Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries

All over the world, agricultural research systems are undergoing significant changes. Using an analytical framework, this Briefing Paper describes how research systems adapt to the changes in the context of agricultural research and also, how such adjustments have affected the effectiveness of the r...

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Main Author: Janssen, Willem G.
Format: Brief
Language:Inglés
Published: International Service for National Agricultural Research 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136244
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author Janssen, Willem G.
author_browse Janssen, Willem G.
author_facet Janssen, Willem G.
author_sort Janssen, Willem G.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description All over the world, agricultural research systems are undergoing significant changes. Using an analytical framework, this Briefing Paper describes how research systems adapt to the changes in the context of agricultural research and also, how such adjustments have affected the effectiveness of the research systems in the following five developed countries: the USA, Australia, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and the UK. The conclusion is that the traditional ""technology factories"" are changing into flexible and versatile ""sources of knowledge."" The transformations have not come about easily, but they have helped minimize budget cuts. The new research systems are a reflection of the new conditions that society imposes on agriculture, science, and the management of the public sector.
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spelling CGSpace1362442025-01-09T06:04:14Z Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries Janssen, Willem G. research institutions All over the world, agricultural research systems are undergoing significant changes. Using an analytical framework, this Briefing Paper describes how research systems adapt to the changes in the context of agricultural research and also, how such adjustments have affected the effectiveness of the research systems in the following five developed countries: the USA, Australia, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and the UK. The conclusion is that the traditional ""technology factories"" are changing into flexible and versatile ""sources of knowledge."" The transformations have not come about easily, but they have helped minimize budget cuts. The new research systems are a reflection of the new conditions that society imposes on agriculture, science, and the management of the public sector. 2002-07 2024-01-04T07:47:44Z 2024-01-04T07:47:44Z Brief https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136244 en Open Access application/pdf International Service for National Agricultural Research Janssen, Willem G. 2002. Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries. International Service for National Agricultural Research
spellingShingle research institutions
Janssen, Willem G.
Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries
title Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries
title_full Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries
title_fullStr Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries
title_full_unstemmed Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries
title_short Institutional Innovations in Public Agricultural Research in Five Developed Countries
title_sort institutional innovations in public agricultural research in five developed countries
topic research institutions
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/136244
work_keys_str_mv AT janssenwillemg institutionalinnovationsinpublicagriculturalresearchinfivedevelopedcountries