Scientific Literacy in the Developing World
From the Archives
Posted on July 27, 2007
Previously filed under: Opinions and Editorials
|
| Developing countries, such as Nigeria, want to bridge the gap between science and politics. Photo Credit: Flickr |
But too often an essential ingredient is neglected. Parliamentarians must be well informed if they are to stimulate, formulate and scrutinize science-related policies, and ensure such policies drive sustainable development.
A meeting held in Nairobi last week (29-30 June), organized by the Kenyan Academy of Sciences (KNAS) and Britain's Royal Society, highlighted a spectrum of obstacles in the way of scientifically literate parliaments, including poor scientific understanding and the different timescales within which scientists and politicians operate.
|
Parliamentarians must be well informed if they are to stimulate, formulate and scrutinize science-related policies, and ensure such policies drive sustainable development.
|
At one end of this spectrum, resources may simply be lacking. Many parliaments have neither the research staff nor the basic technical equipment, such as reliable Internet connections, to access the information they need.
At the other end is a lack of political will. If senior politicians do not accept that science and technology are crucial, and that democratic debate about their impacts is equally important, they are unlikely to support moves by more junior politicians to address either.
Parliaments Need Science
Nevertheless, many of the meeting's delegates presented a strong case for greater scientific literacy within parliaments. Noah Wekesa, Kenya's minister for science and technology — who himself studied veterinary medicine — told the meeting that strengthening links between scientific and parliamentary communities was essential.
|
"The first step to inculcating science and technology into our national ethos is the recognition by parliament that science, technology and innovation are critical tools for policy formulation," said Kenya's minister for science and technology.
|
"The first step to inculcating science and technology into our national ethos is the recognition by parliament that science, technology and innovation are critical tools for policy formulation," Wekesa said. Academies such as the KNAS had an important role in ensuring this happens.
Some attendees, such as Ruth Oniango — previously a professor of food science and nutrition at Jomo Kenyatta University in Nairobi, and now an influential member of the Kenyan National Assembly — encouraged colleagues to follow her in giving science a stronger voice in parliament.
Others highlighted the importance of strengthening parliamentary review mechanisms — for example over the best way of regulating genetically modified crops.
Bridging the Gap
Several ideas for bridging the science-politics divide were proposed. There was considerable enthusiasm for copying the Royal Society's scheme, in which some parliamentarians agree to be 'paired' with researchers from their constituencies.
Further suggestions included encouraging more scientists to become elected politicians, and establishing institutional mechanisms that let the scientific community contribute its knowledge to legislative debates (such as parliamentary offices of science and technology).
Such initiatives can really place science on the national political agenda. For example, the Ugandan parliament has had a science and technology committee since 2002. Its chair, Amuriat Patrick Oboi, said it has already significantly raised science's profile in national economic policies.
Difficulties Remain
|
Patrick Oboi, chair of the Ugandan parliament, pointed out that many scientists still don't want to, or won't, discuss their work with political leaders who are not scientifically trained.
|
But it has not been easy. Many scientists, said Oboi, still don't want to, or won't, discuss their work with political leaders who are not scientifically trained. Despite the committee's efforts, many legislators remain uninformed about both national and international issues in science and technology.
Oniango also spoke of difficulties in persuading her colleagues to take science seriously. Indeed, several members of the Kenyan parliament's science and technology committee failed to address the KNAS workshop because of competing political pressures from an upcoming general election.
Almost all speakers said getting information about science and technology was difficult — despite the fact that much of this already exists on the Internet.
The challenge for parliamentary researchers is first locating relevant and reliable information, then translating it into language that parliamentarians can understand, and finally making it directly relevant to national political priorities — in other words, to the day-to-day concerns of the average politician.
Independent Journalism Can Help
It was striking how many speakers emphasized journalists' roles in bringing scientific and technological information to policymakers' attention. Indeed, the meeting recommended greater support for science journalism training.
But journalists must take care not lose their political independence. Just as parliaments must scrutinize government actions, so journalists must scrutinize the actions of both governments and their parliaments.
Well-informed journalism can certainly help ensure that political debate is grounded in reliable science, undistorted by vested interests. Both journalists and parliamentarians share a common interest in enhancing their scientific literacy.
Contributed by David Dickson, director SciDev.net. Reprinted with permission from SciDev.net.
To read another Global Envision article about science and government, see Science Needs Effective Democracy to Thrive.
Return to top
Bookmark/Search this post with


Recent comments
on Tom's Shoes succeeds at marketing, but Warby Parker wins for a better anti-poverty model
on 20 tiny strokes of genius: Mercy Corps puts social innovations on display
on How Haiti is fighting poverty by killing cash
on 20 tiny strokes of genius: Mercy Corps puts social innovations on display
on Reinterpreting the Brain Drain