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Science, Technology and Inequality The Policy Environment

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Title: Science, Technology and Inequality The Policy Environment


1
Science, Technology and InequalityThe Policy
Environment
  • SALISES Workshop Barbados, October 2008
  • Tiago Santos Pereira
  • Centre for Social Studies, University of Coimbra
  • WP1 Task Coordinators
  • Susan Cozzens, TPAC, Georgia Tech
  • Egil Kallerud, NIFU-STEP

2
WP1 Policy dimensions of the global knowledge
economy
  • Main emphasis of work at the beginning of the
    project
  • WP1 partners/contributors
  • Susan Cozzens, TPAC,
  • Egil Kallerud, NIFU STEP,
  • Tiago Santos Pereira Coimbra University,
  • Louise Ackers, University of Leeds,
  • Bryony Gill, University of Leeds,
  • Jennifer Harper, University of Malta,
  • Noel Zarb-Adami, University of Malta

3
Objectives
  • Provide a conceptual framework for describing how
    policy contexts for key ST policy processes
    affect the production, distribution and
    redistribution of knowledge resources, and for
    articulating alternative framings and policies
  • i.e. locate ResIST within the broader science,
    technology and innovation (STI) policy agenda a
    birds eye view
  • Provide an overview of key policy issues, actors
    and actions, as well as core vocabulary and
    conceptual framework to be used by the project

4
Framework
  • The CARE Cycle
  • Structural Inequalities
  • Capacities
  • Representational Inequalities
  • Accountability
  • Representational
  • Distributional Inequalities
  • Effects
  • Policies and Case Studies

5
Policy Framework
  • STI policy concepts, objectives and actors
  • Knowledge Economy
  • Competitiveness, growth, productivity
  • Innovative firms
  • STI policy and inequality
  • Policy analysis
  • Illustrations
  • National / Regional / Global

6
STI Policy Framework
  • Dominant, single-objective, framework
  • retains its economy-bias from its Iindustry
    pre-history
  • A transient moment of multi-objective STI
    policy
  • Based on social priorities paradigm (Brooks
    Report, OECD, 1971)
  • Short lived
  • What unites conceptions of new economy,
    knowledge-based economy, and systems of
    innovation?
  • focus on economic growth (aggregate),
    competitiveness, productivity
  • economy-biased conceptions of STI policy shaped
    in the 1980s and 90s
  • emphasis on selected sectors and activities
    (high-tech, RD)
  • strong discursive framework

7
Re-emergence of inequality on the STI policy
agenda
  • Response to evidence of
  • extremely uneven distribution of the benefits of
    the growth
  • the flipside of the US model of growth in the
    new economy
  • persistent and exacerbated global inequalities
  • in highly visible instances directly linked to
    the new, knowledge-based economy e.g., IPR
    protection and the AIDS vaccine issue
  • The Social redefined as asset for innovation,
  • social capital as innovative factor
  • the Nordic model general welfare, social
    equality and security explains the flexibility,
    change-embracing and adaptive capability of
    Nordic economies and societies
  • conception of mutually supportive objectives
    and win-win policies (model of environmentalist
    prevention pays notions?)

8
Integrating distributional and growth objectives
  • Developing integrated, multi-objective STI policy
    proceeds by way of
  • rejecting standard argumentative strategies for
    excluding social objectives from STI policy, such
    as
  • tide that makes all boats rise
  • value must be created before it can be
    distributed.
  • developing STI policy frameworks which balance
    and integrate different, often opposite,
    objectives, building on some key framing
    assumptions
  • How growth is created matters, taking
    distributional objectives and outcomes into
    account in the initial (upstream) stages of
    articulation of STI policy
  • The qualitative content of growth matters (vs
    GDP)
  • Who participates in the innovation process matter
  • developing (more) needs based research policies
  • making science and technology work for the
    poor
  • importance of learning, competence building,
    distributed knowledge
  • involving a wide set of actors, beyond private
    firms

9
Paradigms of STI policy
  • A matrix for assessing and assisting the
    development of STI policy by setting up an
    analytic, ideal type or strawman opposition
    between two different paradigms of STI policy
  • - KEPP the knowledge economy paradigm
  • - SCPP the social cohesion paradigm

10
Knowledge Economy Policy Paradigm - KEPP
  • economic objectives only (aggregate) growth,
    competitiveness, productivity,
  • distribution of benefits through markets,
    demand-based innovation
  • private firms as primary agents of innovation and
    assessor of systemic coherence
  • private firms set the direction and pace of
    innovation (cfr Barcelona target)
  • the main role of public policy is to facilitate
    innovation, redress systemic deficiencies and
    gaps,
  • main focus on advanced (science-based)
    technologies, and on high-tech manufacturing,
  • formal, science-/research-based STI forms of
    knowledge at the apex of the knowledge hierarchy
  • preference for policy instruments which promote
    global (scientific cum economic) excellence,
    critical mass, concentration
  • strong, standardized (one size fits all) IP
    protection

11
Social Cohesion Policy Paradigm - SCPP
  • social objectives (welfare, income, education,
    health, housing, security, cohesion,
    environmental quality)
  • focus on benefits and costs of innovation for
    individuals and social groups needs-based
    innovation
  • private firm innovation shaped and directed by
    public policies
  • emphasize social dimension and drivers of
    innovation, mobilize knowledge resources and
    innovative capacity of all members of society
    (cfr Sen equality as capacity)
  • the innovative potential of traditional and
    experience based knowledge
  • preference for policy processes and instruments
    which enhance and widen the distributive scope of
    STI systems
  • Shared influence/power/participation,
  • Inclusive approach to building knowledge/innovativ
    e capacity (Sen)
  • Equitable sharing of benefits and costs of
    innovation/change

12
From KEPP to SCPP
  • Support positions within KEPP which assign a key
    role for social/distributional issues
  • Criticism of high-tech bias, emphasis on
    innovation in low-tech industries and services
  • From science-based innovation to pervasive
    learning (Lundvall STI vs DUI knowledge)
  • Add key dimensions that are neglected in KEPP
  • Power, politics, goal conflicts, modes of
    accountability
  • The directing (not only facilitating) role of
    public policies
  • Select, review and re-describe experience of
    needs-based STI policy within the SCPP framework,
    by
  • including social indicators
  • emphasizing social STI policy priorities
  • assessing good policy practice on
    distributional criteria
  • addressing questions of participation

13
Do STI policies explicitly address
inequality? Illustrations
  • National
  • Not salient in developed countries (emphasis on
    innovation for competitiveness)
  • Explicit and central in developing countries
    (e.g., Mozambique, Brazil integration of
    indigenous knowledge systems and ST policy
    social technologies, inclusion policies...)
  • Regional
  • Europe (EU) tensions and contradictions
    emphasis on competitiveness, but concern with
    cohesion (implicit) emphasis on centres,
    concentration (in)variable geometry mobility,
    but limited
  • Alternative STI regional dynamics e.g. NEPAD
    (CARICOM?)
  • Global
  • Shift towards STI for development/poverty
    reduction development of local capabilities
    learning and not just technologies but also
    conflict (WTO, WIPO, TRIPS, Biofuels)

14
The Lisbon agenda as (unfulfilled) promise and
project of integrated, multi-objective STI policy
  • The Lisbon strategy as indicator of the
    re-emergence of the social
  • states the ambition and outline of a novel, if
    saliently ambiguous, multi-objective, STI policy
    agenda
  • remains, however, largely locked to an
    economy-biased, single-objective STI policy
    framework
  • Europe as the most dynamic and competitive
    knowledge-based economy in the world
  • despite its explicit agenda for an integrated
    (?), multi-objective policy
  • social cohesion, sustainability, quality jobs
  • social cohesion (i.a.) and the European
    social model, as opposed to the US model of
    combined high aggregate growth and dramatically
    increasing social inequalities

15
Conclusions
  • Concern with growing inequalities has reentered
    STI policies
  • From this perspective we have identified two
    policy paradigms, differing in the extent and way
    they address inequality within STI policy
  • Knowledge Economy Policy Paradigm
  • Social Cohesion Policy Paradigm
  • Although not fully distinct in practice,
    contribute to characterize national, regional and
    global practices
  • STI policies have emphasised KEPP, but a broader
    approach is needed to address, explicitly, SCPP
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