AGRICULTURAL BIOTECHNOLOGY TRANSFER TO DEVELOPING COUNTRIES UNDER THE COOPERATION-COMPETITION PARADOX
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.35977/0104-1096.cct1997.v14.8962Abstract
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.Downloads
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
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Section
Ensaios