348,337 research outputs found

    Consolidation Measures of Industry-Academia Cooperation for Human Resources Development of the Vocational Education Institutes

    Get PDF
    Government, industry and colleges have insufficient understanding of the meaning of and strategy for industry-academia cooperation, which is essential in building an innovative economy and searching for substantive public policies and practices. They also do not have a proper grasp of the overall situation, performance and problems of the cooperative relationship between them. This research is aimed at shedding some light on which direction should vocational education institutions, including junior colleges, polytechnics and vocational high schools, take in establishing industry-academia cooperation system in developing human resources as a major step toward becoming an innovative economy. It also intends to develop models for reinforcing mutual relations and collaboration between the three parties leading innovation, and to draw up schemes for promoting cooperation of them. Industry-academia cooperation refers to cooperative activities between academic bodies, government, municipal government, government-sponsored institutes and industries, including developing manpower customized to meet the demands of industries and future industrial development, R&D for creating and expanding new knowledge technology, technology transfer to industrial sectors, and industrial consulting. It is not a purpose itself but a way to facilitate research and technology development, and produce competent human resources. For the construction of an innovative economy, it is necessary to procure and utilize human resources from regional sectors, which form the foundation of social and knowledge capital clusters. For effective cooperation to take place, it is also necessary to be equipped with useful hardware (e.g. institution, law, finance, and facility), human ware (e.g. professionals, organization and leadership), software (e.g. industry-academia cooperation programs), and mind ware (e.g. cognizance and will of participation). Central and local governments should guide the way for developing human and knowledge capital in colleges and industries, and by supporting law, adminstration, and finance to them, show long- and mid-term programs overlooking the supply and demand of human and knowledge capital...

    Latin American perspectives to internationalize undergraduate information technology education

    Get PDF
    The computing education community expects modern curricular guidelines for information technology (IT) undergraduate degree programs by 2017. The authors of this work focus on eliciting and analyzing Latin American academic and industry perspectives on IT undergraduate education. The objective is to ensure that the IT curricular framework in the IT2017 report articulates the relationship between academic preparation and the work environment of IT graduates in light of current technological and educational trends in Latin America and elsewhere. Activities focus on soliciting and analyzing survey data collected from institutions and consortia in IT education and IT professional and educational societies in Latin America; these activities also include garnering the expertise of the authors. Findings show that IT degree programs are making progress in bridging the academic-industry gap, but more work remains

    Ready for Tomorrow: Demand-Side Emerging Skills for the 21st Century

    Get PDF
    As part of the Ready for the Job demand-side skill assessment, the Heldrich Center explored emerging work skills that will affect New Jersey's workforce in the next three to five years. The Heldrich Center identified five specific areas likely to generate new skill demands: biotechnology, security, e-learning, e-commerce, and food/agribusiness. This report explores the study's findings and offers recommendations for improving education and training in New Jersey

    Introducing Inventiveness into the Patent System: Submission to the Review of the National Innovation System

    Get PDF
    Because of the potential impact of the patent system on innovation diffusion, particularly on continuous and/or incremental innovation, patent policy should be of central importance to the review of the national innovation system. Substantial empirical evidence shows that most industrial innovations are not induced by the patent system. Even in very large markets, such as the USA, only a minority of patents are likely to be induced by the patent system. To the extent that patents do induce innovations, it is the inventiveness of the innovation which gives rise to possible social benefits (externalities, mainly in the form of knowledge spillovers) which may offset the costs of a patent system and thus give rise to a net economic benefit. On the basis of this evidence about the inducement effect of the patent system, and evidence on the current very low inventiveness standard for patent grant, policy proposals are put forward to re-introduce inventiveness into the patent system, thus making it potentially welfare-enhancing. These proposed changes would also have a major impact in ameliorating the negative impact of the patent system on continuous/incremental innovation

    Free-libre open source software as a public policy choice

    Get PDF
    Free Libre Open Source Software (FLOSS) is characterised by a specific programming and development paradigm. The availability and freedom of use of source code are at the core of this paradigm, and are the prerequisites for FLOSS features. Unfortunately, the fundamental role of code is often ignored among those who decide the software purchases for Canadian public agencies. Source code availability and the connected freedoms are often seen as unrelated and accidental aspects, and the only real advantage acknowledged, which is the absence of royalty fees, becomes paramount. In this paper we discuss some relevant legal issues and explain why public administrations should choose FLOSS for their technological infrastructure. We also present the results of a survey regarding the penetration and awareness of FLOSS usage into the Government of Canada. The data demonstrates that the Government of Canada shows no enforced policy regarding the implementation of a specific technological framework (which has legal, economic, business, and ethical repercussions) in their departments and agencies

    Do Tax Compliance Robots Follow the Law?

    Get PDF

    National Security Space Launch

    Get PDF
    The United States Space Forceā€™s National Security Space Launch (NSSL) program, formerly known as the Evolved Expendable Launch Vehicle (EELV) program, was first established in 1994 by President William J. Clintonā€™s National Space Transportation Policy. The policy assigned the responsibility for expendable launch vehicles to the Department of Defense (DoD), with the goals of lowering launch costs and ensuring national security access to space. As such, the United States Air Force Space and Missile Systems Center (SMC) started the EELV program to acquire more affordable and reliable launch capability for valuable U.S. military satellites, such as national reconnaissance satellites that cost billions per satellite. In March 2019, the program name was changed from EELV to NSSL, which reflected several important features: 1.) The emphasis on ā€œassured access to space,ā€ 2.) transition from the Russian-made RD-180 rocket engine used on the Atlas V to a US-sourced engine (now scheduled to be complete by 2022), 3.) adaptation to manifest changes (such as enabling satellite swaps and return of manifest to normal operations both within 12 months of a need or an anomaly), and 4.) potential use of reusable launch vehicles. As of August 2019, Blue Origin, Northrop Grumman Innovation Systems, SpaceX, and United Launch Alliance (ULA) have all submitted proposals. From these, the U.S. Air Force will be selecting two companies to fulfill approximately 34 launches over a period of five years, beginning in 2022. This paper will therefore first examine the objectives for the NSSL as presented in the 2017 National Security Strategy, Fiscal Year 2019, Fiscal Year 2020, and Fiscal Year 2021 National Defense Authorization Acts (NDAA), and National Presidential Directive No. 40. The paper will then identify areas of potential weakness and gaps that exist in space launch programs as a whole and explore the security implications that impact the NSSL specifically. Finally, the paper will examine how the trajectory of the NSSL program could be adjusted in order to facilitate a smooth transition into new launch vehicles, while maintaining mission success, minimizing national security vulnerabilities, and clarifying the defense acquisition process.No embargoAcademic Major: EnglishAcademic Major: International Studie
    • ā€¦
    corecore