What is a Knowledge Society? And does it live up to its hype?Published by the Communications and Development Department
10 September 2004
What is a Knowledge Society? And does it live up to its hype?
The government-funded Marsden grants are administered by the Royal Society of New Zealand and, this year, total $33.3 million.
Professor Les Oxley, who will work with Professor David Thorns and Dr Ken Carlaw, says knowledge growth is considered to be a major source of economic development and social wellbeing, but there are no generally accepted definitions of what constitutes a Knowledge Society.
He wants to determine who wins and who loses in a Knowledge Society, and provide methodology which can be used internationally to assess the consequences of knowledge growth.
“Governments seek to promote knowledge growth, but without a coherent notion of its contours or any measure to evaluate the consequences of any actions taken,” he says.
“The world has embraced a set of concepts which are seen as the core of future wellbeing without any commonly agreed notion of what they are, how they might be measured and, crucially therefore, how they actually do or might affect wellbeing.”
For further information please contact: John MacDonald Tel: +64-3-364 2910
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