AGRICULTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TO DEVELOPING COUNTRIES UNDER THE COOPERATION-COMPETITION PARADOX

Authors

  • José de Souza Silva

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.35977/0104-1096.cct1997.v14.8962

Abstract

This is a time of cooperation, competition and contradictions. The paper provides a historical framework for understanding (I) how the process of transferring agricultural technology from developed to developing countries has evolved from colonial times to the present; (II) how international cooperation initiatives have developed from the era of exploitation without cooperation to the era of cooperation for convenience to the era of cooperation and competition; and (III) why some major contradictions are emerging under the cooperation-competition paradox. The paper also reveals how over time the degree of (under)development of S&T has influenced the strategies used by developed countries to benefit from developing countries' weaknesses built by the scientific and technological gap between them; from the era of economic botany to the era of agricultural chemistry to the era of Mendelian genetics to the era of molecular genetics.

Author Biography

José de Souza Silva

Agronomist with a Ph.D. in Sociology of Science and Technology; former Head of the Secretariat for Strategic Management of the Brazilian Public Corporation for Agricultural Research (EMBRAPA); former FAO Senior Officer for the International Conference and Programme for Plant Genetic Resources (ICPPGR); and presently working with the International Service for National Agricultural Research (ISNAR) as the Leader of the ISNAR Project for Strengthening Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation (PM&E) of Agricultural Research in Latin America and the Caribbean (LA&C). ISNAR-IICA; Av. Mariana de Jesús 147 y La Pradera; Apdo. Postal 17-03-00201; Quito, Ecuador. Phone (59-32) 225-697; Fax (59-32) 227-194.

Published

1997-01-01

How to Cite

Silva, J. de S. (1997). AGRICULTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TO DEVELOPING COUNTRIES UNDER THE COOPERATION-COMPETITION PARADOX. Science & Technology Journals, 14(1), 91–112. https://doi.org/10.35977/0104-1096.cct1997.v14.8962

Issue

Section

Ensaios