segunda-feira, 17 de janeiro de 2011 10:53
POPULAR with foreigners looking for sun, sea and samba, Brazil wants to turn itself into a hot destination for seekers of science. Though its own bright graduates still head to Europe or the United States for PhDs or post-doctoral fellowships, nowadays that is more because science is an international affair than because they cannot study at home. The country wants more of them to return afterwards, and for the traffic to become two-way.
Brazil is no longer a scientific also-ran. It produces half a million graduates and 10,000 PhDs a year, ten times more than two decades ago. Between 2002 and 2008 its share of the world's scientific papers rose from 1.7% to 2.7%. It is a world leader in research on tropical medicine, bioenergy and plant biology. It spends 1% of its fast-growing GDP on research, half the rich-world share but almost double the average in the rest of Latin America. Its scientists are increasingly collaborating with those abroad: 30% of scientific papers by Brazilians now have a foreign co-author.
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http://www.economist.com/node/17851421
Fonte: The Economist - http://www.economist.com
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O Instituto Nacional de Engenharia de Superfícies é um dos Institutos Nacionais de Ciência e Tecnologia (INCTs) do CNPq
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O Instituto Nacional de Engenharia de Superfícies, um dos INCTs do CNPq, reúne e articula em nível nacional os melhores recursos humanos e de infraestrutura em engenharia de superfícies. O instituto propõe uma estreita colaboração entre grupos de pesquisa e sistemas produtivos a serviço do crescimento sustentável do Brasil pela via da inovação tecnológica.
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