|
Amazon Body Care |
|
|
Who's Online |
|
We have 66 guests online |
|
Statistics |
Members: 494
News: 11474
Web Links: 0
|
|
Related Items |
-
Brazilian Teachers in the Forefront of War on Drugs
-
Brazil's College Quota: 10% for Poor and Blacks
-
AIDS Among Poor Women Goes Up Sharply in Brazil
-
Brazil and Russia Strengthen Technological Ties
-
UN Advice to Brazil: Export More Technology!
-
Sixteen Million Illiterates in Brazil Over 15
-
Two Million Barred from College in Brazil Due to Poverty
-
Brazil Wonders How to Educate Its Indians
-
Brazil's Lula Asks More Daring from Teachers
-
Brazil's Development Train Is Running Late, Says Minister
-
Brazil Technology to Monitor Venezuela's Environment
-
Brazil: Biotech to Facilitate Mercorsur/EU Relations
-
Half of Brazilian Teachers Never Used Internet
-
Brazil Joins Chile in Scientific Antarctic Expedition
-
Authorized Use of Leishmaniasis Vaccine Made in Brazil
-
In Brazil, Basic Education Gets Only the Crumbs of Public Money
-
Brazil and Argentina Join Forces in Science
-
The Invisible Ink, Made in Brazil
-
Private Colleges Open 82,000 Places for the Poor in Brazil
-
Poor and Rich Countries Discuss Education in Brazil
-
Brazil's Lula: "From Head to Toe' Committed to Poverty and Education
-
Brazil Wants Debt Relief from World for Investing in Education
-
Brazil Trying to Catch Up on Education
-
Basic Schooling Now Takes 12 Years in Brazil Too
-
Brazil's Lula Wants to Take Colleges to the Interior
-
Brazil Triples Output of Research Papers
-
A Forum in Brazil to Debate Women's Role in Technology
-
Brazil Starts the Engines of Biodiesel Program
-
In Brazil, Private and Public Researchers Join Hands at Last
-
Brazil Takes Portuguese to East Timor
-
In Brazil, University for All Is Law
-
Brazil Takes Agricultural Technology to Africa
-
Brazil Shares Info on Information with South Africa
-
Brazil Goes to Israel and Syria Looking for Partners in Education
-
US Broadband System to Be Used in Brazil's Education Project
-
Brazilians Are Well Educated... When They Have Money
-
Schooling Is Not Helping Women Narrow Gap With Men in Brazil
-
Brazil Doubles Amazon Research Funds to US$ 57 Million
-
In Brazil, Quotas and Scholarship Bring 5% More Blacks to College
-
Brazil Earmarks US$ 1.8 Million for Stem Cell Research
-
Brazilian Belita Koiller Gets UNESCO Prize for Science
-
Collegeless Join Homeless and Landless in Brazil
-
Brazil Wants to Convert Foreign Debt into Education Funds
-
Brazil Sends Teachers to East Timor
-
Brazil Provides Consulting to Cabo Verde University
-
Brazil Wants Parameters for Vocational Education in the Mercosur
-
Brazil Offers US$ 86 Million for Research
-
Number of Brazilian Indians Attending Schools Grows to 164,000
-
Brazil Uses Technology as Weapon of Social Inclusion
-
Brazil Finds Cheaper Way to Make Asphalt
-
34% of Brazilian Indians Are in School
-
Brazil Goes High Tech to Fight Fruit Fly
-
Postgraduates in Brazil Are 122,295 with 9% Yearly Growth
-
Brazil and Australia Sign Education Accord
-
Brazil and Mauritania to Explore Oil Together
-
Brazil Vows Better Pay for Teachers
-
Brazil and Arabs to Start Academic Exchange
-
Biotechnology, Blessing and Curse for Poor Countries Like Brazil
-
Scientists Want Closer Cooperation Between Brazil and Arabs
-
Brazilian Gets 'Third-World Nobel' for Chronic Pain Study
-
Brazil Needs Better Distribution of Assets, Says Unesco
-
Bristol-Myers Makes Brazil World Center for its IT Support
-
Brazil Spends 8% of GDP in Communications, But It's Still Too Little
-
Brazil Still Needs to Invest a Lot to Get a Real Electronic Government
-
In Brazil, Only 41% of Youngsters 15 to 17 Attend School
-
Brazil's Lula Wants Constitutional Amemdment for Education Fund
-
Brazil's Lula Calls Education Expenses a "Sacred Investment"
-
Brazil Wants to Use 1/4 of Its US$ 200 Billion Foreign Debt on Education
-
Industry Federation Wants Brazil to Develop Domestic Nanotechnology
-
Lula's Plan to Make Brazil a First World Country
-
Federal Univesity Branches Are Spreading Throughout Brazil, Says Lula
-
Brazil's Oil Industry Is Short 32,000 of Technicians
-
Brazil's ProYouth Brings School Dropouts Back to Class
-
Lula Continues Brazil's Cabinet Shuffle
-
Brazil Gets Own Branch of Altair Engineering
-
International Scientists in Brazil Look for New Seeds to Fight World Hunger
-
Brazil's Votorantim Gets Serious About IT
-
Brazil's Lula Pans Predecessors for Cutting Science Money
-
Brazil and Amazon Nations Officials Discuss Science and Technology
-
Incubator Center in Brazil Hatches a Hit: Robot Football
-
Experts Urge Brazil to Urgently Fund Nanotech R&D
-
Finance Minister Deplores Brazil's Barriers to Foreign Information Techonology
-
Brazilian Government Gets Better Marks for Education, But Worse for Economic Policy
-
Bad Schooling Keeps 15 Million Brazilian Students Overtime in School
-
More Brazilian Indians Looking for Basic Schooling
-
4.4 Million Brazilians Are in College, a 27% Jump
-
Brazil Has 228,000 College Professors. 48% Work in the Southeast.
-
Illiteracy Falls in Brazil, But It's Still the Lot of 10.5%
-
Illiteracy Among Blacks in Brazil Is 17%. Among Whites, 7%.
-
Brazil Is World's 6th Biggest in IT, But 73% of Its Software Comes from Abroad
-
Brazil and Argentina Join Talents for Nanotechnology Projects
-
Brazil Regulates Sign Language Classes in College
-
Only 9% of 18-24 Year Old Brazilians Go to College
-
Brazil Plans to Create 9 Federal Universities and 41 Campuses
-
Brazil's Lula Wants to Make 2006 the Year of Education
-
4,300 Inmates to Get Literacy Instruction in Brazil
-
Brazil and Tunisia Sign Accord on Higher Education
-
56% of College Students in Brazil Are Women. Bad Sign, Says Expert.
-
18-24 Year Old Brazilians Get Chance to Go to Elementary School
-
Favela Kids in Brazil Get 50 Sports Centers
-
Minimum Mandatory Schooling in Brazil Rises to 9 Years
-
Brazil Wants do End Illiteracy Among 3 Million Youngsters
-
The World of Education Is Gathering in Rio, Brazil
-
16 Million Brazilian Kids Don't Go to School. Reasons: Lack of School or Interest
-
Brazil: Global Forum on Education Condemns Conservatism and Private School
-
Brazil Invests 1% of GDP in Technology. That's Not Enough.
-
Brazil Frees US$ 200 Million for Research. Money Was Frozen to Pay Foreign Debts.
-
DVD School, One Way Brazil Is Trying to Improve Education
-
Brazil Graduates 20,000 Engineers a Year. That's Too Little.
-
Brazil Wants Its Own Geostationary Satellite by 2012
-
Brazilian Fund Will Back Drugs, Software and Semiconductors
-
Brazil's Fiocruz Opens Doors and Wallet to Foreign Postdoctoral Researchers
-
Brazil Promises US-Comparable Telecommunications Technology for Lower Price
-
In Brazil, OPEC Chief Predicts Whole Word Will Add Alcohol to Gas
-
400 Scientists from Developing World Gather in Brazil
-
All Brazilian Presidential Candidates Say they Have a Soft Spot for Science
-
Brazil Believes Tax Cut Will Give Big Boost to Information Technology
-
Brazil Has Learned It Can't Survive Without R&D
-
Romi Made Brazil's First Car. Now It Exports to Over 60 Countries
-
Chinese, Africans and Brazilians Use Internet for Biotech Master's
-
A Strong Country Needs to Produce Knowledge, Says Brazil's Lula
-
"Never Again Supplier of Raw Material." Vows Brazil's Lula
-
Brazil Sees Biotecnology as Panacea for Economic and Ecological Ills
-
Brazil Ready to Tap Amazon for Drugs and the Land for Fuel
-
Brazil Wants to Be a Biotech Powerhouse in 15 Years
-
Brazil Carnaval Knows Much About Science Books
-
Hard-to-Get US Visas May Draw Saudis to Brazilian Schools
-
One Third of Brazil's Scientific Research Is Done by Women
-
Brazil and Chile to Cooperate in Science, Biofuel and Education
-
Brazil and Chile Agree: Education is Priority Number 1 in LatAm
-
Brazil Adopts Cost-Reduction and Productivity-Increase Plan for Industries
-
Brazil Industry Will Spend US$ 5 Billion to Educate 16 Million
-
Brazil to Earmark US$ 23 Billion for Science and Technology
-
Brazil Earmarks US$ 23 Billion for Science and Technology
-
After Decades of Neglect Brazil Starts Studies for 150 New Technical Schools
-
Aladdin, Ali Baba and the Building of the Brazilian Character
-
Brazil Ups Scientific Production and Is Ahead of the Swiss and Swedish
-
Brazil's Offers its Water Know-How to Libya's Great Man-Made River
-
Brazil's Incubator Program to Help Oil Companies
-
Sudan Wants Partnership with Brazil in Oil, Agriculture and Aviation
-
Brazilian Small Farmer Learns Technology Is His Friend
-
Brazilian Minister Defends Unification of Portuguese to Spread Language Worldwide
-
India Interested in Investing in Brazil's Ethanol Industry
-
Brazil's Amazontech Debates Amazon's Self-Sustainability
-
Presence of Computer in Brazil's Small Biz Goes from 16% to 75%
-
Brazilian Couple Convicted for Homeschooling Their Two Kids
-
Education Secretary in Brazil Gets F in Geography and Pink Slip
-
With 30,000 Articles Brazil Is 13 in the World in Scientific Output
-
Brazil Vows to Spend 1.5% of Its GDP, About US$ 22 Billion, in Science
-
Unions in France Oppose Brazil Getting Military Technology
-
For This Brazilian Entrepreneur Exporting Commodities Is a Dead End
-
Number of College Students Doubles in Brazil, But It's Still Only 14%
-
Brazil's Silicon Valley Hosts Seminars on Technology and Innovation
-
Brazilians Are Marrying More and at Older Age
|
|
Contribution |
| Have you got news? Do you have news, comment or story on Brazil you want to share with Brazzil? Just send it our way to brazzil@brazzil.com. | |
|
|
|
The Latest from Brazzil Magazine |
|
|
|
|
Brazil's Scientists Contribute a Mere 1.7% to World's Academic Production |
|
|
|
|
Written by Carolina Pimentel
|
|
Thursday, 17 November 2005 |
|
Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva defended the importance of investments in education Brazil's development and, therefore, asked the Congress to approve the Basic Education Maintenance and Development Fund (Fundeb) before the end of the year.
"In education, Brazil cannot do without nor lose any more time," Lula said at the opening session of the 3rd National Conference on Science, Technology, and Innovation. Through Friday (18) the meeting, which is being held in Brasília, will discuss new policies for the sector. The President emphasized that the most powerful countries nowadays are the ones that possess scientific knowledge. "These countries are the ones most capable of determining their own destiny, of defending their sovereign interests at international negotiating tables, and of seeking social justice in the best manner. This is what we are attempting to do for Brazil," Lula affirmed. He mentioned the investments made during the past three years in the area of science and technology, such as the 54.6% increase in scholarship funds, in comparison with 2002. According to the President, the country will have 9,500 new recipients of doctoral degrees by the end of this year and 10,600 next year. Lula also referred to the increase in transfers to the National Scientific and Technological Development Fund. In 2006 the fund's resources will grow from US$ 364 million to US$ 545 million. The President recalled the approval of the Innovation Law, which grants partial income tax exemption to firms that hire holders of master's and doctoral degrees in scientific fields, the Biosecurity Law, which will facilitate research involving embryonic stem cells, and the Informatics Law, which extends the sector's tax incentives through 2019. The conference brings together professors, scientists, and entrepreneurs. Brazil has 50 thousand scientists, responsible for 1.7% of the world's academic production. Agência Brasil
|
|
|
|
|
Home
|
|
Brazzil Magazine - Since 1989 trying to understand Brazil |
|
|
|
|
|
Lula is definitely right, the problem is that funds have already been generously voted for the NSTDF bur as usually not freed. So why increase the budget again, knowing it wont be freed anyway, as usual ? Or better, simply free the already voted budget.
Lula likes to msake demagogic speeches on new programs spending and public statements for obvious reasons, but later, silently without much headway, of course, the money is not freed
A few months ago there was an article on this program and in this same site where scientists and physician complained.