APS April Meeting 2010
Volume 55, Number 1
Saturday–Tuesday, February 13–16, 2010;
Washington, DC
Session J6: Panel Discussion: Policy for Physics and Science in Developing Countries
1:30 PM–3:18 PM,
Sunday, February 14, 2010
Room: Washington 5
Sponsoring
Units:
FIP FGSA
Chair: Galileo Violini, Universita della Calabria, and Paul Gueye, Hampton University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.APR.J6.1
Abstract: J6.00001 : Policy for Research and Innovation in Latin America
1:30 PM–1:40 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Carlos Aguirre-Bastos
(The National Academy of Sciences of Bolivia)
Latin America (LAC) is renewing efforts to build-up research
and innovation (R\&I) capacities, guided by policies that
consider the need to transform the traditional science system
into a more dynamic entity. Policies permitted the generation
of new spaces to develop science, strengthen scientific
communities, improve university-enterprise linkages, establish
common agendas between public and private sectors, earmark
special budgets, build new infrastructure, and improve the
number and quality of scientific publications.
In spite of much progress, LAC lags much behind developed
countries, their universities rank lower than their
international counterparts, the number of researchers is small
and funding is below an appropriate threshold. Some countries
have innovated in few economic sectors, while others remain
technologically underdeveloped and much of the countries'
innovative capacities remain untapped.
It is believed that policies still have little influence on
social and economic development and there exists
dissatisfaction in the academic and entrepreneurial sectors
with their quality and relevance or with the political will of
governments to execute them. On the other hand, in the past
decades, the complexity of innovation systems has increased
considerably, and has yet to be taken fully into account in LAC
policy definitions.
The situation calls for decision makers to shape new framework
conditions for R\&I in a way that both processes co-evolve and
are stimulated and guided on solutions to the major problems of
society. Considering the main features of complex systems, self-
organization, emergence and non-linearity, R\&I policy measures
need to be seen as interventions in such a system, as the use
of traditional leverage effects used in the past for policy
decisions are more and more obsolete.
Policies must now use ``weak coordination mechanisms,''
foresight, mission statements, and visions. It is obvious that
due to nonlinearities in the system, adaptive political
requirements and governance have to replace master plans and
long term fixed targets. Policies must include incentives for
networking, pilot projects, simulation models, etc.
International cooperation is absolutely necessary to generate
the new policy framework needed by LAC.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.APR.J6.1