Science
and technology policy : Where are we going?
Riwanto Tirtosudarmo ; A researcher at the
Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI)
|
JAKARTA
POST, 01 April 2014
In
anticipating the upcoming change in government, over the last three months or
so a debate has been underway concerning the increasingly neglected
development of science and technology in this country.
The
discourse centers on the institutional arrangements of higher education such
as in universities and the state’s research bodies such as the Research and
Technology Ministry.
There is
a consensus that Indonesia is facing a conundrum in which scientific research
is going nowhere; apparently there has been no connection whatsoever made
between the development of science and technology and the actual needs of
society and industry, the two major users of scientific research findings and
technological innovations.
Conventionally
it is the state universities and national research institutes where the
scientific and technological innovations are supposed to be produced.
Higher
education, of which universities form the major part, understandably has the
highest responsibility for the advancement of science and innovations in
technology.
Among
other issues is a proposal that the Directorate General of Higher Education
should be given more autonomy and separated from the Education and Culture
Ministry, which should focus on basic and secondary education. Some even
suggest that higher education should be integrated into the Research and
Technology Ministry to fully support the advancement of scientific research
and technological innovation.
A likely
underlying factor fueling the discourse is the significant increase in the
allocation of the state budget for education, which stands at 20 percent of
the total budget. The huge budget obviously has given the Education and
Culture Ministry a herculean task in managing the funds to effectively
achieve its targets.
The
proposal to separate higher education from the education ministry appears to
be a sensible solution to this problem.
No doubt
all the problems concerning the development of science and technology partly
result from the continuing lack of coherence both in the formulation and
implementation of the state’s science and technology policy.
Although
a ministerial office responsible for the formulation and implementation of
science and technology policy has existed in almost every cabinet since
independence, scientific research has always been given a low priority.
Fragmented
organization has long plagued the effectiveness of national policy as evinced
by different ministries and agencies carrying out their own policies without
clear demarcation and proper coordination.
The
major research organizations, namely the Research and Technology Ministry
with its main agency for planning and implementing technology; the Education
and Culture Ministry with its numerous universities; the research and
development (R and D) departments within every ministry; and non-departmental
research agencies such as the Indonesian Institute of Sciences (LIPI), the
National Nuclear Agency (BATAN) and many others rarely communicate with each
other to set the direction and goals of national policy on science and
technology.
For too
long science and technology policy has been fragmented and uncoordinated
often resulting in redundancies, wasted budgets and the increasingly yawning
gap between research and social realities. Serious and concerted efforts
should be undertaken if we do not want the development of science and
technology to become irrelevant in the eyes of our society.
Despite
the much vaunted campaign rhetoric such as “toward a world-class research
institute” or “toward first-class global universities” the number of academic
publications from Indonesia remains low internationally.
The crux
of the matter is indeed institutional rather than individual as many
Indonesian academics and researchers have been recognized internationally and
many have been employed in prominent foreign universities and research
centers in the developed world.
As with
many other problems that cannot be resolved by the current administration the
timing of the discourse on the expected major changes in the national policy
on science and technology logically should be proposed by the new
administration.
It is
likely that various lobby groups are currently at play to convince the
prospective new administration to change direction toward a more coordinated
and visionary national policy on science and technology. ●
|
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar