Innovation systems for development: Making research and innovation in developing countries matter

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Abstract

The rise and expansion of organized scientific research has led individuals to become accustomed to an unceasing delivery of new scientific results and technical improvements that resolve even seemingly unsolvable problems. This timely book examines how science-based research and innovation is designed, implemented and applied in developing countries in support of development and poverty alleviation. The expert contributors trace and compare the emergence of national innovation systems (NIS) in four developing countries - Bolivia, Mozambique, Tanzania and Vietnam. Dedicated chapters on each country identify the main structural and organizational problems for improving the relevance and quality of research output for the productive sector, and conclude by offering suggestions on how the process of applying research outputs and innovations in support of development goals can be improved.

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Göransson, B., Brundenius, C., & Aguirre-Bastos, C. (2016). Innovation systems for development: Making research and innovation in developing countries matter. Innovation Systems for Development: Making Research and Innovation in Developing Countries Matter (pp. 1–313). Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd. https://doi.org/10.4337/9781783473830

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