U.S. Government Funding for Science and Technology Cooperation with Russia / Najlacnejšie knihy
U.S. Government Funding for Science and Technology Cooperation with Russia

Code: 04733813

U.S. Government Funding for Science and Technology Cooperation with Russia

by Caroline Wagner, Irene Brahmakulam, D.J. Peterson, Linda Staheli

This document details U.S. government spending on cooperative science and technology activities with Russia. The U.S. government spent, on average, 300 million dollars a year during the 1990s to support science and technology (S&T ... more

21.29


Reprint
Date unknown

Availability alert

Add to wishlist

You might also like

Give this book as a present today
  1. Order book and choose Gift Order.
  2. We will send you book gift voucher at once. You can give it out to anyone.
  3. Book will be send to donee, nothing more to care about.

Book gift voucher sampleRead more

Availability alert

Availability alert


Your agreement - Submiting you agree to the Terms and Condtions.

We will watch availability for you

Enter your e-mail address and once book will be available,
we will send you a message. It's that simple.

More about U.S. Government Funding for Science and Technology Cooperation with Russia

You get 53 loyalty points

Book synopsis

This document details U.S. government spending on cooperative science and technology activities with Russia. The U.S. government spent, on average, 300 million dollars a year during the 1990s to support science and technology (S&T) cooperation with Russia. This document details U.S. government spending on cooperative S&T activities with Russian partners. RAND collected and analyzed data at the project level and surveyed agency officials about specific projects and programs. These data were aggregated by spending into categories created by RAND. The report thus provides an analytic, cross-agency overview, presenting a broad picture of the U.S.-Russia S&T relationship between 1994 and 2000. The U.S. government's projects with Russia have a slightly different pattern than can be observed with other scientifically advanced countries: They are more binational in character, less collaborative, more technology-based, less of a shared effort, and dominated more by spending in aerospace applications. Reports from scientists working with Russian counterparts indicate that the United States is gaining significant scientific benefit from this joint collaboration. Although funding for the U.S.- Russia S&T relationship seems to have dropped in 2001, there has been a revived interest within the U.S. scientific community in working with Russia and an increase in the number of projects being considered.

Book details

Book category Books in English Society & social sciences Politics & government Central government

21.29

Trending among others



Collection points Bratislava a 2642 dalších

Copyright ©2008-24 najlacnejsie-knihy.sk All rights reservedPrivacyCookies


Account: Log in
Všetky knihy sveta na jednom mieste. Navyše za skvelé ceny.

Shopping cart ( Empty )

For free shipping
shop for 59,99 € and more

You are here: