The International Science Programme at Uppsala University supports IYBSSD 2022. Let’s have a look at their vision on the relationships between basic sciences and sustainable development.
The International Science Programme (ISP) has a focus on basic sciences. But what are the basic sciences to them and why are they supporting them in low and lower-middle income countries?
Will support to basic sciences contribute to poverty reduction? What is ISP’s approach?
What are the basic sciences?
The basic sciences are defined as the scientific disciplines of mathematics, physics, chemistry, and biology. They are called basic sciences because they provide a fundamental understanding of natural phenomena and the processes by which natural resources are transformed.
Why does ISP support basic sciences in low and lower-middle income countries?
This question was answered in the evaluation of ISP’s operation 2003-2010. There are, several reasons are given why aid money should be used to support basic sciences:
- Most of the flagship breakthroughs in development that benefit the poor have science at their core.
- Research in the basic sciences is a “public good”, and often a global public good.
- Expenditure on Research and Development is low in low and lower-middle income countries. The World Bank finds that the gap between research and development spending between rich and poor countries is much larger than the income gap between those countries.
- Market forces are such that OECD research institutes, and companies, rarely invest in research of direct interest to low and lower-middle income countries.
- Basic science underpins productivity and international competitiveness, that is, key drivers of sustainable economic growth in a globalised world.
- Basic science provides the evidence base for responding to many of the most basic challenges facing low or lower-middle income countries.
- Research and training needs long term investments. None of the breakthrough discoveries had been achieved without long term, predictable, sustained financing.
Will support to basic sciences contribute to poverty reduction?
ISP believes that support to the basic sciences indeed contributes to poverty reduction, although the link may be indirect. In the evaluation of ISP’s operation 2003-2010, it was concluded that basic science is a necessary condition for technological improvement and productivity increases in agriculture, manufacturing, and the service industries including health sciences.
A World Bank study of 55 developing countries states that there is a significant and positive association between the prevalence of science, maths, and engineering graduates and per capita GNI.
What is ISP’s approach?
ISP was founded in 1961, and has for almost 60 years of operation established a successful model for strengthening the capacity in the basic sciences mathematics, physics and chemistry in primarily low and lower middle-income countries.
The model applies long-term collaborative support to institutionally based research groups and scientific networks, aiming at strengthening institutional research capacity, producing and disseminating high-quality research results, and graduating MSc and PhD holders.
The success rate of ISP is exemplified by a study carried out in 2016, which showed that 94% of previously ISP-supported research groups were still pursuing research and PhD training. Many of these groups are located in countries where universities and governments are now increasingly allocating tax resources to education.
Moreover, close to 95% of PhD graduates from ISP-supported activities remain in their countries and regions, where they continue contributing to development.
External funding is still critical for developing basic sciences research in resource-challenged settings, where the domestic ability to sustainably fund such research is not yet established. In the long perspective, however, governments need to ramp up their support to science via domestic resource mobilization, increasing their control over the research agenda and decreasing donor dependency.
Why does ISP support only three of the basic sciences?
ISP started 1961 in the field of physics, but soon a need to include chemistry emerged. This was suggested to Sida in 1966, and after thorough evaluation of the demand and the feasibility, Sida decided to fund a chemistry program. After the necessary preparations, the program started in 1970.
A new evaluation carried out in 1993 recommended that the work of ISP should be broadened and that new separate branches should be set up for geosciences and biology. In 1999, ISP therefore submitted a proposal to Sida, which included an expansion to the fields of biology, geosciences, and – also – to mathematics, which ISP considered equally important. For the assessment of the proposal, Sida assigned an external reviewer, who recommended Sida to fund only a new program in mathematics since it was judged to be most needed. Sida decided as recommended, and the mathematics program started in 2002.
In its proposal to Sida 2007, ISP again suggested new biology and geosciences programs to be initiated, but because of financial constraints Sida did not decide in favor of such an expansion.
This content comes from ISP website.