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Capacity Building through International Research Collaboration Professor Thomas Rosswall Executive Director ICSU, Paris The World: Rising Inequities • Inequities are rising within countries and between countries • Assets of world’s 3 richest people exceed combined GDP of poorest 48 countries • World’s 15 richest people have assets that exceed total GDP of Sub-Saharan Africa I. Serageldin, IAC 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 2 The Knowledge Divide • OECD countries spend more on R&D than economic output of the 61 poorest nations • High income countries earn 42 time that of low income countries but spend 218 times more on research • IBM was granted 2756 patents in the US (1999), while 134 countries together were granted 2643 World Bank S&T Strategy 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 3 Status of Science in Africa • Public budget cuts • Higher education and research systems in decline • National coordination bodies dissolved or with no political influence • Nearly no recruitment during the 1990s • Poor salaries – staff often go unpaid • Brain drain J. Gaillard, IFS and IRD, Johannesburg 2002 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 4 Bending the Curves The Gap 2003 Time 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 5 Bending the Curves • • • • Support of individuals Support of institutions Support of national science policies Change of attitudes 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 6 Support of Individuals Recurring Difficulties • • • • • • • • • • Equipment repairs Purchasing equipment Access to equipment Access to scientific documentation Access to vehicle Access to supplies Lack of technicians Data processing Field work difficulties Lack of time IFS MESIA Report 2 (2001) 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 7 Action • Expand small comptetitive grant schemes to young scientists (IFS-TWAS model) • Training courses for repair and mentainenace of equipment (e.g.,IFS, TWAS) • Strengthen efforts to provide scientific literature (e.g., INASP) • Training courses in writing grant applications and scientific papers (e.g., IFS) • Networking S-S and N-S through collaboration in international coordinated research 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 8 Coordinated Research The four global change programmes, especially IGBP and WCRP, provide the framework for the science on which IPCC assessments are built. 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 9 Earth System Science Partnership • an integrated study of the Earth System, • the changes occurring to the System, and • the implications for global sustainability. 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 10 Bellagio Report, 1990 START Mission • To conduct research through regional networks of collaborating scientists and institutions • To enhance scientific capacity in developing countries • To mobilize the resources for activities in developing countries Portfolio of START Activities • Capacity Building • Regional Research • Cross-cutting, Integrative activities Capacity Building Activities Types of START Capacity Building Programs Regional Science Planning and Research Workshops: Collaborative Research Networks: Short Term Fellowships: Visiting Scientists and Lecturers: Dissertation/PhD fellowships: Small Grants Program: Young Scientists Awards: Advanced Institutes: Training Institutes/Courses: To-date 75+ 50+ 175 121 25 100+ 163 30 150+ ~ 1500 scholars from developing countries involved in START activities in 2003-2004 ~ 150 young scientists currently conducting research under START support Monsoon Asia Integrated Regional Studies Tibet Solar Physical Monsoon Process Industrial Emission Radiation Integrated Monsoon System Land Use Biological Process Regional Anthropogenic Forcing Land/ Ocean Atmospheric Chemistry Impacts Sustainable development of the region Natural Forcing Assessments of Impacts & Adaptation to Climate Change (AIACC) Objectives • Build capacity in developing countries for research in support of climate change adaptation • Advance scientific understanding of climate change impacts, adaptations and vulnerabilities • Link the research community with the policy community to support national communications and adaptation planning No size fits all • The regions are different • The countries are different • Inequalities within countries (top 100 US Universities account for 80% of federal R&D funding; the remaining 2350 for 20%) • All the capacity building components are essential: They reinforce each other • The whole is more than the sum of the parts 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 16 We have identified the problems. There are solutions 11 November 2005 World Science Forum - Budapest 17