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China's New Scientific Elite: Distinguished Young Scientists, the Research Environment and Hopes for Chinese Science

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 February 2002

Abstract

Based on interviews with scientists who have received the Distinguished Young Scientist award from the National Natural Science Foundation of China, the paper examines the backgrounds, experiences, and attitudes of China's rising scientific elite, and explores how this new generation of scientists thinks about the conditions necessary for scientific distinction. The new elite scientists in China show signs of having mastered the institutional environment for research; individually, they seem to be able to find the resources and autonomy to build successful research enterprises. At the same time, as the elite seeks to bridge the norms and practices of the best of international science and Chinese realities, their collective lives are subject to tensions, uncertainties, and contradictions which make the building of a dynamic scientific community especially challenging. As the institutional environment within China changes, scientists receive mixed signals as to the balance between professional and commercial values of research.

Type
Research Report
Copyright
© The China Quarterly, 2001

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Footnotes

This paper is part of a larger study of the changing nature of the Chinese scientific community. We acknowledge with gratitude support for this research from the U.S. National Science Foundation (SBR-9810256).