Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013

Several developing countries seek to build knowledge-based economies by attempting to expand scientific research capabilities. Characterizing the state and direction of progress in this arena is challenging but important. Here, we employ three metrics: a classical metric of productivity (publication...

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Main Authors: Siddiqi, Afreen, Stoppani, Jonathan, Anadon, Laura Diaz, Narayanamurti, Venkatesh
Other Authors: MIT Institute for Data, Systems, and Society
Format: Article
Language:en_US
Published: Public Library of Science 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/107807
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author Siddiqi, Afreen
Stoppani, Jonathan
Anadon, Laura Diaz
Narayanamurti, Venkatesh
author2 MIT Institute for Data, Systems, and Society
author_facet MIT Institute for Data, Systems, and Society
Siddiqi, Afreen
Stoppani, Jonathan
Anadon, Laura Diaz
Narayanamurti, Venkatesh
author_sort Siddiqi, Afreen
collection MIT
description Several developing countries seek to build knowledge-based economies by attempting to expand scientific research capabilities. Characterizing the state and direction of progress in this arena is challenging but important. Here, we employ three metrics: a classical metric of productivity (publications per person), an adapted metric which we denote as Revealed Scientific Advantage (developed from work used to compare publications in scientific fields among countries) to characterize disciplinary specialty, and a new metric, scientific indigeneity (defined as the ratio of publications with domestic corresponding authors) to characterize the locus of scientific activity that also serves as a partial proxy for local absorptive capacity. These metrics—using population and publications data that are available for most countries–allow the characterization of some key features of national scientific enterprise. The trends in productivity and indigeneity when compared across other countries and regions can serve as indicators of strength or fragility in the national research ecosystems, and the trends in specialty can allow regional policy makers to assess the extent to which the areas of focus of research align (or not align) with regional priorities. We apply the metrics to study the Middle East and North Africa (MENA)—a region where science and technology capacity will play a key role in national economic diversification. We analyze 9.8 million publication records between 1981–2013 in 17 countries of MENA from Morocco to Iraq and compare it to selected countries throughout the world. The results show that international collaborators increasingly drove the scientific activity in MENA. The median indigeneity reached 52% in 2013 (indicating that almost half of the corresponding authors were located in foreign countries). Additionally, the regional disciplinary focus in chemical and petroleum engineering is waning with modest growth in the life sciences. We find repeated patterns of stagnation and contraction of scientific activity for several MENA countries contributing to a widening productivity gap on an international comparative yardstick. The results prompt questions about the strength of the developing scientific enterprise and highlight the need for consistent long-term policy for effectively addressing regional challenges with domestic research.
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spelling mit-1721.1/1078072022-10-01T11:48:41Z Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013 Siddiqi, Afreen Stoppani, Jonathan Anadon, Laura Diaz Narayanamurti, Venkatesh MIT Institute for Data, Systems, and Society Siddiqi, Afreen Several developing countries seek to build knowledge-based economies by attempting to expand scientific research capabilities. Characterizing the state and direction of progress in this arena is challenging but important. Here, we employ three metrics: a classical metric of productivity (publications per person), an adapted metric which we denote as Revealed Scientific Advantage (developed from work used to compare publications in scientific fields among countries) to characterize disciplinary specialty, and a new metric, scientific indigeneity (defined as the ratio of publications with domestic corresponding authors) to characterize the locus of scientific activity that also serves as a partial proxy for local absorptive capacity. These metrics—using population and publications data that are available for most countries–allow the characterization of some key features of national scientific enterprise. The trends in productivity and indigeneity when compared across other countries and regions can serve as indicators of strength or fragility in the national research ecosystems, and the trends in specialty can allow regional policy makers to assess the extent to which the areas of focus of research align (or not align) with regional priorities. We apply the metrics to study the Middle East and North Africa (MENA)—a region where science and technology capacity will play a key role in national economic diversification. We analyze 9.8 million publication records between 1981–2013 in 17 countries of MENA from Morocco to Iraq and compare it to selected countries throughout the world. The results show that international collaborators increasingly drove the scientific activity in MENA. The median indigeneity reached 52% in 2013 (indicating that almost half of the corresponding authors were located in foreign countries). Additionally, the regional disciplinary focus in chemical and petroleum engineering is waning with modest growth in the life sciences. We find repeated patterns of stagnation and contraction of scientific activity for several MENA countries contributing to a widening productivity gap on an international comparative yardstick. The results prompt questions about the strength of the developing scientific enterprise and highlight the need for consistent long-term policy for effectively addressing regional challenges with domestic research. John F. Kennedy School of Government. Kuwait Program 2017-03-31T20:46:23Z 2017-03-31T20:46:23Z 2016-11 2016-06 Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 1932-6203 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/107807 Siddiqi, Afreen et al. “Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013.” Ed. Joshua L Rosenbloom. PLOS ONE 11.11 (2016): e0164500. en_US http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0164500 PLOS ONE Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ application/pdf Public Library of Science PLoS
spellingShingle Siddiqi, Afreen
Stoppani, Jonathan
Anadon, Laura Diaz
Narayanamurti, Venkatesh
Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013
title Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013
title_full Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013
title_fullStr Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013
title_full_unstemmed Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013
title_short Scientific Wealth in Middle East and North Africa: Productivity, Indigeneity, and Specialty in 1981–2013
title_sort scientific wealth in middle east and north africa productivity indigeneity and specialty in 1981 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/107807
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