notions of a unified self and text.
2. The paradigm was based on an empiricist view of literary texts as self-contained works expressing an author's imagination, and a method of "modernist reading" that sought to demonstrate a text's unity.
3. Easthope contends cultural studies must consider all signifying practices, not just canonical texts, and study the disc
The document provides a history of literary criticism from ancient times through modern eras. It discusses how classical philosophers like Aristotle and Plato developed early philosophical theories of poetry. It notes key developments in literary criticism during the Renaissance, Enlightenment, and Romantic periods. The document also outlines various theories and approaches that emerged such as structuralism, biographical criticism, new criticism, and postmodern theories.
Quintilian was a prominent Roman rhetorician and educator in the 1st century CE who wrote the influential work "Institutio Oratoria". This extensive 12-book treatise covered various aspects of rhetoric, including literary criticism. Quintilian believed rhetoric and literature were closely related and emphasized studying great works to learn style. He advocated literature that inspired virtue and saw criticism as both analytical and ethical in assessing a work's influence on society. "Institutio Oratoria" had significant influence on rhetorical practices and education for centuries.
This document discusses the concepts of art for art's sake and art for life's sake. It defines art for art's sake as the belief that art needs no justification beyond its own existence and should serve no political or didactic purpose, but rather exist solely to be enjoyed. It presents quotes from Oscar Wilde and Victor Cousin expressing this view. Art for life's sake is defined as using art as a form of self-expression to convey feelings and emotions. Quotes from Roy Adzak, Carl Andre, and Nicholson Baker are presented that discuss how art impacts and relates to life. The document concludes with a quote from J. David Arnold about how art touches both the mind and life.
The Augustan Age was a period in English literature from roughly 1700 to 1750. It was named after the Roman emperor Augustus due to its similarities to the Golden Age of Latin literature during Augustus' reign. Writers during this period, like Alexander Pope and Samuel Johnson, followed Neoclassical principles and focused on rules, reason, and wit over emotion. They were influenced by Classical models and wrote in polished, refined styles using forms like satire and the heroic couplet. Prose flourished as well through periodical essays and works of social commentary and early novels by writers like Daniel Defoe and Henry Fielding. Overall, Augustan literature was characterized by its emphasis on order, balance, rationality,
John Milton was an English poet and writer during the Renaissance period best known for his epic poems Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes. He was born in 1608 to a middle-class family where his father was a composer and musician. Milton received a thorough education as a student of languages and attended Cambridge University where he studied extensively and earned his BA and MA. Later he worked as a secretary for Oliver Cromwell but lost his vision, and had a difficult time when the monarchy was restored in 1660. His most famous work, Paradise Lost, was published in 1667 as a blank verse epic telling the biblical story of creation and the fall of man.
Everyman is a late 15th century English morality play that uses allegory to confront the universal human fear of death. In the play, Death summons Everyman and tells him he must take a journey. Everyman seeks companions to accompany him, but is abandoned by Fellowship, Kindred, and other allegorical figures. Only Good Deeds agrees to join him. The play focuses on the Christian themes of repentance of sins and preparation for death and judgment. It uses familiar medieval concepts like the seven deadly sins and seven sacraments to convey its message about the importance of spiritual life and salvation.
George Gordon Byron, also known as Lord Byron, was a leading figure in Romanticism. He was educated at Trinity College in Cambridge and became a member of the House of Lords at age 21. Byron was famous for his epic romantic poems as well as his controversial personal life. He helped create the literary figure of the Byronic hero, characterized as an anti-hero who is mysterious, intelligent, arrogant, and self-destructive. Byron spent his life traveling and writing poetry that explored political and personal freedom until his death from fever in Greece at age 36.
1) The story of Oedipus Rex tells the tragic tale of King Oedipus of Thebes who unknowingly fulfills a prophecy that he will kill his father and marry his mother.
2) As an infant, Oedipus is abandoned by his parents to die but is rescued and raised in Corinth unaware of his true parentage.
3) As an adult, he solves the riddle of the Sphinx and becomes king of Thebes by marrying the widowed queen Jocasta, unaware she is actually his mother.
This document provides context and analysis of Henrik Ibsen's play "A Doll's House". It discusses the themes of the play, including human rights versus women's rights, and examines the characters of Nora, Torvald, and their society through a Marxist lens. The document also analyzes whether the play is a tragedy or comedy and how it served as a commentary on the limitations and oppressiveness of middle-class life in Ibsen's time.
Alexander Pope was an 18th century English poet who suffered from poor health and faced barriers to education as a Roman Catholic. Despite these challenges, he was a genius who largely educated himself. He is renowned for his translations of Homer's epics and for original works like An Essay on Criticism and The Rape of the Lock. Pope established himself as one of England's greatest poets and is still widely read today.
The document provides an overview and analysis of Philip Larkin's famous poem "The Whitsun Weddings." It describes the poem's depiction of a train journey on a Saturday in May, during which the narrator observes many wedding parties on board. Through its realistic descriptions and interconnected stanzas resembling train compartments, the poem conveys both the happiness of the weddings and the poet's sense of alienation. It explores themes of life, marriage, decay and the inevitable passing of time through symbols of the stopping train and falling rain. The technical brilliance of Larkin's rhyme scheme and style are also discussed.
Background of literature in italy ( 1971 El Decameron)Paolo Dela Cruz
This document provides a summary of literature in Italy from classical times to the 19th century. It highlights important authors and works from different periods, including Virgil's Aeneid from classical Rome, Dante's Divine Comedy from the 13th century written in the Italian language, and Pinocchio created by Carlo Collodi in the 19th century. The Renaissance saw relatively few advances in Italian literature compared to art and architecture. Overall, the document outlines the long history and rich tradition of literature in Italy over the centuries.
Aristotle's Poetics is considered the earliest surviving work of dramatic theory and first systematic treatise on literary criticism. In it, Aristotle defines poetry as a means of mimesis or imitation through language, rhythm, and harmony. He discusses different types of poetry like tragedy, comedy, and epic poetry. For tragedy specifically, Aristotle says the objects imitated are serious actions, the manner is dramatic rather than narrative, and the medium is verse spoken in dialogue. He provides key terms used in tragedy like hamartia, anagnorisis, peripeteia, and katharsis. Aristotle also outlines critical elements of plot and structure for a successful tragedy, including unity of action, completeness, magnitude, and eliciting
The chorus in Greek tragedies served several functions: commenting on and reacting to the plot, establishing ethical frameworks, adding spectacle through song and dance, and pacing the action. In Oedipus Rex specifically, the chorus represents the citizens of Thebes and gradually comes to understand and pity Oedipus's fate over the course of the play through their odes, guiding the audience's emotions and response. They dramatize the unfolding of events and their own enlightenment.
Here is a brief presentation on the text "A Tale of Tub" by Johnathan Swift. Swift's First work and one of the Influential Satire in 18th Century and today as well.
The Arabian Nights: The Art of StorytellingCraig Carey
The document summarizes the origins and evolution of The Arabian Nights collection of stories. It began as oral folktales from Persia and India that were later written down after moving to Baghdad. The stories were revised, combined, edited and remixed as they were translated to other languages like French and English, becoming more of a European text. A key storytelling technique used in The Arabian Nights is the frame narrative, where an overarching story like that of Shahrazad contains embedded stories she tells to entertain the king and survive each night.
Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) is considered the father of English poetry. He wrote some of the earliest poems in English, including The Canterbury Tales. The document provides biographical details about Chaucer, an overview of his major works, and a description of the characters from The Canterbury Tales that go on a pilgrimage and tell stories. Some of the most prominent characters described are the Knight, the Prioress, the Monk, the Friar, the Pardoner, the Wife of Bath, and the Miller. The document emphasizes Chaucer's important contributions to literature as one of the first authors to use English as a language of poetry and to portray realistic characters and contemporary life.
William Shakespeare was an English playwright, poet and actor born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. He is considered the greatest writer in the English language and the world's greatest dramatist. His extant works include 39 plays, 154 sonnets, and other poems. Some of his most famous plays are the four great tragedies: Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear and Othello. He also wrote comedies and historical plays based on English history. Shakespeare died in 1616 at the age of 52.
- The document summarizes the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, a collection of quatrains written in Persian by the poet Omar Khayyam in the 11th century. It discusses the structure, themes, and symbolism of the poetry. Key themes explored in the Rubaiyat include carpe diem, the ephemeral nature of life, and fulfillment through earthly pleasures like wine. Symbols like heaven, hell, and the moving finger that writes one's fate are analyzed.
SURVEY OF PHILIPPINE LITERATURE REVIEWER_073502.docxChlaireGongora
This document provides an overview of Philippine literature from pre-colonial to modern times. It discusses oral traditions like riddles, proverbs, and folk tales that were common before colonization. When Spain colonized the Philippines from 1521-1898, new forms like epics, legends, and songs emerged. American colonization from 1898-1946 introduced poetry, sarswela, novels, and short stories. The document also lists influential literary works from other countries/cultures and defines common poetry terms.
Greek literature began with ancient epics like the Iliad and Odyssey, and flourished during the Classical period with genres like lyric poetry, drama, history, and philosophy. The three great tragic playwrights who established the dramatic traditions were Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. Plato and Aristotle made seminal contributions to philosophy. Greek literature continued to develop through the Hellenistic and Roman periods, influencing works in other areas under Greek influence.
Indian literature is one of the oldest and richest in the world, originating from oral traditions and spanning numerous languages. It began with Vedic hymns orally composed in Sanskrit, the primary sacred language of Hinduism. Over time, Indian literature evolved through distinct periods and was influenced by religion, foreign conquests, and colonial rule, combining classical styles with European influences. Indian literary works are characterized by their focus on piety and religion as well as their composition in epic form.
The document summarizes the project launch of the "Catalyzing New Mobility in Cities: the Case of Metro Manila" project held on January 31, 2012. It provides an overview of the various presentations and discussions that took place at the event, which was organized by the Innovations at the Base of the Pyramid in Asia (iBoP Asia) Program to bring together stakeholders in transportation from Metro Manila. The launch aimed to start a conversation around empowering citizens to shape mobility patterns in Metro Manila to be more inclusive. Preliminary findings from research commissioned by the project on mapping public transportation and understanding mobility issues faced by the poor were also presented.
Developmental University Systems: Empirical, Analytical and Normative Perspec...iBoP Asia
This paper was presented at the IV Globelics Conference in Mexico City from September 22-24, 2008. It discusses trends in higher education and research efforts worldwide, with a focus on developing countries. Some key points made in the summary are:
1) Tertiary education enrollment rates have increased significantly in many developing regions since 1970, though remain lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa.
2) Between 1991-2006, tertiary enrollments more than doubled globally but remain concentrated in a few countries/regions, with over 70% of students in China, US, Central/Eastern Europe, Western Europe, India, Brazil, Japan, South Korea, and Mexico.
3) While developing countries have expanded
This document discusses the concepts of art for art's sake and art for life's sake. It defines art for art's sake as the belief that art needs no justification beyond its own existence and should serve no political or didactic purpose, but rather exist solely to be enjoyed. It presents quotes from Oscar Wilde and Victor Cousin expressing this view. Art for life's sake is defined as using art as a form of self-expression to convey feelings and emotions. Quotes from Roy Adzak, Carl Andre, and Nicholson Baker are presented that discuss how art impacts and relates to life. The document concludes with a quote from J. David Arnold about how art touches both the mind and life.
The Augustan Age was a period in English literature from roughly 1700 to 1750. It was named after the Roman emperor Augustus due to its similarities to the Golden Age of Latin literature during Augustus' reign. Writers during this period, like Alexander Pope and Samuel Johnson, followed Neoclassical principles and focused on rules, reason, and wit over emotion. They were influenced by Classical models and wrote in polished, refined styles using forms like satire and the heroic couplet. Prose flourished as well through periodical essays and works of social commentary and early novels by writers like Daniel Defoe and Henry Fielding. Overall, Augustan literature was characterized by its emphasis on order, balance, rationality,
John Milton was an English poet and writer during the Renaissance period best known for his epic poems Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and Samson Agonistes. He was born in 1608 to a middle-class family where his father was a composer and musician. Milton received a thorough education as a student of languages and attended Cambridge University where he studied extensively and earned his BA and MA. Later he worked as a secretary for Oliver Cromwell but lost his vision, and had a difficult time when the monarchy was restored in 1660. His most famous work, Paradise Lost, was published in 1667 as a blank verse epic telling the biblical story of creation and the fall of man.
Everyman is a late 15th century English morality play that uses allegory to confront the universal human fear of death. In the play, Death summons Everyman and tells him he must take a journey. Everyman seeks companions to accompany him, but is abandoned by Fellowship, Kindred, and other allegorical figures. Only Good Deeds agrees to join him. The play focuses on the Christian themes of repentance of sins and preparation for death and judgment. It uses familiar medieval concepts like the seven deadly sins and seven sacraments to convey its message about the importance of spiritual life and salvation.
George Gordon Byron, also known as Lord Byron, was a leading figure in Romanticism. He was educated at Trinity College in Cambridge and became a member of the House of Lords at age 21. Byron was famous for his epic romantic poems as well as his controversial personal life. He helped create the literary figure of the Byronic hero, characterized as an anti-hero who is mysterious, intelligent, arrogant, and self-destructive. Byron spent his life traveling and writing poetry that explored political and personal freedom until his death from fever in Greece at age 36.
1) The story of Oedipus Rex tells the tragic tale of King Oedipus of Thebes who unknowingly fulfills a prophecy that he will kill his father and marry his mother.
2) As an infant, Oedipus is abandoned by his parents to die but is rescued and raised in Corinth unaware of his true parentage.
3) As an adult, he solves the riddle of the Sphinx and becomes king of Thebes by marrying the widowed queen Jocasta, unaware she is actually his mother.
This document provides context and analysis of Henrik Ibsen's play "A Doll's House". It discusses the themes of the play, including human rights versus women's rights, and examines the characters of Nora, Torvald, and their society through a Marxist lens. The document also analyzes whether the play is a tragedy or comedy and how it served as a commentary on the limitations and oppressiveness of middle-class life in Ibsen's time.
Alexander Pope was an 18th century English poet who suffered from poor health and faced barriers to education as a Roman Catholic. Despite these challenges, he was a genius who largely educated himself. He is renowned for his translations of Homer's epics and for original works like An Essay on Criticism and The Rape of the Lock. Pope established himself as one of England's greatest poets and is still widely read today.
The document provides an overview and analysis of Philip Larkin's famous poem "The Whitsun Weddings." It describes the poem's depiction of a train journey on a Saturday in May, during which the narrator observes many wedding parties on board. Through its realistic descriptions and interconnected stanzas resembling train compartments, the poem conveys both the happiness of the weddings and the poet's sense of alienation. It explores themes of life, marriage, decay and the inevitable passing of time through symbols of the stopping train and falling rain. The technical brilliance of Larkin's rhyme scheme and style are also discussed.
Background of literature in italy ( 1971 El Decameron)Paolo Dela Cruz
This document provides a summary of literature in Italy from classical times to the 19th century. It highlights important authors and works from different periods, including Virgil's Aeneid from classical Rome, Dante's Divine Comedy from the 13th century written in the Italian language, and Pinocchio created by Carlo Collodi in the 19th century. The Renaissance saw relatively few advances in Italian literature compared to art and architecture. Overall, the document outlines the long history and rich tradition of literature in Italy over the centuries.
Aristotle's Poetics is considered the earliest surviving work of dramatic theory and first systematic treatise on literary criticism. In it, Aristotle defines poetry as a means of mimesis or imitation through language, rhythm, and harmony. He discusses different types of poetry like tragedy, comedy, and epic poetry. For tragedy specifically, Aristotle says the objects imitated are serious actions, the manner is dramatic rather than narrative, and the medium is verse spoken in dialogue. He provides key terms used in tragedy like hamartia, anagnorisis, peripeteia, and katharsis. Aristotle also outlines critical elements of plot and structure for a successful tragedy, including unity of action, completeness, magnitude, and eliciting
The chorus in Greek tragedies served several functions: commenting on and reacting to the plot, establishing ethical frameworks, adding spectacle through song and dance, and pacing the action. In Oedipus Rex specifically, the chorus represents the citizens of Thebes and gradually comes to understand and pity Oedipus's fate over the course of the play through their odes, guiding the audience's emotions and response. They dramatize the unfolding of events and their own enlightenment.
Here is a brief presentation on the text "A Tale of Tub" by Johnathan Swift. Swift's First work and one of the Influential Satire in 18th Century and today as well.
The Arabian Nights: The Art of StorytellingCraig Carey
The document summarizes the origins and evolution of The Arabian Nights collection of stories. It began as oral folktales from Persia and India that were later written down after moving to Baghdad. The stories were revised, combined, edited and remixed as they were translated to other languages like French and English, becoming more of a European text. A key storytelling technique used in The Arabian Nights is the frame narrative, where an overarching story like that of Shahrazad contains embedded stories she tells to entertain the king and survive each night.
Geoffrey Chaucer (1340-1400) is considered the father of English poetry. He wrote some of the earliest poems in English, including The Canterbury Tales. The document provides biographical details about Chaucer, an overview of his major works, and a description of the characters from The Canterbury Tales that go on a pilgrimage and tell stories. Some of the most prominent characters described are the Knight, the Prioress, the Monk, the Friar, the Pardoner, the Wife of Bath, and the Miller. The document emphasizes Chaucer's important contributions to literature as one of the first authors to use English as a language of poetry and to portray realistic characters and contemporary life.
William Shakespeare was an English playwright, poet and actor born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. He is considered the greatest writer in the English language and the world's greatest dramatist. His extant works include 39 plays, 154 sonnets, and other poems. Some of his most famous plays are the four great tragedies: Hamlet, Macbeth, King Lear and Othello. He also wrote comedies and historical plays based on English history. Shakespeare died in 1616 at the age of 52.
- The document summarizes the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, a collection of quatrains written in Persian by the poet Omar Khayyam in the 11th century. It discusses the structure, themes, and symbolism of the poetry. Key themes explored in the Rubaiyat include carpe diem, the ephemeral nature of life, and fulfillment through earthly pleasures like wine. Symbols like heaven, hell, and the moving finger that writes one's fate are analyzed.
SURVEY OF PHILIPPINE LITERATURE REVIEWER_073502.docxChlaireGongora
This document provides an overview of Philippine literature from pre-colonial to modern times. It discusses oral traditions like riddles, proverbs, and folk tales that were common before colonization. When Spain colonized the Philippines from 1521-1898, new forms like epics, legends, and songs emerged. American colonization from 1898-1946 introduced poetry, sarswela, novels, and short stories. The document also lists influential literary works from other countries/cultures and defines common poetry terms.
Greek literature began with ancient epics like the Iliad and Odyssey, and flourished during the Classical period with genres like lyric poetry, drama, history, and philosophy. The three great tragic playwrights who established the dramatic traditions were Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. Plato and Aristotle made seminal contributions to philosophy. Greek literature continued to develop through the Hellenistic and Roman periods, influencing works in other areas under Greek influence.
Indian literature is one of the oldest and richest in the world, originating from oral traditions and spanning numerous languages. It began with Vedic hymns orally composed in Sanskrit, the primary sacred language of Hinduism. Over time, Indian literature evolved through distinct periods and was influenced by religion, foreign conquests, and colonial rule, combining classical styles with European influences. Indian literary works are characterized by their focus on piety and religion as well as their composition in epic form.
The document summarizes the project launch of the "Catalyzing New Mobility in Cities: the Case of Metro Manila" project held on January 31, 2012. It provides an overview of the various presentations and discussions that took place at the event, which was organized by the Innovations at the Base of the Pyramid in Asia (iBoP Asia) Program to bring together stakeholders in transportation from Metro Manila. The launch aimed to start a conversation around empowering citizens to shape mobility patterns in Metro Manila to be more inclusive. Preliminary findings from research commissioned by the project on mapping public transportation and understanding mobility issues faced by the poor were also presented.
Developmental University Systems: Empirical, Analytical and Normative Perspec...iBoP Asia
This paper was presented at the IV Globelics Conference in Mexico City from September 22-24, 2008. It discusses trends in higher education and research efforts worldwide, with a focus on developing countries. Some key points made in the summary are:
1) Tertiary education enrollment rates have increased significantly in many developing regions since 1970, though remain lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa.
2) Between 1991-2006, tertiary enrollments more than doubled globally but remain concentrated in a few countries/regions, with over 70% of students in China, US, Central/Eastern Europe, Western Europe, India, Brazil, Japan, South Korea, and Mexico.
3) While developing countries have expanded
Research and Innovation Policies for Social Inclusion: Is There an Emerging P...iBoP Asia
This document summarizes a paper that explores an emerging pattern in research and innovation policies where contributing to social inclusion and marginalized populations is a legitimate goal. It discusses academic contributions recognizing the need to directly tackle problems affecting the poor through science and technology. Challenges include including marginalized groups in identifying solutions and navigating cultural differences. The paper examines examples of policies and initiatives tackling neglected health issues and agricultural problems of poor communities. It argues an emerging view supports using research and innovation to directly address all types of poverty problems through systemic and inclusive innovation systems.
Inclusive Futures Mapping Documentation DRAFTiBoP Asia
This document summarizes the proceedings of a two-day inclusive futures mapping workshop on the 2040 urban challenge in Metro Manila. The workshop brought together stakeholders from different sectors to discuss factors influencing how people live in Metro Manila, develop four scenarios for the city's future, and discuss lessons learned. Participants included community representatives, academics, and government officials who shared perspectives on the past, present and future of the city. Through group exercises, they identified key drivers of change, constructed narratives for alternative futures, and critiqued one another's scenarios. The goal was to generate inclusive visions that could help guide long-term urban planning.
Typology of business, social enterprise and social innovation models for incl...iBoP Asia
This document discusses inclusive mobility in Metro Manila and explores business and social enterprise models that can promote inclusive transportation. It begins by defining concepts of inclusive mobility and how mobility needs to work for vulnerable groups. The document then analyzes the current transportation challenges in Metro Manila, particularly for the poor and vulnerable, such as high costs and long travel times. It presents a framework to analyze potential inclusive mobility models based on how they benefit various sectors. Examples of international models that increase access to transportation for rural areas are also provided. The goal is to identify solutions that can be replicated or scaled up to improve mobility for all in Metro Manila.
This document discusses infrastructure and governance challenges in megacities, using Metro Manila as a case study. It outlines that while Metro Manila has experienced private-led development, especially in real estate, its infrastructure and social services have lagged behind. It notes that future infrastructure development will require increased private participation through public-private partnerships. The document also profiles a private construction company that has played a major role in Metro Manila's development.
Inclusive Mobility Action Plan for Metro Manilanewmobility
This document outlines an action plan for developing an inclusive mobility network in Metro Manila. It begins with an introduction providing background and rationale. It then presents the strategic framework, outlining the envisioned impact of improved mobility, safety, productivity and civility. Key problems, issues and concerns are identified relating to these outcomes. Strategies, programs and initiatives are designed to address the problems through various government, private and civil society roles. The action planning process involves identifying issues, designing solutions, and arranging delivery. The plan is intended to contribute to improving Metro Manila's transportation system to better serve all residents, especially the poor and vulnerable.
Inclusive Mobility Action Plan for Metro Manila (Attachments)newmobility
The document lists members of the Inclusive Mobility Network Steering Committee and the Inclusive Mobility Project Team. It then provides two tables: Table 1 summarizes areas of improvement in different transport modes in Metro Manila in terms of mobility, safety, productivity and civility. Table 2 lists enablers and barriers to inclusive mobility across these four outcome areas and considers physical, social, environmental and economic/institutional dimensions.
[Urban transportation] city presentation manila(philippines)shrdcinfo
This document summarizes public transportation issues and policy in Mega Manila, a metro area of 28 million people in the Philippines. It faces severe traffic congestion, with private vehicles occupying 70% of road space but accounting for only 30% of trips. The average bus commute takes 89 minutes. A national transport policy aims to create a safe, integrated, and sustainable transportation system, but current policymaking lacks coordination and resources for implementation. Plans are outlined to build nine additional mass transit lines by 2021 to serve 2.2 million additional daily commuters.
Metro Manila Transport Initiatives Mapping Workshop Documentation Report (Oct...newmobility
The workshop aimed to identify opportunities and challenges related to mobility, safety, productivity and civility on Metro Manila's roads. Participants identified barriers and enablers across different dimensions. Barriers included overcrowding, limited road space, and lack of accessibility for persons with disabilities. Enablers included public transport hierarchy, mixed-use urban areas, and footbridges. The workshop gathered ideas to improve transportation issues and inform plans to make mobility more inclusive.
Mobility characteristics, costs, and issues of the poor and vulnerable groupsiBoP Asia
The document summarizes the findings of a study on the transport needs and costs of poor communities and vulnerable groups in the Philippines. Key findings include that walking is the most common transportation mode for the poor, transport costs consume a significant portion of household income and expenses, and high transport costs are the primary mobility problem reported. Solutions proposed by communities included increasing income, lowering fares, and budgeting transport costs. Mobility characteristics and transportation preferences of vulnerable groups like BPO workers and the elderly were also examined.
Innovative Urban Tenure in the Philippines. Challenges, Approaches and Instit...Oswar Mungkasa
This document summarizes innovative approaches to securing land tenure for the urban poor in the Philippines. It discusses three key approaches: the Community Mortgage Program (CMP), presidential land proclamations, and the usufruct arrangement. The CMP allows urban poor communities to take out loans to purchase land collectively. Presidential land proclamations involve the president declaring land as available for socialized housing, which then allows informal settlers to formalize their claims. Usufruct arrangements grant communities rights to occupy and use land for a period of time. The report analyzes each approach, describing their legal and institutional frameworks, how they have been implemented, and their benefits and challenges. It aims to document lessons learned that could help institutionalize alternative
Land-Based Transport Governance in the Philippines: Focus on Metro ManilaAlthea Muriel Pineda
This paper aims to provide a situationer on transport governance in the Philippines, as they apply to Metro Manila. Metro Manila provides the arena for describing and analyzing the complexity and dynamics of transport governance in the country. This is occasioned by the number of local government units located in the metropolis (17 cities and municipality) as well as various national government agencies with transport-related mandates operating in the region. Metro Manila is also one of the biggest (13 million) and fastest growing metropolises in the world.
Mapping of the Public Transport System of Metro Manila: Responding to the Nee...iBoP Asia
This document discusses a study that mapped the public transport system in Metro Manila using GIS to analyze accessibility for poor communities. The study collected secondary data on transport facilities and conducted field surveys to map routes, terminals, and pedestrian infrastructure. Notable gaps in existing transport data were identified. The GIS database developed classified formal and informal terminals and analyzed proximity and density to measure accessibility. The analysis identified North Triangle and areas along Commonwealth Avenue as having high public transport accessibility.
A Study on Traffic Management along EDSA in Metro Manilaharoldtaylor1113
This study examined traffic management along EDSA and Quezon Avenue in Manila. It found that most drivers disapproved of the newly implemented U-turn slots and believed graft was still common among traffic officials. Indiscriminate loading and unloading was identified as a primary cause of traffic buildup. The study aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of new MMDA projects and policies at improving traffic flow and road safety.
Traffic congestion costs cities and countries billions each year in lost economic output and productivity. The cost to US cities ranges from $35-48 billion annually, while the UK loses 5% of its GDP to congestion. Individual cities also face massive costs - Moscow loses $1.3 billion, South Africa loses $18 billion, and Dhaka loses $3 billion each year. Beyond economic impacts, congestion also leads to increased air pollution, health issues, accidents, and over 700,000 years of lost time for the over 1 billion daily road passengers worldwide when each loses just 1 minute per day sitting in traffic. Nations must invest heavily to expand transportation infrastructure like highways, public transit, and rail to alleviate congestion which
Promoting collaborative RD networks in morocco some elements for thoughtIlyas Azzioui
this presentation highlights some aspects related to innovation systems in development countries, dominant values and some prevalent misconceptions that should be taken into consideration when building a collaborative R&D Network in a developing country like Morocco.
The Factors That Influence The Adoption Of New TechnologiesErika Nelson
This document discusses organizational change and innovation through the lens of technological change. It defines organizational change as the transformation and development within an organization, including changes to structure, work methods, or culture. A key driver of change is organizational innovation, or the implementation of new creative ideas. The document uses technology as a model, explaining that a new technology is initially introduced through innovation, may develop a dominant design if successful, and faces incremental changes until being replaced by a newer technology in its life cycle according to an S-curve pattern of growth and decline.
Innovation for Inclusive Development Program Prospectus for 2011-2016iBoP Asia
This document outlines a program called Innovation for Inclusive Development (IID) that aims to study innovation in informal sectors in developing countries. The program goals are to understand how innovation in the informal sector can improve livelihoods and contribute to inclusive development. It will focus on the role of women and intermediaries between informal and formal sectors in activities like natural resources, services, and cultural industries. The intended outcomes are for universities in low- and middle-income countries to conduct research on innovation for inclusive development, for science granting councils to fund this research, and for governments to develop policies that encourage and support innovation for inclusive development.
Karin Nygard Skalman, Presentation TCI2018 European Conference SofiaTCI Network
This presentation discusses a policy study on how clusters can be supported to drive regional development, with a focus on key enabling technologies (KETs) such as production technology and photonics. It summarizes the study's approach, identifies the main actors and value chains in the region, and examines the use of the technologies and importance of EU support for KETs. The presentation concludes with recommendations for policy initiatives, emphasizing the need for long-term engagement across structural, institutional, organizational and individual levels to strengthen links between actors, develop knowledge, and attract competence in order to better support clusters and the use of KETs.
Call for Papers (Extended Abstracts): 5th International Conference of the UNE...Graciela Mariani
The Second call for Papers (Extended Abstracts) for the 5th International Conference of the UNESCO Chair in Technologies for Development has been officially launched.
Tech4Dev 2018, gives you an opportunity to:
Ø Present your research at a unique multidisciplinary Conference focused on innovative technology for social impact in the Global South.
Ø Network across disciplines and fields of technology, to promote the development, deployment, adaptation, and scaling of new solutions for the Global South.
Ø Identify opportunities for collaboration with diverse stakeholders – academics, students, engineers, entrepreneurs, policymakers, practitioners, and social scientists- interested in technological innovation in the Global South.
Ø Participate in the fabulous social event of the conference that will take place in the Lavaux Vineyards, a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Ø Build capacity among students and young professionals to engage in multidisciplinary problem solving for social impact.
Tech4Dev 2018 invites researchers, students, practitioners, industry or anyone interested in critical issues in Technologies for Development to submit proposals for Papers (Extended Abstracts). Submissions should emphasize the value of technological innovation while also acknowledging the limits of technology in generating inclusive social and economic development.
Further information, templates and material can be found on the conference website https://cooperation.epfl.ch/Tech4Dev2018.
TIES was founded in 1999 to support STEM education and innovative schools for underserved communities. It has since expanded to be a national consulting group focusing on STEM education. TIES works to develop STEM networks and programs in states to fuel economic development. STEM education is important for developing problem-solvers and innovators needed for a global economy. It engages students in understanding the world through design-based learning and applying STEM concepts. STEM education prepares students with skills like critical thinking needed for the 21st century.
Policies, Institutions, and Markets: Stronger Evidence for Better DecisionsIFPRI-PIM
This document provides a progress report for the Research Program on Policies, Institutions, and Markets (PIM) from January 2013 through June 2014. It summarizes key events and research highlights from PIM's eight research flagships on topics including foresight modeling, science and technology policy, adoption of technologies, value chains, social protection, natural resources, gender, and capacity building. PIM conducts applied social science research to inform food and agricultural policies that benefit poor producers and consumers. It is led by the International Food Policy Research Institute and involves partnerships among 14 CGIAR research centers.
Political EconomicApproachesto DevelopmentPolitical Economy Spring 202.docxlarry345678
Political Economic Approaches to Development
Political Economy Spring 2020
What is Development?
How should we define development?
Quality of Life
Urbanization
Level of Manufacturing
GDP
Energy Consumption
Median Household Income
Education
Level of Technology
Why Does Development Matter
The absolute find themselves in conditions degraded by disease, illiteracy, malnutrition, and squalor denying them the basic human necessities.
Robert McNamara
½ the world population l (3 billion) live on less than $2.50/day
1.3 billion live on less than $1.25/day
5 stages of Development WW. Rostow
Is Development Inevitable?
Does development naturally follow:
Efficiency
Specialization
Surplus/Savings/Investment
Increased Productivity/Innovation
Trade
Consumption
Internal Barriers to Development
Inequality in income/wealth, especially when tied to racial, cultural, or other social divisions
Poor Infrastructure
Roads, Ports, Electricity, Water/Sanitation, Communication/Wireless
Quality of Financial Institutions
Availability of Savings, Credit, Investment
Poor Education System
Lack of Security
Lack of Natural Resources
Lack of Political Freedoms
Corruption/patronage
Market Failures
Geography/Bad Neighbors
External Barriers to Development
Multinational or Transnational Corporations (MNC/TNC) control of resources
Bad Deals
International Division of Labor
International Trade Patterns and Practices
WTO
Regional Trade Blocks
EU
TPP
NAFTA/UMCA
Institutional Change and Development
What institutions are needed to manage economic development?
Legal System
Pubic Works/Infrastructure
Public Health
Birth of new Institutions
Financial Sector
Banks
Stock Markets
Insurance Companies
Regulation
What is the Appropriate
Role of the State?
5 stages of Development WW. Rostow
Varieties of Paths to Development – Washington Consensus
Free Market/Free Trade
Low government borrowing. The idea was to discourage developing economies from having high fiscal deficits relative to their GDP.
Diversion of public spending from subsidies to important long-term growth supporting sectors like primary education, primary healthcare, and infrastructure.
Implementing tax reform policies to broaden the tax base and adopt moderate marginal tax rates.
Selecting interest rates that are determined by the market. These interest rates should be positive after taking inflation into account.
Encouraging competitive exchange rates through freely-floating currency exchange.
Adoption of free trade policies. This would result in the liberalization of imports, removing trade barriers such as tariffs and quotas.
Relaxing rules on foreign direct investment.
The privatization of state enterprises. Typically, in developing countries, these industries include railway, oil, and gas.
The eradication of regulations and policies that restrict competition or add unnecessary barriers to entry.
Development of property rights.
Varieties of Paths to Development – Beijing Consensus
Free Market With Chinese Characteristi.
Vocational education can drive sustainable economic growth by developing skills beyond specific jobs, like problem solving, communication, and entrepreneurship. Smart growth policies recognize that vocational education institutions can play an enabling role by linking to local businesses and communities. For vocational education to truly contribute to innovation and sustainable growth, policies must consider how skills are utilized by businesses and address the underlying factors that drive firm competitiveness, not just skills supply. Evidence shows vocational education can stimulate entrepreneurship and help address global challenges through innovative education programs.
STI for social justice and sustainable development: a New STEPS Manifesto for Global Science
Presentation by Dr Lidia Brito, Director of Science Policy at UNESCO, at a Policy Lab event at the Royal Society, 14 June 2010.
Heitor - What do we need to measure to foster “Knowledge as Our Common Future”?innovationoecd
This document discusses the need to rebalance science and technology (STI) indicators to better capture the intrinsic value of STI beyond just economic impacts. It notes that STI statistics have become overly focused on the instrumental economic value of innovation. The document also examines expectations for the OECD's role in STI indicators, including considering contributions from a wider variety of scientific fields, advancing understanding of knowledge production processes beyond national impacts, and characterizing professional practice-based research. It emphasizes that innovation is a collective and cumulative process requiring long-term investment in education and research.
This document discusses national innovation systems and knowledge flows within them. It describes a national innovation system as a complex set of relationships among private enterprises, universities, and public research institutions that creates and shares knowledge. It outlines four primary knowledge flows within these systems: 1) interaction between enterprises through collaboration and information sharing, 2) interaction between enterprises, universities, and research institutions through joint projects and knowledge diffusion, 3) diffusion of knowledge and technology to firms from public research, and 4) movement of personnel between sectors. The quality and fluidity of connections within a national innovation system determine a country's innovative performance.
The document discusses the economic, social, and geopolitical crises facing Europe in the 21st century and how innovation can help address these challenges. It outlines Europe's policy responses, including strengthening core values, socioeconomic development, and large financial commitments. The document emphasizes activating and reconfiguring regional innovation ecosystems using a Triple Helix approach and smart specialization strategies to identify local competitive advantages. It argues that innovation agents must be stimulated and that knowledge institutions and businesses have untapped potential if properly supported through this process.
03 - Le Chemin de l’Union Européenne vers la Spécialisation IntelligenteMohamed Larbi BEN YOUNES
Le Chemin de l’Union Européenne vers la Spécialisation Intelligente / The European Union's Approach to Smart Specialisation
Mr. Alessandro RAINOLDI, IPTS, Directorate-General (DG) Joint Research Centre (JRC), European Commission (EC)
Séminaire sur la Stratégie de Spécialisation Intelligente / S3 organisé par l'ANPR avec le support de l'UE les 17 et 18 mai 2016 à Hammamet.
Re|Imagine: Improving the Productivity of Federally Funded University ResearchEd Morrison
Federally funded university research provides a backbone to the US economy. But how can we improve the productivity of this research? The first step: move away from the simplistic linear model of commercialization. Second step: Embrace the new disciplines of agile strategy and ecosystems.
This document provides information about the Znanstvena misel journal, including its publication details, editors, and articles in the current issue. The journal is published 12 times per year in Slovenia and several other languages. It covers topics across various fields such as economics, jurisprudence, medical sciences, pedagogy, philology, physics and mathematics, and political science. The current issue includes articles on municipal finance reforms in Georgia, implications of the EU's artificial intelligence act, gender policy issues for Ukrainian workers, and using innovative technologies to teach English. The journal aims to promote scientific thought and is available in both print and electronic formats.
The proposed research project attempts to investigate the advances of technology in the Accounting Profession. Recent developments in technology, especially information technology, may be closely associated with maximizing productivity within the accounting profession. A comprehensive examination of technological growth and its impact deserves the utmost attention to practitioners in the field, to business educators involved in the development of curriculum, students in need of up-to-date knowledge in their college education, and most importantly to external parties who may have a direct impact on the evolution of the Accounting profession. It is with thorough research, objective analysis, and information derived from various professionals, that a better understanding will be reached on the subject and that improvements will be made.
The Global Knowledge Center Network (GKCN) with The Global University System ...Ed Dodds
Acknowledgements: The author’s sincere gratitude goes to extraordinary cooperation and help for
our projects given by Dr. Hans Rudolf Herren of Millennium Institute, Profs. Victor Lawrence and Ali Mostashari of Stevens Institute of Technology, Dr. Greg Cole of the University of Tennessee, Mr. Francisco Bozzano-Barnes, Mr. Daniel P. Molina and many others.
Takeshi Utsumi, Ph.D., P.E.
Chairman, GLObal Systems Analysis and Simulation Association
in the U.S.A. (GLOSAS/USA)
43-23 Colden Street, #9L, Flushing, NY 11355-5913
Tel: 718-939-0928, Cel: 646-589-1730
takutsumi0@gmail.com, http://www.friends-partners.org/GLOSAS/
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Secretariat, Emerging GLOBAL UNIVERSITY SYSTEM (GUS) CONSORTIUM
Chairman: Takeshi Utsumi, Ph.D.; Vice Chairman: Louis Padulo, Ph.D.;
Board Members: David Johnson, Ph.D., Peter Knight, Ph.D., Joseph Pelton, Ph.D., Tapio Varis, Ph.D.; Treasurer: Hisae Utsumi
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Community Futures Mapping Documentation DRAFTiBoP Asia
This document provides information about the project team and community mapping activities conducted for the Informal City Dialogues project in Metro Manila. A series of focus group discussions and mapping exercises were held in 5 informal settler communities between February 16-March 1, 2013 to understand issues in informality. Key issues raised included lack of security of tenure, limited livelihood opportunities, and inadequate access to basic services. Despite challenges, participants remained optimistic and hoped the government and community initiatives could help alleviate poverty and facilitate adaptation to environmental changes.
Non-Motorized Transport Forum and Mapping WorkshopiBoP Asia
The questions raised good points about replicating the program in urban poor communities and construction workers' communities. Mr. Uichico acknowledged the potential for expansion but also noted they are still learning from their pilot project. More discussion is needed on adapting the model to different contexts while maintaining its goals of poverty alleviation and mobility access.
The document summarizes an inception meeting held by the Ateneo School of Government and Rockefeller Foundation to launch a project on catalyzing new mobility in Metro Manila. Key points from presentations include: (1) Metro Manila has experienced rapid urbanization that has led to problems like traffic and informal settlements; (2) Cities are economic engines and attract people seeking opportunities, yet Metro Manila's pedestrians are not prioritized; (3) The meeting brought together stakeholders to discuss research on Metro Manila's transport system and impacts on the poor.
Training on Sustainable Transport and Climate Change Documentation ReportiBoP Asia
The two-day training on sustainable transport and climate change covered 5 modules. The first day included modules on sustainable transport and climate change, sustainable transport and the climate process, and transitioning to low carbon transport. The second day covered climate finance for low carbon transport and measuring the impact of low carbon transport interventions on CO2 emissions. A group exercise was also conducted where participants proposed potential low carbon transport projects. The training aimed to enhance understanding of the relationship between transport and climate change, and identify solutions to transition to more sustainable transport systems.
This document summarizes a pilot mapping workshop on catalyzing new mobility in Metro Manila that took place on February 1, 2012. 38 participants from various private organizations, government agencies, and academic institutions attended to map the transportation systems in Quezon City. The workshop aimed to 1) map existing and potential transportation networks, 2) provide stakeholders an opportunity to collaborate, and 3) expand the shared knowledge base on inclusive mobility. Participants engaged in a walking tour and were divided into groups to map the area. Their maps identified issues like the need for improved signage, bike lanes, and integrated ticketing. The workshop helped participants learn from each other and envision how to make transportation in Metro Manila more accessible and sustainable.
Ortigas New Mobility Mapping DocumentationiBoP Asia
The document reports on a New Mobility Mapping Workshop held on March 13, 2012 in Ortigas CBD area that brought together 63 participants from government, private sector, academe and NGOs. The workshop aimed to map out the existing and potential transport systems in the area through group activities. The results highlighted opportunities to improve walking and biking infrastructure, develop a bus rapid transit system, and implement policies supporting green transportation.
Moving Manila Public Lecture DocumentationiBoP Asia
1. This document summarizes a public lecture on urban planning, transport, and mobility in Metro Manila held by the Ateneo School of Government. The event featured presentations from representatives of the Rockefeller Foundation and the University of Michigan on challenges facing Metro Manila's transportation system and potential solutions.
2. Key challenges discussed included severe traffic congestion, a reliance on private vehicles over public transportation, and a lack of coordination between the cities and municipalities that make up Metro Manila. Potential solutions focused on prioritizing pedestrians, increasing public transportation and road pricing, and fostering greater citizen engagement and multi-sector partnerships.
3. There was discussion around the need for long-term regional planning, modifying governance structures,
Creative industries and innovation the case of new media firms in cape towniBoP Asia
This document examines innovation in new media firms located in Cape Town, South Africa. It finds that the new media sector in Cape Town is small but emerging. While new media firms demonstrate technological innovation, their innovation activities tend to be incremental and localized. Various barriers limit their ability to enhance innovation and growth. The document provides policy implications for supporting innovation in creative industries in developing countries and recommendations for developing Cape Town's new media sector.
Colombia’s National System of Innovation: A Multi-theoretical Assessment of ...iBoP Asia
This document provides an overview of Colombia's National System of Innovation (NSI). It describes the structure and development of Colombia's NSI over three stages from 1968 to present. While the NSI has strengthened over time through various policies and laws, investment in science and technology remains low and Colombia continues to lag behind other countries in areas like academic publications, patents, and business sector performance. The document aims to analyze Colombia's NSI using multiple theoretical frameworks to better understand its strengths and weaknesses.
Clustering and Imitation in Innovation Strategy: Toward an Incumbent-Entrant ...iBoP Asia
This document summarizes a research paper about clustering and imitation in innovation strategy in emerging markets. It discusses how in emerging markets with institutional voids, firms face uncertainty in making innovation strategies. The paper proposes that in this context, imitation can be an alternative learning mechanism. Specifically, it hypothesizes that in industrial clusters in emerging markets, entrant firms will imitate the innovation strategies of incumbent firms. It also hypothesizes that characteristics of the industrial cluster like density and variability will moderate the imitation effect by influencing information conditions. The paper aims to test these relationships by examining firms' R&D investment strategies in Beijing's Zhongguancun Science Park from 2001-2003.
Approaching the Measurement of the Critical Mass of Science, Technology and I...iBoP Asia
This document discusses the concept of critical mass in the context of science, technology, and innovation (STI) capabilities. It aims to define critical mass for STI, discuss how to measure it, and analyze how far Mexico is from achieving critical masses in STI. Critical mass refers to the level of STI capabilities needed to generate self-sustaining endogenous processes. Newly industrialized countries have achieved critical masses in STI, as evidenced by balanced STI populations and spawning of development processes. The paper reviews literature on critical mass and coevolutionary processes. It proposes defining critical masses of S&T and innovation in terms of capability populations and their outputs. The empirical analysis compares STI indicators of developed, newly
Clustering and Imitation in Innovation Strategy Toward an Incumbent-Entrant D...iBoP Asia
This document summarizes a research paper that examines how entrants in an emerging market industrial cluster imitate the innovation strategies of incumbents. Specifically, it looks at firms in Beijing's Zhongguancun Science Park from 2001-2003. The paper develops hypotheses that under institutional voids in emerging markets, entrants will mimic incumbents' R&D investment strategies. It also predicts that characteristics of the industrial cluster, like density and variability, will influence information flow and shape imitation. The paper reviews several theories of imitation and discusses how characteristics of the reference group and information networks can impact diffusion of practices. It aims to test whether entrants imitate incumbents' innovation strategies and whether cluster density and variability moderate this
Colombia’s National System of Innovation A Multi-theoretical Assessment of St...iBoP Asia
The document provides an overview of Colombia's National System of Science, Technology and Innovation (NSSTI). It describes the system's structure and history, noting it was established in 1990 and operates through various councils, programs, and government bodies like Colciencias. However, the development of the system has been slow, with investment in R&D and ST&I remaining low around 0.4% of GDP compared to a 1% goal. Key challenges include low private sector participation, lack of coordination between actors, and regional disparities in innovation capabilities. The paper aims to assess NSSTI using multiple theoretical frameworks to better understand performance gaps and ways to strengthen long-term development.
Local Innovation Systems in Emerging Economies Study Case Córdoba, ArgentinaiBoP Asia
This document analyzes the local innovation system of Córdoba, Argentina. It begins with an introduction to innovation systems and economic development theories. It then provides an overview of Argentina's national context for science and technology, noting that investment in R&D lags behind other countries. The document then describes the key players and links within Córdoba's regional innovation system, including universities, government, and private companies. It concludes that understanding local innovation systems can provide insights into regional economic development and opportunities for improvement.
Where Can Public Policy Play a Role A Comparative Case Study of Regional Inst...iBoP Asia
Where Can Public Policy Play a Role A Comparative Case Study of Regional Institutions and Their Impact on Firm’s Innovation Networks in China and Switzerland
Demand- and User-Driven Innovation Management In Public OrganizationsiBoP Asia
This document discusses demand- and user-driven innovation management in public organizations. It aims to develop a conceptual framework for understanding innovation management in the public sector context, with a focus on the role of demand and users. Traditionally, innovation studies have focused on the private sector, but recently there has been more attention on how the public sector can innovate itself. The document explores defining features of public innovation and reviews approaches to demand-driven innovation management, discussing both the public sector's role as a first user to drive private sector innovation, and its role as an innovator itself in order to improve public services.
Global Trends in R&D-Intensive FDI and Policy Implications for Developing Cou...iBoP Asia
This document summarizes recent trends in research and development (R&D)-intensive foreign direct investment (FDI) and discusses policy implications for developing countries. It finds that while global R&D networks are becoming more multi-polar with some developing countries becoming destinations and sources of R&D FDI, this is largely driven by China and India. Growth of R&D FDI may be slowing due to mature corporate networks and economic crises. Developing effective policies can help countries attract and benefit from R&D FDI by building absorptive capacity. Both direct effects like new R&D jobs and indirect effects like knowledge spillovers must be considered.
R&D collaborations and innovation performance the case of argentinean biotech...iBoP Asia
This document summarizes a study on collaboration networks and innovation performance among Argentinean biotech firms. The study finds that Argentinean biotech firms actively collaborate with partners, especially local public research organizations and foreign partners in leading regions, to source knowledge and enhance their technological capabilities. Collaborations with both local PROs and foreign partners are shown to benefit firms' innovation performance. While the knowledge network structure differs from leading biotech regions, it is similar to other non-leading regions, relying heavily on collaborations with local PROs and partners abroad. The study contributes new evidence on how high-tech industries develop in emerging countries through both local and non-local knowledge flows.
“An Outlook of the Ongoing and Future Relationship between Blockchain Technologies and Process-aware Information Systems.” Invited talk at the joint workshop on Blockchain for Information Systems (BC4IS) and Blockchain for Trusted Data Sharing (B4TDS), co-located with with the 36th International Conference on Advanced Information Systems Engineering (CAiSE), 3 June 2024, Limassol, Cyprus.
Encryption in Microsoft 365 - ExpertsLive Netherlands 2024Albert Hoitingh
In this session I delve into the encryption technology used in Microsoft 365 and Microsoft Purview. Including the concepts of Customer Key and Double Key Encryption.
Unlock the Future of Search with MongoDB Atlas_ Vector Search Unleashed.pdfMalak Abu Hammad
Discover how MongoDB Atlas and vector search technology can revolutionize your application's search capabilities. This comprehensive presentation covers:
* What is Vector Search?
* Importance and benefits of vector search
* Practical use cases across various industries
* Step-by-step implementation guide
* Live demos with code snippets
* Enhancing LLM capabilities with vector search
* Best practices and optimization strategies
Perfect for developers, AI enthusiasts, and tech leaders. Learn how to leverage MongoDB Atlas to deliver highly relevant, context-aware search results, transforming your data retrieval process. Stay ahead in tech innovation and maximize the potential of your applications.
#MongoDB #VectorSearch #AI #SemanticSearch #TechInnovation #DataScience #LLM #MachineLearning #SearchTechnology
UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series, part 5DianaGray10
Welcome to UiPath Test Automation using UiPath Test Suite series part 5. In this session, we will cover CI/CD with devops.
Topics covered:
CI/CD with in UiPath
End-to-end overview of CI/CD pipeline with Azure devops
Speaker:
Lyndsey Byblow, Test Suite Sales Engineer @ UiPath, Inc.
Removing Uninteresting Bytes in Software FuzzingAftab Hussain
Imagine a world where software fuzzing, the process of mutating bytes in test seeds to uncover hidden and erroneous program behaviors, becomes faster and more effective. A lot depends on the initial seeds, which can significantly dictate the trajectory of a fuzzing campaign, particularly in terms of how long it takes to uncover interesting behaviour in your code. We introduce DIAR, a technique designed to speedup fuzzing campaigns by pinpointing and eliminating those uninteresting bytes in the seeds. Picture this: instead of wasting valuable resources on meaningless mutations in large, bloated seeds, DIAR removes the unnecessary bytes, streamlining the entire process.
In this work, we equipped AFL, a popular fuzzer, with DIAR and examined two critical Linux libraries -- Libxml's xmllint, a tool for parsing xml documents, and Binutil's readelf, an essential debugging and security analysis command-line tool used to display detailed information about ELF (Executable and Linkable Format). Our preliminary results show that AFL+DIAR does not only discover new paths more quickly but also achieves higher coverage overall. This work thus showcases how starting with lean and optimized seeds can lead to faster, more comprehensive fuzzing campaigns -- and DIAR helps you find such seeds.
- These are slides of the talk given at IEEE International Conference on Software Testing Verification and Validation Workshop, ICSTW 2022.
Full-RAG: A modern architecture for hyper-personalizationZilliz
Mike Del Balso, CEO & Co-Founder at Tecton, presents "Full RAG," a novel approach to AI recommendation systems, aiming to push beyond the limitations of traditional models through a deep integration of contextual insights and real-time data, leveraging the Retrieval-Augmented Generation architecture. This talk will outline Full RAG's potential to significantly enhance personalization, address engineering challenges such as data management and model training, and introduce data enrichment with reranking as a key solution. Attendees will gain crucial insights into the importance of hyperpersonalization in AI, the capabilities of Full RAG for advanced personalization, and strategies for managing complex data integrations for deploying cutting-edge AI solutions.
Pushing the limits of ePRTC: 100ns holdover for 100 daysAdtran
At WSTS 2024, Alon Stern explored the topic of parametric holdover and explained how recent research findings can be implemented in real-world PNT networks to achieve 100 nanoseconds of accuracy for up to 100 days.
TrustArc Webinar - 2024 Global Privacy SurveyTrustArc
How does your privacy program stack up against your peers? What challenges are privacy teams tackling and prioritizing in 2024?
In the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey, we asked over 1,800 global privacy professionals and business executives to share their perspectives on the current state of privacy inside and outside of their organizations. This year’s report focused on emerging areas of importance for privacy and compliance professionals, including considerations and implications of Artificial Intelligence (AI) technologies, building brand trust, and different approaches for achieving higher privacy competence scores.
See how organizational priorities and strategic approaches to data security and privacy are evolving around the globe.
This webinar will review:
- The top 10 privacy insights from the fifth annual Global Privacy Benchmarks Survey
- The top challenges for privacy leaders, practitioners, and organizations in 2024
- Key themes to consider in developing and maintaining your privacy program
Securing your Kubernetes cluster_ a step-by-step guide to success !KatiaHIMEUR1
Today, after several years of existence, an extremely active community and an ultra-dynamic ecosystem, Kubernetes has established itself as the de facto standard in container orchestration. Thanks to a wide range of managed services, it has never been so easy to set up a ready-to-use Kubernetes cluster.
However, this ease of use means that the subject of security in Kubernetes is often left for later, or even neglected. This exposes companies to significant risks.
In this talk, I'll show you step-by-step how to secure your Kubernetes cluster for greater peace of mind and reliability.
Cosa hanno in comune un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ?Speck&Tech
ABSTRACT: A prima vista, un mattoncino Lego e la backdoor XZ potrebbero avere in comune il fatto di essere entrambi blocchi di costruzione, o dipendenze di progetti creativi e software. La realtà è che un mattoncino Lego e il caso della backdoor XZ hanno molto di più di tutto ciò in comune.
Partecipate alla presentazione per immergervi in una storia di interoperabilità, standard e formati aperti, per poi discutere del ruolo importante che i contributori hanno in una comunità open source sostenibile.
BIO: Sostenitrice del software libero e dei formati standard e aperti. È stata un membro attivo dei progetti Fedora e openSUSE e ha co-fondato l'Associazione LibreItalia dove è stata coinvolta in diversi eventi, migrazioni e formazione relativi a LibreOffice. In precedenza ha lavorato a migrazioni e corsi di formazione su LibreOffice per diverse amministrazioni pubbliche e privati. Da gennaio 2020 lavora in SUSE come Software Release Engineer per Uyuni e SUSE Manager e quando non segue la sua passione per i computer e per Geeko coltiva la sua curiosità per l'astronomia (da cui deriva il suo nickname deneb_alpha).
Climate Impact of Software Testing at Nordic Testing DaysKari Kakkonen
My slides at Nordic Testing Days 6.6.2024
Climate impact / sustainability of software testing discussed on the talk. ICT and testing must carry their part of global responsibility to help with the climat warming. We can minimize the carbon footprint but we can also have a carbon handprint, a positive impact on the climate. Quality characteristics can be added with sustainability, and then measured continuously. Test environments can be used less, and in smaller scale and on demand. Test techniques can be used in optimizing or minimizing number of tests. Test automation can be used to speed up testing.
Threats to mobile devices are more prevalent and increasing in scope and complexity. Users of mobile devices desire to take full advantage of the features
available on those devices, but many of the features provide convenience and capability but sacrifice security. This best practices guide outlines steps the users can take to better protect personal devices and information.
Mind map of terminologies used in context of Generative AI
Problems of Inequality in Science, Technology, and Innovation Policy
1. Problems of Inequality in Science, Technology,
and Innovation Policy
Susan E. Cozzens, Technology Policy and Assessment Center
School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology, USA
Egil Kallerud, NIFU STEP, Oslo, Norway
Louise Ackers and Bryony Gill, University of Leeds, UK
Jennifer Harper, University of Malta
Tiago Santos Pereira, CES, University of Coimbra, Portugal
Noel Zarb-Adami, University of Malta
James Martin Institute Working Paper 5
Project Deliverable # 2
April 2007
This paper has been prepared under Work Package One of ResIST, “Researching Inequality through
Science and Technology,” (www.resist-research.net) a strategic targeted research project funded by the
European Commission (contract 029052 under Priority 7 of the 6th Framework Programme: Citizens and
Governance in a Knowledge-Based Society). We gratefully acknowledge additional support from the
School of Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology; the Georgia Tech Foundation; and the
James Martin Institute for Science and Civilization, University of Oxford. Corresponding author: Susan
Cozzens, Technology Policy and Assessment Center (TPAC), School of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Atlanta, GA 30332-0345, scozzens@gatech.edu
2. Executive Summary
National leaders in science, technology, and innovation policies face two kinds of
challenges of inequality: the competitive challenge of closing gaps in economic
performance, and the social cohesion challenge of sharing the benefits of economic
growth broadly. This paper describes the relationship between the two; articulates how
the social cohesion challenge is currently being addressed in policies at national,
European, and international levels; and suggests how those efforts might be strengthened.
A dominant concept in science, technology, and innovation (STI) policy is the
Knowledge Economy, which focuses on science-based industries and turning knowledge
into profit. Narrow high-tech focussed frames load the dice in favour of those particular
advanced knowledge economies which are best placed to succeed in these particular
industries, and restrict the range of policy options and strategies for coping in the
knowledge economy. Emphasizing diversity and divergence may open up for policies
predicated on specific systemic qualities and assets that are not easily identified in single
and/or aggregated benchmarks, nor effectively addressed through trans-systemic transfer
of best practices. Innovation has become increasingly market based. A shift has taken
place in the relative roles of public and private R&D performers and funding sources, to
the detriment of the public. The creation of “level” playing fields in areas like intellectual
property policy may cement the competitive advantage of the already strong players of
the game.
The social cohesion approach focuses on reducing inequalities in order to spread
the benefits and costs of technological advance more evenly, creating win-win situations.
We take reducing inequality to be a step towards “social inclusion” and “social
cohesion,” a general policy goal in many countries. At national level, human resource
policies are often aimed at reducing inequalities in capacity, through programs that
recruit women or members of under-represented ethnic minorities into science and
engineering careers or by building institutional capacity in disadvantaged communities.
Innovation policies generally respond primarily to the competitiveness agenda, but can
also be directed in pro-poor ways by putting jobs front and center and focusing on pro-
poor technologies. Research and regulatory policies often become re-distributional
through the active participation of civil society groups. At European level, a tension
exists between concentrating STI resources for competitiveness and spreading them
around the region to achieve cohesion. At international level, while intellectual property
laws are creating advantages for countries with strong STI capabilities already, there are
many organizations, including the development banks, United Nations, foundations, and
non-governmental organizations, that put significant effort into directing innovation
toward human needs, empowering women, and activating communities to solve their own
problems actively and demand accountability from the public sector.
We conclude that there is an emerging social cohesion agenda in science,
technology, and innovation policy, but that there is ample room to expand its scope and
sharpen its policy and program tools. Our research over the next few years will explore
the concepts and pathways more deeply, to inform that growing agenda.
2
3. Table of Contents
1 Introduction................................................................................................................. 4
2 The Knowledge Economy Policy Paradigm ............................................................... 5
2.1 Main features of the paradigm ............................................................................ 5
2.2 The general applicability of the paradigm .......................................................... 7
2.2.1 From high-tech to pervasive learning ......................................................... 7
2.2.2 Diversity and divergence ............................................................................ 9
2.3 Aligning and balancing economic and social policy objectives ....................... 11
2.4 The power politics of STI for competitiveness................................................. 12
3 The Social Cohesion Policy Paradigm...................................................................... 14
3.1 Inequality and Re-distribution .......................................................................... 14
3.2 Re-distribution in National STI Policies........................................................... 16
3.2.1 Human resource policies........................................................................... 16
3.2.2 Innovation policies.................................................................................... 18
3.2.3 Research policies ...................................................................................... 20
3.2.4 Regulatory policies ................................................................................... 21
3.3 Europe: the Lisbon agenda................................................................................ 22
3.3.1 STI policy predicated on the European ‘social model’............................. 22
3.3.2 Tensions in Policies for the European Research Area .............................. 24
3.4 International institutions ................................................................................... 28
3.4.1 World Trade Organization ........................................................................ 28
3.4.2 National Development Agencies .............................................................. 30
3.4.3 The Development Banks........................................................................... 32
3.4.4 The United Nations ................................................................................... 32
3.4.5 Foundations and International NGOs ....................................................... 33
3.4.6 Working together ...................................................................................... 34
4 In Conclusion: Adding Momentum to the Emergent Agenda .................................. 35
3
4. 1 Introduction
The practice of science, technology, and innovation (STI) policy is worldwide.
Ministers of Science, Industry, Health, Agriculture, Education, and Defense are all
involved. Heads of major public research laboratories participate, along with university
leaders, managers in private firms, regional development authorities, and a wide range of
non-governmental groups. Government decision makers in science and technology
intensive issues spread even more widely, for example through trade, international
affairs, and transportation agencies, as well as the judiciary. These functions exist in
countries from the smallest to the largest, and from the least to the most affluent.
The way these people approach the STI aspects of their jobs is shaped by many
factors, including their education and training; what others in their positions have done,
before them and in parallel with them; and the challenges posed by the specific
environments of their institutions.
Often those challenges include inequalities among nations, institutions, and
regions. The leaders are almost always expected to be doing something about those
inequalities, usually increasing performance to close a gap, or in the few cases of those
currently at the top, increasing performance to maintain the gap. We might call these the
competitive challenges of STI policy. But at the same time, leaders in the world of
science and technology are challenged by internal inequalities: between rich and poor,
men and women, dominant and disadvantaged ethnic and religious groups. The barriers
and gaps between these groups limit the effectiveness of efforts to become more
competitive, because each one of them leaves talent on the wrong side of opportunity and
saps the energy of the nation, institution, or region. Reducing these gaps – the challenge
of social cohesion -- becomes part and parcel of the job of improving performance.
Current concepts in STI policy and management offer many insights into the
competitive challenges, but fewer into the social cohesion challenges, and almost none
into the interaction between the two. The goal of this paper is to describe where these
various inequalities fit in current practice in this area and to point to places where more
attention should be devoted to them, not just for the sake of equity, justice, and social
cohesion, but also for efficiency and effectiveness.
The paper will concentrate on national, European, and international policymaking.
In the first section of the paper, we argue that too narrow a focus on high technology,
research and development (R&D), and strong intellectual property protection – a set of
strategies we will call “the competitiveness agenda” – favors incumbents over
challengers broadly, not just between firms and countries but also across all the divides.
A broader conception of innovation, which we will call “the social cohesion agenda,”
points to more sources of growth and prosperity, but has not been put into practice as
widely as the competitiveness approach. In the second section of the paper, we point to
places in STI policy at national, European, and international levels where the Social
cohesion approach is already in operation or could take root.
4
5. 2 T h e K n o wl e d g e E c o n o m y P o l i c y P a r a d i g m
Whatever else in the world we know survives to the year 2000, [the disparity
between rich and poor] won’t. Once the trick of getting rich is known, as it now is,
the world can’t survive half rich and half poor. It’s just not on. 1
While the optimism of this half-decade old statement of hope and unconditional
confidence in the power of science and technology in overcoming poverty and inequality
has been unfulfilled, it resonates again strongly with current beliefs that science and
technology is “the trick of getting rich”, and will have to play essential roles in efforts to
alleviate poverty and unacceptable inequalities. Many subscribe to the assumption that
growth and development in developing countries and regions are contingent on the
building up of qualified manpower and acquisition of technological capacity to exploit
effectively S&T for economic growth and social development. In the hindsight of 50
years with limited and uneven achievements, it is, however, impossible to embrace the
unqualified optimism of the quote that S&T is in itself a guarantee that poverty and
extreme inequality will inevitably, sooner or later, be abolished. If S&T have brought
these goals within reach, we have during these decades learned in many ways that the
availability of science and technology as such is not a sufficient condition for success. It
is as much the ways they are used which determine to what extent they may generate
wealth, overcome underdevelopment and alleviates poverty.
2.1 Main features of the paradigm
The concept of the knowledge based economy has achieved extensive success as
both explanatory and normative framework for explaining success in the contemporary
economy as primarily dependent on investments in knowledge and technology. The
achievements of some particularly successful countries such as the USA, a number of
European countries, Japan and other Asian catch-up economies provide models and
guidelines for others to emulate. To be able to catch up with the developed world, poorer
and less developed countries are advised to invest in R&D, technology and knowledge.
Both national governments and various international bodies such as the European
Union, the World Bank, the IMF, the OECD and others now subscribe to the notion of a
‘knowledge economy’. Over the last decade, a general conviction has emerged and taken
hold that this notion should frame and guide policy development of policies for growth
and development, in developed as well as in less developed nations. By defining
knowledge as an increasingly important ‘strategic resource’ in modern societies,
developing effective policies for education, scientific research and technological
development and R&D, are seen to become increasingly important. The progress of
societies and the success of their economies will hence depend essentially on their
capability to develop and implement effective policies for the production, distribution and
application of knowledge. Such policies for knowledge are also generally
reconceptualised as and embedded in broader policy frameworks for knowledge-based or
knowledge-driven innovation, since the effective harnessing of the socio-economic
benefits of knowledge is seen to depend essentially on specific capacity and competence
1
Snow, C.P. (1959) The Two Cultures.
5
6. to translate knowledge into products and services that are novel, useful and commercially
viable.
The notion of knowledge economy is predicated on a definitional hierarchy of
types of knowledge, within which advanced, research-based scientific and technological
knowledge is placed at the apex. The knowledge-based economy is defined by the
“fusion of science, technology and the economy” (Daniel Bell), through which science
and science-based technologies have become immediate sources of innovation and
growth: “Scientific research, technological development and innovation are at the heart of
the knowledge-based economy”. 2 It is innovation based on advanced scientific and
technological research which sustains the accelerating rates of innovation and technical
change which characterize advanced economies.
The ever-increasing role of innovation based on advanced scientific and
technological research has created “new rules of the game” 3 , and learning to master and
play by these rules determines the divide between those who will become winners and
losers, pioneers and laggards in the epochal transitions that are underway. Key parts of
that game include the implementation of policies to:
(1) … support, develop capacity and harvest the commercial benefits of research
and development (R&D), in particular in high-technology fields (ICT,
biotechnology, nanotechnology) which drive development in research-intensive
industries and services, seen to be the most fast-growing and profitable in the
emergent knowledge economy;
(2) … support the commodification of knowledge, i.e., the transformation of
knowledge into immediate economic entities (patents etc) by which knowledge
becomes value that can be privately appropriated and an “intangible” capital asset
in its own right. The significance of this is particularly evident in the rise of a
specific type of knowledge-based firm which has considerable levels of knowledge
and intangible economic assets in-house, but few or no saleable products at the time
when financing is required. The extension and stronger protection of property rights
over intellectual assets − patents, trademarks, designs, copyright – has thus become
a hallmark of the knowledge economy.
(3) … stimulate the increase of private R&D, facilitate public-private partnership,
and access to public R&D by private firms.
While different versions and definitions of the knowledge economy and society
circulate, they have within STI policy contexts achieved stability and coherence through
the development and use of a core set of standard indicators of performance and progress
in terms of developing into “knowledge economies”. This set includes, as developed and
disseminated by in particular the OECD 4 and the EU, indicators such as public and
private investment in R&D; the R&D intensity of nations (R&D as proportion of GDP),
and industries (R&D as proportion of sales); high tech export; output and employment in
2
European Commission (2004) Science and technology, the key to Europe’s future – Guidelines for future
European Union policy to support research, (COM(2004) 353 final), p.2.
3
UNESCO (2005) UNESCO Science Report 2005.
4
See in particular, Godin, B (2005) Measurement and Statistics on Science and Technology: 1920 to the
Present, London: Routledge.
6
7. high- and medium-tech industries; patents, trademarks and designs; proportion of popu-
lation with secondary and tertiary education; number of S&T graduates; new products to
the market and the firms; level of ICT expenditures and several other ICT-related
indicators (broadband penetration etc). These indicators shape and constrain policy
formation by providing a set of common standard terms, concepts and measures of
performance that are easily translated into policy objectives and targets.
The development of STI policies through general dissemination of these
conceptual frameworks and model policy solutions does, however, raise a number of
questions. Policy development for the knowledge economy is often understood as a
process of dissemination, imitation and convergence, often framed in the apolitical terms
of (policy) “learning”. This may erase tensions and preclude alternative options that must
rather be exposed and addressed at a fundamental level for the development of effective
STI policies with social or distributional objectives at their core to become possible. One
specific and pervasive aspect of the dominant frameworks is how policies framed in
terms of competitiveness invariably emphasize “excellence”, concentration and critical
mass, pushing back the complementary and equally essential roles in innovation of
distribution, diffusion and spillover. These latter dimensions are not only key
determinants of innovative performance, but also of specific importance if concerns with
inclusion and participation, with wide distribution and general sharing of the benefits of
innovation, would become integral to STI policy.
We will review three main issues aspects of prevalent policy notions about the
knowledge economy which pertain to our concern with the role of distributional
objectives in STI policies. These are, first, the issue of the general applicability of the
prevalent knowledge economy paradigm: it is not evident that policies that have
effectively pursued by some of the now most advanced countries and regions are equally
applicable for countries and regions which start out from a lower level of development.
Secondly, the paradigm may be seen to marginalise and immunize itself to distributional
concerns and objectives: while it is recognized that STI policies pursued by advanced
countries have undeniably in many cases proven highly effective in terms of their
economies’ overall growth and productivity, that progress has in some cases been
achieved at the cost of rising inequalities in the social distribution of wealth, within the
economy in question and/or between that economy and other economies. And thirdly,
within the increasingly competitive game of global economy, the framework has
facilitated the development of stratagems by which the already successful have increased
their chances of retaining and consolidating their hegemony against aspiring competitors.
2.2 The general applicability of the paradigm
2.2.1 From high-tech to pervasive learning
Under the auspices of, in particular, the OECD and the EU, mainstream policy
conceptions of the ‘knowledge economy’ have been developed and disseminated which
have framed STI policy-making in developed economies and societies for a number of
years. Their key ideas, arguments and indicators have thus been developed in response to
the opportunities, needs and conditions of already well-developed knowledge economies.
It is, however, far from given a priori that policy objectives and priorities, benchmarks
and ‘best practice’ models which may be appropriate for well-developed economies and
7
8. effective for ensuring their continued success, are adequate and appropriate for
economies and societies beyond the North. 5
A number of standard indicators emphasize the salience in this framework of the
most R&D intensive manufacturing industries. These industries epitomize the knowledge
economy: they are extremely R&D intensive; scientific knowledge and research are
immediate sources and drivers of innovation; they are fast growing and highly profitable.
However, while high-tech manufacturing industries account for a growing share of value
added in advanced economies (in particular in the US), they do still not account for more
than four percent of GDP, even in the US 6 . Innovation in so-called low- and medium-
tech industries remains essential to overall competitiveness and growth in all economies –
and will remain so in the foreseeable future. While sophisticated knowledge and
advanced technology may be essential in these industries, this is incompletely captured
by R&D and high-tech indicators. A narrow focus on R&D intensive, high-tech industries
may thus be seen to build on a skewed representation of the overall basis of economic
growth and employment. A less high-tech-focused notion of STI policy may be seen to
emerge, as the roles of Finland and the US as best performers in the knowledge economy
are increasingly being matched by the strong performance of, e.g., Denmark, where
growth is largely based on strong innovation performance in low- and medium-tech
industries.
The high-tech bias of dominant knowledge economy framings of STI policies
may thus also be seen to sustain a narrow conception of how knowledge underpins
innovation in the “knowledge economy”. While knowledge in an immense variety of
forms arguably does play increasingly important roles in the modern economy, it does so
in the whole economy, drawing on widely diverse forms of knowledge, not only, nor
primarily, in R&D-intensive and directly science-based industries. Modern, innovative
economies may be knowledge-intensive and based in a more generalised sense than
suggested by high-tech biased conceptions of innovation. A broader perspective has, e.g.,
been proposed, phrased in terms of the pervasive role in the economy of “learning”, i.e.,
the creative and productive recombination of a large number of forms of knowledge, both
tacit and formal, experience- and research-based. 7 Thus, the economical role of
knowledge is not exclusively based on formal, research-based knowledge (“STI know-
ledge”), but includes also a wide variety of forms of tacit, experience-based, ‘doing-
using-interacting‘ (“DUI knowledge”) knowledge. While innovations originating in
science-based forms of knowledge are highly important and common, in particular in
such R&D intensive industries as pharmaceuticals and ICT, the innovative deployment of
STI knowledge is dependent on and embedded in DUI-based forms of knowledge.
While too strongly R&D-biased innovation policies may be inadequate for many
developed economies, in particular small and/or resource-based economies where low-
5
See, e.g., Joakum Arendt: Building science, technology and innovation policies,
http://www.scidev.net/dossiers/index.cfm?fuseaction=policybrief&policy=62§ion=363&dossier=13 ,
and http://www.scidev.net/dossiers/index.cfm?fuseaction=dossierfulltext&Dossier=13
6
Hirsch-Kreinsen, H, D Jacobson, Steffan Laestadius (eds) (2005) Low-tech Innovation in the Knowledge
Economy, Peter Lang: Frankfurt a M.
7
Lundvall, B-Å (2005) National innovation systems – analytical concept and development tool, MS,
<http://www.druid.dk/ocs/viewabstract.php?id=603&cf=3>, accessed Sept 2006.
8
9. and medium-tech industries pre-dominate, this is a fortiori the case for developing
economies: “A narrow innovation system concept focusing on the research and
development system and on high tech and science-based innovations makes even less
sense in the South” 8 . Appropriate and effective innovation policies for less developed
economies require a broadening of the innovation policy framework to take into account
the diverse ways by which the productive mobilisation and creative recombination of
knowledge contribute to innovation.
Narrow high-tech focussed frames load the dice in favour of those particular
advanced knowledge economies which are best placed to succeed in these particular
industries, and restrict the range of policy options and strategies for coping in the
knowledge economy. Within a broader framework, innovation in the knowledge
economy can be about the creative mobilization and productive recombination of
knowledge generally, in the whole economy, including the less glamorous low-tech,
traditional industries which opens up for strategies which are better attuned to the needs
and circumstances of economies where initial conditions are such that efforts to develop
high-tech manufacturing will predictably be rewarded with meagre success. 9
A broad approach also indicates a key role in innovation policies of less
developed economies for efforts to identify, recognize and mobilize the unique
innovative potential of local, community-based knowledge, including so-called
‘traditional knowledge’. These and other specific forms of context-bound, experience-
based knowledge may be marginalized, neglected and suppressed in R&D-biased
conceptions about how knowledge sustains innovation, with highly problematic social
implications as to who are qualified to participate in and contribute to innovation
processes. They may be mobilized as resources which enhance the distributive end
assimilative capacities of these economies and societies. But mobilisation should be
different from the appropriation and use of traditional knowledge by modern scientific
research, as seen in cases of alleged ‘biopiracy’. In such cases neither the research nor its
benefits are controlled by these communities themselves, the carriers of knowledge are
dispossessed, rather than empowered. 10
2.2.2 Diversity and divergence
Tensions and contradictions are built into narratives about the knowledge
economy through the combination or amalgamation of ideas about the “knowledge
economy” and about the “systemic” determinants of innovative performance, as
embodied in particular in the concept of “systems of innovation”. The wedding of
knowledge economy and systems of innovation conceptions forms unstable conceptual
amalgams. The shift from classical science, R&D and technology policy to modern,
“systems”-based notions of innovation policy is based on the realization that the
8
Lundvall, B A et al (2002) National systems of production, innovation and competence building,
Research Policy 31, 226.
9
Eduardo Viotti, National Learning Systems. A new approach on technological change in late
industrializing economies and evidence from the cases of Brazil and South Korea, Technological
Forecasting and Social Change, 69, (2002), 653 – 680.
10
On how this as a key objective in STI policies of less developed countries , see e.g. Ariel Nhacolo;Khatia
Munguambe & Pedro Aide: Community Involvement in Research Projects in Manhiça: the Case of a
Malaria Intervention by CISM, http://www.resist-research.net/cms/site/docs/Ariel_Nhacole.pdf
9
10. persistent “paradoxes” of R&D and STI policy are in fact a symptom of overly narrow,
implicit assumptions that underpin earlier conceptions of R&D policy. These are based
on assumptions that investments in R&D will inevitably and quasi-automatically translate
into actual innovations, productivity gain and growth. The concept of innovation policy
grew out of the demise of the “linear models of innovation” that is seen to have sustained
those assumptions. The scope of innovation policy must be extended far beyond R&D, in
recognition that the effective commercial and social exploitation of the innovative
potential of R&D and knowledge depends on the combination of complementary assets
and competencies and on the configuration of a large number of factors, often with little
or nothing to do with R&D as such, that influence innovative performance in complex
ways. R&D is, hence, not a sufficient condition for innovation, and innovation policy
must transcend R&D policy and address all these complementary assets, competencies
and conditions. This requires a mix of policy measures and the synchronization of a range
of a wide range of policies (education, industrial, social, ICT…) Moreover, highly
effective forms of innovation may involve knowledge in essential ways, without being
immediately based on results from R&D. In some economies, such forms of innovation
may be far more common and economically more important than suggested by too R&D-
focused and high-tech-biased conceptions of innovation.
The implication of “systemic” approaches to innovation policy is that innovative
performance is contingent on the “systemic” interaction and complementarity of
resources, assets and conditions, not on specific strengths or weaknesses considered in
isolation. This dynamic at the “systemic” level is captured neither by single benchmarks,
nor by their simple aggregation. While policy approaches predicated on benchmarks and
best practice creates a dynamic of convergence pull on policy development and learning,
systemic approaches also open up for the possible success of widely divergent configu-
rations of policies, assets, resources and conditions. Emphasizing diversity and
divergence may open up for policies predicated on specific systemic qualities and assets
that are not easily identified in single and/or aggregated benchmarks, nor effectively
addressed through trans-systemic transfer of best practices.
If the innovative capacity of innovation systems is defined in terms of capacity to
mobilise and recombine knowledge (including traditional knowledge or context-specific
competencies or assets) in a productive way, that capacity is not only or primarily
determined by the productive capacity that is primarily measured by capacity and output
of research, or R&D. Innovative capacity is as much a function of the capacity of
innovation systems in terms of knowledge distribution and absorptive capacity of the key
actors (deriving from the particular local context within which they are operating). R&D
contributes to innovation not only as immediate source of innovations, but also by
expanding and enhancing the capacity of people, firms and institutions to assimilate
knowledge and put it to productive use. This is why it is important that knowledge
production is strongly connected to the needs and capacities of local communities
through more open innovation systems and knowledge exchange strategies linking
researchers and end-users. The more proactive universities in developed economies in
cash-strapped situations are already mobilizing themselves in their strategies plans to
10
11. develop knowledge exchanges strategies with local development agencies to meet local
knowledge needs 11 .
While this is an essential contribution by R&D to the innovative capacity and
performance of any innovation system, it may be particularly important in the context of
less developed economies, where innovation strategies may – according to conventional
assumptions – to a larger extent build on imitation and adaptation rather than original
inventions. However, phrasing the difference of innovation systems and strategies of
developed and developing economies in these terms may, however, to overstate their
differences. On the one hand, imitation, adaptation and incremental innovation may – in
both developing and economies – be seen to involve innovation and novelty to a higher
extent than the terms themselves suggest, while, on the other hand, imitative and adaptive
forms of innovation remain, and will remain, a key and dominant feature of innovation
also in developed economies.
2.3 Aligning and balancing economic and social policy objectives
From a vantage point where the issues of social distribution of the benefits of STI
is a core concern, it is a noteworthy characteristic of prevalent policies predicated on
conceptions of the knowledge economy and of innovation systems (as well as their
amalgams) that purely economic policy objectives are usually strongly dominant.
Productivity, competitiveness and aggregate economic growth form their core policy
objectives, while the distributional aspects are marginal, often embedded in ‘trickle-
down” conceptions of distribution.
While policy approaches that focus on market driven innovation have in many
economies resulted in policies which have been highly effective in terms of overall
innovative performance and aggregate economic growth, they have also in some cases
remained too blind or tolerant to social costs and effects which these frameworks are not
designed to take into account. Evidence indicates that the verso of the bright picture
provided by economic indicators of a long period of strong, sustained growth, is
increasing inequality, decreasing job quality and increasing insecurity. While some have
enjoyed large increases in wages, others have benefited less, and many have even
suffered an absolute income decline. What has emerged is a "picture of simultaneous
growth in wealth and poverty unprecedented in the twentieth century" (Paul Krugman).
This has taken place during a period of growth, at least partly explained by many by the
success of policies to harness the potential for productivity increase of advanced
technologies, in particular ICT. Assumptions based on the “trickle down” model of
economic growth, that everybody will eventually benefit from overall growth although
not in equal measure, have proven inadequate.
The unequal sharing of the benefits of technology-driven growth has become
particularly salient on the global level. The issue of less developed countries’ access to
essential and affordable medicines has come to epitomize that gap. The issue of drugs for
neglected diseases has become a case of “fatal imbalance” (“Campaign for access to
essential medicines”) between needs and innovation tailored to market demand, and as
11
http://forera.jrc.es/fta/documents/anchor/HigherEdAnchorPaper.pdf pg 6
11
12. such a strong symbol of structural imbalances and mismatches between social and
economic objectives of contemporary STI policies.
Innovation has become increasingly market based. A shift has taken place in the
relative roles of public and private R&D performers and funders. The proportion of total
R&D performed by business has increased in most OECD economies, in some cases
dramatically. Public STI policy is less framed in terms of initiative and of directing the
R&D towards specific objectives, and more in terms of facilitation and support.
“Increasingly, government must become a facilitator, enabling business and consumers to
adapt to the demands and opportunities of the new economy” 12 . Innovation policy
remains firm-centred, about responding to “the needs of innovation” as perceived by
these firms.
The access to essential medicines issue may, thus, be the symbol of one type of
“market failure” that has not been addressed in prevalent policies framed in terms of
effective market-based STI policies, viz. gaps that have widened between social needs
and market demand. A needs-driven STI agenda needs to be developed to balance and
supplement the dominant model of market-driven innovation 13 . Needs-driven research
policies may be essential for ensuring that substantial public investments in research and
innovation are fully valorised by users, by redressing inadequate absorption and take-up
of research results. They may ensure that research becomes tailored to the needs of end-
users such as local communities and citizens, and not driven, as it now often is, driven by
priorities of peer review and publication in international scientific journals. This is
particularly the case in developing countries as scientists and researchers who return after
studies in developed countries continue to work on research topics which are
disconnected from their local context.
2.4 The power politics of STI for competitiveness
Thus, while it may appear from the overall trends as captured by general statistics,
that it is obvious that “knowledge” in general, and science-and research-based knowledge
in particular, is playing an increasingly central part in emergent “knowledge-based
economy and society”, it is far less obvious how − and what – policy implications may be
inferred from and justified by this general evidence. In the short and longer term, any
chosen line of action will benefit some actors and interests and harm others, depending
on perceptions of available opportunities and viable options. It is, in particular, not
evident how policy objectives to be achieved within zero-sum games of competition and
competitiveness, can be generalized to apply to and benefit all. While immediate conflicts
of interests may be dampened and alleviated, mechanisms which sustain reconciliatory
solutions are not easily found. In their absence, the raw pursuit of competitiveness
objectives within global contexts will easily be accompanied by increasing conflict.
One case where such open conflicts of interests have emerged is, for example, for
the issue of protection of intellectual property rights (IPR; more in a later section). The
linking of IPR issues to trade, as was done for the first time in the Uruguay process of
12
OECD Policy Brief, Sept. 2000.
13
Roger Cortbaoui: Science and Technology for and by the Developing World, http://www.resist-
research.net/cms/site/docs/resistwrm_programme_rc.pdf
12
13. GATT, with TRIPS as the outcome, have made global IPR an issue in which tensions and
conflict have become salient. That linkage as initiated by developed countries and the US
in particular, has been seen as a move in the development of a global “level” playing field
in IPR regulation, which is based on stronger protection and more extensive
harmonisation of IPR regulations, and is seen by many to primarily sustain the interests
of the most developed knowledge economies.
Another issue where the creation of “level” playing fields may cement the
competitive advantage of the already strong players of the game is migration of high-
skilled labour. As economic competitiveness is seen to depend increasingly on access to a
high-skilled work force, becoming a net beneficiary of these migration processes has
become a key issue for gaining and retaining competitive advantage in the knowledge
economy. Regions and nations are now developing specific policies to attract foreign
students and researchers. As only a few developed countries have been net beneficiaries
of migration of high-skilled workers, these inequalities may easily be exacerbated by
such active policies to attract highly skilled personnel from abroad, as countries and
regions that are already in advanced positions may extend and capitalize on that
competitive edge.
Another closely associated issue of increasing importance for developing as well
as developed countries where competition may be positioned in direct opposition to
development is foreign direct investment (FDI) as a main avenue for sharing the benefits
of the knowledge economy. Each country may be under pressure to underbid each other
in a game in which the fate of countries and regions in the knowledge economy depends
on investment and (re)location decisions by a small number of MNCs which are
becoming increasingly dominant in terms of share of private and total global R&D
expenditure and innovation. 14 "Over the past eight years only 2% of global FDI has gone
to Africa. And the financial losses because of changes in the terms of trade have been
greater than all the aid and investment flows the continent has received." 15
While neither IPR protection, migration nor FDI are as such problematic from a
distributional point of view, policies within these contested policy areas need to be
balanced and designed with more explicit consideration of how they may specifically
benefit less advantaged economies, nations and social groups. For any of these specific
policy issues, a broader agenda and alternative options are being sought and developed:
In response to stronger and ever-increasing global harmonisation of IPR protection, an
‘development agenda’ for IPR is under development, emphasizing the need for flexible
IPR policies according to the needs and circumstances of developing countries. In
migration issues, opportunities are sought, not to stop migration, but make it benefit
sending regions and countries 16 . Increasing awareness is emerging on the importance of
terms for FDI which may facilitate spillover and create virtuous circles of wider growth
and development.
14
See Monitoring Industrial Research: the 2005 EU Industrial R&D Investment Scoreboard, EU/Research
15
World Economic Forum
16
Lucas Luchilo: Trends, policies and impacts of international mobility of the highly skilled on developing
countries, http://www.resist-research.net/cms/site/docs/resistwrm_programme_rc.pdf
13
14. Hence, the framing of STI policies cannot be seen as simple translations into
policy of insights and knowledge about the ‘nature’ of knowledge as economical entity,
of ‘new production of knowledge’ or of ‘systemic innovation’. These framing processes
are core parts of the politics of the contemporary global knowledge economy, where
interests often conflict and the role of power is pervasive. Thus, developing effective STI
policies is not only about learning to play by the “new rules of the game”, contesting and
re-writing of those rules may be as integral and essential parts of that competitive game
itself.
3 The Social Cohesion Policy Paradigm
We envisage, then, the development of STI policy frameworks which put
distributional concerns and objectives at their core. These approaches certainly continue
to strive to stimulate economic growth, but they also strive to distribute the benefits and
costs of growth more evenly, creating win-win situations. Reducing inequalities and
increasing social cohesion are thus among their core missions. After introducing some
basic concepts, this section traces the social cohesion approach at national, European, and
international levels.
3.1 Inequality and Re-distribution
Inequality is the unequal distribution of something people value: some people
have more of that valued object, some people less. This seemingly simple concept has
complex applications when we use it to understand social, political, and economic
dynamics on a global basis. In his masterpiece on inequality, Amartya Sen 17 (Sen 1992)
notes that inequality is a multi-dimensional space, within which different political
philosophies emphasize equality on different dimensions. Some observers value equality
in rights, others in power, and still others in income or the provision of basic needs like
food and shelter. Decreasing inequality in one dimension, Sen notes, almost always
increases it in another.
With our colleagues we have described three kinds of inequalities associated with
science and technology 18 . Structural inequalities, that is, the unequal distribution of
capacities, are a starting condition for processes of distribution. Representational
inequalities in politics as well as socio-economic and cultural activities contribute to
inequalities in levels and forms of accountability – that is, to making visible whose
interests are embodied in proposed actions. Structural and representational factors
combine to produce inequalities in effects, that is, in the distribution of benefits and costs
for various individuals and households. Together, they form a cycle of CARE (capacities,
accountability, representation, and effects), a wheel that can spin for the better or the
worse. Inequalities in capacity contribute to inequalities in representation, which in turn
perpetuate inequalities in the distribution of benefits and costs. Conversely, greater
equality in capacity across groups and communities can contribute to more accountability
17
Sen, A. (1992). Inequality Reexamined. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press.
18
Cozzens, S. E., R. Hagendijk, et al. (2007). A Framework for Analyzing Science, Technology and
Inequalities: Preliminary Observations. ResIST Working Papers. Oxford, UK, James Martin Institute,
Oxford University.
14
15. in decision processes that lead to real improvements in meeting basic needs for a broader
range of communities.
Economists, who tend to focus primarily on inequalities in income, distinguish
between vertical inequalities (among individuals) and horizontal ones (between groups,
such as between women and men or between ethnic or religious groups). The unequal
distributions of other valued items also fall along these two dimensions. So, for example,
a disadvantaged ethnic group may be disadvantaged in political power as well as income,
and women may bear more than their share of the costs of technologies, as in the
asymmetry in birth control devices. Horizontal inequalities are important limiting factors
in social cohesion and inclusion.
Reducing inequalities in various dimensions goes on under a variety of names.
Reducing inequalities between countries in national wealth is one way of describing the
challenge of economic development. Reducing inequalities between countries in the
extent to which the basic needs of their populations are met is a way of describing part of
the human development challenge. Reducing absolute poverty is a central part of that
challenge, which also has health, education, and environmental components. But
inequalities between countries can also be seen in terms of power. When less affluent
countries demand and achieve power, they reduce this type of inequality.
In this paper, we assume that reducing inequalities is an important step towards
achieving social cohesion and social inclusion, two concepts that are general policy goals
in many (although not all) countries. This is a simplifying assumption, not intended to
ignore the complexity of and considerable analytic and empirical research on these two
concepts. Little of that work, however, has focused on the roles of science and
technology in inclusion and cohesion processes. We recognize that the subjective sense
of cohesion or inclusion rests on more than the facts of inequality in income or basic
needs, but rather reflects connections between material inequalities, cultural identities and
patterns, and levels of social mobility. In brief, we take reducing inequality to be a
necessary but not sufficient condition for increasing social cohesion and moving towards
an inclusive society.
Given the complexity of the concept, there is a very wide range of actions that
could be taken in STI policy to reduce inequality. It is important, therefore, to distinguish
several basic approaches 19 (Cozzens, Gatchair et al. 2006). When the policy aims to
reduce poverty or address conditions associated with poverty, we will put it in the “pro-
poor” category. When the policy is directed towards decreasing horizontal inequality, we
will put it in the “fairness” category. When the policy works to decrease vertical
inequality, we will put it in the “egalitarian” category. Each of the categories rests on a
different rationale and calls for different kinds of actions. It is thus useful to have a
vocabulary to refer to them separately, even though they are all re-distributive.
19
Cozzens, S. E., S. Gatchair, et al. (2006). Distributional Assessment of Emerging Technologies: A
framework for analysis. Globelics 2006, Kerala, India.
15
16. 3.2 Re-distribution in National STI Policies
Any policy actor can adopt the social cohesion agenda, but national policy actors play
particularly strong roles in this process. They articulate STI issues with larger national
values and set the agenda for attention to social cohesion by sub-national policy actors.
To move towards social cohesion, policy actors can choose among a wide range of
instruments. We will group those instruments into four categories: human resource,
innovation, research and regulatory policies. The categories are analytically distinct,
although often intertwined in practice. In the sections that follow, we will explain each
category, outline its current connections to re-distributional goals, and point to
possibilities for its contribution to social cohesion, illustrating with examples drawn from
the ResIST project.
3.2.1 Human resource policies
Human resource policies work to ensure adequate supply of trained personnel
within a given country or region. Typical policies and programs in this area include
• Student support for tertiary education
• Fellowships for science and engineering degrees, either domestically or on
international exchanges
• Programs to build institutional capacity for research at new institutions, so that
they can provide a higher quality research training experience
• Recruitment programs to interest under-represented groups in science and
engineering careers (addressing horizontal inequalities)
• Provision of vocational technical training, e.g., for technicians and skilled
operators
We begin with this category for several reasons. First, the development of human capital
is taken to be a key element in economic growth in the dominant contemporary growth
theories 20 (Romer 1990). Thus even competitiveness approaches stress the importance of
this set of policies. But in addition, human resource policies are the pathway to reducing
structural inequalities, one of the key factors in change through the CARE cycle and a
central task in building a socially cohesive society.
At the base of the effort is the formal education system of a country, from primary
schools through advanced education, as in recent programs in Portugal and the UK. 21
Unfortunately, formal education often embodies a great deal of inequality of its own, so
science education has an uneven base to build on. Thus although human resource policies
are the home of “fairness” efforts in many places to open science and engineering careers
20
Romer, P. M. (1990). "Endogenous Technological-Change." Journal of Political Economy 98(5): S71-
S102.
21
Information on Portugal in this section is based on the analysis of PT (2005), Plano Tecnológico: Uma
estratégia de crescimento com base no Conhecimento, Tecnologia e Inovação. Documento de
apresentação. Lisboa: Conselho Consultivo do Plano Tecnológico do XVII Governo Constitucional
Português (http://www.planotecnologico.pt/Docs_PT_DS/OPlanoTecnologico.pdf). Information on the UK
in this section is based on the analysis of HMT (2006), Science & Innovation Investment Framework 2004-
2014: Next Steps. London: HM Treasury (http://www.hm-
treasury.gov.uk/media/D2E/4B/bud06_science_332v1.pdf.
16
17. to under-represented groups, including women and disadvantaged ethnic groups, they are
most likely to recruit elites within these groups. A social cohesion approach would go
beyond the numbers in recruitment processes, to assure that various cultural styles and
approaches to knowledge are respected. A society that is not open to this variety of styles
among its science and engineers is also unlikely to respect these various forms in public
discourse.
The social cohesion agenda would also see informal science education as more
than just a tool for recruiting more young people into science and engineering careers.
Informal science education takes places in museums, newspapers, television, and other
venues outside the classroom. These often provide the opportunity to reach out
horizontally. In Portugal, for example, the effort is explicitly inclusive, stressing access
through an Information Society program. In Brazil, a Junior Minister for Science and
Technology for Inclusion carries science to the countryside in travelling exhibits. 22 The
best efforts in science communication of this sort have moved beyond the “deficit
model,” which assumes that participants need to know more, to modes of engagement
that assume that participants bring different kinds of knowledge to issues, all of which
contribute. For example, the UK science strategy treats the lay public at a par with
sciences, and “public understanding” has given place to “public engagement” and “public
confidence” as key terms. Spreading the capacity for many people in society to
participate in decision making involving science and technology is a step towards
reducing representational inequalities and increasing accountability.
Human resource policy also concerns itself with building institutional capacity in
disadvantaged communities for both science education and research. So for example in
the United States, institutional development programs have been directed to historically
black colleges and universities, and similar steps are underway in South Africa. An
example of such an effort in Mozambique is the Centro de Investigação em Saúde da
Manhiça (CISM, the Manhiça Health Research Center), a regional health center which is
training health care workers for the whole country, while increasing capacity by doing
clinical trials as part of international research efforts.
Institution-building is also a key element in technology-based regional
development, an effort that aims at reducing rural-urban and other sub-national structural
inequalities. The UK science strategy, for example, points to reducing regional
inequalities in capacity. And the Brazilian social inclusion effort extends to “local
productive arrangements,” “technological vocational centers,” and “digital inclusion.”
Local development, however, is an area of potential tension between the social cohesion
and competitiveness approaches. The competitiveness approach focuses on regional
agglomeration and the clustering of related activities. National policies with this focus
can thus reinforce center-periphery and urban-rural differences, in pursuit of national
economic growth.
22
Information on Brazil in this section is based primarily on the analysis of MCT (2004), “Plano
estratégico do Ministério da Ciência e Tecnologia 2005-2007”. Brasília: Ministério da Ciência e
Tecnologia do Governo Federal Brasileiro (http://www.mct.gov.br), as well as the presentation from the
Ministry for Science and Technology for Social Development and Inclusion at the ResIST World Regional
Meeting in Rio, Ildeu de Castro, “S&T and social inclusion,” http://www.resist-
research.net/paperslibrary/rio.aspx, accessed April 25, 2007.
17
18. Similar tensions also appear between countries. They are perhaps most visible in
the context of the international mobility of scientists and engineers. The competitiveness
agenda sets up competition between countries for trained personnel. At the same time that
Europe and the United States are struggling to try to overcome their internal inequalities
and over the long run recruit women and members of ethnic minorities into such careers,
they are adopting policies designed to attract scientists and engineers from other
countries. 23 Yet in developing countries, these professionals are crucial for addressing
both economic development and human development challenges like agricultural
productivity and tropical disease. Policies on recruitment of immigrant talent can run
directly counter to the same government’s international development plans for capacity
building. 24
The social cohesion agenda would first and foremost create the conditions for
effective domestic recruitment everywhere, and in addition find ways to support scientists
and engineers in all the countries where they are needed. This spreading of capacity
would ultimately produce more global economic growth than the current unequal
distribution of talent, and thus provide the opportunity for plenty of prosperity for
everyone.
3.2.2 Innovation policies
Innovation policies stimulate the introduction of new products and processes. They
are usually aimed at the private sector, but in principle could be aimed at public sector or
community innovation as well – both important possibilities in a socially cohesive
society. Common forms of innovation policies and programs include:
• Programs that require university-industry interaction.
• Joint research programs aimed at moving particular technologies forward
more quickly,
• Policies that encourage invention, such as patent systems themselves and the
policies that allow universities to own patents on their publicly-funded
research results.
• Research and development tax credits.
• Science parks and other incubator programs to provide business help and
infrastructure for high-technology start-up firms.
• Extension services that provide technical help to small businesses.
Innovation policies focused on private firms get the lion’s share of attention in the
competitiveness approach. Cozzens discusses the various dynamics through which this
standard view contributes to inequalities, through distribution of assets, employment, and
23
Lucas Luchilo, “Trends, policies and impacts of international mobility of the highly skilled on
developing countries,” http://www.resist-research.net/cms/site/docs/resistwrm_programme_ll.pdf, accessed
April 22, 2007
24
For example, the UK’s work in four development centers (see
http://www.dfid.gov.uk/pubs/files/researchframework/research-framework-2005.pdf, accessed April 28,
2007), including attention to “how citizens can hold states accountable…”
18
19. the design and diffusion of products and services 25 (Cozzens 2007 (forthcoming)). The
decision processes of standard innovation policy are less participatory than in the other
STI policy areas, with industry tending to articulate its needs through government actors.
The social cohesion approach, however, calls attention to other actors in the
innovation system, including worker-innovators with a direct view of the production
process, and user-innovators, along with community-based innovations or innovation in
the public sector. The current effort in Mozambique to develop malaria-treatment tea
based on a local plant illustrates such an effort, since if successful the tea will require “no
dependence on highly qualified expertise, no dependence on imported medicine, no
dependence on pharmacies (Green Pharmacies), no intellectual property rights related
restraints on use, improvement and research.” 26 Thus the community gains much more
than a solution to a problem – it also frees up resources to address to other challenges.
Competitiveness approaches focus innovation policies on generating exports and
national wealth first and foremost and only secondarily on generating employment and
sustainable livelihoods. The social cohesion agenda, however, puts jobs front and center,
paying attention to the quality of jobs, who gets them, and where they are located – all
key re-distributive variables. An example from South Africa illustrates how the use of
local knowledge for innovation can create export-oriented industries in ways that build
local communities. BP1, a compound extracted from a local plant, is being developed as
a mosquito-repellent product collaboratively between local community healers and a
large government laboratory. If the business is successful, it will generate local jobs in
growing the plant and in producing the repellent candles. 27
Innovation policy can also be specifically directed in pro-poor and other inclusive
directions. Brazil’s social inclusion effort, for example, includes work on “social
technologies,” “assistive technologies,” and “popular cooperative incubators.” The
micro-finance movement includes support for grass-roots entrepreneurs who develop
simple technologies that can be produced locally and solve local problems 28 (Fisher
2006). Likewise, policies that affect diffusion of innovations can facilitate or prevent
such inventive uses as small businesses started by “mobile phone ladies.”
In the international arena, the tensions between competitiveness and social
cohesion approaches again become clear. Intellectual property is a key form of capital in
the knowledge economy, and national trade policies often focus on preserving and
extending those rights. Those rights sometimes stand in the way, however, of distributing
the benefits of innovation equitably, as in the case of access to essential medicines,
discussed in Section 2. Some national development policies have supported the search for
ways to both preserve the rights and distribute the benefits, as in the UK’s support for
25
Cozzens, S. E. (2007 (forthcoming)). Innovation and Inequality. The co-evolution of innovation policy.
Innovation policy dynamics, systems, and governance. R. Smits, S. Kuhlmann and P. Shapira. London,
Edward Elgar.
26
Adelaide Bela Agostinho, “Malaria and herbal therapies: where science and traditional knowledge meet,”
slide 10, http://www.resist-research.net/cms/site/docs/Adelaide_Agostinho.pdf, accessed April 22, 2007.
27
Vinesh Maharaj, “Bioprospecting Research: a case study,” http://www.resist-
research.net/cms/site/docs/Vinesh_Maharaj.pdf, accessed April 22, 2007
28
Fisher, M. (2006). "Income Is Development: KickStart's Pumps Help Kenyan Farmers Transition to a
Cash Economy." Innovations: Technology, Governance, Globalization 1(1): 9-30.
19
20. exception clauses under TRIPS and advance purchase commitments for essential
medicines. 29
3.2.3 Research policies
Research policies stimulate the production of new formal knowledge. Typical
research policies and programs include
• Funding for university research, whether it comes through the university’s
base of public support, through research council grants programs (e.g., the
research programs of the South African National Research Foundation), or
through sectoral project funding (e.g., from the U.S. Department of Energy for
research on renewable energy sources)
• Support and management of government laboratories, such as the Councils for
Scientific and Industrial Research in India and Australia, or the Centre
National de Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in France.
• Strategic research programs, which provide funding for a specific theme, like
the main priority programmes under the European Union’s Sixth Framework
Programme
• Industry funding for research at either universities or government laboratories,
with research in this case distinguished from product development by having
knowledge as its result, rather than a prototype or product.
• Regulation of human subjects and laboratory safety, as well as national
security concerns.
While private industry likes to see government invest in research so that new
knowledge becomes publicly available, public decision makers are the dominant force in
research policy. This policy area is therefore permeable to the influence of civil society,
and there is often considerable open negotiation over the research agenda. Particular
groups care about whether their problems are being studied. For example, the Women’s
Health Initiative in the United States was brought into existence by a feminist political
coalition 30 . In these cases, making the priority-setting processes more accountable
through an expanded process of representation contributed to reducing both structural
inequality (by putting in place programs to recruit these groups into science and
engineering careers) and addressing major health problems for these groups on a targeted
basis (reducing inequalities in effects).
29
See the UK Science and Innovation Investment Framework 2004-2014 (www.hm-
treasury.gov.uk/media/95846/spend04_sciencedoc_1_090704.pdf, access April 28, 2007), which identified
international development as one of five key policy priorities for UK government R&D. A Parliamentary
Report in October 2004 on The Use of Science in UK International Development
Policy(http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200304/cmselect/cmsctech/133/133.pdf, accessed
April 28, 2007) reinforced the momentum and was followed in 2005 by the Report of the Commission for
Africa, a UK government initiative with strong African representation in its membership
(http://www.commissionforafrica.org/english/report/thereport/english/11-03-05_cr_report.pdf, accessed
April 28, 2007).
30
Cozzens, S. E. (2004). Gender issues in U.S. science and technology policy: equality of what? Gender
and Excellence in the Making. D. Al-Khudhairy, N. Dewandre and H. Wallace. Brussels, European
Communities.
20
21. Indeed, public research, in either government laboratories or universities, has
historically been seen as an instrument of re-distribution, whether brought about by
bottom-up representational processes or top-down articulation of the public interest.
Public research institutions can build the knowledge base over the long term in directions
that serve public goals, like research on affordable housing. They can also provide
technical consulting for community-based innovation processes, as the science shops do
in the Netherlands. Universities are also the site for spreading capacity through the
education process, and their connections to the broader community are crucial in keeping
them culturally attuned to this task. International research efforts can contribute to
poverty reduction, as is the goal with new programs in the UK 31 or research on vaccines
for the diseases of poverty 32 .
In short, a socially cohesive society needs strong public research institutions to
support broad, societal innovation processes. A competitiveness agenda focused on
directing public research exclusively towards commercial applications undermines this
goal.
3.2.4 Regulatory policies
Regulatory policies, those that set ground rules for health and safety, are an area
of overlap between science and technology policy and other arenas such as health, labour,
and environmental policy. Regulatory processes are often quite S&T intensive, calling for
high levels of expertise and often for dedicated bodies of research knowledge. Examples
of such policies include
• Approval of new drugs and medical devices after checking for safety and
efficacy
• Environmental pollution standards, geared to public health goals
• Safety standards in food products, automobiles, telecommunication devices,
workplaces, etc.
• Regulation of public utilities, including setting rates to assure broad access to
basic services
The key actors in these areas are regulatory agencies, civil society groups with a
focus on the regulatory area, regulated industries, and relevant portions of the research
community. Some of these policies are explicitly re-distributional, such as setting utility
prices in ways that do not negatively affect low-income households, or that make sure
that utilities like Internet connections extend to rural communities that are more
expensive to serve. Some regulatory policies are in principle not re-distributional and are
instead intended to protect all citizens equally; but unequal power, capacity, and
participation can make the results unequal nonetheless. Formal knowledge tends to be
given more weight than situated, local knowledge in such processes, but industry is much
more likely to be able to mobilize experts with the appropriate credentials.
31
http://www.nerc.ac.uk/research/programmes/espa/events/ao1.asp, accessed April 28, 2007.
32
Neyland, D., J. A. Nunes, et al. (2007). Articulating New Accountability Systems; Towards an
Integrated Framework Interim report. ResIST Working Papers. Oxford, UK, James Martin Institute, Oxford
University.
21
22. Regulatory policy is often the site of citizen action to create accountability,
sometimes extending well beyond health and safety to economic justice. The
environmental justice movement in Brazil, 33 for example, has addressed the social as
well as environmental consequences of large-scale soy production, including the closing
of thousands of small farms. They have criticized the shipment of toxic waste from the
rich state of Sao Paulo to the poor state of Bahia, and tried to prevent Europe from
sending its used tires to Brazil. As the last example illustrates, the issues can extend
across national boundaries, and new forms of accountability are needed to address such
international regulatory issues as e-waste (Neyland, Nunes et al. 2007).
3.3 Europe: the Lisbon agenda
3.3.1 STI policy predicated on the European ‘social model’
The differences and tensions between the competitiveness and social cohesion
models of STI policy, and the possibility of aligning and fusing them, lie at the core of
the framing of the Lisbon agenda of the European Union. While economic objectives -
competitiveness, productivity, growth – remain firmly the core objectives of European
STI policy, the Lisbon agenda frames a broader, multidimensional agenda by
incorporating social objectives – the quality of jobs, sustainability, quality of life, social
cohesion – into the STI policy agenda on, apparently, equal footing with economic
objectives. This agenda recognizes explicitly that economic and social objectives often
conflict, and need to be balanced. It also envisages the possibility that these objectives
may be reconciled and aligned to an extent which makes it possible to develop “win-win”
or “mutually supportive” policies through which everybody wins and nobody loses. Thus,
the “eco-modernist” or “sustainable development” model of win-win policy (“prevention
pays”) is extended to encompass policy objectives that fall under the “social cohesion”
category:
“A high level of R&D spending and a good innovation performance contribute to
more and better jobs. In addition research and innovation are needed to make the
EU economy more sustainable, by finding win-win solutions for economic growth,
social development and environmental protection” 34 .
This circumscribes the ambition of an STI policy predicated on the “European
model” for sustainable, economic growth, framed in opposition to the “US model”, where
growth is accompanied by increasing socio-economic inequality. The Nordic “sub-
model” of economic development is now accordingly held up as evidence of the viability
of the European social model. 35 These countries exhibit strong performance on R&D,
innovation and growth, while retaining their distinctive features as welfare societies, with
a high premium on social equality and security. The concept of the “learning economy”
provides one rationale for social equality as an asset for innovation in the knowledge
33
Juliana Malerba, “Environmental Justice Network,” http://www.resist-
research.net/cms/site/docs/resistwrm_programme_jm.pdf, accessed April 22, 2007.
34
European Commission (2005) More research and innovation – investing for Growth and Employment:
A Common Approach (COM(2005) 488 final, p. 4.
35
See http://www.euractiv.com/en/innovation/eu-nordic-beat-us-competitiveness-challenge/article-
158217
22
23. economy, as one essential part of the “social capital” on which innovative, interactive
learning depends. 36
These are significant shifts in the way the STI policy agenda is being framed,
guided by ambitions to develop a type of a less economy-dominated, more multi-
objective STI policy framework. Within this framework, economic and social policy
objectives, including equality and equity, should be seen as equally important and in need
of being balanced, made compatible and – ideally - mutually supportive.
However, the difficulty of this task must be acknowledged. Different and often
manifestly conflicting policy objectives do not converge simply because it is politically
desirable and urgent that they do. The very idea of win-win-policy, and the assumption
that science, technology and innovation are instrumental for developing innovative, win-
win policy options, does not in itself go a long way in making such policies real. Such
harmonistic policy talk may easily remain mere ideology or rhetoric, serving to deflect
political conflict. Extensive policy innovation will be required, as will difficult political
choices have to be made to change entrenched practices which are not compliant with
‘win-win‘ criteria. And contrary to many statements that innovation policy predicated on
the European model must be a type of multi-objective polices which balance, reconcile
and integrate social, environmental and economic objectives, it also often transpires in
EU policy statements that economic objectives prevail:
So the challenge for European innovation policy is: first, to develop increased
awareness of the significance of innovation across all policy fields; and second to
develop effective and efficient means of co-ordination through which we can
ensure that conflicting policy aims are reconciled to the overall benefit of
innovation and economic objectives 37 .
The concept of innovation and the conception of innovation policy may thus remain an
instrument for achieving economic policy objectives, and thus hold back, rather than
encompass and stimulate, the policy innovation required and called for by the terms of
the Lisbon agenda and its call for a “balanced”, “social model” of policy for innovation,
development and growth.
36
The concept of mutually supportive, or “win-win” innovation policy has been elaborated by projects for
the EU and OECD (Lengrand, L et al (2002) Innovation Tomorrow: Innovation policy ad the regulatory
framework: making innovation an integral part of the broader structural agenda, Innovation papers no 28,
DG Enterprise; OECD (2005) Governance of innovations systems. Volume 1: Synthesis Report, OECD:
Paris). Here, it is introduced in terms of an emergent “3rd generation” innovation policy, which extends and
re-articulates the idea that has been strongly emphasized in notions of “systems of innovation”: that
innovation policies must be horizontal in scope, cross-cutting traditional policy borders ands encompass all
policies that impact on the conditions and performance of innovation. This idea is at the core of the Lisbon
agenda, one implication of which is that “all policies at Member State and EU level should be tuned to
support research and innovation, wherever possible” (EUC, 2005: 5). Putting “research and innovation at
the heart of EU policies” (ibid) should, in terms of the notion of a 3rd generation horizontal innovation
policy be interpreted to mean that while “1st and 2nd generation” policies for “innovation systems” were
primarily focussing on the role of innovation policy for competitiveness and economic growth, 3rd
generation innovation policy are essentially multi-objective.
37
Innovation and Technology Transfer, EUC, Sept 2003: 6, see also,e.g., Building the Knowledge
Society: Social and Human Capital Interactions, SEC(2003) 652
23
24. 3.3.2 Tensions in Policies for the European Research Area
These tensions may be seen in policies for the European Research Area (ERA), in
particular in policies for human resources. While the goal of the ERA is to make Europe
more internationally competitive in research by reinforcing the highest standards, several
re-distributive elements are included in the goals of the ERA. The ERA strongly
emphasises ‘excellence’, but it stresses the need for its networking, and hence for the
distribution of knowledge. It seeks to give more prominence to the place and role of
women in research, as well as of young researchers. It also seeks greater European
cohesion in research based on the best experiences of knowledge transfer at regional and
local levels, and to bring together the scientific communities, companies, and researchers
of Western and Eastern Europe. All these elements address horizontal inequalities within
the European Union. Conspicuously missing in documents on the ERA is, however, any
mention of reducing the horizontal inequalities of Europe’s growing disadvantaged ethnic
minorities.
From the start, structural inequalities create some of the challenges of reinforcing
social cohesion through STI policies. The EU member states invest in research and
development at very different rates, and while some established members are rapidly
increasing their investments, some are experiencing declines. The top 15 research-
intensive regions appear in five Northern European countries, and the EU’s clustering
policy is likely to reinforce the concentration of resources further. While a resulting
concern on regional cohesion may be seen to be in tension with the primary
competitiveness objectives, it is not necessarily so. The emphasis on ‘excellence’ in the
ERA, while being a possible source of cumulative advantage, goes along with the
emphasis on the creation of networks, through European collaborative projects. In this
way, cooperation becomes an essential instrument both for improved competitiveness as
well as for improved dissemination acrosse Europe, and therefore greater European
cohesion.
While European research collaboration is often seen as the most clear positive impact
of European RTD policy, a new step is taken with the establishment of the European
Research Council, which clearly makes ‘excellence’ its priority, and where collaboration
ceases to be the rule, expecting to establish a true ‘free market’ for science, supporting
those proving to be the best. While this could be a source of tension regarding further
concentration dynamics in Europe, it must be acknowledged that it works in parallel with
other EU funding instruments. Regional policy, through the European Structural Funds,
contributes directly to readdress these processes, and increasingly includes STI policy
components, to advance their capability to absorb new knowledge and to actively
contribute to the European knowledge economy, thus fully becoming part of the ERA. 38
But also at the level of the Framework Programmes, specific funding instruments
contribute to different processes that attempt to go beyond the normal concentration of
research resources. Examples of this are the Networks of Excellence, which have as its
aims to strengthen the collaboration at the top, or the Regions of Knowledge initiative,
which supports regional networking, or programs that target in particular the large
population of SMEs, rather than the few large firms.
38
Cf. European Commission, “The Regional Dimension of the European Research Area”, Communication
from the Commission, COM(2001)549 final, 2001.
24
25. Nevertheless, it is clear that the concentration of resources in turn has implications for
where highly-educated scientists and engineers want to work. The distribution of R&D
workers in the ERA is already heavily skewed; in 2003 54% of R&D personnel in the
EU-25 were concentrated in Germany, France and the UK. 39 Mobility is central to the
ERA strategy in two respects: first, increasing the volume of human capital through
policies to retain researchers in and attract researchers into the ERA from other countries
and, second, shaping the distribution of this human capital within the boundaries of the
ERA. In many respects these two goals are linked, as the development of research
concentration and the emergence of specific centres of excellence play a critical role in
maintaining the attractiveness of Europe to those scientists already located within the
ERA and acts as a magnet to those from outside. To support excellence, European
researchers are expected to move to the places where excellence is strongest.
The expectation of mobility, however, can place the EU’s ambitions for
excellence in conflict with its re-distributional objectives. Disadvantaged regions that are
trying to develop their S&T capacity will not be helped by having their best and brightest
move to the European centers of excellence. Not only may this goal undermine the EU’s
cohesion policy, strongly supporting advanced training of young researchers in these
regions, but it may also undermine efforts to bring women into science, as one of the
reasons that women leave science is that they often do not want to be mobile, so meeting
one goal may create challenges for the other.
The broader ERA perspective promotes market liberalization, unfettered
individual competition and mobility as the vehicles for the achievement of these goals.
The ‘free market’ is the means by which to recruit and retain the ‘brightest and the best’
and to ‘match’ skills and resources optimizing scientific potential. Individual decision-
making and the ‘matching process’ associated with it is central to the European
Commission’s commitment to meritocratic recruitment, competition and excellence and
mobility, an important ‘ instrument for the transfer of scientific knowledge.’
The fusion of economic and social goals reflected in recent ERA policy with
social objectives essentially underpinning the competitive ethos is perhaps symptomatic
of a new approach to the European Social Model. Rather than being presented as some
kind of moral imperative with high social costs and potentially draining effects on
competitiveness, equality objectives are now tied closely to the latter. The language and
approach adopted in many of the ERA policy instruments and the Researchers’ Charter
and the Marie Curie Fellowship Scheme illustrate the ‘dynamic tension’ 40 that exists
between the development of social rights and economic integration, as a consequence of
‘an ever greater stress on the economic dimensions of social policy and in particular its
links to the ‘knowledge economy’.
The Lisbon objectives refer explicitly to the idea of ‘sustainable economic
growth’. What is unclear, however, is the unit of analysis. If one takes the whole of the
ERA as the appropriate level of analysis then intra-EU mobility is effectively no different
to internal mobility within an individual Member State. On the other hand, if the
39
Gotzfried, A. (2005) ‘Science, Technology and Innovation in Europe’, Statistics in Focus, August 2005
40
Catherine Barnard, Simon Deakin, Richard Hobbs, ‘Capabilities and rights: An emerging agenda for
social policy?’, Industrial Relations Journal, 32 (5) pp 464-479
25
26. aggregate effect of individual career and migration decisions, fuelled by policy and
resource allocation decisions within the ERA, leads to serious imbalances in flows and
significant losses to less developed countries then one might question the compatibility of
free market economics with sustainability at Member State level. The European Charter
for Researchers and the Code of Conduct for the Recruitment of Researchers 41 explicitly
recognizes these inherent policy tensions both in terms of researchers coming into the
ERA from third countries and imbalances within the ERA:
The development of a consistent career and mobility policy for researchers to and
from the EU should be considered with regard to the situation in developing
countries and regions within and outside Europe, so that building capacities
within the EU does not occur at the expense of less developed countries or
regions. (para 13)
More recently, and following specific concerns around the impact of scientific mobility
on capacity-building in developing countries (outside of the EU), the European
Commission issued an ‘EU Strategy for Action on the Crisis in Human Resources for
Health in Developing Countries.’ 42 In this context, the ‘risks’ of highly skilled migration
are emphasized, as is the importance of being able to remain within ‘one’s own country’:
‘The long term manageability of international migration hinges on making the
option to remain in one’s own country a viable one for all people. Sustainable
economic growth and equity and development strategies consistent with this aim
are a necessary means to that end’ (p5)
European policy place a strong emphasis upon the identification and development
of Centres of Excellence that lies at the heart of European R&D policy (mirroring that of
most Member States) and to the role that mobility plays in ‘matching’ quality human
resources with quality infrastructures. Mobility is the logical corollary of ‘clustering’ and
the redistribution of human capital to support research infrastructures. This highly
competitive form of capacity-building, which effectively augments existing resource-rich
institutions and regions, does not sit well alongside a commitment to building new
capacity and maintaining sustainable R&D in less research intensive regions. Although
they are often not expressed as such, concerns around ‘brain drain’ within the ERA – and
policy responses to it - need to be understood as facets of this wider debate, underlying
tensions between equality and equity.
But while the concentration of resources, human resources and other, may
possibly be the most visible tension regarding inequalities in the European Research Area
strategy, the main objective surrounding the proposal for its establishment has been
focused on the policy-making processes. The ERA is expected to contribute to a greater
coordination between STI policies in Europe, overcoming the limitations derived from
the loose existence of the (now 25) national policies plus the EU’s. The objective of
improved coordination, based on the Lisbon strategy’s open method of coordination
(OMC), also challenges the corresponding decision-making processes. If the simple
existence, side-by-side, of national and European policies, with its distinct policy-making
41
Commission of the European Communities 11.3.2005 C(2005) 576.
42
Communication to the Council and the European Parliament ‘EU Strategy for Action on the Crisis in Human
Resources for Health in Developing Countries’ (COM(2005) 642 final dated Brussels 12.12.2005)
26
27. processes, may lead to significant duplication of efforts and resulting inefficiencies at the
European level, strong coordination can also reduce the participation processes in
decision-making. This has been noted for example in the build-up to FP7, where an initial
proposal to reduce the number of programme management committees in order to reduce
administrative processes has been criticised precisely for reducing the participation of
Member-States in the decision-making processes of the FP.
One of the strategies devised to improve coordination while reducing the
concentration of decision-making has been the openness for ‘variable geometry’
processes of decision-making, by which some Member-States can decide for their own
cooperative actions with support from the EC (following Article 169 of the Treaty).
While this opportunity was established with FP6, only one initiative has been initiated,
the Europe Developing Countries Clinical Trials Partnership (EDCTP). The alternative it
represents, in a “joint effort to combat poverty-related diseases through more and better
structured research and development that meets the needs of populations in need”, is
nevertheless suggestive with regards to the need of alternative policy-making processes
(such as this) to go beyond the dominant policy paradigm.
The existing tension at the policy-making level on the focus on the knowledge-
based policy, and on the global competitiveness of the European economy, and its ability
to be truly open and inclusive is evident in a recent European Communication on
innovation:
“The Commission is convinced that even more is needed - Europe has to become
a truly knowledge-based and innovation-friendly society where innovation is not
feared by the public but welcomed, is not hindered but encouraged, and where it
is part of the core societal values and understood to work for the benefit of all its
citizens. That is why the Spring European Council called on the European
Commission to present “a broad based innovation strategy for Europe that
translates investments in knowledge into products and services”.” 43 (EC, 2006:
emphasis in the original)
Even if proposing a broad based innovation strategy, it nevertheless does leave little
room to questioning the impacts of innovation and of the translation process between
knowledge and resulting products and services.
To conclude, a fundamental and pervasive tension exists in the European
Research Area strategy between the pursuit of different levels of equality, namely for the
sustainable development within the European Union (sometimes referred to as ‘balanced
growth’) and at different lower levels (Member States, regions, or even at the level of
individual equity, regarding the individual human right not to be discriminated against on
grounds of nationality).
43
European Commission, 2006: Putting knowledge into practice: A broad-based innovation strategy for
the EU, COM(2006) 502 final; emphasis in the original
27
28. 3.4 International institutions
We have so far in this half of the paper reviewed the potential for national and
European STI policies to incorporate re-distributional goals and objectives internally. We
cannot leave this policy survey, however, without addressing the practice and potential to
address these goals on a global level. A wide range of institutions with stakes in science,
technology, and inequalities are operating internationally. We begin this review with a
discussion of the international reflection of the competitiveness agenda, in the form of the
TRIPS agreement on intellectual property. We then move on to three sets of
organizations that are working on the social cohesion agenda in various forms: official
development assistance agencies of national governments; the international development
banks; and international civil society.
The assumption that S&T would inevitably provide the means for developing
countries to break out of the vicious cycle of debt and poverty highlights the fact that the
challenge of S&T for development relates not only to limited resources but also to wrong
approaches, projecting S&T as “instant cures for deep-rooted economic and social
problems” 44 . A key concern remains the limited exploration of alternative, more
knowledge-based and sustainable approaches working in synergy with local culture,
values, socio-economic patterns and ways of life.
The international development effort as a whole is of course directed to reducing
inequalities between countries, in both economic and human development terms. Given
the focus of our project, we focus our attention here on the place of STI in the
development efforts of these various actors. The development community is exerting
great efforts to reduce poverty, empower women, and give communities a greater role in
their own development. We again focus our attention in this discussion on how they use
STI to support those efforts.
3.4.1 World Trade Organization
One of the key global institutions of the Knowledge Economy is the World Trade
Organization, and in particular the agreement on minimal standards of intellectual
property rights (IPR) reached under its auspices on Trade-Related Intellectual Property
Rights (TRIPS). Developments within the IPR domain have generally gone in the
direction of stronger protection of the rights of “owners” of knowledge, thus contributing
to a general shift towards the commodification and stronger private appropriability of the
benefits of knowledge. A fast change in IPR regimes has ensued, as changes in various
domains have converged towards what James Boyle has called a “maximalist” rights
regime 45 . These changes include the emergence of relaxed standards of patentability;
extending the domain of patentable subject matter to include living entities, software
programs, business methods and research tools; lengthening the protection period; and
enforcing rights more strongly. Developments in the US have led the way forward. 46
44
Bezanson, K. And Oldham, G., Rethinking science aid (www.SciDev.net, accessed April 28, 2007).
45
Boyle, James (2004) A manifesto on WIPO and the future of intellectual property.
46
Coriat, B & F Orsi (2002) Establishing a new intellectual property rights regime in the Uniteds States.
Origins, content and problems, Research Policy 31 (2002) 1491-1507
28
29. While the maximalist trend in the IPR policy domain is still dominant, it has become
increasingly contested in a number of policy arenas. The extension of patentable subject
matter, e.g., human genes, is seen to obfuscate the essential distinction between discovery
and invention, and encroaches on human dignity. There is increasing concern that the
“enclosure of the knowledge commons” may erode the essential role of the public
domain and hinder rather than stimulate innovation. 47
The TRIPS agreement marks the end of a process initiated by the US by which issues
of IPR protection has become part of trade agreements. 48 One consequence of the TRIPS
agreement is that developing nations may be deprived of an essential policy instrument,
i.e., the adaptation of IPR policy to their specific needs and circumstances, for entering
the global knowledge economy. As acquiring technological capacity through copying,
imitation and reverse engineering is an essential part of catching up strategies, TRIPS
may place limitations, including higher licensing costs, on the use of that strategy. Thus,
TRIPS may be seen to offer few advantages to developing countries in terms of IPR; it
was a trade-off where overall loss in IPR would be traded in for gains in trade, in
particular export of agricultural products. It was also seen as an advantage that
negotiations over intellectual property would be moved from bilateral to multilateral
trade negotiations. However, TRIPS has not led to the removal of IPR from bilateral and
regional trade agreements. These bilateral agreements have been retained as a channel to
enforce higher, “TRIPS Plus” standards of IPR protection, alongside and over those of
the TRIPS itself.
As these developments may be seen to have benefited primarily the already advanced
economies, they have been characterized as the emergence of protectionism for the
advanced knowledge economy:
Old protectionism was about keeping your rivals out of domestic markets. New
protectionism in the knowledge economy was about securing a monopoly
privilege in an intangible asset and keep your rivals out of world markets 49 .
Key IPR issues in the Doha Round have pertained to the relationship between the
Biodioversity Convention and TRIPS. This concerns issues of “biopiracy”, by which the
“piracy” and “theft” discourse that have been extensively used to drive the maximalist
agenda have been turned around to apply to the IP right holders of developed countries.
Issues concerning the compatibility between the TRIPS and the Biodiversity Convention,
which regulates conditions of “access and benefit-sharing” between patent holders and
providers, have been part of the Doha Round as a number of large, developing countries,
including India, Brazil and China, have pushed for a change in TRIPS to make it
mandatory to include disclosure of origin of genetic resources in patent application. The
Biodiversity Convention states the principle of national sovereignty of genetic resources,
and the rights of origin countries to a fair share of the benefits of inventions based on
47
Heller M & R. Eisenberg (1998) Can patent deter innovation? The anticommons in biomedical research,
Science, Vol 280, 1 May 1998, 698-701
48
Drahos, Peter with John Braithwaite (2002) Information Feudalism. Who Owns the Knowledge
Economy? Earthscan: London.
49
Drahos, ibid, p. 87.
29