ABSTRACT

Science and technology have long been considered key for development, problem solving and education in low-income countries, and Sweden has been at the forefront of efforts in this area, as one of the first countries to formalize research aid.

This book analyses how the Swedish Agency for Research Cooperation with Developing Countries (Sarec) and the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (Sida) have worked to promote science in low-income countries. In doing so, the book tackles challenging questions around whose knowledges and capacities count, who sets the research agenda, how knowledge resources are distributed, and how complex donor–recipient relationships serve both to address and inflate these issues. Through a discursive analysis of policy material and interviews with former directors at Sarec and Sida as well as other key persons, the book traces how perceptions of the relationship between research and development have shifted over the last five decades.

Pointing to why long-term collaboration is necessary in order to contribute significantly to capacity building, as well as highlighting more general tensions relating to the production of knowledge, Sweden’s Research Aid Policy: The Role of Science in Development will be a valuable resource for advanced students and researchers of foreign aid, development cooperation and the history of science and technology.

chapter 1|26 pages

Science for development

The roots and branches of aid to research

chapter 2|21 pages

Research aid

Mutually beneficial cooperation or neo-colonial science?

chapter 3|24 pages

Theoretical perspectives and methodology

chapter 4|30 pages

1973–1979

Tracing foundations

chapter 5|22 pages

1980–1990

Settling in and becoming pragmatic

chapter 6|25 pages

1991–1997

Polemic revival and the intertwining of localism and universalism

chapter 7|30 pages

1998–2008

Constructing sustainable knowledge societies

chapter 8|23 pages

2009–2020

Tackling global challenges through transformative innovation?

chapter 9|10 pages

Concluding discussion

The boundary organization's conundrum