Recherche et défense, vers un nouveau partenariat ?
Renaud Bellais
Innovations, 2005, vol. 21, issue 1, 145-166
Abstract:
The end of the Cold War weakened the relationship created between science and defence after World War II. Credits for defence R&D have been regularly reduced through the 1990s. Indeed armed forces' requirements for innovation and technology have evolved compared to the second half of the 20th century. Nevertheless they remain important since armed forces might face potential, emerging threats and have to manage new kinds of missions. Can a new partnership between science and defence be the solution in Europe to conjugate constrained military expenditures and a true, international leadership in science and technology? Do recent trends in relations between States and markets open the way for new forms of scientific and technological effort?
Date: 2005
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