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Publications


New Book Promotes Science and Innovation for Development

Science Innovation Book
 
A new book by two of the UK’s leading international development thinkers is a landmark in development thinking and practice. Science and Innovation for Development demonstrates how science and innovation can be harnessed to tackle today’s biggest challenges in poor countries, including climate change, HIV/AIDS and illiteracy. Case studies are described, including the use of tissue culture to develop disease-resistant bananas in Kenya; the use of nanotechnology to develop cheaper and faster kits for diagnosing infectious diseases and the use of organic material to power a multi-purpose stove that can also function as a refrigerator and generator.

“Science and Innovation for Development is the most important publication on development since Fritz Schumacher’s 1973 classic Small is Beautiful,” says world-renowned development scholar Professor Calestous Juma of Harvard University. He will joined the authors at the official launch in London today on Tuesday 19 January at the Wellcome Collection.

The authors
Written by two of the UK’s foremost development experts, Sir Gordon Conway, Professor of International Development at Imperial College London (and former chief scientist at the UK Department for International Development) and Professor Jeff Waage, Director of the London International Development Centre (LIDC), with Sara Delaney, LIDC & Imperial College, Science and Innovation for Development demonstrates how even the most basic daily activities in developing country communities are based on science and innovation.

Conway said: “People in developed countries sometimes forget how scientific innovations have transformed their lives.

“In the 20th century we witnessed dramatic medical inventions such as a vaccine against yellow fever and the discovery of penicillin. Today we are seeing revolutionary advances in electronics and communications. Similarly, technology is helping solve challenges faced by the world’s poorest people:  water purification technologies are providing communities with access to clean water, mobile phones are being used by farmers to access agricultural data and medical research is helping tackle diseases like malaria and HIV.”

Using the Millennium Development Goals as a framework, the book explores a wide range of development issues where science is particularly active: agriculture, health and the environment.
Co-author Waage said: “We have written this book to help people understand the role that science and innovation can – and does – play in helping developing countries reduce poverty and improve people’s livelihoods.

“We firmly believe that science is vital for development and we want that to be well understood, particularly as science is often presented in a way that is not easily accessible to the non-specialist.”

Further resources
Read the online version of the book

Report of the book launch, 19 January 2010

Video footage of the book launch
Professor Calestous Juma, Harvard University

Professor Gordon Conway, Imperial College London, and Professor Jeff Waage, LIDC