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  • Research for the Developing World: Public Funding from Australia, Canada, and the UK

    Research for the Developing World by Currie-Alder, Bruce;

    Public Funding from Australia, Canada, and the UK

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 88.00
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    39 732 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 8 October 2015

    • ISBN 9780198742937
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages206 pages
    • Size 238x163x18 mm
    • Weight 472 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 10 Figures and 4 Tables
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    Short description:

    Research for the developing world can create evidence on the effectiveness of foreign aid, invent new technologies to help poor people, and strengthen research in poor countries. How do countries determine which policy goals to pursue? This book answers this question based on the history of research funders in Australia, Canada, and the UK.

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    Long description:

    Research for the developing world can generate evidence on the effectiveness of foreign aid, invent new technologies that serve poor people, and strengthen research capabilities in poor countries. How do countries determine which of these policy goals to pursue? Examining the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia reveals how each country established a unique approach to research funding. Programs and grantmaking evolved in response to various expectations across government, tempered by the need to remain credible in the scientific community.

    This book explores the histories of the UK Department for International Development (DFID), Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC), and the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR). Looking back, changes in research governance encouraged a shift towards whole-of-government priorities, shorter timeframes for realizing results, and performance predicated on academic productivity and research impact. Whereas funders used to encourage 'small is beautiful' with local experiments in development, today the emphasis is on 'getting to scale' delivering innovation through self-financing models.

    Looking forward, research for the developing world is fading as part of development assistance, yet rising as collaboration on common global challenges. Funders are adopting new definitions of performance and actively shaping policy to connect science and international development. Leaders are brokering partnerships that connect research governance at home and abroad, bridging the incentives towards academic productivity and research impact. In short, the future of research for the developing world is moving from foreign aid to science diplomacy.

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    Table of Contents:

    Expecting more: changing governance of public research
    Research funders: adapting to government expectations
    United Kingdom: between Haldane and Rothschild
    Canada: Hopper's vision of empowerment
    Australia: Crawford's legacy of partnership
    Changing context: public management and research governance
    Looking back: program theory and grantmaking practice
    Looking forward: from foreign aid to global challenges
    Conclusion: the quest for research impact

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