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Lonely Ideas - Can Russia Compete? (Hardcover)
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Lonely Ideas - Can Russia Compete? (Hardcover)
Series: The MIT Press
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Total price: R706
Discovery Miles: 7 060
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An expert investigates Russia's long history of technological
invention followed by commercial failure and points to new
opportunities to break the pattern. When have you gone into an
electronics store, picked up a desirable gadget, and found that it
was labeled "Made in Russia"? Probably never. Russia, despite its
epic intellectual achievements in music, literature, art, and pure
science, is a negligible presence in world technology. Despite its
current leaders' ambitions to create a knowledge economy, Russia is
economically dependent on gas and oil. In Lonely Ideas, Loren
Graham investigates Russia's long history of technological
invention followed by failure to commercialize and implement. For
three centuries, Graham shows, Russia has been adept at developing
technical ideas but abysmal at benefiting from them. From the
seventeenth-century arms industry through twentieth-century
Nobel-awarded work in lasers, Russia has failed to sustain its
technological inventiveness. Graham identifies a range of
conditions that nurture technological innovation: a society that
values inventiveness and practicality; an economic system that
provides investment opportunities; a legal system that protects
intellectual property; a political system that encourages
innovation and success. Graham finds Russia lacking on all counts.
He explains that Russia's failure to sustain technology, and its
recurrent attempts to force modernization, reflect its political
and social evolution and even its resistance to democratic
principles. But Graham points to new connections between Western
companies and Russian researchers, new research institutions, a
national focus on nanotechnology, and the establishment of
Skolkovo, "a new technology city." Today, he argues, Russia has the
best chance in its history to break its pattern of technological
failure.
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