Skip to content

Tapping the Riches of Science

Universities and the Promise of Economic Growth

Roger L. Geiger, Creso M. Sá
Barcode 9780674031289
Hardback

Sold out
Original price £42.65 - Original price £42.65
Original price
£42.65
£42.65 - £42.65
Current price £42.65

Click here to join our rewards scheme and earn points on this purchase!

Availability:
Out of stock

Release Date: 01/01/2009

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Children's Learning & Education
Label: Harvard University Press
Language: English
Publisher: Harvard University Press

Universities and the Promise of Economic Growth
American universities are under increasing pressure to maximize their economic contributions. This book offers a rigorous and far-sighted explanation of this controversial and little-understood movement.

Can university-based scientific research contribute to the economic development of a region? Can it generate wealth for the university? American universities are under increasing pressure to maximize their economic contributions. Tapping the Riches of Science offers a rigorous and far-sighted explanation of this controversial and little-understood movement.

Just how do universities contribute to innovation in industry? How have state legislatures promoted local university commitments to economic relevance? And how has the pressure to be economically productive affected the core academic missions of teaching and research? Drawing from a range of social science analyses, campus interviews, and examples of university-industry partnerships, Roger Geiger and Creso Sá reveal the ways that economic development has been incorporated into university commitments.

Noting enduring cultural differences between the academic and business worlds, Geiger and Sá deflate both suspicious and overconfident views. They show how elusive success can be for embryonic discoveries with as-yet-unclear applications. Warning against promising—and expecting—too much, Tapping the Riches of Science nonetheless makes a strong case for the long-term promise of practical uses for academic research.