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Issue 26: July-August 2003

 

INTECH Innovation project
generates spin-offs worldwide

A new training programme developed by researchers at UNU Institute for New Technologies is helping national policy-makers to evaluate the effectiveness of national innovation policies thus strengthening National Systems of Innovation.

Sunil Mani

The eight-day programme is aimed at middle-level officials working in ministries of science and technology and those employed in organisations that support technical changes in developing countries. 

The capacity building programme is just one of the spin-offs of a recently completed INTECH project, Market friendly innovation policies in developing countries, coordinated by Dr. Sunil Mani, which demonstrates the benefits of research that  responds to real needs in developing countries. The programme is creating interest in many regions of the world:

  • South Africa's National Research Foundation of the Republic of South Africa commissioned INTECH to carry out two projects to evaluate the effectiveness of one of the country’s main research grants, the Technology and Human Resources for Industry Programme (THRIP).

  • Iran's Ministry of Industry and Mines has asked INTECH to carry out a research study aimed at producing policy recommendations for strengthening Iran’s innovation system.

  • INTECH has been working with India's Department of Science and Technology to improve the country's Research and Development Statistics.

Other recent spin-offs from the INTECH innovation policy project include:

Enhanced collaboration with UN agencies: In collaboration with the UNESCO Institute of Statistics, Montreal, the project has developed innovation indicators for eight developing countries from disparate published sources. The indicators will contribute to the evaluation of the effectiveness of innovation policies and will be completed by the end of November.

Contribution to informed debate in developing countries: National dissemination workshops of the research findings  in Brazil, India, the Philippines and South Africa generated strong media interest. The Philippines study has been accepted by the Department of Science and Technology (DOST) and formed the basis for a national conference organised by the Advanced Science and Technology Institute (ASTI) earlier this year. The study attracted considerable interest from key government, industry and academic actors in the country's innovation system and was published as a lead article in a special issue of The Philippine Journal of ICT and Microelectronics.  

The findings of the INTECH project have been published in the book
Government, Innovation and Technology Policy: An International Comparative Analysis

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