Global Computer Grid Links Far-Flung African Scientists

From the Archives

Previously filed under: Africa, Technology
African scientists will be able to communicate with fellow overseas scientists through a new 'grid computing' project launched this November.
Photo Credit: Copyright © SciDev.net
Universities in five African countries to gain from new computer grid
African scientists will be able to connect up with fellow researchers who have moved overseas through a 'grid computing' project.

Launched by UNESCO this week (20 November) and co-sponsored by the information technology company Hewlett-Packard (HP), the initiative aims to tackle the brain drain that plagues Africa's scientific sector.

Grid computing technology uses powerful computer servers to give individuals access to databases all over the world. The joint project will be set up at universities in Algeria, Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal and Zimbabwe, and will be extended to other countries in two years.

Since 1990, some 20,000 African professionals have left their home countries each year for the industrialised world. Skilled workers make up just four per cent of the total workforce in sub-Saharan Africa, according to the International Organization for Migration.
Grid computing technology uses powerful computer servers to give individuals access to databases all over the world.


Participating universities will be chosen by their governments, along with UNESCO, and preference given to university departments that already have technological capacity. Each government will also identify one discipline which, in addition to IT, will be prioritised for the project.

While UNESCO will organise and develop the project, HP will provide the equipment to set up the technology.

Gisèle Morin-Labatut, senior officer at the International Development and Research Centre (IDRC) in Canada, welcomed the project but warned of potential exclusivity. African researchers should be connected to all researchers in the North, not just fellow Africans, she said.

But Alioune Camara, a senior officer at the IDRC in Senegal, disagreed. Instead, he says, any step that can be taken towards alleviating the effects of the brain drain should be welcomed.

"We cannot achieve everything at once," he told SciDev.Net. "African researchers abroad are themselves connected with those in the North, so this will open up much larger networks of research."
Since 1990, some 20,000 African professionals have left their home countries each year for the industrialised world.


"The main problem of our emigrating researchers is not so much that they are outside the country as the fact that they are disconnected from researchers in their homeland," he said.

Stamenka Uvalic-Trumbic, an education project leader at UNESCO told SciDev.Net that a similar project launched in Eastern Europe in 2003 successfully provided scientists with substantial research networks.

Although she could not give exact figures, she told SciDev.Net that funding for the project would not be substantial.




Contributed by Eva Tallaksen, contributor to SciDev.net . Reprinted with permission from SciDev.net.

To read another Global Envision article about the importance of communication in world development, see Communication is Key to Development, Say Experts.



Return to top

Stories We're Watching

As Growth Slows, India Awakens to Need for Foreign Investment

International Herald Tribune - Wed, 02/08/2012 - 08:26
India’s central bank and economic analysts predict that growth will fall sharply to 7 percent this fiscal year and remain sluggish.

Social responsibility and a new world order

Washington Post - Innovations - Tue, 02/07/2012 - 07:56
Just before the New Year, the London-based Center for Economics and Business Research announced that Brazil had overtaken the United Kingdom as the world’s sixth largest economy. Furthermore, it predicted that by 2020, India and Russia will also have overtaken all the European economic powers.

Aid for trade policy rears its ugly head

The Guardian's Poverty Matters - Mon, 02/06/2012 - 01:41
The UK government's dismay at not being granted the contract for Typhoon fighter jets in India is an indication that its controversial aid for trade policy is still very much alive.

Liberia's battle to put the lights back on

The Guardian's Poverty Matters - Sun, 02/05/2012 - 23:00
Ellen Johnson Sirleaf has set ambitious targets to restore the country's electricity supply. But will it meet them by 2015?

As Africa's consumers rise, so does inequality

Yale Global Online - Fri, 02/03/2012 - 10:17
Kenya struggles to spread the wealth from rapid growth.

Recent comments

Countries

An initiative of Mercy Corps
“You must be the change
you wish to see in the world”
Mahatma Gandhi
Learn more about Mercy Corps >

Efficiency

Over the last five years, more than 89% of Mercy Corps' resources have been allocated directly to programs

Excellence

America's premier charity evaluator gives Mercy Corps four stars in organizational efficiency. Click here to learn more.

High Value

Every dollar you donate to Mercy Corps helps us secure $11.16 in donated food and other critical supplies.

Mercy Corps — Dept. W — 45 SW Ankeny — Portland, OR 97204
All original content Copyright © 2009 Mercy Corps. Quoted and linked content is property of the creator(s). Mercy Corps will not sell, rent or trade your personal information.