With
the advent of liberalization and globalization of our economy, we have witnessed
an astounding economic growth during the last decade of 20th century
and indeed continued to grow at a reasonable pace since then. Our economy is ranked
third in the world in terms of purchasing power. Yet, this impressive economic growth
could not push scientific research forward. Ironically, it continues to lag
behind. The oft cited reason for such poor growth in scientific research is: our
low level of investment in research—0.9% of GDP as against China’s 1.5% and
2.6% of the US. A dispassionate look at the whole issue however reveals many structural/systemic
weaknesses too that stand in the way of our progress under science and its
exploration.
Against this backdrop, it is pretty encouraging to read the
interview given by the newly appointed Principal Scientific Adviser to the
Government of India, K Vijaya Raghavan, a developmental biologist, to The Hindu
(22-4-18). True to his image—a forthcoming scientist in discussions on ‘Science
Policy’—he made certain interesting observations that merit the attention of
all those who are concerned about nurturing scientific excellence in our country.
First things first:
In order to expand the footprint of scientific excellence, Dr Raghavan wanted
that the scientific institutions in the country must learn to “work together a
lot more.” Of course, this has been agitating the minds of our scientific
community for long: sophisticated equipment lying idle at one centre, while
scientists from other laboratories lamenting at the lack of such/requisite
equipment to carry forward their explorations. Secondly, the very style of
carrying out research today is quite different from what it was in the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries: individual inventor has been replaced
by organized scientific research, which has even acquired international
character. This approach has of course, amplified production of new scientific
knowledge greatly. And with the advent of computers and novel modes of
communication, growth and dissemination of new scientific knowledge has further
been speeded up. With the result, people are being served by the industry with
newer products and comforts at a faster rate than in the past.
However,
science-based industries such as pharma and biotechnology, unlike matured
sectors like semiconductor industry, are still look to universities/national
laboratories for new scientific inputs. In such an evolving scenario, elite
institutions of India could no longer afford to function in isolation but must
pursue science in active collaboration with each other. It hardly needs to be
stressed here that by pooling the know-how and resources across the
institutional boundaries we can create better knowledge-base, can solve
problems faced by the nation more creatively, improve productivity and pocket
higher profits.
That said, it must
also be admitted that it is not easy for such collaboration to materialize
overnight across laboratories, for the leaders will be reluctant to cede their
control over institutions/projects and relationships thereof, that too, having
worked for ages in silos. Secondly, you know how difficult it is for adults to
learn new ways of doing work merely by listening or reading circulars. So, the
real question would be: how to transform the culture of our individual-driven
labs into that of collaborative culture? How to make our subject specialists
who built careers over their niche expertise to collaborate with their
competitors? And yet, there is no way out: their expertise must be integrated
across fields to offer better solutions to the society.
So, the policy
makers/top leaders must invest one-on-one time with the experts/leaders
supposed to implement the strategy to make collaboration happen as also support
them with requisite training and coaching. Multiple meetings with the heads of
labs is a must to make them imbibe the spirit of collaboration and model their
behaviour towards it. People like Dr Raghavan must engage themselves in
‘story-telling’ about the success achieved, however small it might be, in
centres elsewhere and how it could be made possible in every lab. Such
stories/successes must be accessible to everyone, for it could act as a
catalyst in making them think over the collaborative behaviour and in course of
time own it. Till such time all that the scientific adviser talked about would
remain as a mere wish.
The next comment
that he has made from the perspective of student community is more important:
“A student joining the National Institute of Immunology in New Delhi as an
immunologist should be able to go to the neighbouring plant genome centre, and
say, ‘I am very excited by plants. Can I switch from being an immunologist to
being a plant biologist?’” As he rightly observes, today, it is near impossible
for such a shift.
Perhaps, it is time
for us to dismantle such rigid silos and make education available across the
disciplines sans pre-set boundaries. And the earlier the better, for the wave
of ‘disruption’ being heralded by the destructive innovation wrought by new
technologies is feared to set free many from their present jobs in large-scale
manufacturing industries, service industries and other private sectors. And
they would be needing high quality university-level education that prepares
them for reemployment in the realm of 21st century technology.
In the gig economy,
even the fresh students entering the job-market are required to be equipped
with knowledge of various disciplines, all fused into one. In such an evolving
scenario, even the faculty need to reorient themselves: their teaching and
research activities, particularly of those who are engaged in high-end
technologies, must be made available to even students and research scholars
from other institutions.
His third
observation is about making “science accessible to citizens in the language
they are comfortable with”, for, he felt “Science education … in English is
exclusionary.” There are no two opinions about the validity of this statement.
But it has tremendous capital costs, for as Raghavan himself observed, its
accomplishment “will need investments in quality people who can write and
translate texts in multiple languages.” Now the big question is: whether to
allocate capital for the pursuit of scientific research in frontier areas that
results in new knowledge or to invest capital in translating existing
scientific knowledge into our regional languages. The importance of this
question can better be appreciated if it is juxtaposed with our current level
of investment in R&D, which according to the latest Economic Survey stood at
0.7% of GDP which is pretty low in comparison to an international scale.
Incidentally, such a
translation project was once launched in the past but appears to have been
abandoned half the way for obvious reasons. It is n order here, to say that
universities and institutions of higher learning are already facing acute
shortage of qualified staff even to carry out routine research and teaching.
That being the reality, one can well visualise about the availability of
competent translators to undertake the project of making science available in
regional languages. A dispassionate look at this whole issue makes one wonder:
Isn’t science education, be it in any language, ‘exclusionary’! After all mere
access to science by itself does not make one a Chandrasekhar or Raman. And
Ramans and Chandrasekharans will somehow acquire access to science, for they
have a strong ‘why’ of their own. But what they certainly need is sustained
support from the nation in terms of capital and laboratory facilities to keep
their engagement with science going on fruitfully.
Populist measures
sound pretty appealing, but their blind pursuit may leave us way behind the
rest of the nations. And examples of such populist pursuits of the past making
us miss the bus are many: Under the pretext of self-reliance, we invested
earlier considerable sums in ‘reinventing the wheel’—establishment of CERI in
Bits, Pilani to reinvent TV tubes in the 60s, etc—while countries like Japan
and other Southeast Asian nations marched ahead by borrowing the existing
technology from the west and once having acquired a foothold, kept themselves
in the race by building newer technologies over it.
So, we have to make
a choice, a choice that is rational but not populist and importantly capable of
keeping the nation at par in its scientific endeavours with the rest of the
globe, if not ahead of them. And this calls for leaders like Dr Homi Bhabha,
who passionately worked for creating effective schools to undertake fundamental
research across the disciplines. In this endeavour, we can even invite diaspora
settled in the US universities to visit as adjunct faculties and guide young
scientists in acquiring investigative skills.
Any endeavour that
breaks away from the past is all set to encounter obstacles. Nevertheless, let’s
hope for the success of Dr Vijaya Raghavan’s mission.
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