The "Conhecimento Brasil" Program neglects the structural problems of Brazilian science and fails to offer a solution to the brain drain

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Authors

Bruno Eleres Soares , Arthur Lamounier Moura, Vanbasten Noronha de Araújo, Nathália Helena Azevedo, Ana Carolina de Almeida Cardoso, Maíra Rodrigues Cardoso, Guilherme Siqueira de Carvalho, Arildo Souza Dias, Daniela de Angeli Dutra, Elvira D'Bastiani, Ana Clara Sampaio Franco, Luísa Genes, Thiago Gonçalves-Souza, Piatã Marques, Roberta da Silva Medina, Cristiano B. Moura, Raquel Negrão, Erico A. Oliveira-Pereira, Guilherme Oyarzabal, Roberta S. Pamplona, Ualerson I. Peixoto, João Pedro de Jesus Pereira, Pedro Henrique Pezzi, Andressa da Silva Reis, Vinicius Cardoso Reis, Érika Gardez da Rocha, Janaína de Andrade Serrano, Iolanda Ramalho da Silva, Carolina de Barros Vidor

Abstract

We, a group of Brazilian scientists residing abroad in diverse career stages, are writing in response to CNPq’s recent announcement of the "Talent Repatriation Program - Conhecimento Brasil," (see Morimoto 2024). We discuss our impressions and suggestions to align the proposal with what the program aims to achieve.

DOI

https://doi.org/10.32942/X26328

Subjects

Science and Technology Studies

Keywords

Dates

Published: 2024-06-12 02:59

License

CC BY Attribution 4.0 International

Additional Metadata

Language:
English