30 нояб. 2013 г.

Creating the Market University: How Academic Science Became an Economic Engine. Elizabeth Popp Berman

American universities today serve as economic engines, performing the scientific research that will create new industries, drive economic growth, and keep the United States globally competitive. But only a few decades ago, these same universities self-consciously held themselves apart from the world of commerce. Creating the Market University is the first book to systematically examine why academic science made such a dramatic move toward the market. Drawing on extensive historical re­search, Elizabeth Popp Berman shows how the government--influenced by the argument that innovation drives the economy--brought about this transformation. Americans have a long tradition of making heroes out of their inventors. But before the 1960s and '70s neither policymakers nor economists paid much attention to the critical economic role played by innovation. However, during the late 1970s, a confluence of events--industry con­cern with the perceived deterioration of innovation in the United States, a growing body of economic research on innovation's importance, and the stagnation of the larger economy--led to a broad political interest in fostering invention. The policy decisions shaped by this change were di­verse, influencing arenas from patents and taxes to pensions and sci­ence policy, and encouraged practices that would focus specifically on the economic value of academic science. By the early 1980s, universit­ies were nurturing the rapid growth of areas such as biotech entrepren­eurship, patenting, and university-industry research centers.

Max Weber Book Award, Pierre Bourdieu Award, American Sociological Association
President's Book Award, Social Science History Association