E U C A R I N E T EUCARINET project n.244510

“Fostering EU‐Caribbean

Research and Innovation Networks”

A N A L Y S I S , M O N I T O R I N G A N D R E V I E W O F S C I E N C E & T E C H N O L O G Y R E S E A R C H I N T H E C A R I B B E A N

Prepared by:

C.M. Sean Carrington, Faculty of Pure & Applied Sciences, The University of the West Indies, Barbados, Charles Plaigin, CERCAL, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium, & Gustavo Perez, Chemistry Department, Science Faculty, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain

WP2

Document identifier: EUCARINET

Date

Document date: 11/11/2011

Level of dissemination: No Dissemination (Draft version)

WP 2: Promoting and supporting the establishment of Work package: a sustainable multi-stakeholder EU-Caribbean S&T policy dialogue

Lead Beneficiary: UAB-UWI-CERCAL

Authors: UAB-UWI-CERCAL

Document status: Draft

Grant Agreement EUCARINET 1 / 147 E U C A R I N E T EUCARINET project n.244510

“Fostering EU‐Caribbean

Research and Innovation Networks”

Document link:

Grant Agreement EUCARINET 2 / 147 Doc. Identifier: DELIVERABLE EUCARINET D2.2 v1.0 REPORT Date: 30/11/2011

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1. A STUDY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH IN THE CARIBBEAN: INSTITUTIONS, OUTPUT, PRIORITIES & COLLABORATION...... 2 1.1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY...... 2 1.2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY...... 2 1.3 INTRODUCTION TO THE CARIBBEAN REGION...... 2 2. CARIBBEAN SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH OUTPUT - A BIBLIOMETRIC STUDY...... 2 2.1 INTRODUCTION TO THE BIBLIOMETRIC STUDY...... 2 2.2 METHODOLOGY...... 2 2.2.1 DATA MANAGEMENT...... 2 2.2.2 SEARCH STRATEGY...... 2 2.2.3 BIBLIOMETRIC INDICATORS...... 2 2.2.3.1 GENERAL PRODUCTIVITY...... 2 2.2.3.2 SPECIALISATION...... 2 2.2.3.3 IMPACT...... 2 2.2.3.4 COLLABORATION...... 2 2.2.3.5 VISIBILITY OF CARIBBEAN-EU PAPERS...... 2 2.3 ANALYSIS OF THE SCIENTIFIC PERFORMANCE OF CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES/TERRITORIES...... 2 2.3.1 NUMBER OF DOCUMENTS PER CARIBBEAN COUNTRY/TERRITORY...... 2 2.3.2 NUMBER OF DOCUMENTS PER CARIBBEAN SUB-REGION...... 2 2.3.3 THEMATIC PROFILE OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE CARIBBEAN REGION...... 2 2.3.4 THEMATIC PROFILES OF PUBLICATIONS OF THE FOUR CARIBBEAN SUB-REGIONS...... 2 2.3.5 THEMATIC PROFILES OF PUBLICATIONS OF EACH CARIBBEAN COUNTRY/TERRITORY...... 2 2.3.6 VISIBILITY AND SPECIALISATION OF THE PUBLICATION PROFILE OF EACH CARIBBEAN COUNTRY/TERRITORY...... 2 2.3.7 RELATIVE PERFORMANCE OF CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES/TERRITORIES BY THEMATIC AREA...... 2 2.3.8 COLLABORATION PROFILE OF CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES/TERRITORIES...... 2 2.3.9 COLLABORATION BETWEEN CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES/TERRITORIES...... 2 2.3.10 COLLABORATION BETWEEN EUROPEAN COUNTRIES AND CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES/TERRITORIES...... 2 2.3.11 COLLABORATION WITH EUROPEAN COUNTRIES FROM THE CARIBBEAN PERSPECTIVE...... 2 2.3.12 EU COLLABORATION PROFILE FOR THE CARIBBEAN REGION BY THEMATIC AREA...... 2 2.3.13 EU COLLABORATION PROFILE FOR EACH CARIBBEAN COUNTRY/TERRITORY...... 2 2.3.14 EVOLUTION OF DOCUMENTS PER CARIBBEAN SUB-REGION WITH RESPECT TO EU-COLLABORATION...... 2 2.3.15 VISIBILITY OF EU COLLABORATIVE PAPERS...... 2 2.4 CONCLUSIONS OF THE BIBLIOMETRIC STUDY...... 2 3. A SURVEY OF CARIBBEAN SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS...... 2 3.1 INTRODUCTION TO THE SURVEY...... 2 3.2 METHODOLOGY & ADMINISTRATION OF THE SURVEY...... 2 3.3 SURVEY RESULTS...... 2 3.3.1 CHARACTERISATION OF THE SURVEYED INSTITUTIONS...... 2 3.3.1.1 INSTITUTIONAL TYPE...... 2 3.3.3.2 INSTITUTIONAL FUNDING...... 2 3.3.3.3 GEOGRAPHICAL RANGE OF THE SCIENTIFIC INSTITUTIONS...... 2 3.3.3.4 INVOLVEMENT IN POSTGRADUATE TRAINING...... 2 3.3.4 RESEARCH ACTIVITIES...... 2 3.3.4.1 TIME DEVOTED TO RESEARCH AND OTHER ACTIVITIES...... 2 3.3.4.2 TYPES OF RESEARCH UNDERTAKEN...... 2 3.3.4.3 CURRENT KEY RESEARCH AREAS...... 2 3.3.4.4 CONTRIBUTION OF VISITING SCIENTISTS TO RESEARCH OUTPUT...... 2 3.3.4.5 NUMBERS OF PUBLICATIONS AND PATENTS...... 2 3.3.5 IDENTIFICATION OF PRIORITIES FOR THE NEXT FIVE YEARS...... 2 3.3.6 RESOURCES AND FUNDING...... 2 3.3.6.1 SIZE AND STAFFING OF INSTITUTIONS...... 2 3.3.6.2 GRANT FUNDING...... 2 3.3.7 COOPERATION, COLLABORATION & DEVELOPMENT...... 2 3.3.7.1 RESEARCH NETWORKS ACTIVE IN THE REGION...... 2 3.3.7.2 INSTITUTIONAL INDUSTRIAL COLLABORATIONS...... 2 3.3.7.3 INTRA-CARIBBEAN COLLABORATION...... 2 3.3.7.4 COLLABORATION WITH EUROPEAN RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS...... 2 3.3.7.5 FAMILIARITY WITH THE EU 7TH FRAMEWORK PROGRAMME (FP7)...... 2 3.3.8 INTEREST IN THE EUCARINET PROJECT...... 2 3.4 CONCLUSIONS OF THE SURVEY...... 2

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4. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS OF THE COMBINED STUDIES...... 2 4.1 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS...... 2 4.2 RESEARCH OUTPUT IN THE CARIBBEAN REGION...... 2 4.3 THEMATIC PROFILE OF CARIBBEAN RESEARCH...... 2 4.4 VISIBILITY OF CARIBBEAN RESEARCH...... 2 4.5 COLLABORATION OF CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES...... 2 4.6 INDICATORS FOR MONITORING CARIBBEAN STI ACTIVITY...... 2 4.7 CARIBBEAN-EU COLLABORATION - BARRIERS, CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES...... 2 5. REFERENCES...... 2 6. ABBREVIATIONS...... 2 7. APPENDIX 1...... 2 7.1. IDENTIFICATION OF THE RESEARCH CENTRE...... 2 7.2. IDENTIFICATION OF THE CONTACT PERSON...... 2 7.3. RESEARCH ACTIVITIES...... 2 7.4. PRIORITY SETTINGS...... 2 7.5. RESOURCES – FUNDING...... 2 7.6. COOPERATION, COLLABORATION AND CONNECTIONS...... 2 8. APPENDIX 2...... 2

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1. A STUDY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH IN THE CARIBBEAN: INSTITUTIONS, OUTPUT, PRIORITIES & COLLABORATION

1.1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Science and Technology (S&T) activity has been mapped in the Caribbean by an objective, quantitative bibliometric study of the region's publications and by a comprehensive survey of the region's active scientific research centres. The results of this study provide a firm foundation for a sustainable S&T policy dialogue between the European Union (EU) and the Caribbean region. Some key descriptors are given below.  The bibliometric study analysed data, derived from the Web of Science (WoS) © online database, based on all research publications from all Caribbean countries/territories except Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands for the period 1999-2009. This lengthy time span was chosen to provide high enough resolution to detect publications from the less productive territories of the region.  The survey was based on responses from 94 Caribbean scientific research centres, most from the University/Higher Education category, comprising 50 from the English sub-region, 20 from the French sub-region, 9 from the Dutch region and 15 from the Dominican Republic. Cuba did not participate in the survey.  The centres targeted in the survey ranged from small field research centres to relevant units of Government Ministries to research institutes and University Faculties. Half of these are funded by both the private and public sector except in the Dominican Republic where private sector funded institutions are more common.  Research is the main activity of most surveyed institutions with applied research predominating and the French sub-region reporting the highest proportion of employees engaged in research (75%) and the highest percentage of PhD-level employees (26%). Most of these institutions offer postgraduate training except in the Dutch sub-region. Bibliometric analysis From the bibliometric analysis of the Caribbean publications for 1999-2009 the most significant outputs are:  The thirty-two countries/territories together published 12,817 papers, an estimated 0.08% of world publications for that same period. Just over half of these publications are produced by the Spanish-speaking Caribbean (mainly Cuba), about 32% by the Anglophone Caribbean, about 13% by the French Caribbean and less than 2% by the Dutch Caribbean, all sub-regions but the Dutch showing annual growth.  Half the territories examined produced less than 50 publications in the 11 year period (together 1.7% of all publications) and were not included in further analyses. Cuba produced about half the publications while the remaining major producers are (with output in parentheses);- Jamaica (1465), Trinidad & Tobago (1353), Guadeloupe (818), Barbados (485), French Guiana (421), the Dominican Republic (276), Martinique (242), Bermuda (220), Haiti (149), Curacao (138), Guyana (135), Grenada (127), the Bahamas (102), and Suriname (83).

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 Most of the publications from the region fall into three thematic domains – Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (28%); Biomedical Research (21%); and Clinical Medicine (18%) - and this trend is also evident on a sub-regional basis.  Indicators were generated which allowed comparison of the relative visibility or impact of a country's publications based on whether papers of one country in a particular research area were more highly cited than the regional average.  By this approach, Curacao then Belize have the highest visibility in the Agriculture/Biology/Environment domain. For Biomedical research, the top performers are Barbados followed by the Dominican Republic while for Clinical Medicine it is the Dominican Republic that leads followed by Haiti. For Chemistry, Jamaica is most visible followed by Trinidad & Tobago while for Engineering/Technology it is Guadeloupe first with Jamaica in second place. For Mathematics, Jamaica, Martinique and Guadeloupe are all top performers while in Physics the Dominican Republic and Guadeloupe out-perform other countries.  A specialisation index was also calculated to assess whether some countries tend to publish more in particular areas than the regional average and in most cases the research areas of specialisation or apparent focus are not necessarily those of high impact. Survey The survey provides insight in a number of areas:  The same themes were identified as prime areas of current research by the French and English Caribbean but using the FP7 groupings, Environment & Climate, Medicine & Biology (Health) and Agriculture & Food Supply (KBBE).  The survey results differed from the bibliometric findings for the Dutch sub-region with Socio-economic concerns the top research area and for the Dominican Republic ICT and Industry & Industrial Technology being also top-ranked.  Current research topics recurring in the survey from all sub-regions are natural hazards, climate change, water resources, biodiversity, marine ecosystems, chronic diseases, HIV/AIDS, public health and renewable energy.  Areas identified as priorities for the next 5 years in the survey by all sub-regions are Agriculture & Food Supply (KBBE), Environment & Climate and Energy, with Biology & Medicine (Health) in fourth place.

 In the survey, Dutch and English Caribbean institutions tended to list the most research networks while the Dominican Republic reported the least. In addition to Caribbean networks, the English and French sub-regions also listed many European research networks, while the Dominican Republic added Latin American networks. Over one hundred actual networks were reported and six were common to several sub-regions, four of these six focusing on marine science. EU-Collaboration The survey suggests that industrial collaboration in research in the Caribbean does not seem particularly well-developed, especially in the case of the French and Dutch sub-regions where only 22% and 29% of institutions reported collaboration with industry compared to those of the Dominican Republic (50%) and the English Caribbean (40%).

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 Most collaborations were within the country or sub-region and involved companies in the agriculture, food, cement, hotel, mining, spirits, and petroleum/gas sectors.  There is, however, greater collaboration taking place between Caribbean research institutions than is observed between Caribbean research institutions and the private sector. The English sub-region represents the area where the highest proportion of institutions (85%) report collaboration with a different Caribbean institution, followed by the French (74%) and Dutch (71%) sub-regions and then the Dominican Republic (55%). This was also examined objectively in the bibliometric study.  Low output Caribbean countries/territories mainly publish in collaboration with others while the percentage of collaborative publications is often much less for the higher output members, probably reflecting their greater research capacity.  For intra-Caribbean collaboration, the English and French sub-regions collaborate most with their own sub-region while the Dutch and Spanish sub-regions publish most with Anglophone Caribbean countries Looking beyond the Caribbean,  Spain, France and the UK are the main EU collaborators for the Caribbean but the Netherlands, despite equally strong colonial links, is less engaged and lags well behind. The main EU collaborating country for each sub-region is the one with which it has the strongest historical and linguistic ties, i.e. for the English Caribbean - the UK, the French Caribbean - France, the Dutch Caribbean - the Netherlands, the Spanish Caribbean - Spain.  The Anglophone Caribbean tends to collaborate more with North America than Europe while the other sub-regions generally collaborate more with Europe than North America.  Cuba and the Dominican Republic are distinct in also having very strong collaboration with Latin America. The bibliometric study shows that there are clear advantages to EU collaboration:  Caribbean publications with EU co-authors have higher visibility than those without, on average being cited twice as much.

 EU collaboration as evidenced by publications, is growing faster in the French and Spanish sub-regions than in the Dutch and English Caribbean. This may relate to funding as the survey reports most French and Dutch Caribbean research is EU-funded while this is not the case for the Dominican Republic or the English sub-region. Awareness of EU programmes  The survey shows that there is an abysmal lack of knowledge in the Caribbean about the EU FP7 programme with 26-42% of institutions never having heard of it with the Dutch sub- region worst in this regard.  Knowledge of the programme seemed no better in EU Caribbean territories than in independent Caribbean countries. On the other hand, the survey showed there is overwhelming interest throughout the region in applying for FP7 support for future research activities.

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1.2 INTRODUCTION TO THE STUDY The European Union continues to strengthen and expand its cooperation in Science & Technology (S&T) with different regions of the world as it seeks to address global issues and problems. With this in mind, the European Commission developed a new instrument in the 7th Framework Programme for Science & Technology (FP7) - the INCONET. This provides a means of establishing a bi-regional dialogue for Science, Technology & Innovation (STI). The EUCARINET project (http://www.eucarinet.eu/) is such an INCONET Coordination Action, launched in April 2010. It is supported by the European Commission (DG RTD-INCO), with the main goal of strengthening bi- regional sustainable dialogue on Science and Technology (S&T) between Europe and the Caribbean.

A study in 2008 for the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) identified ''a growing need in Caribbean countries for a consistent information system and database on S&T statistics" (Holbrook, n.d.). It went on to state that most Caribbean countries are small and relatively poor and to expect these to produce reliable S&T statistics may be unreasonable. Our report tries to address this general deficiency. It consolidates two mapping exercises which seek to provide baseline data on STI in the Caribbean and in cooperation with Europe. The first study is a bibliometric one which objectively and quantitatively analyses the S&T publications of Caribbean countries/territories, the areas of specialisation and high impact and how the Caribbean is collaborating as a region and with the European Union and Norway. The second study is a survey of Caribbean institutions engaged in S&T research, generating a comprehensive database of such centres which up to now has been sadly lacking. It further provides qualitative information on research areas, priorities for research and collaborative links within the Caribbean and between the Caribbean and the EU. These studies complement each other and together provide a foundation on which the bi-regional dialogue on STI can be built.

1.3 INTRODUCTION TO THE CARIBBEAN REGION The Caribbean typically refers to the archipelago historically known as the West Indies or Antilles which comprise over a hundred inhabited islands and numerous uninhabited islets and cays. These stretch from Cuba in the west to Barbados in the east, and from Grand Bahama in the north to Trinidad in the south, a distance of some 2700 km in each case. Yet the Caribbean region is also generally recognised to include countries and territories beyond these islands of the Caribbean basin. Strong cultural and historic ties bind the peoples of the Caribbean islands with those of Belize in Central America and French Guiana, Guyana and Suriname in South America. In fact, Belize, Guyana and Suriname are all full members of the Caribbean Community (CARICOM), the organisation of 15 countries and territories established in 1973 to promote economic integration and cooperation among its members. A weaker case for inclusion is Bermuda, located in the Atlantic, way beyond the Caribbean Sea, but with strong historic links with the region, membership of the University of the West Indies (UWI) and associate membership of CARICOM.

The Caribbean can be viewed as four geo-linguistic sub-regions reflecting their history of colonisation by the English, Dutch, French and Spanish. The Spanish-speaking Caribbean comprises three large island states, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. Both Cuba and the Dominican Republic

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have been independent countries for some time, having first declared independence in 1868 and 1821 respectively, with independence being formally gained after further years of struggle. Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands are possessions of the USA and are not included in the EUCARINET project and will not be discussed further. The English-speaking Caribbean comprises twelve independent countries;- Antigua & Barbuda, Barbados, the Bahamas, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St. Kitts & Nevis, St. Lucia, St Vincent & the Grenadines and Trinidad & Tobago. These gained their independence from the United Kingdom (UK) over a number of years starting with Jamaica in 1962 and culminating in St. Kitts & Nevis in 1983. The Anglophone Caribbean also includes six British Overseas Territories (OCT), namely, Anguilla, Bermuda, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Montserrat and the Turks & Caicos Islands. The French-speaking Caribbean comprises the Republic of Haiti and the French Overseas Territories of French Guiana, Guadeloupe, Martinique and St. Martin. French Guiana, Guadeloupe and Martinique are overseas departments (DOM) of France, each equivalent to a region of France. Haiti which encompasses the western half of the island of Hispaniola has the distinction of being the oldest independent country of the Caribbean, having declared independence in 1804. St Martin is the southern portion of an island partitioned between the French and the Dutch, with the Dutch portion using the Dutch version of the name, St. Maarten. The Dutch Caribbean comprises the independent country of Suriname on the South American mainland, the islands of Aruba, Bonaire and Curacao off the Venezuelan coast and the Lesser Antillean islands of St. Eustatius (or Statia), Saba and St. Maarten. Until recently, the Dutch islands with the exception of Aruba made up the Netherlands Antilles, a country within the Kingdom of the Netherlands. This grouping was dissolved in October 2010, but these islands all remain part of the Kingdom of the Netherlands. Despite the historical ties, Dutch is not widely spoken in some members of this group such as Saba and St. Eustatius. As the foregoing indicates, the Caribbean is a diverse, complex region, historically, geographically and culturally. This heterogeneity is further reflected in numbers of inhabitants and economic indicators like GDP. Populations range from about 2,000 inhabitants on Saba to almost 11.5 million on Cuba. The South American Caribbean nations of Guyana and Suriname present the largest land areas with approximately 215,000 and 156,000 km2 while Saba and St Eustatius are the smallest territories of 13 and 21 km2 respectively. While about half the countries have a GDP of the order of $10,000 US per capita, Haiti is the lowest at $1,300 while Bermuda is the highest at $69,900. In short, these countries vary widely and this diversity must be borne in mind as we examine scientific research institutions in the region.

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2. CARIBBEAN SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY RESEARCH OUTPUT - A BIBLIOMETRIC STUDY by Charles Plaigin, CERCAL, Université Libre de Bruxelles, Belgium & C.M. Sean Carrington, The University of the West Indies, Barbados

2.1 INTRODUCTION TO THE BIBLIOMETRIC STUDY This bibliometric study seeks to quantitatively analyse the scientific publications produced by Caribbean researchers to generate a number of S&T performance indicators reflecting overall productivity, specialisation, impact and collaboration. To date, there has been no attempt to carry out such an analysis for the entire Caribbean region although recent UNESCO publications cite data for a few Caribbean countries (Ramkissoon & Kahwa, 2010) and with respect to Latin America (Lemarchand, 2010). In this regard, the publication output of Latin America and the Caribbean per million inhabitants is a tenth of that of Europe or North America but comparable to that of Asian & Pacific countries (Lemarchand, 2010). As the study aims to map Caribbean countries on the basis of excellence in Research & Technical Development (RTD), the internationally recognised Web of Science ©, a database of high profile journals is used. This may underestimate the absolute number of publications as only 1.6% of an estimated 12,000 Latin American and Caribbean journals are indexed in this database (Cetto & Alonso-Gamboa, 2010) but it does mean the same stringent criteria are applied to all countries in the study and that only quality publications are assessed. The goal of this bibliometric study is to identify, down to the country-level, in which areas of Science & Technology the Caribbean actively publishes, what are the areas of specialisation and high impact and the degree of collaboration that exists within the region and with the European Union and Norway.

2.2 METHODOLOGY

2.2.1 Data Management The database Web of Science ® (WoS), a product of Thomson Reuters, was selected to extract the publication data for the Caribbean region. It is acknowledged as the world’s leading citation database and has multidisciplinary coverage of over 10,000 high-impact journals in the sciences, social sciences, and arts and humanities. Its bias is towards Science & Technology but this is also the focus of the EUCARINET project. Publication data for each of the 32 target countries/territories of EUCARINET were downloaded to a local database from WoS for the period 1999-2009. This extended time-frame was chosen in order to ensure capture of data from low output target countries. The search was carried out on the combined WoS sub-databases SCI-Expanded, SSCI and A&HCI, selecting all languages and only "articles" as against other publication categories such as book

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reviews and conference proceedings. A simple country search was successfully employed for most of the target countries/territories but some OCTs required a search strategy based on the address field as these are not indexed in WoS as countries. This is detailed below below under search strategy.

Table 1: Assignment of Web of Science Sub-Categories to Ten Broad Thematic Areas (after Gómez et al, 2009).

Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Chemistry Sciences Chemistry, Analytical Agricultural Economics & Policy Chemistry, Applied Agricultural Engineering Chemistry, Inorganic & Nuclear Agriculture, Dairy & Animal Science Chemistry, Multidisciplinary Agriculture, Multidisciplinary Chemistry, Organic Agronomy Chemistry, Physical Biodiversity Conservation Electrochemistry Biology Polymer Science Biotechnology & Applied Microbiology Ecology Clinical Medicine Entomology Allergy Environmental Sciences Andrology Evolutionary Biology Anaesthesiology Fisheries Cardiac & Cardiovascular Systems Food Science & Technology Clinical Neurology Forestry Critical Care Medicine Horticulture Dentistry, Oral Surgery & Medicine Limnology Dermatology Marine & Freshwater Biology Emergency Medicine Mycology Engineering, Biomedical Ornithology Gastroenterology & Hepatology Plant Sciences Geriatrics Soil Science Gerontology Veterinary Sciences Hematology Water Resources Infectious Diseases Zoology Medical Informatics Medical Laboratory Technology Biomedical Research Medicine, General & Internal Anatomy & Morphology Medicine, Legal Behavioural Sciences Neuroimaging Biochemical Research Methods Nutrition & Dietetics Biochemistry & Molecular Biology Obstetrics & Gynecology Biophysics Oncology Cell Biology Ophthalmology Chemistry, Medicinal Orthopedics Developmental Biology Otorhinolaryngology Endocrinology & Metabolism Pediatrics Genetics & Heredity Peripheral Vascular Disease Immunology Psychiatry Medicine, Research & Experimental Public, Environmental & Occupational Microbiology Health

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Microscopy Radiology, Nuclear Med.& Medical Imaging Neurosciences Respiratory System Parasitology Rheumatology Pathology Sport Sciences Pharmacology & Pharmacy Substance Abuse Physiology Reproductive Biology Surgery Virology Toxicology Transplantation Tropical Medicine Urology & Nephrology Engineering, Technology Humanities Acoustics Archaeology Automation & Control Systems Architecture Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence Art Computer Science, Cybernetics Asian Studies Computer Science, Hardware & Classics Architecture Film, Radio, Television Computer Science, Information Systems Folklore Computer Science, Interdisciplinary History Applications History & Philosophy Of Science Computer Science, Software Engineering Humanities, Multidisciplinary Computer Science, Theory & Methods Language & Linguistics Construction & Building Technology Linguistics Energy & Fuels Literary Reviews Engineering, Aerospace Literary Theory & Criticism Engineering, Chemical Literature Engineering, Civil Literature, African, Australian, Canadian Engineering, Electrical & Electronic Literature, American Engineering, Environmental Literature, British Isles Engineering, Geological Literature, German, Dutch, Scandinavian Engineering, Industrial Literature, Romance Engineering, Manufacturing Literature, Slavic Engineering, Marine Medieval & Renaissance Studies Engineering, Mechanical Music Engineering, Multidisciplinary Philosophy Engineering, Ocean Poetry Engineering, Petroleum Religion Imaging Science & Photographic Theater Technology Instruments & Instrumentation Mathematics Materials Science, Biomaterials Mathematics Materials Science, Ceramics Mathematics, Applied Materials Science, Characterization & Mathematics, Interdisciplinary Applications Testing Operations Research & Management Materials Science, Coatings & Films Science Materials Science, Composites Statistics & Probability Materials Science, Multidisciplinary Materials Science, Paper & Wood Multidisciplinary Sciences

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Materials Science, Textiles Education, Scientific Disciplines Mathematical & Computational Biology Multidisciplinary Sciences Mechanics Physics Metallurgy & Metallurgical Engineering Astronomy & Astrophysics Mining & Mineral Processing Crystallography Nanoscience & Nanotechnology Geochemistry & Geophysics Nuclear Science & Technology Geology Optics Geosciences, Multidisciplinary Remote Sensing Meteorology & Atmospheric Sciences Robotics Mineralogy Telecommunications Oceanography Transportation Paleontology Transportation Science & Technology Physics, Applied Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical Physics, Condensed Matter Physics, Fluids & Plasmas Physics, Mathematical Physics, Multidisciplinary Physics, Nuclear Physics, Particles & Fields Spectroscopy Thermodynamics Social Sciences Medical Ethics Anthropology Nursing Area Studies Planning & Development Business Political Science Business, Finance Psychology Communication Psychology, Applied Criminology & Penology Psychology, Biological Demography Psychology, Clinical Economics Psychology, Developmental Education & Educational Research Psychology, Educational Education, Special Psychology, Experimental Environmental Studies Psychology, Mathematical Ergonomics Psychology, Multidisciplinary Ethics Psychology, Psychoanalysis Ethnic Studies Psychology, Social Family Studies Public Administration Geography Rehabilitation Geography, Physical Social Issues Health Care Sciences & Services Social Sciences, Biomedical Health Policy & Services Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary History Of Social Sciences Social Sciences, Mathematical Methods Industrial Relations & Labor Social Work Information Science & Library Science Sociology Integrative & Complementary Medicine Urban Studies International Relations Women's Studies Law Management

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Table 2: Search codes for downloading of publication data of EUCARINET countries/territories from Web of Science.

Countries/territories Search codes used in WoS Anguilla ad=anguilla NOT cu=jamaica Antigua cu=antigua Aruba ad=aruba Bahamas cu=bahamas Barbados cu=barbados Belize cu=belize Bermuda cu=bermuda Bonaire ad=bonaire AND (cu=Netherlands OR cu=Neth Antilles) British Virgin Islands ad=tortola OR ad=virgin gorda Cayman Islands ad=cayman Cuba cu=cuba Curacao cu=curacao Dominica cu=dominica Dominican Republic cu=dominican rep French Guiana ad=cayenne Grenada cu=grenada Guadeloupe cu=guadeloupe Guyana cu=guyana Haiti cu=haiti Jamaica cu=jamaica St Kitts & Nevis cu=st kitts & nevis Martinique cu=martinique Montserrat ad=montserrat NOT ad=spain NOT ad=usa NOT ad=portugal NOT ad=mexico Saba ad=saba AND (cu=Netherlands OR cu=Neth Antilles) St Lucia cu=st lucia St Maarten ad=st maarten AND cu=Netherlands NOT cu=Belgium St Martin cu= st martin St Vincent cu=st vincent St Eustatius ad= eustatius AND (cu=Netherlands OR cu=Neth Antilles) Suriname cu=surinam Trinidad & Tobago cu=trinid & tobago Turks & Caicos Islands ad=caicos

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The data was obtained using the advanced search mode of the Web of Sciences website, one country at a time. Each request returns a maximum of 500 records which meant that data for countries with more than this number of publications had to be downloaded as multiple searches and files. The files for a single country were then merged, cleaned and harmonized. Finally, the resulting 32 country/territory files were merged into one database containing the information on publications for all the countries/territories in the study. Records in WoS are assigned to some 256 subject categories ( 2010) which are too narrow for this bibliometric study and so these were reassigned in the local database to 10 broad thematic domains as defined by Gómez et al. (2009) and reproduced in Table 1. While WoS records can be assigned to more than one subject category only the first and primary subject category was used in this study. A number of bibliometric indicators were then generated from the local database. The full count method was applied in which documents with authors in two or more countries are assigned to each of these countries. This method is favoured over the fractional count method in which a multinational publication is shared between the various countries with each receiving a fraction representative of its participation.

2.2.2 Search Strategy The ability to download publications of particular countries relies on the indexing of the entries by WoS. The requests on WoS utilise field tags of two letters where e.g. CU means country, AD means address and CI means city. All the field tags are detailed on the website. Boolean search operators AND, OR, NOT, and SAME may be used to combine terms in order to broaden or narrow retrieval. Publications for all independent countries can be accessed by the country field. There are, however, some inconsistencies as Table 2 reveals. Conveniently, Bermuda, Guadeloupe and Martinique, are indexed as countries but not the other British OCTs nor the Dutch OCTs. In addition, the full name of some countries is not used as a country tag, e.g. Trinid & Tobago (Table 2).

2.2.3 Bibliometric indicators

2.2.3.1 General productivity The following indicators were generated from the local database for 1999-2009:- The annual production of articles for each country. The annual production of articles for the Dutch, English, French and Spanish sub-regions. The relative growth in articles for each sub-region. The annual production of articles in each thematic domain for the Caribbean. The proportion of articles in each thematic domain for each sub-region and each country (only for countries with > 50 publications).

2.2.3.2 Specialisation For the larger producers a Specialisation Index (SI) was calculated for each thematic domain for each higher output country. The Specialization Index (SI) is the ratio of the percentage of publications of a country in a specific discipline to the percentage of publications in that discipline for the whole region (i.e. the Caribbean).

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2.2.3.3 Impact Two indices were calculated as a measure of the impact or visibility of a country's publications in a particular discipline. The Citation Share (CS), also called the Relative Citations per Document, is the ratio of the mean citations per document of a particular country to the mean citations per document for the whole reference region (Mustar & Esterle, 2006), in this case, the Caribbean. The Relative Non-cited Rate or what we term the Non-Citation Share (NCS) was also calculated and this is the ratio of the percentage of publications of a particular country without citations to the percentage of publications without citations for the whole Caribbean. In both cases these indices were calculated for each thematic domain of a country’s output. These indices were only calculated where there was a minimum of 10 publications in that discipline.

2.2.3.4 Collaboration The number of collaborations of any country with other Caribbean countries or with five regions of the world, viz. the EU (plus Norway), North America (USA & Canada), Latin America (Central & South America excluding Caribbean countries), Other (none of the fore-mentioned), was determined directly from the WoS using the Analyse Results (Country/territory) feature. Unfortunately, a more complicated approach was required to analyse Caribbean-EU collaborations in detail. The collaborations with EU countries were derived from the WoS using the search codes presented in Table 2 adding a Boolean relation: AND cu=Country, where country was replaced by the 27 EU states and Norway. (The United Kingdom publications are not so indexed by WoS. Collaboration with the United Kingdom was obtained by combining publications indexed under England, North Ireland, Scotland and Wales.) We were then able to develop a database for all high output Caribbean countries/territories containing only collaborative publications with Europe. The previous full database and this smaller database restricted to EU collaborative publications could be linked through the specific ID number of each publication. This enabled the detailed analyses of collaboration with an European country for each paper of the initial database. The percentage of EU collaboration by thematic area, by the number of EU collaborating countries and the growth of publications with or without EU collaboration were all calculated from this database.

2.2.3.5 Visibility of Caribbean-EU papers It is widely accepted that international collaboration boosts the visibility of scientific publications (Chinchilla-Rodríguez et al., 2009). For each thematic area and then each sub-region, the rate of citation and the percentage of uncited papers were compared for papers produced with EU collaboration and those without.

2.3 ANALYSIS OF THE SCIENTIFIC PERFORMANCE OF CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES/TERRITORIES

2.3.1 Number of documents per Caribbean Country/Territory In the eleven year period, 1999-2009, the thirty-two Caribbean countries/territories of this study produced just over 12,800 research articles, based on the output retrieved from the Web of Science (WoS) database (Table 3). This is based on the full count method which is used throughout this study and which credits multinational publications fully and not fractionally to each contributing country.

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This means some records are counted more than once. About half of these were produced by Cuba, followed by Jamaica and then Trinidad & Tobago, the latter two countries accounting for just over 10% and just under 10% of all publications respectively (Figure 1). Guadeloupe was the next most prolific territory generating 818 documents or about 6% of all publications. A fourth tier of productivity is represented by the following ;- Barbados, French Guyana, the Dominican Republic, Martinique and Bermuda – which each produced 201-500 publications in this same period. Below these are a number of territories which produced 51-200 publications over the same time interval, namely Haiti, Curacao, Guyana, Grenada, the Bahamas, Suriname and Belize. For the remaining sixteen countries/territories, which constitute half of those targeted, the output is very low, at less than 50 publications each for the eleven year period. Of this group, the lowest output is shown by the British Overseas Territory Anguilla with one publication and by the French territory St. Martin with no publications, although the Dutch half of the latter, St. Maarten, produced 8 publications. For many of the parameters which are examined, the publication sample size is too small to attempt these detailed analyses with the sixteen low output (<50 publications) countries/territories. For this reason, many of the subsequent specialised analyses are restricted to the sixteen higher performing countries/territories. For completeness, it should also be noted that Puerto Rico, a US possession, generated 5,839 WoS-indexed publications in the same period (data not shown). This productivity is of the order of magnitude of Cuba and while Puerto Rico is not a target country of the EUCARINET project, and so will not appear in this report, its ranking as a major generator of research publications in the Caribbean should not be forgotten. The other Caribbean territory outside the scope of this study is the US Virgin Islands which produced 180 WoS-indexed publications in the same period (data not shown).

2.3.2 Number of documents per Caribbean sub-region Table 4 shows how the four geo-linguistic sub-regions of the Caribbean contribute to the annual output of publications for the region. Just over half of the publications are produced by the Spanish- speaking Caribbean, almost one-third by the Anglophone Caribbean, about 13% by the French Caribbean and less than 2% by the Dutch Caribbean. What is noticeable, in this regard, is that there seems to be no increase in the annual output for the Dutch sub-region in contrast to the other three sub-regions, all of which show growth. If one examines this growth relative to the initial year 1999 it can be seen that while the Dutch output is quite erratic, the English, French and Spanish sub-regions show a similar rate of growth (Figure 2). The final year, 2009, is quite variable, but, ignoring this, the three sub-regions show an approximate 50% increase in the number of publications over a ten period or an average annual growth of about 5%. The total number of articles produced by the entire world cannot be easily obtained from the WoS for any year. Published values for world scientific publications from WoS for the years 2002 through 2006 suggest an annual growth rate of 4.8% (Gomez et al., 2009; Table II, p9). The average annual growth rate for those years for Caribbean publications is slightly lower at 3.3% (from Table 3) but for the Latin American region this is much higher at 8.1% (Gomez et al., 2009; Table II, p9). For this same period, Caribbean publications represent a miniscule 0.08% of world publications.

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Table 3: Number of documents per Caribbean country over the period 1999-2009.

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Anguilla 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Antigua 1 0 1 2 1 0 5 4 6 4 1 25 Aruba 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 2 0 1 4 Bahamas 9 7 5 10 7 5 8 9 14 13 15 102 Barbados 34 32 37 32 50 67 38 48 46 58 43 485 Belize 7 2 4 5 9 7 11 12 7 7 7 78 Bermuda 13 21 26 26 9 18 17 21 26 24 19 220 Bonaire 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 3 British Virgin Islands 0 1 2 2 1 3 1 4 4 1 3 22 Cayman Islands 3 4 3 2 1 0 5 3 3 8 15 47 Cuba 507 547 624 536 599 546 558 610 640 727 605 6499 Curacao 11 14 12 16 14 12 8 9 6 23 13 138 Dominica 1 1 3 0 4 3 6 5 8 2 6 39 Dominican Republic 20 38 24 15 16 25 21 20 33 38 26 276 French Guiana 29 28 35 38 41 48 43 41 33 35 50 421 Grenada 4 2 1 1 6 4 7 16 28 29 29 127 Guadeloupe 54 56 52 50 64 72 71 80 93 99 127 818 Guyana 12 11 11 15 6 8 19 10 20 15 8 135 Haiti 3 11 7 12 13 9 15 23 17 21 18 149 Jamaica 126 113 139 142 127 138 134 129 147 144 126 1465 St Kitts & Nevis 2 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 1 3 6 18 Martinique 28 19 21 20 19 22 20 19 17 20 37 242 Montserrat 0 2 1 2 5 0 2 1 1 2 1 17 Saba 2 2 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 1 0 11 St Eustatius 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 2 1 0 5 St Lucia 1 0 2 2 1 0 2 2 2 1 1 14 St Maarten 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 4 0 2 0 8 St Martin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 St Vincent 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 2 1 0 1 6 Suriname 10 4 8 10 6 10 13 7 6 6 3 83 Trinidad & Tobago 94 101 115 121 109 117 133 122 151 144 146 1353 Turks & Caicos 0 0 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 2 1 6 Islands Total 973 1018 1133 1063 1111 1117 1142 1200 1315 1428 1309 12817

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Table 4: Yearly evolution of documents per Caribbean sub-region.

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Dutch 25 20 20 28 21 25 26 20 17 33 17 252 English 307 299 350 364 338 371 389 391 465 457 429 4160 French 114 114 115 120 137 151 149 163 160 175 232 1630 Spanish 527 585 648 551 615 571 579 630 673 765 631 6775 Total 973 1018 1133 1063 1111 1118 1143 1204 1315 1430 1309 12817

Turks & Caicos I. Trinidad & Tobago Suriname St Vincent St Lucia St Maarten St Kitts-Nevis St Eustatius Saba Montserrat Martinique Jamaica Haiti Guyana Guadeloupe Grenada French Guiana Dominican Republic Dominica Curacao Cuba Cayman I. BVI Bonaire Bermuda Belize Barbados Bahamas Aruba Antigua Anguilla

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 6000 6200 6400 6600 Number of publications Figure 1: Number of publications for 1999-2009 per Caribbean territory

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Figure 2: Growth in publications of Caribbean sub-regions relative to 1999

Figure 3: Publication thematic profile of the entire Caribbean Region (1999-2009).

2.3.3 Thematic Profile of Publications of the Caribbean Region Most of the publications from the region fall into three thematic domains – Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (28%) ; Biomedical Research (21%) ; Clinical Medicine (18%) [Figure 3]. The other three thematic areas which are well represented are Chemistry (9%), Engineering, Technology (8%) and Physics (8%). Social Sciences and Humanities are poorly represented which may be partly explained by the bias of the WoS database. When the yearly production in these thematic areas is examined (Table 5; Figure 4), there seems little growth in the Chemistry, Clinical Medicine and Physics domains. On the other hand, in the two largest sectors, Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences and Biomedical Research there is growth throughout the period under study. Mathematics, Social Sciences and Engineering, Technology also seem to show modest growth.

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Table 5: Thematic profile of Caribbean output (all countries).

Area 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Agriculture, 274 269 271 282 317 328 346 348 382 417 328 3562 Biology & Environmental Sciences Biomedical 186 208 234 194 241 261 247 279 277 290 283 2700 Research Chemistry 79 108 97 102 109 105 102 91 104 125 111 1133 Clinical Medicine 201 204 264 206 182 205 193 188 225 235 228 2331 Engineering, 89 70 101 95 95 79 98 93 116 122 123 1081 Technology Humanities 5 7 8 18 11 7 5 9 10 17 18 115 Mathematics 16 13 12 17 19 24 25 26 28 41 43 264 Multidisciplinary 4 6 5 6 5 6 4 8 8 5 11 68 Sciences Physics 90 98 110 86 100 69 93 107 87 111 96 1047 Social Sciences 29 35 31 55 29 34 29 53 75 64 68 502 Other 0 0 0 2 3 0 1 2 3 3 0 14 Total 973 1018 1133 1063 1111 1118 1143 1204 1315 1430 1309 12817

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Figure 4: Yearly evolution of publications from the Caribbean (all countries) per thematic area.

2.3.4 Thematic Profiles of Publications of the four Caribbean Sub-regions For the entire Caribbean the largest thematic domains were Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences followed by Biomedical Research then Clinical Medicine (Figure 3). When one looks at the four sub-regions (Table 6), Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences still constitutes the largest category of publications for all but the English sub-region where Clinical Medicine (28%) just overtakes Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (26%). The Biomedical Research thematic area is still in the top three in all sub-regions but in the Spanish sub-region Clinical Medicine is no longer in the top three, being just edged out by the Engineering, Technology theme. In fact, publications from the Spanish sub-region show the most even distribution with six of the ten thematic categories each having greater than 10% of total publications. The Spanish sub-region comprises only two countries, Cuba with 6499 publications and the Dominican Republic with 276 publications for the 11 year period. The profile for the Spanish sub-region is therefore dominated by Cuba and as Figure 6 shows the Dominican Republic profile differs in several ways which will be described later. The other three sub-regions are more specialised in their output with only three thematic domains ever equalling or exceeding 10% of total publications (Figure 5, 7, 8). As will be discussed in the next section, half the countries/territories produce too few publications to be meaningfully examined on a thematic basis. For this reason some countries/territories are omitted from the thematic profiles depicted in Figure 5, 7 & 8.

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Table 6: Percentage of publications in each thematic area for each Caribbean sub-region

AgBioEnv BioMed Chem ClinMed Eng. Hum Math Multi Phy Soc Sc Total

Dutch 45 14 1 27 1 0 0 1 5 6 100 English 26 14 7 28 6 2 1 1 7 8 100 French 38 24 2 20 3 1 6 0 3 2 100 Spanish 26 25 12 11 12 1 2 0 10 2 100 Total 28 21 9 18 8 1 2 1 8 4 100

Of the sub-regions, the Dutch sub-region shows the least spread of publications across disciplines, with half of the ten thematic areas almost having no ( ≤ 0.1% ) publications (Figure 8). It is also the most homogenous of the sub-regions with the two territories Suriname and Curacao quite similar in thematic output. Of all sub-regions, the English sub-region is the most heterogeneous with especially wide variation in the Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences sector (Figure 5). With respect to the Francophone territories, Martinique differs most with its strong Clinical Medicine output largely at the expense of the Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences domain (Figure 8).

Figure 5: Thematic profile of higher output English sub-region countries/territories.

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Figure 6: Thematic profile of Spanish sub-region countries.

Figure 7: Thematic profile of French countries/territories.

Figure 8: Thematic profile of higher output Dutch sub-region countries/territories.

2.3.5 Thematic Profiles of Publications of each Caribbean Country/Territory Table 7 depicts the spread of publications between the ten thematic areas in each of the sixteen higher output countries/territories. One obvious difference from the regional and sub-regional

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profiles is that Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences is eclipsed by Clinical Medicine in terms as the largest category of publications in three islands, Grenada, Jamaica and Martinique, probably reflecting the prominent medical schools there. In the case of Grenada, Biomedical Research even exceeds Clinical Medicine. Belize stands out in having the most specialist output, with 73% of publications in the Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences grouping. Bermuda also has a very distinctive profile with 78% of publications in two categories. These are Physics and Agriculture,Biology & Environmental Sciences and reflect the two major research institutions on Bermuda, the Bermuda Institute of Ocean Sciences and the Bermuda Weather Services. The Agriculture,Biology & Environmental Sciences domain is, nonetheless, very robust for the majority, aided by the many Field Research Stations throughout the region and the various Government Agricultural and Fisheries Departments. The strength of Chemistry in the Guyana profile (21%) stands out and reflects the prominence of this discipline at the University of Guyana. The Engineering Technology domain is best represented in Cuba (12%) and Trinidad & Tobago (11%) where University Engineering Faculties exist. Four of the countries, Barbados, Cuba, Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago, show the widest spread of publications across the ten thematic domains (majority of categories with ≥ 5% of publications) and this probably reflects the presence in these countries of Universities with a range of Faculties. Table 8 shows the thematic profiles of the sixteen countries/territories with low output of publications (< 50). Generally, these are territories with smaller populations or land area where critical mass comes into play. For most of these, the few publications are in the Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences area where even if universities or research centres are lacking there are Government Agriculture, Fisheries and/or Forestry Departments which generate applied research on this theme. Montserrat is singular in having an active volcano and its concentration of publications in the Physics area reflects the geophysical research of the Montserrat Volcano Observatory. The publications of Antigua, Dominica, St Maarten and the Cayman Islands in the Clinical Medicine and/or Biomedical Research fields reflect offshore medical schools located on those islands. These are essentially for-profit teaching establishments with weak research output. No further in depth analyses will be carried out in this Report on these sixteen countries/territories with low publication output. Their total publications represent 1.7% of the total for the Caribbean region.

Table 7: Percentage of publications in each thematic area of each higher output Caribbean country/territory

Ag. Bio Chem Med Eng. Hum Math Multi Phy Soc Sc Total Bahamas 36 17 1 17 5 2 2 3 4 14 100 Barbados 20 18 11 17 8 3 3 1 7 12 100 Belize 73 5 0 6 0 4 0 1 8 3 100 Bermuda 50 7 2 1 3 0 0 4 28 5 100 Cuba 25 25 13 11 12 1 2 0 10 2 100 Curaçao 44 13 1 32 1 0 0 2 3 4 100 Dominican Republic 33 32 0 17 3 1 0 1 4 9 100 French Guiana 45 33 1 11 3 0 0 1 5 0 100 Grenada 10 41 0 38 1 1 0 2 0 8 100 Guadeloupe 37 21 3 19 4 1 10 0 3 2 100

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Guyana 45 10 21 9 5 1 0 1 4 4 100 Haiti 41 26 1 20 1 1 0 1 3 5 100 Jamaica 16 13 8 44 2 2 2 0 7 6 100 Martinique 25 18 1 42 3 0 7 0 2 3 100 Surinam 46 14 2 20 2 0 0 0 10 5 100 Trinidad & Tobago 32 13 5 23 11 2 1 0 5 9 100 Total 28 21 9 18 9 1 2 0 8 4 100

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Table 8: Distribution of publications per thematic area from each low output Caribbean country/territory.

Ag. Bio Chem Med Eng. Hum Math Multi Phy Soc Sc Total Anguilla 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Antigua 4 1 0 18 0 0 0 0 1 1 25 Aruba 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 Bonaire 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 British Virgin Islands 8 0 0 4 0 0 0 1 8 1 22 Cayman Islands 17 19 0 5 0 1 0 1 1 3 47 Dominica 9 6 1 10 0 0 0 1 0 12 39 St Kitts & Nevis 8 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 3 18 Montserrat 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 15 0 17 Saba 4 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 3 11 St Lucia 6 2 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 2 14 St Maarten 0 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 St Martin 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Saint Vincent 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 6 St Eustatius 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 5 Turks & Caicos Islands 5 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 Total 72 46 1 46 0 1 0 6 27 27 226

2.3.6 Visibility and Specialisation of the Publication Profile of each Caribbean Country/Territory For each of the higher output countries/territories it is possible to assess the visibility or impact of publications by measuring how many times these are cited. One index is Citation Share (CS), also called the Relative Citations per Document, which is the ratio of the mean citations per document of a particular country to the mean citations per document of a reference region (Mustar & Esterle, 2006), in this case, the Caribbean region. The publications of countries with this ratio greater than one are more highly cited than the average for the region and so have higher visibility or impact. A related index is the Relative Non-cited Rate or, what we term, the Non-Citation Share (NCS) which is the ratio of the percentage of publications of a particular country without citations to the percentage of publications without citations for the whole region (here, the Caribbean region). In this case, a value less than one indicates higher impact as this means proportionately fewer publications from that country have no citations compared to the regional average. In both cases these indices will be applied to each thematic domain of a country’s output to identify those which have higher visibility or impact relative to the regional average. While these address quality, the Specialization Index (SI) is the ratio of the percentage of publications of a country in a specific discipline to the percentage of publications in that discipline for the whole region. It is relevant to the quality indices just described as if a country does show specialisation in a particular discipline ideally these publications should be of high visibility. These indices need to be calculated using a sizeable number of publications to be meaningful but even for these higher output countries these numbers are relatively low. Faced with

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these small publication numbers, we will only consider these indices for samples of at least ten publications, but even this number we consider rather low. Table 9 shows the visibility and specialisation indices for publications of the Bahamas. Only four thematic areas meet the criterion of having an adequate number of publications (> 10) to apply these indices, namely Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences, Biomedical Research, Clinical Medicine and Social Sciences. For both Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences and Biomedical Research, papers from the Bahamas have a Citation Share greater than one (CS = 1.25, 1.14, resp.) meaning they attract more citations than the regional average for that discipline. Similarly, in these disciplines the Non-Citation Share is less than one (NCS = 0.85, 0.00, resp.) meaning there are a lower proportion of papers having no citations relative to the regional norm. In fact, for Biomedical Research the NCS index of zero means all papers have been cited. Proportionately fewer Social Sciences publications from the Bahamas are non-cited relative to the region but in terms of the CS this is less than one, meaning that these publications are less cited than the regional average for the discipline. Of these, Clinical Medicine is the lowest ranked with the relative citation rate and the proportion of non-cited papers worse than the regional average (CS=0.45; NCS= 1.65). The Bahamas has a higher proportion of publications than the regional average in the Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences and the Social Sciences domains (SI=1.25, SI=3.50, resp.). This suggests this specialisation is paying off in terms of the higher impact of these publications. In contrast, despite Biomedical Research being under-represented in the publications from the Bahamas relative to the region (SI=0.79) these publications have higher visibility than the regional average. Table 9: Bibliometric indices for publications of the Bahamas per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/ % Doc without Specialisatio Citation Non-citation n number Doc Citation n Index (SI) Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, 37 7.30 0.24 1.30 1.25 0.85 Biology and Environment al Sciences Biomedical 17 12.88 0.00 0.79 1.14 0.00 Research Chemistry 1 0.00 1.00 0.11 0.00 4.90 Clinical 17 3.29 0.47 0.92 0.45 1.65 Medicine Engineering, 5 7.20 0.20 0.58 1.49 0.67 Technology Humanities 2 0.00 1.00 2.18 0.00 1.20 Mathematics 2 0.50 0.50 0.95 0.15 1.26 Multidisciplin 3 20.00 0.33 5.54 0.35 2.83 ary Sciences Physics 4 34.50 0.00 0.48 4.27 0.00 Social 14 1.64 0.29 3.50 0.45 0.83 Sciences

For Barbados (Table 10), five thematic areas - Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences; Biomedical Research; Chemistry; Humanities; Physics - have relatively high visibility based on their NCS indices (NCS = 0.62, 0.55, 0.80, 0.83, 0.74, resp.). For all of these except Physics, the CS also

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exceeds one (CS = 1.38, 3.21, 1.09, 1.97, resp.), further confirming the higher impact of these domains for Barbados relative to the entire Caribbean. In fact, the visibility for Biomedical Research is particularly high. Two of these thematic areas, Chemistry and Humanities, also represent areas of specialisation (SI= 1.28, SI=2.99, resp.). Table 10 : Bibliometric indices for publications of Barbados per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/ % Doc SI Citation Non-citation n number Doc without Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 97 8.06 0.18 0.72 1.38 0.62 and Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 85 36.28 0.08 0.84 3.21 0.55 Chemistry 55 7.89 0.16 1.28 1.09 0.80 Clinical Medicine 83 4.66 0.35 0.94 0.63 1.22 Engineering. 37 1.68 0.51 0.91 0.35 1.73 Technology Humanities 13 1.08 0.69 2.99 1.97 0.83 Mathematics 15 2.47 0.60 1.50 0.75 1.51 Multidisciplinary 4 88.50 0.25 1.56 1.56 2.13 Sciences Physics 35 7.97 0.14 0.88 0.99 0.74 Social Sciences 60 3.67 0.38 3.16 1.00 1.11 As Table 11 shows, for Belize, only the Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences thematic area has an adequate number of publications for this analysis and in this case the impact is high based on both indices (CS=1.53; NCS=0.62). This is also an area of specialisation for Belize (SI=2.63). Table 11: Bibliometric indices for publications of Belize per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/Doc % Doc without SI Citation Non-citation n number Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 8.93 0.18 2.63 1.53 0.62 and Environmental 57 Sciences Biomedical Research 4 0.75 0.25 0.24 0.07 1.67 Chemistry 0 - - - - - Clinical Medicine 5 8.60 0.40 0.35 1.17 1.40 Engineering, 0 - - - - - Technology Humanities 3 1.33 0.33 4.28 2.43 0.40 Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplinary 1 16.00 0.00 2.41 0.28 0.00 Sciences Physics 6 19.00 0.00 0.94 2.35 0.00 Social Sciences 2 0.00 1.00 0.65 0.00 2.90

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For Bermuda (Table 12), four thematic areas are for consideration - Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences; Biomedical Research; Physics; Social Sciences – and all have relatively high visibilities based on both impact indices (CS = 2.54, 1.78, 2.94, 1.18; NCS = 0.22, 0.89, 0.34, 0.58, resp.). Of these, all but Biomedical Research are areas in which Bermuda shows specialisation (SI > 1). Table 12: Bibliometric indices for publications of Bermuda per thematic area.

Publication Citation/Doc % Doc SI Citation Share Non- number without (CS) citation Cit. Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 111 14.83 0.06 1.81 2.54 0.22 and Environmental Sciences Biomedical 15 20.13 0.13 0.32 1.78 0.89 Research Chemistry 4 30.25 0.00 0.21 4.18 0.00 Clinical Medicine 2 0.50 0.50 0.05 0.07 1.75 Engineering, 6 7.50 0.17 0.32 1.55 0.56 Technology Humanities 1 1.00 0.00 0.51 1.83 0.00 Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplinary 9 168.11 0.00 7.71 2.96 0.00 Sciences Physics 62 23.81 0.06 3.45 2.94 0.34 Social Sciences 10 4.30 0.20 1.16 1.18 0.58

Cuba with its large number of publications allows these indices to be applied and interpreted with the greatest confidence (Table 13). In only one domain, Clinical Medicine, is Cuba performing better than the regional average on the basis of both impact indices (CS=1.08; NCS=0.99) although, based on the SI, this is not an area of specialisation for Cuba (SI=0.62). On the other hand, both higher impact (CS=1.04) and specialisation (SI=1.42) are evident in the area of Engineering, Technology. In Humanities, Cuba also has high visibility (CS=1.62) even though this is not a specialisation (SI=0.62).

Similarly, although Mathematics is not a specialisation (SI=0.78), Cuban publications in this discipline have relatively high impact based on the proportion of uncited publications (NCS=0.92). Cuba shows specialisation with respect to Biomedical Research, Chemistry and Physics (SI=1.17, 1.43, 1.25 resp.) but, based on the respective CS and NCS indices, publications in these areas are not of higher than average visibility.

Curacao has three thematic areas with relatively high impact publications (Table 14), viz. Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (CS=2.68; NCS=0.29), Biomedical Research (CS=1.50; NCS=0.74), Clinical Medicine (CS=1.45; NCS=0.48). Of these only Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (SI=1.59) and Clinical Medicine (SI=1.75) are country specialisations.

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Table 13: Bibliometric indices for publications of Cuba per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/Do % Doc SI Citation Non-citation n number c without Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 1654 4.20 0.37 0.92 0.72 1.31 and Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 1593 9.76 0.17 1.17 0.86 1.14 Chemistry 821 6.67 0.21 1.43 0.92 1.03 Clinical Medicine 727 7.92 0.28 0.62 1.08 0.99 Engineering, 776 5.00 0.30 1.42 1.04 1.00 Technology Humanities 36 0.89 0.83 0.62 1.62 1.00 Mathematics 104 3.34 0.37 0.78 1.02 0.92 Multidisciplinary 20 24.80 0.15 0.58 0.44 1.28 Sciences Physics 662 6.05 0.22 1.25 0.75 1.15 Social Sciences 99 3.70 0.42 0.39 1.01 1.23 In the five disciplinary areas with sufficient publications for analysis, the Dominican Republic has high visibility (Table 15). Publications are more highly cited than the regional average in Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (CS=1.11) and this is also an area of specialisation (SI=1.17). The Dominican Republic also shows specialisation in Biomedical Research (SI=1.50) and Social Sciences (2.31) and publications in these two disciplines are relatively highly cited (CS=1.60, 1.68 resp.) and with relatively few uncited papers (NCS=0.54, 0.81 resp.). Clinical Medicine is another area in which the Dominican Republic is performing particularly well (CS=3.60; NCS=0.44). Although Physics is not a specialisation, the few papers (10) are all cited (NCS=0) and at a higher than average rate for the region (CS=1.34). Table 14: Bibliometric indices for publications of Curacao per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/Do % Doc SI Citation Non-citation n number c without Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 61 15.64 0.08 1.59 2.68 0.29 and Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 18 17.00 0.11 0.62 1.50 0.74 Chemistry 1 5.00 0.00 0.08 0.69 0.00 Clinical Medicine 44 10.64 0.14 1.75 1.45 0.48 Engineering, 1 11.00 0.00 0.09 2.28 0.00 Technology Humanities 0 - - - - - Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplinary 3 11.67 0.33 4.09 0.21 2.83 Sciences Physics 4 12.25 0.25 0.35 1.52 1.30 Social Sciences 6 3.00 0.00 1.11 0.82 0.00

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For French Guiana, there are five thematic areas with adequate numbers and all are noteworthy (Table 16). Publications are more highly visible in Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (CS=1.38; NCS=0.48) which is also a specialisation (SI=1.61). Clinical Medicine also shows high visibility (CS=1.79; NCS=0.75) but is not a specialisation (SI=0.61). Biomedical Research is an area of concentrated output (SI=1.58) and this pays off with relatively few non-cited articles (NCS=0.77). While neither Physics nor Engineering, Technology are specialisations (SI= 0.55, 0.34 resp.) relatively few Physics publications lack citations (NCS=0.55) and Engineering, Technology publications are more cited than the regional average (CS=1.05). Table 15: Bibliometric indices for publications of the Dominican Republic per thematic area.

Publication Citation % Doc without SI Citation Share Non-citation Share number /Doc Cit (CS) (NCS) Agriculture, 90 6.47 0.33 1.17 1.11 1.17 Biology & Environment al Sciences Biomedical 87 18.06 0.08 1.50 1.60 0.54 Research Chemistry 1 15.00 0.00 0.04 2.07 0.00 Clinical 48 26.50 0.13 0.96 3.60 0.44 Medicine Engineering, 9 2.67 0.44 0.39 0.55 1.50 Technology Humanities 3 0.33 0.67 1.21 0.61 0.80 Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplin 3 80.33 0.00 2.05 1.42 0.00 ary Sciences Physics 10 10.80 0.00 0.44 1.34 0.00 Social 25 6.12 0.28 2.31 1.68 0.81 Sciences

In the case of Grenada (Table 17), there are two domains in which output is concentrated, Biomedical Research (SI=1.95) and Clinical Medicine (SI=2.08), but publications in both these areas have relatively low citation rates (CS= 0.33, 0.17, resp.) and a higher than average proportion of uncited papers (NCS= 1.93, 1.61, resp.). However, Grenada is unusual in that there is not an even evolution of publications but instead 80% of the articles are published in the last four years of the study period (data not shown). This is likely to lower the rate of citation and negatively impact these impact indices compared to a country where production is evenly spread over the eleven year period under study. Despite this, the low output in Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (n=13) does attract a citation rate higher than the regional average (CS=1.24).

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Table 16: Bibliometric indices for publications of French Guiana per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation % Doc SI Citation Share Non-citation Share n number /Doc without Cit (CS) (NCS) Agriculture, 189 8.06 0.14 1.61 1.38 0.48 Biology and Environmental Sciences Biomedical 140 11.29 0.11 1.58 1.00 0.77 Research Chemistry 5 10.20 0.00 0.13 1.41 0.00 Clinical 47 13.15 0.21 0.61 1.79 0.75 Medicine Engineering, 12 5.08 0.33 0.34 1.05 1.12 Technology Humanities 2 0.00 1.00 0.53 0.00 1.20 Mathematics 1 1.00 0.00 0.12 0.30 0.00 Multidisciplinar 4 41.25 0.00 1.79 0.73 0.00 y Sciences Physics 19 7.21 0.11 0.55 0.89 0.55 Social 2 17.00 0.00 0.12 4.65 0.00 Sciences

Table 17 : Bibliometric indices for publications of Grenada per thematic area.

Publicatio Citatio % Doc SI Citation Share Non-citation n number n/Doc without Cit (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, 13 7.23 0.38 0.37 1.24 1.35 Biology and Environmental Sciences Biomedical 52 3.73 0.29 1.95 0.33 1.93 Research Chemistry 0 - - - - - Clinical 48 1.23 0.46 2.08 0.17 1.61 Medicine Engineering, 1 10.00 0.00 0.09 2.07 0.00 Technology Humanities 1 0.00 1.00 0.88 0.00 1.20 Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplinary 2 3.00 0.00 2.97 0.05 0.00 Sciences Physics 0 - - - - - Social Sciences 10 2.50 0.40 2.01 0.68 1.16

Guadeloupe (Table 18) shows specialisation in Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (SI=1.33), Clinical Medicine (SI=1.02) and Mathematics (SI=5.06) and correspondingly higher than average citation in these thematic areas (CS = 1.04, 1.03, 1.18 resp.). Of these, there are also relatively fewer uncited publications in Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (NCS=0.55) and Clinical Medicine (NCS=0.86). Relatively higher citation rates and lower non-citation rates are evident in publications in Biomedical research (CS=1.24; NCS=0.47), Engineering, Technology

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(CS=1.16; NCS=0.31) and Physics (CS =1.12; NCS=0.96) but none of these are areas of specialisation (I=1.00, 0.48, 0.41, resp.). The low output in Social Sciences is also relatively well-cited (CS=1.51) but the citation level in Chemistry is below the regional average (CS=0.45; NCS=1.40). Table 18 : Bibliometric indices for publications of Guadeloupe per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/Doc % Doc SI Citation Non-citation n number without Share (CS) Share (NCS) Cit Agriculture, Biology 302 6.10 0.16 1.33 1.04 0.55 and Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 172 14.03 0.07 1.00 1.24 0.47 Chemistry 21 3.29 0.29 0.29 0.45 1.40 Clinical Medicine 151 7.56 0.25 1.02 1.03 0.86 Engineering, 33 5.61 0.09 0.48 1.16 0.31 Technology Humanities 7 0.00 1.00 0.96 0.00 1.20 Mathematics 85 3.88 0.44 5.06 1.18 1.09 Multidisciplinary 3 9.33 0.33 0.69 0.16 2.83 Sciences Physics 27 9.04 0.19 0.41 1.12 0.96 Social Sciences 14 5.50 0.43 0.44 1.51 1.24

Table 19 : Bibliometric indices for publications of Guyana per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/D % Doc SI Citation Non-citation n number oc without Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, 61 8.79 0.23 1.62 1.50 0.81 Biology and Environmental Sciences Biomedical 13 8.31 0.00 0.46 0.73 0.00 Research Chemistry 29 1.48 0.52 2.43 0.20 2.54 Clinical Medicine 12 2.83 0.33 0.49 0.38 1.17 Engineering, 7 5.57 0.29 0.61 1.15 0.96 Technology Humanities 1 0.00 1.00 0.83 0.00 1.20 Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplinary 1 22.00 0.00 1.40 0.39 0.00 Sciences Physics 5 7.20 0.00 0.45 0.89 0.00 Social Sciences 6 1.83 0.33 1.13 0.50 0.97

Like many Caribbean states, the output of Guyana (Table 19) emphasises Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (SI=1.62) and publications in this grouping have relatively high visibility (CS=1.50; NCS=0.91). While Chemistry is another specialisation of Guyana (SI=2.43), publications in this discipline are less well-cited than the regional average (CS=0.20; NCS=2.54) and this is probably the domain of Guyana with least impact. The modest output in the area of Biomedical Research (n=13) are all cited but this is not a specialisation for the country (SI=0.46).

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Haiti (Table 20) has proportionately higher than average output in three areas, Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (SI=1.48), Biomedical Research (SI=1.25) and Clinical Medicine (SI=1.08). In all three areas, the publications enjoy higher citation rates than the regional average (CS= 1.44, 1.25, 2.49 resp.) and lower non-citation rates relative to the regional norm (NCS=0.23, 0.00, 0.24 resp.). No other disciplines have sufficient publications to be assessed by the bibliometric indices. Table 20: Bibliometric indices for publications of Haiti per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation/Do % Doc SI Citation Non-citation n number c without Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 61 8.43 0.07 1.48 1.44 0.23 & Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 39 14.13 0.00 1.25 1.25 0.00 Chemistry 2 3.00 0.00 0.15 0.41 0.00 Clinical Medicine 29 18.34 0.07 1.08 2.49 0.24 Engineering, 2 5.00 0.00 0.16 1.04 0.00 Technology Humanities 2 0.00 1.00 1.51 0.00 1.20 Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplinary 1 204.00 0.00 1.27 3.60 0.00 Sciences Physics 4 18.25 0.00 0.33 2.26 0.00 Social Sciences 8 1.50 0.63 1.38 0.41 1.81

Jamaica has three areas of specialisation, Clinical Medicine (SI=2.40), Humanities (SI=1.67) and Social Sciences (SI=1.57) but, of these, higher than average visibility (NCS=0.84) is only apparent in Social Sciences (Table 21). There are three disciplines in which publications from Jamaica make a higher than average impact, Chemistry (CS=1.55; NCS=0.79), Engineering, Technology (CS=1.14; NCS=0.94) and Mathematics (CS=1.09; NCS= -0.52). Interestingly, none of these represent a country specialisation (SI= 0.96, 0.29, 0.96 resp.), least of all Engineering, Technology. Higher visibility with respect to proportionately fewer non-cited papers is also seen in the areas Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (NCS=0.87) and Biomedical Research (NCS=0.94). The discipline with the lowest relative citation rate for Jamaica is Humanities (CS=0.33). Martinique shows specialisation in Clinical Medicine (SI=2.29) and Mathematics (SI=3.44) and in each of these disciplines the proportion of papers that lack citation are fewer than the regional average (NCS = 0.70, 0.74 resp.) [Table 22]. While Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences is not one of the island’s specialisations (SI=0.90) it is an area in which the indices indicate higher citation than the regional average (CS=1.05; NCS=0.53). The lowest ranked discipline for Martinique relative to the regional average is Biomedical Research (CS=0.63; NCS=1.91).

Table 21 : Bibliometric indices for publications of Jamaica per thematic area.

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Publication Citation/ % Doc SI Citation Non-citation number Doc without Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 229 4.92 0.25 0.56 0.84 0.87 and Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 193 10.57 0.14 0.63 0.93 0.94 Chemistry 124 11.23 0.16 0.96 1.55 0.79 Clinical Medicine 639 6.30 0.31 2.40 0.86 1.08 Engineering, 36 5.50 0.28 0.29 1.14 0.94 Technology Humanities 22 0.18 0.86 1.67 0.33 1.03 Mathematics 29 3.59 0.21 0.96 1.09 0.52 Multidisciplinary 3 48.67 0.00 0.39 0.86 0.00 Sciences Physics 100 6.03 0.15 0.84 0.75 0.78 Social Sciences 90 3.28 0.29 1.57 0.90 0.84

Table 22: Bibliometric indices for publications of Martinique per thematic area.

Publicatio Citation % Doc SI Citation Share Non-citation n number /Doc without Cit (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology 60 6.13 0.15 0.90 1.05 0.53 and Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 42 7.17 0.29 0.83 0.63 1.91 Chemistry 2 5.00 0.00 0.09 0.69 0.00 Clinical Medicine 100 5.55 0.20 2.29 0.75 0.70 Engineering, 8 14.63 0.25 0.39 3.03 0.84 Technology Humanities 0 - - - - - Mathematics 17 2.59 0.29 3.44 0.79 0.74 Multidisciplinary 0 - - - - - Sciences Physics 5 1.60 0.20 0.25 0.20 1.04 Social Sciences 6 1.17 0.33 0.64 0.32 0.97

For Suriname (Table 23), there is relatively high visibility for publications in Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (CS=1.61; NCS=0.55) and Biomedical Research (CS=1.05; NCS=0.56), with only the former being a specialisation (SI= 1.65). Clinical Medicine is also a discipline in which Suriname specialises (SI=1.13) and in which it has proportionately fewer non-cited papers than the region (NCS=0.62) but in this discipline its relative citation rate is below the regional average (CS=0.70).

Table 23 : Bibliometric indices for publications of Suriname per thematic area.

Publication Citation/ % Doc SI Citation Share Non-citation

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number Doc without Cit (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, 38 9.39 0.16 1.65 1.61 0.55 Biology and Environmental Sciences Biomedical 12 11.83 0.08 0.69 1.05 0.56 Research Chemistry 2 3.50 0.00 0.27 0.48 0.00 Clinical 17 5.12 0.18 1.13 0.70 0.62 Medicine Engineering, 2 10.50 0.00 0.29 2.18 0.00 Technology Humanities 0 - - - - - Mathematics 0 - - - - - Multidisciplinary 0 - - - - - Sciences Physics 8 2.75 0.25 1.18 0.34 1.30 Social Sciences 4 4.25 0.00 1.23 1.16 0.00 Trinidad & Tobago shows specialisation in Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (SI=1.14), Clinical Medicine (SI=1.28), Engineering , Technology (SI=1.28), Humanities (SI=1.78) and Social Sciences (SI=2.24) but in none of these areas does it have high visibility based on the two impact indices, CS and NCS (Table 24). Its highest impact is seen in Chemistry where proportionately fewer of its publications lack citation and those that are cited have a higher rate of citation than the regional average (CS=1.24; NCS=0.54). It also has heightened visibility in the Biomedical Research discipline where a lower proportion of its publications lack citation compared to the regional average (NCS=0.82) but once again this is not one of its areas of specialisation (SI=0.60). The discipline with the lowest visibility for Trinidad & Tobago is Mathematics (CS=0.06; NCS=2.06). Table 24: Bibliometric indices for publications of Trinidad & Tobago per thematic area.

Publication Citation/ % Doc SI Citation Non-citation number Doc without Cit Share (CS) Share (NCS) Agriculture, Biology & 430 4.51 0.29 1.14 0.77 1.00 Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 172 10.60 0.12 0.60 0.94 0.82 Chemistry 64 8.95 0.11 0.53 1.24 0.54 Clinical Medicine 316 6.20 0.31 1.28 0.84 1.08 Engineering, 146 3.52 0.31 1.28 0.73 1.04 Technology Humanities 21 0.33 0.90 1.73 0.61 1.08 Mathematics 11 0.18 0.82 0.39 0.06 2.06 Multidisciplinary 5 79.80 0.00 0.70 1.41 0.00 Sciences Physics 69 6.97 0.26 0.62 0.86 1.36 Social Sciences 119 3.41 0.35 2.24 0.93 1.02

2.3.7 Relative Performance of Caribbean Countries/Territories by Thematic Area

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Norms for citation exist within a discipline which allows comparison between countries/territories with respect to the impact indices within a discipline. Some caution should, nonetheless, be exercised, bearing in mind the small numbers of publications involved in some cases. Levels of production vary widely even among the higher output Caribbean countries. With half the regional publications generated by Cuba this means that indices based on regional output in many ways reflect the contribution of Cuba. Finally, publications in the Humanities and Social Sciences tend to be published locally or regionally and to be poorly represented in the WoS database. These caveats should be borne in mind in the foregoing comparisons.

Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences is the only disciplinary domain in which all of the sixteen higher output countries/territories have a large enough pool of publications to be meaningfully compared with respect to the specialisation (SI) and impact (CS, NCS) indices (Table 25). For ten countries/territories this is an area of specialisation, foremost among these being Belize (SI=2.63). Perusal of these publications for Belize reveals that these primarily deal with wildlife conservation and are produced by some twenty research centres and organisations which focus on the country’s terrestrial and marine biodiversity.

Table 25 : Agriculture, Biology and environmental Sciences Indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/Do SI Citation Share (CS) Non-citation publication c Share (CS) Bahamas 37 7.30 1.30 1.25 0.85 Barbados 97 8.06 0.72 1.38 0.62 Belize 57 8.93 2.63 1.53 0.62 Bermuda 111 14.83 1.81 2.54 0.22 Cuba 1654 4.20 0.92 0.72 1.31 Curaçao 61 15.64 1.59 2.68 0.29 Dominican 90 6.47 1.17 1.11 1.17 Republic French Guiana 189 8.06 1.61 1.38 0.48 Grenada 13 7.23 0.37 1.24 1.35 Guadeloupe 302 6.10 1.33 1.04 0.55 Guyana 61 8.79 1.62 1.50 0.81 Haiti 61 8.43 1.48 1.44 0.23 Jamaica 229 4.92 0.56 0.84 0.87 Martinique 60 6.13 0.90 1.05 0.53 Suriname 38 9.39 1.65 1.61 0.55 Trinidad & Tobago 430 4.51 1.14 0.77 1.00

Eleven countries/territories have higher than average visibility based on both the CS and NCS indices, while two of these have higher than average visibility based on just one of these indices. Two territories are particularly outstanding. Publications from Curacao in this area have the highest relative citation rate in the region (CS=2.68) closely followed by those of Bermuda (CS=2.54). With respect to having the lowest proportion of papers which lack citation, the order is reversed with Bermuda more highly ranked than Curacao (NCS = 0.22, 0.29 resp.). Both of these territories are

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specialised in this thematic domain (Bermuda SI = 1.81; Curacao SI = 1,59). Cuba is the lowest ranked in this list based on citation share (CS=0.72) with Trinidad & Tobago close behind (CS=0.77). In this thematic area, Cuba also has the second highest rate of non-citation of papers (NCS= 1.31) while this index for Trinidad & Tobago is the average for the region.

Table 26: Biomedical Research Indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/doc SI Citation Share Non-citation publication (CS) Share (CS) Bahamas 17 12.88 0.79 1.14 0.00 Barbados 85 36.28 0.84 3.21 0.55 Bermuda 15 20.13 0.32 1.78 0.89 Cuba 1593 9.76 1.17 0.86 1.14 Curaçao 18 17.00 0.62 1.50 0.74 Dominican Republic 87 18.06 1.50 1.60 0.54 French Guiana 140 11.29 1.58 1.00 0.77 Grenada 52 3.73 1.95 0.33 1.93 Guadeloupe 172 14.03 1.00 1.24 0.47 Guyana 13 8.31 0.46 0.73 0.00 Haiti 39 14.13 1.25 1.25 0.00 Jamaica 193 10.57 0.63 0.93 0.94 Martinique 42 7.17 0.83 0.63 1.91 Suriname 12 11.83 0.69 1.05 0.56 Trinidad & Tobago 172 10.60 0.60 0.94 0.82

For Biomedical Research fifteen of the sixteen higher output countries/territories qualify for consideration based on an adequate number of publications (Table 26). In this discipline, Barbados has the highest citation share (CS=3.21), considerably higher than second-ranked Bermuda (CS=1.78). While the relative proportion of papers without citation is lower than the regional average for these two countries (NCS = 0.55, 0.89, resp.), the countries ranked highest on this criterion alone are the Bahamas, Guyana and Haiti (NCS = 0.00 for all) for which there are no uncited publications. Grenada then Martinique are the lowest ranked with respect to the relative citation rate (CS = 0.33, 0.63, resp.) and also in terms of the proportion of papers lacking citation (NCS = 1.93, 1.91, resp.). Specialisation is poorly correlated with publication impact in this discipline. Four of the five countries recognised as having high citation rates or low non-citation do not show specialisation (SI < 1) while Grenada which is specialised in this field (SI=1.95) is the poorest performer.

Only six countries/territories show adequate output in Chemistry for impact analysis. Jamaica has the highest relative citation rate in this discipline followed by Trinidad & Tobago (CS = 1.55, 1.24, resp.) but the order is reversed when the ranking is on the proportion of papers without citation (NCS = 0.79, 0.54, resp.) (Table 27). Guyana and Guadeloupe are lowest ranked on the basis of both the relative citation rate (CS = 0.20, 0.45, resp.) and the proportion of papers without citation (NCS = 2.54, 1.40, resp.). Again, there is a lack of correlation between impact and specialisation with Guyana, the lowest ranked, being the most specialised (SI=2.43) while Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago, the highest ranked, being relatively unspecialised in this discipline (SI = 0.96, 0.53, resp.).

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Table 27 : Chemistry Indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/doc SI Citation Share Non-citation publication (CS) Share (CS) Barbados 55 7.89 1.28 1.09 0.80 Cuba 821 6.67 1.43 0.92 1.03 Guyana 29 1.48 2.43 0.20 2.54 Guadeloupe 21 3.29 0.29 0.45 1.40 Jamaica 124 11.23 0.96 1.55 0.79 Trinidad & Tobago 64 8.95 0.53 1.24 0.54

Almost all the higher output countries are represented in the Clinical Medicine discipline (Table 28). The Dominican Republic is the highest ranked performer in this field with respect to the relative rate of citation (CS=3.60) followed by Haiti (CS=2.49) while the order is reversed when the proportion of papers without citation is the criterion (NCS = 0.24, 0.44, resp.). The worst performing on the basis of citation rate is Grenada followed by Guyana (CS = 0.17, 0.38, resp.) while on the basis of the proportion of papers without citation the Bahamas is weakest, followed by Grenada (NCS = 1.65, 1.61, resp.). Once again, specialisation in this field is no indicator of publication impact, e.g. one of the more specialised countries, Grenada,( SI=2.08) is least ranked.

Table 28: Clinical Medicine indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/doc SI Citation Non-citation Share publication Share (CS) (CS) Bahamas 17 3.29 0.92 0.45 1.65 Barbados 83 4.66 0.94 0.63 1.22 Cuba 727 7.92 0.62 1.08 0.99 Curaçao 44 10.64 1.75 1.45 0.48 Dominican Republic 48 26.50 0.96 3.60 0.44 French Guiana 47 13.15 0.61 1.79 0.75 Grenada 48 1.23 2.08 0.17 1.61 Guadeloupe 151 7.56 1.02 1.03 0.86 Guyana 12 2.83 0.49 0.38 1.17 Haiti 29 18.34 1.08 2.49 0.24 Jamaica 639 6.30 2.40 0.86 1.08 Martinique 100 5.55 2.29 0.75 0.70 Suriname 17 5.12 1.13 0.70 0.62 Trinidad & Tobago 316 6.20 1.28 0.84 1.08

Few Caribbean countries/territories have a high output in Engineering, Technology (Table 29). Guadeloupe has the highest visibility in this field (CS=1.16; NCS=0.31) while Jamaica is in second place (CS=1.14; NCS=0.94). The poorest performer in this discipline is Barbados (CS=0.35; NCS=1.73). The

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countries showing the least specialisation in this field - Jamaica, French Guiana and Guadeloupe (SI = 0.29, 0.34, 0.48, resp.) – are the top performers.

Table 29 : Engineering and Technology indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/doc SI Citation Share (CS) Non-citation publication Share (CS) Barbados 37 1.68 0.91 0.35 1.73 Cuba 776 5.00 1.42 1.04 1.00 French Guiana 12 5.08 0.34 1.05 1.12 Guadeloupe 33 5.61 0.48 1.16 0.31 Jamaica 36 5.50 0.29 1.14 0.94 Trinidad & 146 3.52 1.28 0.73 1.04 Tobago

A limited number of countries are listed for Humanities (Table 30). Of these, Barbados is top-ranked (CS=1.97; NCS=0.83) and is also the most specialised (SI=2.99). Jamaica is least-ranked in this discipline with respect to citation rate (CS=0.33) although this position is taken by Trinidad & Tobago when the proportion of papers without citation is the criterion (NCS=1.08). Having said that, it should be borne in mind that the WoS database is primarily a science database and the Humanities data should be interpreted with caution. Furthermore, in this domain, books, monographs and local journals are the major means of publication and these are not considered in this study.

Table 30: Humanities indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/do SI Citation Share Non-citation publication c (CS) Share (CS) Barbados 13 1.08 2.99 1.97 0.83 Cuba 36 0.89 0.62 1.62 1.00 Jamaica 22 0.18 1.67 0.33 1.03 Trinidad & 21 0.33 1.73 0.61 1.08 Tobago

In the discipline of Mathematics six countries/territories are considered (Table 31). Jamaica ranks highest on the proportion of papers without citation (NCS=0.52) and second on the relative citation rate (CS=1.09). Guadeloupe is first-ranked on relative citation rate (CS=1.18) while Martinique is second-ranked on the basis of the proportion of papers without citation (NCS=0.74). Trinidad & Tobago is ranked lowest using both of these indices (CS=0.06; NCS=2.06). In this field there is some correspondence between specialisation and impact, with both Guadeloupe and Martinique showing high specialisation (SI = 5.06, 3.44, resp.).

Table 31 : Mathematics indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/d SI Citation Share Non-citation publication oc (CS) Share (CS)

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Barbados 15 2.47 1.50 0.75 1.51 Cuba 104 3.34 0.78 1.02 0.92 Guadeloupe 85 3.88 5.06 1.18 1.09 Jamaica 29 3.59 0.96 1.09 0.52 Martinique 17 2.59 3.44 0.79 0.74 Trinidad & 11 0.18 0.39 0.06 2.06 Tobago

In Physics, on the basis of relative citation rate, Bermuda is highest ranked (CS=2.94) while the Dominican Republic takes second place (CS=1.34), with the order reversed when the proportion of non-cited papers is the criterion for assessing impact (NCS = 0.32, 0.00, resp.) (Table 32). Using the criterion of citation rate, Cuba and Jamaica share the lowest ranking (CS=0.75) while this position is taken by Trinidad & Tobago if the proportion of non-cited papers is the criterion (NCS=1.36). As for other disciplines, the SI correlates poorly with the impact indices.

Table 32: Physics indices for relevant countries

Countries Number of Cit/doc SI Citation Share Non-citation publication (CS) Share (CS) Barbados 35 7.97 0.88 0.99 0.74 Bermuda 62 23.81 3.45 2.94 0.34 Cuba 662 6.05 1.25 0.75 1.15 Dominican Republic 10 10.80 0.44 1.34 0.00 French Guiana 19 7.21 0.55 0.89 0.55 Guadeloupe 27 9.04 0.41 1.12 0.96 Jamaica 100 6.03 0.84 0.75 0.78 Trinidad & Tobago 69 6.97 0.62 0.86 1.36

For Social Sciences (Table 33), the Dominican Republic is top-ranked based on both the relative citation rate (CS=1.68) and the proportion of uncited publications (NCS=0.81). Guadeloupe is next in line based on relative citation rate (CS=1.51) but this place goes to Bermuda if the proportion of uncited publications is the criterion used (NCS=0.58). The worst performer is the Bahamas, based on relative citation rate (CS=0.45), while this position is taken by Guadeloupe if the proportion of uncited publications is the criterion used (NCS=1.24).

Table 33 : Social Sciences indices for relevant countries.

Countries Number of Cit/doc SI Citation Share Non-citation publication (CS) Share (CS)

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Bahamas 14 1.64 3.50 0.45 0.83 Barbados 60 3.67 3.16 1.00 1.11 Bermuda 10 4.30 1.16 1.18 0.58 Cuba 99 3.70 0.39 1.01 1.23 Dominican Republic 25 6.12 2.31 1.68 0.81 Grenada 10 2.50 2.01 0.68 1.16 Guadeloupe 14 5.50 0.44 1.51 1.24 Jamaica 90 3.28 1.57 0.90 0.84 Trinidad & Tobago 119 3.41 2.24 0.93 1.02

2.3.8 Collaboration Profile of Caribbean Countries/Territories Table 37 summarises the degree and spectrum of collaboration of the thirty-one Caribbean countries/territories with publications in the study. While politically some of these are independent countries and some are EU overseas territories, for the purposes of this analysis we have assessed each of the thirty-one as if it was an independent Caribbean country. This means that collaboration of a Caribbean country with a French overseas territory such as Martinique is not scored as a collaboration with France but with Martinique. This allows us to build up a picture of collaboration within the Caribbean which is also key to the aims of the EUCARINET project. We have not limited this analysis to the higher output countries/territories as it was felt that that the collaboration profile of the low output members may be quite distinct and needs to be understood, if this performance is to improve. The number of collaborations reported is that derived from the WoS database. Collaborations are not synonymous with collaborative publications. Instead collaborations are the number of collaborating countries co-authoring a publication, e.g. a paper from Barbados co- authored with one Cuban institution and two French institutions is reported as two collaborations, not three. Note also that it is not possible in our analysis to identify national collaborations, e.g. co- authorship by two different institutions within one Caribbean state. Based on the small size of most Caribbean countries/territories we believe these are less significant than in large countries with many research institutions.

As Table 34 shows, there is a rough correlation between the number of publications and the number of collaborations. For many countries/territories, there is about one collaboration per publication. Notable exceptions are low producers where the number of collaborations tends to exceed the number of papers. While there is something approaching parity for higher producers, notable exceptions are Belize, the Dominican Republic and Haiti where there are on average about two collaborations per publication. It is clear from this study that the Caribbean collaborates widely, with Cuba publishing in collaboration with 117 countries and the third highest producer Trinidad & Tobago co-publishing with 107 countries. It is noteworthy that the Dominica Republic with a much lower output almost matches these with 101 collaborating countries. Generally speaking the low producers on average publish papers with a higher number of collaborating countries than the high producers.

In this same vein, low output countries/territories mainly publish in collaboration with others. In contrast, the percentage of collaborative publications is often much less for the higher output members - Barbados, 53%; Cuba, 59%; Jamaica, 46%; Martinique, 58%; Trinidad & Tobago, 50% (Table 34). This probably reflects the relatively developed state of these societies where there is greater capacity to undertake and publish scientific research independently. Some higher output

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countries/territories, nonetheless, almost entirely publish in collaboration with other countries - Belize, 94%; the Dominican Republic, 95%; Grenada, 93%; Haiti, 95%.

Grant Agreement EUCARINET 44 / 147 Doc. Identifier: DELIVERABLE EUCARINET D2.2 v1.0 REPORT Date: 30/11/2011

Table 34: Collaboration profiles of Caribbean Countries/Territories (1999-2009).

s s s s s s s s n g g n n n n n n n n o n n i o o o o o o o o i i t i i i i i i i i t t t t t t t t t t a a a a a a a a a a a c r r i r r r r r r c c l o o i i o o o o o o l l b b b b b b b b b b b u a a a a a a l l a a u u p l l l l l l l l l l l l l l p P / o o

o o o o o o s f C C e

C C C C C C n o

v f n

i f o y r a n n n i o Sub- t o r

o i t c e a a o

a i t r t

Country/Territory i a r c r b r e i e a n r n

region e o e r b c b u o m i b U b e b l

o b m i u a m b r l n m C a m A l N

l u

u a a l u r A o

h p C N e o e

N t C / s n p C r h i s e % t t o i o % e r r i a O N t r

u L

t n E %

n % u % u % o o C Anguilla 1 6 6 100 6.0 6.00c 16.6 33.3 33.3 0.0 16.6 Antigua & Barbuda 25 36 14 80 1.4 0.56 13.9 25.0 44.4 2.8 13.9 English The Bahamas 100 132 30 74 1.3 0.30 16.5 20.3 51.1 3.8 8.3 Barbados 488 427 65 53 0.9 0.13 14.5 23.0 45.0 4.7 12.9 Belize 79 150 32 94 1.9 0.41 10.7 17.3 43.3 24.7 4.0 Bermuda 223 284 29 87 1.3 0.13 0.7 33.1 56.3 2.1 7.7 British Virgin Islands 19 39 12 68 2.1 0.63 2.5 57.5 30.0 5.0 5.0 Cayman Islands 47 78 28 92 1.7 0.60 24.3 25.6 34.6 7.7 7.7 Dominica 39 41 19 64 1.1 0.49 19.5 22.0 48.8 2.4 7.3 Grenada 127 190 26 93 1.5 0.20 5.3 8.9 56.3 1.1 28.4 Guyana 138 141 30 67 1.0 0.22 10.7 32.6 35.5 9.2 12.1 Jamaica 1493 983 79 46 0.7 0.05 7.9 31.2 43.4 4.7 12.7 Montserrat 34 61 11 91 1.8 0.32 1.6 62.3 32.8 0.0 3.3 St Kitts & Nevis 18 34 19 78 1.9 1.06 26.5 11.5 32.4 0.0 29.4 St Lucia 14 24 18 93 1.7 1.29 29.2 33.3 20.8 4.2 12.5 St Vincent & the Grenadines 6 24 17 100 4.0 2.83 62.5 16.7 16.7 4.2 0.0 Trinidad & Tobago 1370 1079 107 50 0.8 0.08 7.1 33.5 32.5 5.9 21.0 Turks & Caicos Islands 6 14 9 100 2.3 1.50 14.3 14.3 28.6 0.0 42.9 Spanish Cuba 6581 5688 117 59 0.9 0.02 0.6 47.2 8.6 34.5 9.1 Dominican Republic 280 676 101 95 2.4 0.36 4.5 17.2 29.4 30.3 18.6 Aruba 4 4 3 75 1.0 0.75 0.0 25.0 50.0 0.0 25.0 Dutch Bonaire 4 5 4 100 1.3 1.00 20.0 60.0 20.0 0.0 0.0 Curacao 138 172 26 92 1.2 0.19 6.4 76.7 12.8 1.2 2.9 St Eustatius 5 5 5 80 1.0 1.00 40.0 0.0 20.0 0.0 40.0 Saba 16 30 15 94 1.9 0.94 6.7 40.0 30.0 0.0 23.3 St. Maarten 8 15 6 100 1.9 0.75 20.06 46.6 33.3 0.0 0.0 Suriname 83 115 31 86 1.4 0.37 10.4 41.7 22.6 7.0 18.3 Martinique 245 217 35 58 0.9 0.14 20.7 57.1 5.5 2.3 14.3 French Guadeloupe 813 849 86 71 1.0 0.11 6.5 60.9 8.2 5.4 19.0 French Guiana 415 616 72 81 1.5 0.17 3.7 58.0 7.0 9.3 22.1 Haiti 148 276 53 95 1.9 0.36 10.5 18.1 47.1 10.1 14.1

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Generally speaking the majority of collaborations of Caribbean countries/territories involve two regions - Europe (the 27 EU member states plus Norway) and North America (the USA & Canada). For the Anglophone Caribbean this collaboration is typically skewed in favour of North America but St Lucia and two British Overseas Territories, the British Virgin Islands and Montserrat, show the converse (Table 34). Also bucking this trend are Guyana and Trinidad & Tobago where collaboration with the two regions is evenly matched. In the Dutch and French Caribbean sub-regions the majority of collaborations are with the EU possibly reflecting the closer political ties. Exceptions to this are Dutch St Maarten, where a high North American collaboration relates to an US off-shore medical school, and Haiti, in the French sub-region, where the collaboration with North America (47%) is more than double that with the EU (18%). The Spanish-speaking Caribbean, comprising Cuba and the Dominican Republic, is distinct in having the majority of its collaborations with Latin America (here defined as Central & South America, excluding Belize, French Guiana, Guyana & Suriname). Cuba's remaining collaborations are mainly with the EU while for the Dominican Republic those with North America (29%) far exceed those with the EU (17%). Other notably strong collaborations with Latin America are shown by Belize, French Guiana, Guyana and Haiti, all but the last-mentioned explicable on the basis of geographic proximity. The collaboration with the rest of the Caribbean varies widely, with Cuba and Bermuda showing particularly low percentages of collaborative papers (0.6%, 0.7%, resp.). In Bermuda's case this probably stems from its geographical isolation while Cuba's focus seems more international than Caribbean.

2.3.9 Collaboration between Caribbean countries/territories Collaboration between Caribbean countries/territories takes place, for some sub-regions, as one might expect, along geo-linguistic lines. In the English sub-region, most of the collaborations are with other English Caribbean members (Table 36). A similar trend is seen in the Francophone Caribbean where most of the collaborations are with other French Caribbean territories except in the case of Haiti where collaborations with the English Caribbean predominate. In the Dutch Caribbean, on the other hand, for the higher output territories (Curacao, St Maarten, Suriname) most collaborative publications are with the Anglophone Caribbean and, in the case, of Suriname, surprisingly, there are no collaborative publications with the rest of the Dutch sub-region. The Spanish sub-region comprises two countries, Cuba and the Dominican Republic, and in both cases the largest share of their Caribbean collaboration is with the English sub-region, especially so for the Dominican Republic. Several countries/territories - Barbados, Belize, the Cayman Islands, Guyana, Jamaica, St. Vincent & the Grenadines, Trinidad & Tobago, the Dominican Republic, Curacao, Martinique and Haiti - have collaborative publications with all four geo-linguistic sub-regions (Table 34). While this is largely a list of the larger producers and so may be expected to have Caribbean-wide collaborations, there are some important exceptions. Despite, generating the highest number of publications, Cuba has no collaborative publications with the Dutch Caribbean, and the same is true of Guadeloupe. Similarly, neither French Guiana nor Guyana share any publications with the Spanish sub-region.

Table 35: Collaboration of Caribbean countries/territories with each sub-region

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% Total Collaborations s n n n n n n a a a a a o e e e e e i b b b b b t b b b b b a i i i i i c r r r r r i l a a a a a b C C C C C

u l l h h h h p s s

c c A i

Sub-region Country/Territory i f t l n n o u g e

a . r n D p F o E S N

Anguilla 1 16.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 16.6 Antigua & Barbuda 25 8.3 0.0 0.0 5.6 13.9 The Bahamas 100 13.5 1.5 1.5 0.0 16.5 Barbados 488 12.6 0.5 0.7 0.7 14.5 Belize 79 7.4 0.7 1.3 1.3 10.7 Bermuda 223 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.7 British Virgin Islands 22 2.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.5 Cayman Islands 47 20.5 1.3 1.3 1.3 24.3 Dominica 39 19.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 19.5 ENGLISH Grenada 127 4.2 1.1 0.0 0.0 5.3 Guyana 138 5.7 0.7 4.3 0.0 10.7 Jamaica 1493 6.6 0.1 0.4 0.8 7.9 Montserrat 34 1.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.6 St Kitts & Nevis 18 20.6 2.9 2.9 0.0 26.5 St Lucia 14 20.9 0.0 8.3 0.0 29.2 St Vincent & the Grenadines 6 50.0 4.2 4.2 4.2 62.5 Trinidad & Tobago 1370 4.9 0.5 1.0 0.7 7.1 Turks & Caicos Islands 6 14.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 14.3 Cuba 6581 0.3 0.0 0.2 0.2 0.6 SPANISH Dominican Republic 280 2.2 0.2 0.7 1.3 4.5 Aruba 4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Bonaire 4 0.0 20.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 Curacao 138 4.1 1.2 0.6 0.6 6.4 DUTCH St Eustatius 5 0.0 40.0 0.0 0.0 40.0 Saba 16 0.0 6.7 0.0 0.0 6.7 St. Maarten 8 20.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 20.0 Suriname 83 6.1 0.0 4.4 0.0 10.4 Martinique 245 2.3 1.4 15.7 1.4 20.7 Guadeloupe 813 1.0 0.0 4.7 0.8 6.5 FRENCH French Guiana 415 0.6 0.3 2.8 0.0 3.7 Haiti 148 5.4 0.4 2.5 2.2 10.5 Trinidad & Tobago is the country which shows the greatest collaboration with the rest of the Caribbean, having published with 17 other Caribbean countries/territories (Table 36). Using co-publication with ≥10 Caribbean countries/territories as a criterion to identify countries with wide-

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ranging Caribbean collaborations, seven of these are Anglophone, both Cuba and the Dominican Republic would qualify while in the Dutch and French sub-regions only Curacao and Haiti respectively show this breadth of collaboration. Bermuda is anomalous in collaborating with only 2 Caribbean countries despite its high output and this may relate to its singular location. Yet Belize boasts ten collaborating countries despite its distance from the rest of the Caribbean on the Central American mainland. Location and language may explain French Guiana's collaboration with only 4 Caribbean partners, neighbouring Guyana and Suriname and French-speaking Martinique and Guadeloupe. The collaboration of Montserrat solely with Trinidad & Tobago reflects the specialised nature of that research (volcanology) with few centres having this expertise. It should be noted that collaborations with British Overseas Territories are under-reported in Table 36 because they are not indexed as countries but classified under England (and at times even under the USA in the case of the British Virgin Islands). These collaborations are revealed where these territories are the subject of the search, i.e. Barbados publications will not reveal Montserrat collaborations but a Montserrat search will reveal collaborations with Barbados.

Grant Agreement EUCARINET 48 / 147 Doc. Identifier: DELIVERABLE EUCARINET D2.2 v1.0 REPORT Date: 30/11/2011

Table 36: Intra-regional Collaboration of Caribbean Countries/Territories.

i . t s s s s c s a a a a a a a e a e e a e l e o o n t t i i a i a i r a c c l z s e u o g d d n b b a e u n p i v n i i c i i I i r u m a t l b c d a t r a a a r a u u q u a e e a n u m g r i a i t e i n a H i a y u S a c b e n C L n o a i a N r t u

n t n l m n s B m

b u p e n o i i g o t a h r m s t i u n r e r u r a t G r e T S G & B a e i o J u r n a C V d

A o u G R M

h B E B a

s V o a B D S t C &

. c t

n t S t u . e t h M n M d i S a S s b h G e a c i K i r a T t l d i t F l i n r i S o n B i C m r o T D

Anguilla 16.6 1 Antigua 8.3 5.6 2 Bahamas 1.5 0.8 0.8 4.5 0.8 0.8 4.5 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.8 11 Barbados 0.5 0.7 0.2 0.2 6.6 0.2 0.2 0.7 3.3 0.5 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.7 14 Belize 0.7 2.0 0.7 2.0 0.7 0.7 0.7 1.3 0.7 1.3 10 Bermuda 0.4 0.4 2 Br. Virgin I. 2.5 1 Cayman I 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 11.5 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 1.3 11 Dominica 2.4 7.3 2.4 2.4 2.4 2.4 6 Grenada 1.6 0.5 0.5 0.5 1.1 1.1 6 Guyana 1.4 4.3 0.7 1.4 2.8 5 Jamaica 0.6 2.9 0.3 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 1.9 0.4 0.4 0.1 0.4 15 Montserrat 1.6 1 St Kitts-Nevis 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9 2.9 9 St Lucia 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 7 St Vincent s 4.2 12.5 4.2 4.2 4.2 8.3 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 4.2 12 Trinidad & Tobago 0.3 0.6 1.3 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.6 1.7 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.6 0.1 0.4 0.3 0.5 0.3 17 Turks & Caicos Is 7.1 7.1 2 Cuba 0.04 0.04 0.04 0.02 0.1 0.02 0.02 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.04 11 Dominican Republic 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.6 0.2 0.2 0.9 1.3 0.2 0.7 10 Aruba 0 Bonaire 20.0 1 Curacao 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 11 St Eustatius 20.0 20.0 2 Saba 3.3 3.3 2 St. Maarten 17.0 3.8 1.9 3 Suriname 0.9 0.9 0.9 3.5 2.6 1.7 6 Martinique 0.5 0.5 1.4 1.4 1.4 12.0 3.7 7 GuadeloupeGrant Agreement EUCARINET 0.2 0.1 0.6 490.8 / 147 3.1 0.8 0.8 7 French Guiana 0.6 0.3 1.5 1.3 4 Haiti 0.4 1.1 0.7 1.5 0.4 0.4 1.1 0.4 1.8 0.4 2.5 11 Doc. Identifier: DELIVERABLE EUCARINET D2.2 v1.0 REPORT Date: 30/11/2011

2.3.10 Collaboration between European countries and Caribbean countries/territories In assessing EU-Caribbean collaborations, Spain has the highest number of collaborations (1106) of all EU countries with France close behind (1076) and the UK (838) in third place (Table 37). These EU countries would be expected to be the most highly ranked based on past colonial linkages but the Netherlands breaks this pattern being ranked sixth (246), behind Germany (442) and Italy (316). Two EU countries, Latvia and Slovakia, have no collaborations with the Caribbean. As expected, Cuba is responsible for about half of all Caribbean publications and so it is not surprising that this is the country showing the most EU collaborations (Table 37). In fact, only a few EU countries show no collaborations with Cuba and among these are several former Soviet bloc countries (the Czech Republic, Latvia, Lithuania & Slovakia) where such linkages might have been expected to persist.

France, the Netherlands, Spain and the UK are the EU countries with the strongest historical links to the Caribbean. Ignoring collaborations with Cuba, most of France's collaborations are predictably with its overseas departments, French Guiana, Guadeloupe and Martinique, with Haiti coming in behind Trinidad & Tobago (Table 37). For the Netherlands, most collaborations are with its overseas territory Curacao, with Cuba in second place and Suriname, a former Dutch colony, third. Spain's collaborations are overwhelmingly with Cuba, with the other Spanish-speaking country, the Dominican Republic, doing little better than other Caribbean countries. Ignoring collaborations with Cuba, most of the UK's collaborations are with the English Caribbean, Trinidad & Tobago just edging out Jamaica, with the British overseas territory, Bermuda in third place. Interestingly, the UK's collaborations with the Dominican Republic, French Guiana and Guadeloupe are each more than those with the remaining English Caribbean countries/territories. Of the 28 European countries, only the Netherlands and the UK have collaborations with all 16 higher output Caribbean countries/territories.

Grant Agreement 244510 EUCARINET 50 / 147 Doc. Identifier: DELIVERABLE EUCARINET D2.2 v1.0 REPORT Date: 30/11/2011

Table 37 : Collaborations between European countries (EU+Norway) and higher output Caribbean countries/territories. D T o r F m i n r G i M e i B n S B B u t G C J n G a a i u a a a B e c a c u C r d r T H u r r h d r a e m h t e r b i u m o y i a a e n & n n a l n a a t b i a G i m l ç a a a z

u t i o d R i n T a q i a m d c l e u d a u o a o e u o a a i a s p e s a p b e n e u a a g b o l i c

Austria 0 0 0 1 39 0 4 2 0 5 0 2 3 0 0 2 58 Belgium 0 0 0 0 185 0 1 8 0 22 2 3 5 0 4 2 232 Bulgaria 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 Cyprus 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 Czech republic 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 2 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 2 11 Denmark 1 0 0 4 17 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 31 Estonia 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 Finland 0 0 1 0 33 0 12 2 0 13 0 0 0 1 0 12 74 France 0 1 3 16 207 2 10 267 1 376 18 20 18 100 5 32 1076 Germany 0 1 2 10 339 4 5 13 1 11 4 4 19 3 2 24 442 Greece 1 0 0 0 7 0 4 2 1 2 0 0 1 1 1 3 23 Hungary 0 0 0 0 13 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 18 Ireland 0 0 0 5 19 0 1 0 0 4 0 0 8 0 0 11 48 Italy 0 1 2 0 265 0 11 7 1 14 0 2 3 1 0 9 316 Latvia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lithuania 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 Luxembourg 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Malta 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 Netherlands 2 4 1 4 54 103 6 8 2 10 4 5 13 2 33 13 264 Norway 0 0 0 3 36 0 3 0 0 2 0 0 5 0 0 2 51 Poland 0 0 0 0 21 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 2 27 Portugal 0 1 0 0 77 2 1 1 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 3 90 Rumania 1 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 Slovakia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Slovenia 0 0 0 0 7 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 Spain 0 1 1 5 1049 0 13 3 0 8 1 2 9 4 0 10 1106 Sweden 1 0 0 5 37 1 1 0 1 2 0 2 5 0 0 4 59 UK 2 9 13 40 239 8 25 30 7 27 15 9 196 11 3 204 838

2.3.11 Collaboration with European countries from the Caribbean perspective

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We can now examine the EU-Caribbean collaboration with reference to each high output Caribbean country/territory. The Dominican Republic collaborates with the highest number of EU countries (22), followed by Trinidad & Tobago (17) and then Guadeloupe and Cuba tie for third place (14) (Table 38). These are the same four top collaborators, although not in that order, identified with respect to world-wide collaboration (Table 34). The Bahamas, Curacao, Guyana and Suriname are at the opposite extreme, collaborating with the fewest number of European countries, namely six EU countries each.

An examination as to who are the main European collaborating partners of each Caribbean country/territory reveals historical ties persist. For all English Caribbean countries/territories, the UK is the main collaborating EU member, with the exception of the Bahamas and Guyana (Table 38). For the Bahamas, this is shared with the Netherlands, each accounting for one quarter of all collaborations. For Guyana, 41% of its EU collaborations are with France while the UK share is 34%. For all Francophone territories, France is the main collaborating EU country, viz. French Guiana 77%, Guadeloupe 73%, Martinique 81% and Haiti 40%. France also represents the second largest EU collaboration for Belize, Bermuda and Trinidad & Tobago. For the Dutch Caribbean territories, collaboration is strongest with the Netherlands, viz. Curacao 86%, Suriname 69%. Dutch collaboration was already recognised as top ranking in the Bahamas and also represents the second highest collaboration for Barbados, Grenada and Haiti. For the Spanish Caribbean, Spain takes the lion's share (86%) of Cuba's EU collaborations, while for the Dominican Republic the UK is the main collaborator (24%) with Spain ranked second (12%).

Of EU countries which figure less prominently in the Caribbean, Denmark, Greece, Romania and Sweden each represent 13% of the EU collaborations of the Bahamas, a tie for third place for that country (Table 38). In that same vein, Finland is the Dominican Republic's second ranked collaborator, garnering 11% of that country's EU collaborations. While Belgium is not a minor EU collaborator, just trailing behind the Netherlands in its collaborations with the Caribbean (Table 37), its most significant impact is in Suriname where it takes third place in that country's share of EU collaborations (Table 38).

2.3.12 EU Collaboration profile for the Caribbean region by thematic area Table 39 shows that the thematic area with the least proportion of publications in collaboration with the EU is the Humanities (1.8%) while Multidisciplinary Sciences shows the highest proportion of EU collaborative publications (46.8%). These are also the categories with the smallest numbers and so should be interpreted with some caution. For the remaining disciplines, EU collaboration is highest in Physics (39.4%), Chemistry (37.6%) and Engineering,Technology (36.7%) and lowest in Social Sciences (21.3%), Clinical Medicine (24.3%) and Mathematics (24.6%). In general, EU collaborative papers represent 25-40% of all papers, depending on the discipline.

Table 38: Percentage of collaborations with individual European countries for each Caribbean Country/territory

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D T o r i F m n r G M i e i t S B n B B u G a C n J G u a a i a a e a d B u c r c C H r r u r d h r m e h a e r t i b u m & y n a e a n i a n l n a a b G a i i l a m

ç a z u

t o T d i i a n R a m u e c i d q d o u a o a e o a i a u a a e b s p s p e n a e u a g b g l o i c

Austria 0 0 0 1 1 0 4 1 0 1 0 4 1 0 0 1 Belgium 0 0 0 0 7 0 1 2 0 4 5 6 2 0 8 1 Bulgaria 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Cyprus 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Czech Republic 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Denmark 13 0 0 4 1 0 0 1 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Estonia 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Finland 0 0 4 0 1 0 11 1 0 3 0 0 0 1 0 3 France 0 6 13 17 8 2 10 77 6 73 41 40 6 81 10 9 Germany 0 6 9 11 13 3 5 4 6 2 9 8 7 2 4 7 Greece 13 0 0 0 0 0 4 1 6 0 0 0 0 1 2 1 Hungary 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ireland 0 0 0 5 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 3 0 0 3 Italy 0 6 9 0 10 0 10 2 6 3 0 4 1 1 0 3 Latvia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Lithuania 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Luxembourg 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 Malta 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Netherlands 25 22 4 4 2 86 6 2 13 2 9 10 5 2 69 4 Norway 0 0 0 3 1 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 Poland 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Portugal 0 6 0 0 3 2 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 Romania 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Slovakia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Slovenia 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Spain 0 6 4 5 39 0 12 1 0 2 2 4 3 3 0 3 Sweden 13 0 0 5 1 1 1 0 6 0 0 4 2 0 0 1 UK 25 50 57 43 9 7 24 9 44 5 34 18 68 9 6 59 Total 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 EU collaborators 6 7 7 11 14 6 22 12 9 14 6 10 11 8 6 17

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Table 39: EU Collaboration profile by thematic area for the whole Caribbean

% % Total Publications Publications Publications Without EU with EU Collaboration Collaboration Agriculture, Biology and Environmental Sciences 70.1 29.9 3490 Biomedical Research 63.0 37.0 2654 Chemistry 62.4 37.6 1132 Clinical Medicine 75.7 24.3 2285 Engineering. Technology 63.3 36.7 1081 Humanities 98.3 1.7 114 Mathematics 75.4 24.6 264 Multidisciplinary Sciences 53.2 46.8 62 Physics 60.6 39.4 1020 Social Sciences 78.7 21.3 475 Total 68.2 31.8 12577

2.3.13 EU Collaboration profile for each Caribbean country/territory The Caribbean countries/territories showing the highest percentage of publications co-authored with the EU are Curacao (75%) and French Guiana (69%) (Table 40). At the other extreme, the countries with the lowest EU-collaboration are Barbados (2%) and the Bahamas (5%). Martinique, Guadeloupe and Suriname occupy a median position with about half the publications in collaboration with the EU. For the remaining countries/territories, most of their publications are not in collaboration with the EU (Table 40). These are all independent countries except for Bermuda which is a British overseas territory. Most Caribbean-EU collaborative publications involve just one EU country but most Caribbean countries have a few EU-collaborative publications with two EU countries (Table 40). On the other hand, collaborative publications with five or more EU countries are quite uncommon, limited to French Guiana, Guadeloupe and Haiti.

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Table 40 : Share and degree of EU-Collaboration for each Caribbean country/territory

No. of publications % Publications

With EU Total Without EU With EU With 1 With 2 With 3 EU With ≥4 EU collaboration collaboration collaboration EU EU countries countries country countries Bahamas 5 102 95 5 2 3 0 0 Barbados 11 484 98 2 2 0 0 0 Belize 20 78 74 26 22 4 0 0 Bermuda 71 220 68 32 24 7 0 0 Cuba 2205 6492 66 34 29 4 1 0 Curaçao 103 138 25 75 63 11 1 0 Dominican 74 276 73 27 23 3 0 0 Republic French 292 421 31 69 61 6 1 1 Guiana Grenada 15 127 88 12 11 1 0 0 Guadeloupe 439 815 46 54 48 5 0 1

Guyana 40 135 70 30 27 3 0 0 Haiti 34 148 77 23 20 1 1 1 Jamaica 257 1465 82 18 16 1 0 0 Martinique 111 240 54 46 41 5 0 0 Suriname 44 83 47 53 48 5 0 0 Trinidad & 283 1353 79 21 19 2 0 0 Tobago

2.3.14 Evolution of documents per Caribbean sub-region with respect to EU- collaboration Figure 9 depicts the annual production of publications without EU-collaboration for each Caribbean sub-region relative to 1999. What is clear from this is that for the Dutch sub-region there is marked decline in the number of such papers falling to half the initial publication rate by the end of the 11 year study period. If one ignores the final year, 2009, the other three sub-regions all show increasing annual production. The growth is about 50% for the English sub-region and around 30% for the French and Spanish sub-regions.

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When one looks at the remaining publications produced in collaboration with the EU the pattern is quite different (Figure 10). The Dutch sub-region shows quite erratic growth and will not be discussed further. The French and Spanish sub-regions show very similar evolution of publications with growth of around 70% by 2008. This is higher than the roughly 30% growth seen for the same period for papers without EU collaboration from these sub-regions. What is also clear is that the production of EU-collaborative papers in the English sub-region is lower than that seen for the French and Spanish sub-regions and grows by only about 25% for the same period ending in 2008. When the two graphs are compared it is clear that for both the French and Spanish sub-regions there is greater growth in papers in collaboration with the EU than those not in collaboration with the EU (Figure 9 & 10). This is especially so for the Spanish sub-region. For the English sub-region it is the converse. Growth for papers in collaboration with the EU is about half that of growth for those not co-published with the EU. The actual numbers of publications are given in Tables 41 & 42.

Table 41 : Evolution of EU-collaborative publications for each Caribbean sub-region

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Dutch 11 10 12 19 12 15 14 10 8 25 11 147 English 56 44 64 63 53 66 72 76 70 73 65 702 French 57 61 66 66 81 86 82 81 86 95 115 876 Spanish 154 154 199 170 195 202 215 237 228 270 255 2279 Total 278 269 341 318 341 369 383 404 392 463 446 4004

Table 42: Evolution of publications without EU-collaboration for each Caribbean sub-region

1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 Total Dutch 10 8 8 7 8 7 7 6 4 4 5 74 English 243 245 274 289 269 298 295 291 369 361 328 3262 French 57 53 49 53 54 65 66 81 74 79 117 748 Spanish 373 431 449 380 420 369 364 392 442 493 376 4489 Total 683 737 780 729 751 739 732 770 889 937 826 8573

Figure 9: Growth in publications without EU collaboration for each Caribbean sub-region relative to 1999

Figure 10: Growth in EU-collaborative publications for each Caribbean sub-region relative to 1999

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2.3.15 Visibility of EU Collaborative Papers Table 43 reveals that there is a higher visibility of Caribbean publications produced in collaboration with EU authors than those without such partners, as evidenced by a Relative EU to non-EU Citation Rate greater than one (1.86). This is also true also when the data is analysed at the sub-regional level. In this case, the English sub-region derives the greatest benefit from EU co-authorship, followed by the Spanish sub-region. For both of these, EU-collaborative papers have about twice the visibility of those published without EU collaboration. Enhanced visibility with EU collaboration may partly be attributable to the greater opportunity for networking and presentation of research European scientists enjoy relative to their Caribbean counterparts. If so, this may explain the lower enhancement of visibility with EU collaboration seen in the French and Dutch sub-regions which are mainly overseas territories of the EU whose scientists have similar benefits to those based in Europe.

Table 43: Comparative citation rates of publications with and without EU collaboration for each Caribbean sub-region.

Caribbean Total Number Citations % EU Citations Number of Citations % pa- Citations Relative Sub-region of EU of EU col- collab. per docu- papers of pa- pers per docu- EU to collab. lab. pa- papers ment of without EU pers without ment of Non-EU papers pers EU collab. collab. without EU col- papers Citation papers EU col- lab. without Rate lab. EU collab. English 3964 702 10201 17.7 14.53 3262 21350 82.3 6.55 2.22 French 1624 876 8950 53.9 10.22 748 4860 46.1 6.50 1.57 Spanish 6768 2279 23094 33.7 10.13 4489 23724 66.3 5.28 1.92 Dutch 221 147 1827 66.5 12.43 74 672 33.5 9.08 1.37 Entire Car- 12577 4004 44072 11.01 8573 50606 5.90 1.86 ibbean

Table 44 affords a comparison of the citation rates by sub-discipline for papers co-authored with EU partners and those without EU participation. For all thematic fields except Multidisciplinary Sciences the citation rate is higher for EU-collaborative papers. No such analyses are attempted for disciplines with less than ten publications such as the Humanities, in this case. While different citation norms for each discipline prevent comparison of direct citation rates, these relative EU/non-EU citation rates can be compared. From this it can be seen that Clinical Medicine benefits the most from EU-collaboration with an almost fourfold higher level of visibility (EU to Non-EU Ratio = 3.91). Social Sciences is the discipline with the second highest enhancement of citation for EU-collaborative papers (EU to Non-EU Ratio = 2.18).

Table 45 shows the comparative citation rates for papers for the English sub-region with and without EU collaboration. As was seen for papers from the entire Caribbean, EU collaboration increases the visibility of papers in all domains except Multidisciplinary Sciences (Relative EU to non-EU Citation Rate = 0.68). Papers in Clinical Medicine are most positively impacted with EU collaboration increasing visibility over six fold (EU to non-EU Citation Rate = 6.38). Mathematics and Social Sciences are the thematic areas which show the next highest enhancement with about a threefold increase in visibility with EU collaboration.

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Table 44: Comparative citation rates of Caribbean publications with & without EU collaboration for each thematic area.

Thematic Total No. of Citations % EU Citations No. of Citations % pa- Citations Relative Field no. of EU col- of EU collab. per docu- papers of pa- pers per docu- EU to papers lab. pa- collab. papers ment of without pers without ment of Non-EU pers papers EU collab. EU col- without EU col- papers Citation papers lab. EU col- lab. without Rate lab. EU collab. Agriculture, 3490 1045 8625 29.9 8.25 2445 11368 70.1 4.65 1.78 Biology & Envtl. Sci. Biomedical 2654 981 14054 37.0 14.33 1673 16125 63.0 9.64 1.49 Research Chemistry 1132 426 3807 37.6 8.94 706 4938 62.4 6.99 1.28 Clinical 2285 556 9466 24.3 17.03 1729 7529 75.7 4.35 3.91 Medicine Engineering, 1081 397 2215 36.7 5.58 684 3001 63.3 4.39 1.27 Technology Humanities* 114 2 20 112 43 Mathematics 264 65 270 24.6 4.15 199 596 75.4 2.99 1.39 Multi-disci- 62 29 1384 46.8 47.72 33 2301 53.2 69.73 0.68 plinary Sci- ences Physics 1020 402 3600 39.4 8.96 618 4170 60.6 6.75 1.33 Social Sci- 475 101 632 21.3 6.26 374 1075 78.7 2.87 2.18 ences Mean 11.01 5.97 1.84

* Only data from disciplines with >10 papers are shown.

Table 46 examines the effect of EU collaboration on citation rates for the French sub-region. In this case, the greatest positive effect of EU-collaboration on citation is shown by Social Sciences and Physics where citation rates are roughly tripled and doubled respectively. Interestingly, two disciplines show lower rates of citation for EU-collaborative papers. These are Engineering Technology and Mathematics where papers with EU collaboration are roughly cited half as frequently as those without EU collaboration.

Table 47 shows the effect of EU collaboration on the visibility of Spanish Caribbean publications. In this case, the largest enhancement of visibility associated with EU collaboration is shown by Clinical Medicine and Mathematics which have roughly four times and twice the citation rates of papers without EU collaboration. No disciplines exhibit lower citation rates with EU-collaboration compared to papers without -EU collaboration.

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Table 45: Comparative citation rates of English Caribbean papers with & without EU collaboration per thematic area.

Thematic Total No. of EU Citations % EU Citations No. of Citations % pa- Citations Relative Field no. of collab. of EU collab. per docu- papers of pa- pers per docu- EU to pa- papers collab. papers ment of without pers without ment of Non-EU pers papers EU collab. EU col- without EU col- papers Citation papers labora- EU col- lab. without Rate tion lab. EU collab. Agriculture, 1035 191 2018 18.5 10.57 844 4886 81.6 5.79 1.83 Biology and Environmen- tal Sciences Biomedical 551 121 1905 22.0 15.74 430 5868 78.0 13.65 1.15 Research Chemistry 277 51 573 18.4 11.24 226 1990 81.6 8.81 1.28 Clinical 1122 145 3193 12.9 22.02 977 3374 87.1 3.45 6.38 Medicine Engineering, 238 44 247 18.5 5.61 194 657 81.5 3.39 1.66 Technology Humanities* 64 0 0 64 30 Mathematics 57 6 41 10.5 6.83 51 103 89.5 2.02 3.38 Multi-disci- 28 13 712 46.4 54.77 15 1804 53.6 120.27 0.46 plinary Sci- ences Physics 281 82 1148 29.2 14.00 199 1979 70.8 9.94 1.41 Social Sci- 311 49 364 15.8 7.43 262 659 84.2 2.52 2.95 ences Mean 14.53 6.55 2.22

* Only data from disciplines with >10 papers are shown.

In the Dutch Caribbean, where publication numbers are fewer, only three thematic areas have sufficient numbers of publications to permit this kind of analysis (Table 46). In this case, the Agriculture, Biology and Environmental Sciences grouping shows just over twice the citation rate for EU-collaborative papers compared to those without EU collaboration. In contrast, Biomedical Research papers with EU partners are less cited than those without EU partners while Clinical Medicine is just about the same irrespective of EU involvement. That said, the relatively small number of papers means that these data should be interpreted with caution.

Just as the number of citations per document is a measure of the visibility of a publication so too is the proportion of uncited papers, i.e. papers without a single citation. If the ratio of the percentage of uncited EU-collaborative papers to the percentage of uncited non-EU papers (termed here the EU to non-EU Uncited Ratio) is calculated to be less than one this indicates a greater visibility of EU-

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collaborative papers compared to those without EU involvement. The closer this value is to zero the greater is the enhancement of visibility associated with EU co-authorship.

In Table 49, it can be seen that the proportion of uncited publications from the entire Caribbean is about half as high for EU collaborative papers relative to those without EU collaboration. When the four sub-regions are examined, this effect is less marked in the French and Spanish sub-regions (Table 49).

Table 46: Comparative citation rates of French Caribbean papers with & without EU collaboration per thematic area.

Thematic Field Total Number Citations % EU Citations Number Citations % pa- Citations Relative number of EU of EU collab. per docu- of pa- of pa- pers per docu- EU to of pa- collab. collab. papers ment of EU pers pers without ment of Non-EU pers papers papers collab. pa- without without EU col- papers Citation pers EU col- EU col- lab. without Rate lab. lab. EU collab. Agriculture, Bi- 612 350 2660 57.19 7.60 262 1586 42.81 6.05 1.26 ology and Envi- ronmental Sci- ences Biomedical Re- 393 218 3290 55.47 15.09 175 1556 44.53 8.89 1.70 search Chemistry 30 21 104 70.00 4.95 9 32 30.00 3.56 1.39 Clinical 327 163 1773 49.85 10.88 164 1073 50.15 6.54 1.66 Medicine Engineering, 55 32 154 58.18 4.81 23 219 41.82 9.52 0.51 Technology Humanities* 11 0 0 11 0 Mathematics 103 26 56 25.24 2.15 77 319 74.76 4.14 0.52 Multi-disci- 8 6 395 2 2 plinary Sci- ences* Physics 55 45 420 81.82 9.33 10 42 18.18 4.20 2.22 Social Sciences 30 15 99 50.00 6.60 15 31 50.00 2.07 3.19 Mean 10.22 6.50 1.57

* Only data from disciplines with >10 papers are shown.

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Table 47: Comparative citation rates of Spanish Caribbean publications with and without EU collaboration for each thematic area.

Total Number of Cita- % EU Citations Number of Cita- % pa- Citations Relative number EU collabo- tions of collab. per docu- papers with- tions of pers per docu- EU to Thematic Field of pa- rative EU col- papers ment of out EU col- papers without ment of Non-EU pers papers lab. pa- EU collab. laboration without EU col- papers Citation pers papers EU col- lab. without Rate lab. EU collab. Agriculture, Bi- ology and Envi- 1744 451 3007 25.86 6.67 1293 4525 74.14 3.50 1.91 ronmental Sci- ences Biomedical Re- 1680 621 8575 36.96 13.81 1059 8537 63.04 8.06 1.71 search Chemistry 822 353 3125 42.94 8.85 469 2369 57.06 5.05 1.75 Clinical 775 196 4023 25.29 20.53 579 3004 74.71 5.19 3.96 Medicine Engineering, 785 319 1797 40.64 5.63 466 2110 59.36 4.53 1.24 Technology Humanities* 39 2 20 5.13 37 13 Mathematics 104 33 173 31.73 5.24 71 174 68.27 2.45 2.14 Multidisci- 23 8 262 34.78 32.75 15 475 65.22 31.67 1.03 plinary Sciences Physics 672 267 1965 39.73 7.36 405 2145 60.27 5.30 1.39 Social Sciences 124 29 147 23.39 5.07 95 372 76.61 3.92 1.29 Mean 10.13 5.28 1.92 * Only data from disciplines with >10 papers are shown.

Table 48: Comparative citation rates of Dutch Caribbean publications with and without EU collaboration for each them- atic area.

Total Number of Cita- % EU Citations Number of Cita- % pa- Citations Relative number EU collabo- tions of collab. per docu- papers with- tions of pers per docu- EU to Thematic Field of pa- rative pa- EU col- papers ment of out EU col- papers without ment of Non-EU pers pers lab. pa- EU collab. laboration without EU col- papers Citation pers papers EU col- lab. without Rate lab. EU collab. Agriculture, Biology and 99 53 940 53.54 17.74 46 371 46.46 8.07 2.20 Environmental Sciences Biomedical 30 21 284 70.00 13.52 9 164 30.00 18.22 0.74 Research

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Clinical 61 52 477 85.25 9.17 9 78 14.75 8.67 1.06 Medicine 12.43 9.08 1.37 Mean

Table 49: Percentage of uncited publications with and without EU collaboration for each Caribbean sub-region.

Caribbean Number of Number of % Uncited Number of pa- Number of % Uncited pa- EU to Sub-region EU collabo- uncited EU EU collabo- pers without EU uncited papers pers without non-EU rative pa- collaborative rative pa- collaboration without EU EU collabora- Uncited pers papers pers collaboration tion Ratio

English 702 94 13.39 3262 937 28.72 0.47 French 876 115 13.13 748 170 22.73 0.58 Spanish 2279 388 17.03 4489 1424 31.72 0.54 Dutch 147 13 8.84 74 14 18.92 0.47 Entire Carib- 4004 610 15.23 8573 2545 29.69 0.51 beanl

In Table 50, EU-collaboration results in higher visibility of all thematic areas for papers from the entire Caribbean. As was previously found when citation rates were the focus (Table 44), Clinical Medicine gains the greatest increase in visibility with proportionately fewer uncited papers where there is EU collaboration (Table 50). Physics and Engineering, Technology are the domains where the enhanced visibility associated with EU collaboration is least.

Table 50: Percentage of uncited Caribbean publications with and without EU collaboration by thematic area.

Thematic Field Number of Number of % Uncited EU Number of Number of uncit- % Uncited pa- EU to EU collabora- uncited EU collaborative papers with- ed papers with- pers without non-EU tive papers collaborative papers out EU collab- out EU collabora- EU collabora- Uncited papers oration tion tion Ratio

Agriculture, Bi- 1045 179 17.13 2445 809 33.09 0.52 ology and Envi- ronmental Sci- ences Biomedical Re- 981 88 8.97 1673 305 18.23 0.49 search Chemistry 426 55 12.91 706 176 24.93 0.52 Clinical 556 85 15.29 1729 564 32.62 0.47 Medicine Engineering, 397 96 24.18 684 225 32.89 0.74 Technology Mathematics 65 17 26.15 199 88 44.22 0.59

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Physics 402 65 16.17 618 134 21.68 0.75 Social Sciences 101 22 21.78 374 145 38.77 0.56 Mean 3973 607 15.28 8428 2446 29.02 0.51

One can take this analysis further, looking at thematic areas within the four sub-regions, but the low numbers of publications in the Dutch Caribbean eliminate this sub-region from consideration. In the French sub-region, of the three domains for comparison, Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences gains the greatest visibility through EU collaboration while Biomedical Research is the least leveraged (Table 51). The English and Spanish Caribbean (Tables 52 & 53) show similarities in that in both sub-regions Clinical Medicine (EU to Non-UE Uncited Ratio = 0.48, 0.42, resp.) shows the highest increase in visibility associated with EU collaboration while Physics publications are least affected (EU to Non-UE Uncited Ratio = 0.76, 0.79, resp.). Clinical Medicine was also the discipline whose visibility was most enhanced by EU collaboration when citation rates were considered (Tables 45 & 46).

Table 51: Percentage of uncited French Caribbean publications with and without EU collaboration by thematic area.

Fields Number of Number of % Uncited EU Number of Number of % Uncited EU to EU collabora- uncited EU collaborative papers with- uncited pa- papers with- non-EU tive papers collaborative papers out EU col- pers without out EU col- Uncited papers laboration EU collabora- laboration Ratio tion Agriculture, Biology and Environmental Sci- 350 40 11.43 262 46 17.56 0.65 ences Biomedical Research 218 20 9.17 175 20 11.43 0.80 Clinical Medicine 163 28 17.18 164 41 25.00 0.69 Total 731 88 13.13 601 107 22.73 0.58

Table 52: Percentage of uncited English Caribbean publications with and without EU collaboration by thematic area.

Fields Number of Number of % Uncited EU Number of Number of % Uncited pa- EU to EU collabora- uncited EU collaborative papers with- uncited pa- pers without non-EU tive papers collaborative papers out EU collab- pers without EU collabora- Uncited papers oration EU collabora- tion Ratio tion Agriculture, Biology and Environmental 191 28 14.66 844 214 25.36 0.58 Sciences Clinical Medicine 145 24 16.55 977 336 34.39 0.48 Engineering, Techno- 44 10 22.73 194 68 35.05 0.65 logy Physics 82 10 12.20 199 32 16.08 0.76 Social Sciences 49 10 20.41 262 95 36.26 0.56

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Total 511 82 13.39 2476 745 28.72 0.47

Table 53: Percentage of uncited Spanish Caribbean publications with and without EU collaboration by thematic area.

Fields Number of Number of % Uncited EU Number of Number of % Uncited pa- EU to EU collabora- uncited EU collaborative papers with- uncited pa- pers without non-EU tive papers collaborative papers out EU collab- pers without EU collabora- Uncited papers oration EU collabora- tion Ratio tion Agriculture, Biology and 451 109 24.17 1293 540 41.76 0.58 Environmental Sciences Biomedical Research 621 59 9.50 1059 218 20.59 0.46 Chemistry 353 46 13.03 469 127 27.08 0.48 Clinical Medicine 196 26 13.27 579 185 31.95 0.42 Engineering, Techno- 319 79 24.76 466 155 33.26 0.74 logy Physics 267 50 18.73 405 96 23.70 0.79 Total 2207 369 16.72 4271 1321 30.93 0.54

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2.4 CONCLUSIONS OF THE BIBLIOMETRIC STUDY

Using the Web of Science database, it was found that for the period 1999-2009 the thirty-two Caribbean countries/territories together published 12,817 papers, an estimated 0.08% of world publications for that same period. Cuba produced about half the publications while Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago each produced about 10% of the total with Guadeloupe next in line producing about 6% of the Caribbean output. Half the territories examined produced less than 50 publications in the 11 year period, 1.7% of the sum total, and were not included in further analyses. Marked growth in output was evident in all geo-linguistic regions except the Dutch Caribbean. Most of the publications from the region fall into three thematic domains – Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (28%) ; Biomedical Research (21%) ; Clinical Medicine (18%). When the thematic profile of the constituent countries of each sub-region were examined, the English sub- region proved the most heterogeneous. The visibility and specialisation of the publication profile of each Caribbean country/territory was also analysed and the relative performance of Caribbean countries/territories by thematic area compared. In the Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Science area Curacao and Bermuda had the highest visibility while Belize showed the strongest specialisation. In Biomedical Research, Barbados and Bermuda showed the highest visibility while Grenada was the most specialised in this area. In Chemistry, publications of Jamaica and Trinidad & Tobago were better cited than the average for the region. In Clinical Medicine, the Dominican Republic and Haiti led the way with respect to visibility of publications. With respect to collaboration, countries with fewer papers tend to publish with more collaborating countries. Typically, Caribbean countries tend to publish in collaboration with Europe and with North America. Generally, the Anglophone Caribbean tended to collaborate more with North America than Europe while the converse tended to be the case for the other Caribbean sub- regions. With few exceptions, present day patterns of collaboration tended to mirror historical links between European countries and Caribbean territories. Of European countries, most collaborations were with Spain, France and the UK while the Netherlands and the UK had collaborative publications with the largest number of Caribbean partners. Of Caribbean countries, the Dominican Republic then Trinidad & Tobago collaborated with the highest number of EU states. EU collaboration was highest in Physics - about 40% of all collaborative papers. The evolution of papers in collaboration with the EU is higher in the Spanish- and French-speaking Caribbean and grew faster than papers not co-authored with the EU. Finally, the visibility of Caribbean papers published with European collaboration was higher (on average two-fold) than those without. This was seen in virtually all thematic fields, the greatest enhancement evident in Clinical Medicine.

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3. A SURVEY OF CARIBBEAN SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH INSTITUTIONS

Prepared by

Gustavo Perez, Chemistry Department, Science Faculty, Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain & C. M. Sean Carrington, Faculty of Pure & Applied Sciences, the University of the West Indies, Barbados

3.1 INTRODUCTION TO THE SURVEY This survey has the overall aim to map Caribbean scientific institutions on the basis of their excellence in STI. More specifically, it was designed to provide information on basic statistics and capacities of these scientific research centres, their resources and funding, their activities, their research priorities, their collaborative links and their networks. It relies on self-reporting and so, where there is overlap with the companion bibliometric study, data from the latter will be more objective and reliable. To date there has been no published database of the scientific research institutions of the entire Caribbean. A detailed, comprehensive, though slightly dated, listing of Caribbean agricultural research centres (Roseboom et al., 2001) proved useful in providing a starting list for this sector as did the EU-funded WINDS-Caribe report for the ICT sector (Cortés et al. 2009). In contrast, the EU- funded LAC Access Directory (Johann, 2008) focused on Latin America and listed only a handful of Caribbean centres in Cuba and the Dominican Republic.- The centres targeted in the survey range from relevant units in Government Ministries of Agriculture, Environment, Forestry and Fisheries to research institutes and discrete University units such as Faculties. These were all selected by the relevant Caribbean project partners (see section 3.2). Subsequent to the survey launch, a UNESCO report was published which listed CARICOM scientific centres (Lemarchand, 2010) but did not add to the list developed by the EUCARINET project. A very practical deliverable from this survey therefore is the first comprehensive database of scientific research institutions for the entire Caribbean, the core of which is available in this report as Appendix 2 and which will be available subsequently as an on-line searchable database.

3.2 METHODOLOGY & ADMINISTRATION OF THE SURVEY In the original project proposal it was envisaged that the survey would only be administered to a select group of institutions based on certain criteria agreed by the partners. It was, however, agreed that imposing too stringent criteria in a region where many research institutions were in their developmental stage might be counter-productive to the objectives of the project. It was therefore agreed to be inclusive with the invitation to participate in the survey and have Caribbean partners send the questionnaire to all entities they considered to be involved in scientific research,

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no matter how limited. As indicated below, four agreed criteria were then imposed on the responding institutions to ensure that those surveyed conveyed a representative picture of Caribbean research institutions which could be targeted to foster the intra-regional and interregional cooperation central to the project;-

1. The institution is a physical entity located in the Caribbean and is not simply a research net- work. 2. The institution is also sustainable and is not simply an entity established by project-funding with no future beyond the life of the project. 3. The institution is engaged in some form of scientific research as evidenced by the answers to the survey, its published mission and/or its publications or patents. 4. The Institution participates in the survey beyond simply providing contact information.

The survey questionnaire (Appendix 1) was developed by the UWI and the Centre d’Etude des Relations entre l’Union Européenne et l’Amérique Latine (CERCAL) with input from other EUCARINET project partners, using as a starting point a related survey employed in the EULARINET project.

CERCAL provided French and Spanish language versions of the survey while the Ministerie Van Economische Zaken (EL&I) provided the Dutch translation. The survey in the four languages was then available on-line for the period September 8, 2010, through April 29, 2011, hosted by a commercial site, SurveyMonkey ©. EUCARINET Caribbean partners, the Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG), the University of the Netherlands Antilles (UNA), and the UWI invited suitable institutions involved in scientific research from the French, Dutch and English Caribbean respectively to take part in the survey while the Universidad Iberoamericana (UNIBE) did the same in the Dominican Republic. Through the Cuban Ministry of Science, Technology & the Environment (CITMA), Cuban institutes were also expected to participate but this activity was not launched in Cuba aside from two preliminary responses which do not reflect the numerous research institutions in that country and so have been ignored. As a result the Spanish Caribbean is represented solely in this report by responses from the Dominican Republic. In light of the dire situation in Haiti following the 2010 earthquake, it was decided at the start of the project not to include Haiti in the survey. Each month, Caribbean partners were provided by CERCAL with a list of respondents from their sub-region and were urged to follow-up on those who had not yet responded and to thank those who had.

The questionnaire comprised five sections; (i) Identity of the institution (ii) Identity of the respondent (iii) Research activities (iv) Identification of R&D priorities (v) Resources and funding (vi) Cooperation, collaboration and development. The survey results are presented and analysed in this sequence, with the questionnaire available for consultation in Appendix 1.

A total of 137 persons responded to the survey as shown in Table 54. Of those 137 persons, 43 provided only their contact information and did not answer the research activities, resource/funding and cooperation/collaboration sections of the survey, in breach of Criterion 4.

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This left a final total of 94 respondents in the survey which all met the remaining criteria for inclusion.

Table 54: Participation in the Survey

English French Dutch Spanish Total sub-region sub-region sub-region sub- region Total 65 26 16 30 137 Responses Inadequate 15 6 7 15 43 Responses Complete 50 20 9 15 94 Responses Responding Anguilla, French Aruba, Dominican Countries & Antigua & Barbuda, Guiana, Bonaire, Republic Territories The Bahamas Guadeloupe, Curaçao, Barbados, Martinique Suriname Belize, Cayman Islands, Dominica, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, Montserrat, St Kitts & Nevis, St Lucia St. Vincent & the Grenadines, Trinidad & Tobago, Turks & Caicos Islands

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3.3 SURVEY RESULTS 3.3.1 Characterisation Of The Surveyed Institutions 3.3.1.1 Institutional Type Figure 11 illustrates the make-up of institutions responding to the survey. For the Dominican Republic and the English and French Caribbean, the majority belong to the University or Higher Education (HE) category, with this largest in the Dominican Republic (68%). The Dutch Caribbean stands out in that the HE component is matched in first place by the Private non-profit sector. This sector is the second largest in the Dominican Republic while in the English sub-region this shares second place with Government Agencies. In the French Caribbean, the Private non-Profit organisation represents the smallest fraction of respondents while the Governmental sector is the second largest. The only respondents in the Business Enterprise category came from the English Caribbean and the Dominican Republic while the Other category (International Organizations excluding business enterprises and institutions beyond a country's borders) was restricted to the English Caribbean. Some institutions choosing the Other category were reassigned based on the definition of these categories in the Frascati Manual (OECD, 2002).

Figure 11: Sectoral composition of the institutions in the survey. (Number of respondents in parentheses). The Other category includes institutions/organisations (except business entreprises) beyond a country's borders. 3.3.3.2 Institutional Funding One striking funding similarity in the Dutch, French and English Caribbean is that half the institutions are supported financially by both the public and private sector (Figure 12). The French sub-region is distinctive in that none of the respondents are solely funded by the private sector while this category is sizeable in the other sub-regions, representing almost half of the institutions in the Dominican Republic and 17% and 20% from the Dutch and English Caribbean respectively.

Figure 12: Composition of surveyed institutions based on their funding (Number of respondents in parentheses). 3.3.3.3 Geographical Range of the Scientific Institutions National institutions comprise the majority of the respondents in all sub-regions, representing 95% and 75% of institutions in the Dominican Republic and the Dutch sub-region respectively but only just over half in the French and English Caribbean (Figure 13). The Dominican Republic is distinctive in having no regional institutions but does have a small proportion of international institutions. The Dutch, French and English Caribbean respondents included both regional and international institutions with the regional institutions outnumbering international ones in both the English and Dutch sub-regions. Although the wording of the question made clear that regional meant the Caribbean, the responses must be interpreted with some caution for the French Caribbean where, strictly speaking, national equates with France and regional can mean Martinique, Guadeloupe or French Guyana, which are each regions of France.

Figure 13: Classification of Caribbean scientific institutions based on their operational geographic area. (Number of re- spondents in parentheses)

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3.3.3.4 Involvement In Postgraduate Training Institutions were queried as to whether they offered any of three levels of postgraduate training - Taught Masters, Research Masters or PhD. As Figure 14 shows, the Dutch and French Caribbean are at two ends of this spectrum with the majority of Dutch institutions (58%) offering no such programmes while few (13%) of the French institutions had no postgraduate programmes. Only in the Dutch Caribbean were there no institutions offering all three types of postgraduate training while most of the French institutions with postgraduate training offered the full range of programmes (Figure 14). The Dutch profile may reflect the fact that its survey comprised a relatively low proportion of University or HE institutions (Figure 11). With respect to the range of postgraduate programmes mounted, the Dominican Republic and English Caribbean show a similar pattern (Figure 15).

Figure 14: Institutions characterised by the number of types of postgraduate programmes (Taught Masters, Research Masters, PhD) each offers. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

When one looks to see which of the three types of training are offered, there seems to be completely different postgraduate training strategies in the different sub-regions. In the French and English sub-regions PhD and Research Masters programmes predominate (Figure 16). Furthermore, on a proportionate basis, French institutions lead the region in the provision of these research degree programmes. The situation in the Dominican Republic differs from the other sub-regions in that Taught Masters programmes outnumber the research-based postgraduate programmes (Figure 15). While the Dutch rub-region has fewer respondents, on a proportionate basis, its institutions lag behind the rest of the Caribbean in the provision of postgraduate training (Figure 15).

Figure 15: Provision of various types of postgraduate programmes by the surveyed institutions(Number of respondents in parentheses)

3.3.4 Research Activities

3.3.4.1 Time Devoted To Research And Other Activities Institutions from the Dutch, French and English sub-regions show a similar distribution of time allocated to various types of work, with research being the main activity and French centres devoting the highest proportion of time to this (Figure 16). The Dominican Republic differs markedly from these in that teaching is the predominate activity (51%) in its institutions. Teaching is second-ranked (29%) in the English Caribbean but is third ranked in the French and Dutch sub- regions (15% and 22% respectively) after the Other category.

Figure 16: Distribution of time devoted to various activies by the surveyed institutions. (Number of respondents in par- entheses) Respondents listed the following activities as Other;- clinical services, public health services, diagnosis and prevention, development and cooperation, public services, social services, technical

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assistance, extension programmes, think tanks and outreach activities such as exhibitions, communication and dissemination. This component was third ranked in all sub-regions except the Dominican Republic where the least time was allocated to this. Administration typically occupied 10-16% of time while only 6% of time was spent on product development in the Dominican Republic and French and English Caribbean, while Dutch institutions devoted twice as much time to this.

3.3.4.2 Types Of Research Undertaken Institutions were asked whether they were involved in Experimental, Applied or Basic Research or combinations of these. To avoid ambiguity, these classes of research were clearly defined in the questionnaire (for convenience, repeated below in parentheses). As Figure 17 shows, the main type of research performed in Caribbean scientific institutions is applied research (original research applied to a specific problem), taking place in 88-100% of centres. Experimental research (drawing on previous studies to produce new/improved products/processes) and basic research (acquisition of new knowledge without regard to applicability) are less common, with between one third and two thirds of institutions engaged in this type of research (Figure 17). The Dominican Republic with its relatively strong industrial sector stands out with the highest proportion of institutions engaged in experimental research (63%) while the French Caribbean leads with the proportion of centres engaged in basic research (58%).

Figure 17: Percentage of institutions undertaking Basic, Apllied and Experimental Research in the Caribbean. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

Figure 18: Number of types of research ( applied, basic, experimental) per surveyed partner. (Number of respondents in parentheses) Figure 18 shows quite different trends in different parts of the Caribbean with respect to the number of classes of research in which institutions are engaged. In the Dominican Republic, almost a third of institutions are involved in all three types of research, applied, basic and experimental, while a similar proportion undertake two of these three kinds of research and the remaining portion (just over a third) undertake only one of these types of research. The pattern in the English Caribbean is quite similar to this but the spread is less even with only 24% of institutions involved in all three types of research and 40 % undertaking two of the three types of research. The Dutch and French sub-regions differ from this pattern. In the French Caribbean, about half of the institutions are engaged in two types of research and 30% are involved in all three types while only 17% undertake only one type of research (Figure 17). The Dutch Caribbean is the converse; half the institutions engage in only one type of research, a third undertake two types of research and 17% carry out all three types (Figure 18). The Dutch sub-region is therefore quite different with half of its institutions doing one type of research whereas for other parts of the Caribbean most institutions (63-83%) are engaged in multiple forms of research.

3.3.4.3 Current Key Research Areas Each institution provided up to five key words that encapsulated their research focus. For each sub- region, keywords were sorted according to the FP7 thematic area under which each fell. In this case

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we have used the current FP7 theme name (e.g. KBBE or Knowledge Based Bio-Economy) vs the earlier name (e.g. Agriculture & Food Supply). Figure 19 depicts the distribution of these key research topics for each sub-regional grouping of institutions. Although respondents were not asked to rank these research areas one might expect that the first keyword given would be a more important research area compared to that provided last.

For the English, French and Dutch Caribbean there is little evidence of ranking with the proportion of research areas in the various thematic domains much the same irrespective of whether the first or last keyword is considered (Figure 19). Only for the Dominican Republic does the thematic profile seem to differ with the order of the keywords. The English and French Caribbean present the most similar profiles with Environment being the largest category, Health the second ranked and KBBE a close third. The English Caribbean differs from the French with the consistent inclusion of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) topics as well as mention of Energy-related topics. The Dutch Caribbean is distinguished by its emphasis on Socio-economic research while the only other consistent research domains are KBBE and Environment, the former slightly more prominent than the latter. For the Dominican Republic, while four thematic areas are consistently singled out – Environment/Climate, ITC, Energy and Health - the relative prevalence of these varies with the keyword order. If one assumes the first keyword represents the most important research topic then one would argue that foremost and equally important are ITC, Energy and Health. Interestingly, only in the Dominican Republic was the Energy domain consistently reported as a research focus.

A full listing of the keywords can be consulted in the profiles of the institutions in Appendix 2, but a synopsis of these research topics is provided here. For the English Caribbean, six distinct clusters were apparent. There was an ICT grouping which included key words like internet security, high performance computing and telecommunications. Under the broad Environment/Climate umbrella there was an Earth Sciences grouping which included natural hazards, volcanology, seismology, climate change and water management and then biological topics like biodiversity, coral reefs, ecosystem services, invasive species, protected areas, sea turtles and wildlife management. In the Health area, asthma, chronic diseases, infectious diseases, HIV/AIDS and public health were prominent while in the Energy domain renewable energy was the recurring theme. Under the Socio-economic category, crime, livelihoods and tourism were listed while prominent in the KBBE sector were fisheries, animal diseases, biotechnology, natural products, crop and livestock improvement as well as various named crops.

For the French Caribbean, Environment/Climate keywords also fell into two clusters, those relating to Earth Sciences like hydrology, seismology, volcano monitoring, tsunami and natural hazards and then the bioscience ones like biodiversity, ecology, forestry and mangrove ecosystems. In the KBBE area topics included agroecology, fisheries, forage systems and various animal diseases/pathogens (e.g. arbovirus). The Health domain included epidemiology, public health, emerging diseases and specific diseases such as dengue and malaria. Several keywords relating to computer science and mathematics were also listed.

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For the Dutch Caribbean, Socio-economic sciences and the humanities was the largest domain with keywords like cultural & social awareness, migration/integration, gender relations, creole linguistics, Caribbean literature, multilingual education, small island development, economics and governance. The Environment group included climate change, coastal zone management, coral reef ecology, geology, water resources and forecasting. The Energy domain comprised renewable energy and wind energy.

For the Dominican Republic, ICT keywords included mobile applications, real time software, GIS, GPS and virtual communities. Under Environment, natural resource management, environmental quality and disaster were listed while socio-economic keywords included knowledge creation, languages, gender, human development, institutional strengthening, sustainability and violence. Health keywords were HIV/AIDS, rehabilitation and cognitive neuroscience while those for KBBE were agricultural development, food safety, fermentation and biotechnology. Energy keywords included biofuels, clean energies and renewable energy. Unlike other sub-regions this was the only one to list nanotechnology as a research area.

Institutions were also presented with a list of eight FP7 research domains and asked to indicate whether these were research areas in which they were very active, active or not active, an exercise complementary to the previous open-ended one where they had indicated their research profile by submitting five keywords. In this case, we retain the FP7 areas used in the questionnaire. One general trend is that for all parts of the Caribbean there was little or no research activity (0-21% active institutions) reported for the Transport & Construction area (Figure 19).

For the English Caribbean, Environment & climate, Biology & medicine and Agriculture & Food Supply are the three major research areas (Figure 20), a similar result gleaned from the research keywords for this sub-region (Figure 19).What is quite different is the strong research activity (69% institutions active or very active) in the socio-economic domain (Figure 20) which was not apparent from the keywords submitted (Figure 19). Energy and ICT are also significant research areas for this sub-region (Figure 20) although energy was less prominent based on keywords (Figure 19).

The French sub-region is very similar in its research profile to the English Caribbean (Figure 20) but with an even stronger focus on Environment/Climate (87% of respondents). It also differs by reporting less research activity in the Energy, ICT and Socio-economic domains (Figure 20). While the profile of the top three research areas confirms that inferred from the keywords, again, the strong reporting of socio-economic research differs from the keyword research profile (Figure 19).

The Dutch sub-region shows a completely different trend, with Social & Economic Concerns being the research area with the highest activity, followed by Energy and Environment/Climate tied in second place and ICT and Agriculture/Food Supply next in prominence (Figure 20). This is very consistent with the profile derived from keywords except in that case Energy research had a low and inconsistent ranking (Figure 19).

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The Dominican Republic differs from the preceding in that its institutions appear to be quite active in every research area (except Transport & Construction) and generally at a higher level than in the other sub-regions. Unlike the other parts of the Caribbean, ICT and Industry & industrial Technologies are the leading areas of research but, as in other sub-regions, Environment/Climate is also an area of high activity (Figure 20). A tier below these, the Energy, Socio-economic, Biology/Medicine and Agriculture/Food domains also figure prominently (Figure 20). The profile based on keywords is consistent with this pattern in that it showed a relatively even spread of research activity across domains compared to the other sub-regions (Figure 19).

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Figure 19 : Classification by FP7 themes of key words provided by institutions to indicate their research focus. ENV = Environment, ICT = Information and communication Technology, KBBE = Knowledge-Based Bio-Economy, SOCIAL = Socio-economic sciences & Humanities; NMP = Nanotechnology & Nanomaterials.

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Figure 20 :. Ranking of research areas classified in terms of active participation by the surveyed institutions.

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3.3.4.4 Contribution Of Visiting Scientists To Research Output From Figure 21 it is clear that for all parts of the Caribbean region that visiting scientists make only a minor contribution to the research output of the majority of institutions (58-67%). The French Caribbean is also distinctive in that it is the only sub-region in which all institutions reported some contribution from overseas-based scientists. The other sub-regions all had a minority of institutions (4-17%) which reported no contribution at all from visiting, overseas-based scientists. This difference probably reflects the unique political situation of the French Caribbean where its major territories are regions of France and their institutions are more integrated with Europe counterparts than elsewhere. A minority of institutions (4-10%) in the English, Dutch and French Caribbean, but none from the Dominican Republican, indicated that most of their scientific output relied on visiting overseas-based scientists. There are several small field stations and marine research centres in the region (and the survey) which employ just a few scientists but host a steady stream of visiting scientists from North America and Europe year round who make use of their unique location to carry out their research and these may well explain this category. Institutions of the Dominican Republic are the most self-sufficient of those surveyed in that none of these depended on overseas visitors for most of their publications and a sizeable proportion (11%) had no publications co-authored with visiting scientists (Figure 21).

Figure 21 : Impact of overseas-based scientists on Caribbean Institutions research output. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

3.3.4.5 Numbers Of Publications And Patents There are stark differences in the reported number of publications for each sub-region. The English sub- region clearly dominates with more than 6800 publications, followed by the French sub-region with up to 2234 publications and with the Dutch sub-region and Dominican Republic far behind (Figure 22). These numbers though inflated do reflect the trends obtained objectively from the Web of Science © database for a similar time period and presented in the accompanying Bibliometric Survey. It must be

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borne in mind that the Dominican Republic is but one, albeit populous, country and not a sub-region. No patent data was examined in the Bibliometric Report and so these results fill a void. What is significant here is the relatively high number of patents reported for the Dominican Republic which exceeds that for the French Caribbean (Figure 22). This may reflect the high level of industrialisation found in the Dominican Republic.

Figure 22 : Total number of total publications and patents reported by the surveyed institutions.

Due to differences in the number of institutions surveyed in the various sub-regions it seemed useful to also present the data as an average number per institution (Figure 23). On this basis, the difference in publication numbers between the French and English sub-regions is considerably reduced, averaging 126 and 168 respectively. On average, the number of patents in Dominican Republic is very close to the claimed by the English sub-region institutions, 0.9 and 1.2 respectively, and three times that found in the French Caribbean (Figure 23).

Figure 23 :. Average number of publications and patents within the surveyed institutions

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3.3.5 Identification of Priorities for the Next Five Years When presented with the list of eight FP7 research domains, all sub-regions of the Caribbean identified the same three areas as the top priority for the next five years, namely, Energy, Agriculture & Food Supply and Environment & Climate (Figure 24). While all of these tie for first place in the Dominican Republic, for the other sub-regions each had its own ranking. The French prioritised Environment/Climate (31%) over Energy (21%) and Agriculture/Food (17%), the English put Agriculture/Food (26%) before Environment/Climate (24%) and Energy (19%) and the Dutch ranked Energy highest (21%) then Environment/Climate (18%), then Agriculture/Food (15%). In fact, the Dutch also ranked Socio-economic concerns equally (15%) with Agriculture/Food and this was also priority #4 for the English sub-region. In the French Caribbean, Biology/Medicine took fourth place (10%) which was also the case in the Dominican Republic (14%) except in this case this was tied with ICT (Figure 24), an area of very active research for that country (Figure 20).

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Figure 24 : Areas of Science, Technology & Innovation selected as most important for the Caribbean over the next five years

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The other domains were not rated as priorities and only the Dutch made use of the Other category (Figure 24), listing several topics which actually fall under the socio-economic umbrella (linguistics, literature, language acquisition, education, parent child relationships and criminology).

3.3.6 Resources And Funding

3.3.6.1 Size And Staffing Of Institutions Analyzing the reported total employee numbers of the institutions surveyed clearly shows that the Dominican Republic has the highest proportion of large institutions with up to 30% of these having more than 500 employees (Figure 25 : ). In contrast, at the other extreme is the Dutch sub-region with no institutions of more than one hundred employees and with the highest percentage (50%) of small institutions with less than ten employees. The English and French sub-regions are similar in that a quarter of the institutions have more than 100 and around a half of the institutions, 50% for the French and 60% for the English, comprise 11-99 employees (Figure 25 : ). Institutions were also asked to indicate their total annual budget but many skipped this question and those figures provided seem too unreliable to analyse and include.

Figure 25 : Classification of institutions based on the size of their workforce. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

Figure 26 : shows a much higher proportion of employees engaged in research in the French sub-region (75%) and the Dominican Republic (72%) compared to the Dutch (43%) and English (35%) sub-regions. Even where there may be many researchers, however, the percentage of employees who work full-time in research is generally low (9-35%) with Dutch institutions having the highest proportion of full-time researchers (35%). With respect to the qualifications of employees of scientific institutions, those in the French sub-region have the highest percentage of PhD-level employees (26%) while those in the English Caribbean and the Dominican Republic have the lowest (12%), with the Dutch intermediate (18%).

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Figure 26 : Average percentage of employees of the surveyed institutions who are researchers, full-time researchers or have a PhD degree. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

3.3.6.2 Grant Funding

Institutions were asked to report up to three of their largest current or recent research grants. As Figure 27 shows, 67-93% of institutions responded, with the lowest response from the Dutch Caribbean and the highest from the Dominican Republic. Most of the respondents from any sub-region listed three projects, 52-60% of respondents in the case of the Dominican Republic and English and French Caribbean, but only 33% in the case of the Dutch sub-region (Figure 27).

Figure 27 : Percentage of Caribbean centres providing details on up to three recent research grants.

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Table 55 gives a flavour of the size of the grants reported. While the size of the largest grant varied considerably between sub-regions, from about $2 million in the Dominican Republic to about $16 million (all in US$), there was more consistency in the average grant reported. In the English, French and Dutch sub-regions this average was around $1 million but the Dominican Republic was considerably less ($0.3 million). When one looks at the source of this funding, not surprisingly the bulk of research funding come from Europe in the case of the French and Dutch Caribbean which are respectively regions of France within the Caribbean and, with the exception of Suriname, parts of the Kingdom of the Netherlands in the Caribbean. Interestingly, only 40% of research funds reported for the English sub- region came from Europe and no European grants were reported by the Dominican Republic. While there may be some questions as to the accuracy of these self-reported figures, the trend of comparatively low European funding for the English Caribbean and the Dominican Republic is important.

Table 55: Largest, smallest and average research grant s reported by Caribbean institutions along with the percentage of European funding (EU agencies and European governments).

Maximum Grant / $US Mean Grant / $US % European Funding English sub-region 16,011,000 918,300 40.3 French sub-region 5,000,000 949,600 97.5 Dutch sub-region 6,200,000 1,338,000 76.1 Dominican Republic 2,319,000 317,000 0.0

Research funding for the English sub-region is the most heterogeneous with, in addition to EU funding, funding from Caribbean governments and a range of donors and lending agencies. International agencies reported include the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB), the Global Environmental Facility (GEF), the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB), the Organisation of American States (OAS), the Pan-American Health Organisation (PAHO), UNEP, UNICEF and the World Bank. Non-Caribbean Governmental agencies include the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), the International Development Research Corporation of Canada (IDRC), DAAD of Germany, the Government of Italy, the UK Darwin Initiative and from the USA - the National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA), National Science Foundation (NSF), US Agency for International Development (USAID) and US Forestry & Wildlife Service. Private charitable foundations listed are the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, the Gates Foundation, the Lighthouse Fund, the MacArthur Foundation, the Moore Foundation and the Save our Seas Foundation.

3.3.7 Cooperation, Collaboration & Development

3.3.7.1 Research Networks Active In The Region

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Respondents were asked to identify up to five research networks in which their institution participated. As Figure 28 shows, only a minority of respondents (3-10%) listed five networks. The Dutch and the English sub-regions had the highest proportion of answers listing multiple networks while the Dominican Republic was the least informative with half of the respondents providing the name of just one network (Figure 28). All sub-regions listed Caribbean networks but the Dominican Republic also included South American networks reflecting their shared linguistic heritage. In the case of the English and French sub- regions, the participation in networks was more global including several European research networks compared to those reported by the Dutch sub-region and Dominican Republic. The names and/or acronyms of a total of 156 networks were submitted but some of these were organisations, e.g. named universities, which may themselves host networks but are not networks per se. Several of these networks were listed more than once, namely the Association of Marine Laboratories of the Caribbean (AMLC), the Caribbean Food Crops Society (CFCS), the Consortium of Southeastern Hypertension Control (COSEHC), the Gulf & Caribbean Fisheries Institute (GCFI), the International Society for Reef Studies (ISRS) and the Wider Caribbean Sea Turtle Conservation Network (WIDECAST). Not surprisingly for island nations, four of these six focus on marine science. The remaining 'networks' with multiple listing were either funding agencies like Groupe de recherche international (GDRI) and Programa iberoamericano de ciencia y tecnología para el Desarrollo (CYTED) or institutions like the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), the University of the West Indies (UWI) and the World Health Organisation (WHO). It should also be noted that many institutions did not answer this question.

Figure 28: Percentage of institutions from each sub-region identifying one to five research networks. 3.3.7.2 Institutional Industrial Collaborations Figure 29 : suggests that industrial collaboration in research in the Caribbean does not seem particularly well-developed, especially in the case of the French and Dutch sub-regions where only 22% and 29% of institutions reported collaboration with industry. The Dominican Republic (50%) has the highest percentage of reported industrial collaborations (50%), followed by the English sub-region (40%).

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Figure 29 : Collaboration reported between Caribbean research institutions and the industrial sector. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

Figure 30 : Number of industrial partners named by institutions with industrial collaborators.

Within the English sub-region, all surveyed who affirmatively answered the question provided at least one contact and country location of their industrial collaborators. These were mainly Caribbean companies, primarily in Jamaica and Trinidad, but extra-regional collaborations were reported with companies in Australia, Belgium, Canada, South Africa, the UK and the USA. In the case of the Dominican Republic, all reported collaborations were with industries within the country. For the French sub-region, few provided contact details for their industrial collaborations which were either in Guadeloupe, France or Japan. For the Dutch sub-region, few collaborators were again named but these were either in the Netherlands or Suriname. One trend was apparent for all those who reported industrial collaboration. Despite being asked to provide the names of up to five, the tendency was to name only one industrial link (33-75%) and even less common to name two (Figure 30 : ). In fact, no Dutch or French institutions provided five industrial contacts, suggesting industrial linkages are less common in research institutions

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in those sub-regions (Figure 30 : ). Companies named were in the agro-industry, cement, hotel, mining, petroleum and gas and spirit sectors. 3.3.7.3 Intra-Caribbean Collaboration Figure 31 : reveals that, irrespective of the sub-region, greater collaboration takes place between Caribbean research institutions than was observed between Caribbean research institutions and private companies (Figure 29 : ). The English sub-region represents the area where the highest proportion of institutions (85%) report collaboration with a different Caribbean institution, followed by the French (74%) and Dutch (71%) sub-regions and then the Dominican Republic (55%). Interestingly, in the case of the Dominican Republic, this percentage is similar to that reported for industrial collaboration (Figure 29).

Figure 31 : Collaboration reported between different Caribbean research institutions (Number of respondents in parentheses)

As was the case for industrial collaborations (Figure 30 : ), although institutions were asked to list up to 5 collaborating institutions most only listed one (33-56%), with progressively fewer institutions listing 2, 3, 4 and 5 collaborating institutions (Figure 32 : ).

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Figure 32 : Number of Caribbean research institutions named as collaborators by surveyed institutions reporting collaboration.

As shows, English respondents mainly collaborate with other English Caribbean institutions with few exceptions, namely a handful of collaborations with Cuba, Martinique, Guadeloupe, Saba and Suriname as well as bilingual Puerto Rico. In addition, they reported single instances of collaboration with countries not in our definition of the Caribbean, namely, Colombia, Nicaragua and Venezuela. Within the Dutch sub-region, those with collaborations provided very limited details of the cooperating institutions but these were in the Dutch and English sub-regions with the exception of a single collaboration with Panama. Most of the French institutions who reported collaboration with other institutions provided details and generally these were more wide-ranging geographically than for other sub-regions, encompassing not only French-speaking territories but Jamaica, Trinidad & Tobago, Montserrat, Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. Two French collaborations with Brazil were also mentioned. For the Dominican Republic, collaboration was reported with Haiti, Jamaica, Trinidad and Martinique but most was with Spanish-speaking islands like Cuba and Puerto Rico as well as non-Caribbean, Spanish speaking countries like Costa Rica, El Salvador, Panama and Colombia.

Institutions that were repeatedly mentioned as collaborators were the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC), the Chronic Diseases Research Centre (CDRC) of the UWI, the Observatoire volcanologique de Guadeoupe, UAG, the UWI, the University of Puerto Rico and the Inter-American Institute for Co-operation in Agriculture (IICA).

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Figure 33 : Percentage of Caribbean collaborations for research institutions of each sub-region.

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3.3.7.4 Collaboration With European Research Institutions A majority of English (64%) and French (61%) Caribbean research institutions have research collaborations with EU research institutions, but this proportion falls to 50% for the Dutch Caribbean and 45% for the Dominican Republic (Figure 34 : ).

Figure 34 : Percentage of Caribbean research institutions reporting collaboration with European research institutions (Number of respondents in parentheses)

As Figure 35 shows, the majority of Caribbean institutions reported multiple EU collaborators with a similar pattern across the sub-regions except for the Dutch where no institution named more than three EU collaborators. It should be noted that relatively few respondents provided this specific information compared to simply affirming EU collaboration.

Figure 35 : Number of European research institutions named as collaborators by Caribbean institutions reporting collaboration.

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Figure 36 : Percentage of EU collaborations for research institutions of each sub-region.

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Figure 36 shows that the main EU collaborating country for each sub-region was the one with which it had the strongest historical and linguistic ties, i.e. for the English Caribbean - the UK, the French Caribbean - France, the Dutch Caribbean - the Netherlands, the Dominican Republic - Spain. It also suggests that for the whole Caribbean the UK is the EU country involved in the most collaborations. Of all sub-regions, the French Caribbean collaborates with the widest range of EU countries in that it with the English Caribbean collaborated with the most EU countries yet it had almost a third of the number of respondent institutions as the English Caribbean. Only the English and French Caribbean provided enough collaborators that certain institutions occured more than once in the lists. These recurring institutions are Bristol University, CIRAD (France), Exeter University, INRA (France), Nuffield Health Taunton Hospital (UK), University of Leeds, University of Oxford, University of Newcastle and the University of Reading. The University of Zurich was also cited more than once but Switzerland is not part of the EU.

3.3.7.5 Familiarity with the EU 7th Framework Programme (FP7) The survey shows that there is an abysmal lack of knowledge in the Caribbean about the EU FP7 on RTD with 26-42% of institutions never having heard of it (Figure 37 : ). This situation is worst in the Dutch sub-region which had the highest percentage of respondents who had never heard of it (42%) and which had no respondents in the "know something about it" category. Even for the Dominican Republic and English and French sub-regions this most aware category was 42%, 26% and 35% respectively. Surprisingly, knowledge of the programme seemed no better in the French Caribbean territories which are part of the EU compared to the English Caribbean which largely comprises independent countries.

Figure 37 : Knowledge of respondents about the EU FP7 on RTD. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

Related to the previous question, the perceived ignorance regarding the existence of FP7 is countered by a strong interest for information from respondents of the different sub-regions. All respondents (104) except one from the Dutch Caribbean indicated they would be interested in applying for FP7 support for future research activities (data not shown).

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3.3.8 Interest in the Eucarinet Project As Figure 38 : shows, most respondents indicated they would be willing to provide further information toward the identification of priorities and research needs of their countries. More than 83% of them responded affirmatively although, surprisingly, a minority in each region (2-17%) declined to participate further.

Figure 38 : Willingness to proactively contribute to identification of country research priorities and needs. (Number of respondents in parentheses)

Respondents were then asked whether the information they provided could form part of an on-line directory of Caribbean research institutions and more than 83% responded in the affirmative (Figure 39 : ). The few institutions which declined such use of the information may have done so due to confidential agreements related to their activities. On the other hand, the pattern of unwillingness to be part of an on-line directory (Figure 39 : ) closely mirrors that declining to participate further in the project and may simply reflect an overall lack of interest.

Figure 39 : Institutional agreement for the survey information to be included in a public on-line directory (Number of respondents in parentheses)

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3.4 CONCLUSIONS OF THE SURVEY A total of 94 Caribbean scientific research centres are included in the final mapping excercise, 50 from the English sub-region, 20 from the French sub-region, 9 from the Dutch region and 15 from the Dominican Republic. The majority of these belong to the University/Higher Education category. The Dutch Caribbean differs in this regard in that the number of Higher Education institutions is matched in first place by private non-profit institutions which constitute the second largest category in other sub- regions, except in the French Caribbean where Government agencies come second. Half the research institutions are financed by both the public and private sector in the Dutch, French and English Caribbean while in the Dominican Republic almost half the centres are financed by the private sector alone. In the French sub-region there are no institutions funded solely by the private sector. National institutions comprise the majority of the respondents in all sub-regions, especially in the Dominican Republic and the Dutch sub-region. All regions had a minority of international institutions while regional institutions were a major category except in the Dominican Republic where none were recorded. The majority of Dutch Caribbean institutions (58%) offer no postgraduate training while at the opposite extreme few of the French Caribbean institutions (13%) are without postgraduate programmes. In the French and English sub-regions, PhD and Research Masters programmes predominate with French institutions, on a proportionate basis, leading the region in the provision of research degree programmes. The situation in the Dominican Republic differs from the other sub-regions in that Taught Masters programmes outnumber research-based postgraduate programmes. Institutions from the Dutch, French and English sub-regions show a similar distribution of time allocated to various types of work, with research being the main activity and French centres devoting the highest proportion of time to this. The Dominican Republic differs markedly from these in that teaching is the predominate activity in its institutions. Product development is an activity to which institutions devote the least amount of time except in the Dutch Caribbean which spends twice as much time on this. Applied research (research to solve a problem) is the type of research taking place in the majority of Caribbean research centres (88-100%, depending on sub-region). Less common are experimental research (products/process improvement) and basic research (research without regard to applicability) in which roughly half the respondents are active. The Dominican Republic with its relatively strong industrial sector stands out with the highest proportion of institutions engaged in experimental research (63%) while the French Caribbean leads with the proportion of centres engaged in basic research (58%). French and English sub-regions indicated Environment & Climate, Medicine & Biology (Health) and Agriculture & Food Supply (KBBE) as their three main research areas. The Dominican Republic reported broad research activities but was strong on Energy and ICT. The Dutch Caribbean was quite distinct in placing most research emphasis on Socio-economic concerns, a theme selected as fourth ranked by the English & French sub-regions. Research key words common to all sub-regions were natural hazards, climate change, water resources, biodiversity, marine ecosystems, chronic diseases, HIV/AIDS, public health and renewable energy. AIl sub-regions of the Caribbean identified the same three areas as the top priority for the next five years;- Energy, Agriculture & Food Supply and Environment & Climate. The Dutch sub-region also ranked Socio-economic concerns equally with Agriculture & Food Supply and this was also priority #4 for

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the English sub-region. In the French Caribbean, Biology & Medicine took fourth place which was also the case in the Dominican Republic except in this case this was tied with ICT. Generally, these priority areas agree with current research areas except the high ranking of Energy as a priority which until now has not been a strong research area for the region. While for all parts of the Caribbean visiting scientists make only a minor contribution to the research output of the majority of institutions (58-67%), the French Caribbean is distinctive in that all its institutions reported some contribution from overseas-based scientists. A minority of institutions (4- 10%) in the English, Dutch and French Caribbean, but none from the Dominican Republic, indicated that most of their scientific output relied on visiting overseas-based scientists. These probably represent the several small field stations and marine research centres in the region which employ hardly any staff but host visiting field researchers from abroad each year. The total publications reported for the last decade by institutions suggest three times as many publications from the English sub-region than the French sub-region which is compatible with objective data from the Bibliometric Report. These are both much higher than reported numbers from the Dutch sub-region and from the Dominican Republic and this is also to be expected. The total number of patents for the region is around 60 for the decade with patents per institution being higher for the English Caribbean and the Dominican Republic. Turning to resources and funding, for the Dutch, French and English Caribbean 50-60% of the institutions comprise 11-99 employees. The Dutch sub-region has no centres of over 500 employees and for the French and English these represent less than 7% of institutions but for the Dominican Republic 30% of the centres are of this large size. A much higher proportion of employees are engaged in research in the French sub-region (75%) and the Dominican Republic (72%) compared to the Dutch (43%) and English (35%) sub-regions. Even where there may be many researchers, however, the percentage of employees who work full-time in research is generally low (9-35%). With respect to employee qualifications, the French institutions have the highest percentage of PhD-level employees (26%) while those in the English Caribbean and the Dominican Republic have the lowest (12%), with the Dutch sub-region intermediate (18%). While there are big differences in terms of the maximum grants reported by each region the mean grant values for the English, French and Dutch sub-regions are quite similar, of about 1 million US dollars. Interestingly, the Dominican Republic reported no EU-funded research grants while at the other extreme almost all funding for the French sub-region is from Europe. Research funding for the English sub-region is the most heterogeneous with funding from Caribbean governments, the EU, international agencies, US, Canadian and European governmental agencies and a range of private international charitable foundations.

With respect to research networks, the Dutch and the English sub-regions had the highest proportion of answers listing multiple networks while the Dominican Republic was the least informative with half of the respondents providing the name of just one network. All sub-regions listed Caribbean networks but the Dominican Republic also included South American networks, reflecting their shared linguistic heritage. In the case of the English and French sub-regions, the participation in networks was more global including several European research networks, compared to those reported by the Dutch sub-

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region and the Dominican Republic. Over one hundred actual networks were reported and six were common to several sub-regions, four of these six focusing on marine science. Turning to collaboration, industrial collaboration in research in the Caribbean does not seem particularly well-developed, especially in the case of the French and Dutch sub-regions where only 22% and 29% of institutions reported collaboration with industry. The Dominican Republic has the highest percentage of reported industrial collaborations (50%), followed by the English sub-region (40%). Most collaborations were within the country or sub-region with a sprinkling of extra-regional industrial links. Companies named were in the agriculture, food, cement, hotel, mining, petroleum, gas and spirit sectors. Irrespective of the sub-region, greater collaboration takes place between Caribbean research institutions than is observed between Caribbean research institutions and private companies. The English sub-region represents the area where the highest proportion of institutions (85%) report collaboration with a different Caribbean institution, followed by the French (74%) and Dutch (71%) sub- regions and then the Dominican Republic (55%). Institutions that were repeatedly mentioned as collaborators were the Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre (CCCCC), the Chronic Diseases Research Centre (CDRC) of the UWI, the Observatoire volcanologique de Guadeloupe, UAG, the UWI, the University of Puerto Rico and the Inter-American Institute for Co-operation in Agriculture (IICA). A majority of English (64%) and French (61%) Caribbean research institutions have research collaborations with EU research institutions, but this proportion falls to 50% for the Dutch Caribbean and 45% for the Dominican Republic. The main EU collaborating country for each sub-region was the one with which it had the strongest historical and linguistic ties, i.e. for the English Caribbean - the UK, the French Caribbean - France, the Dutch Caribbean - the Netherlands, the Dominican Republic - Spain. It also appears that for the whole Caribbean the UK is the EU country involved in the most collaborations. Several institutions were repeatedly mentioned as collaborators. There consisted of a number of British Universities as well as the French agencies INRA and CIRAD. The survey shows that there is an abysmal lack of knowledge in the Caribbean about the EU FP7 on RTD with 26-42% of institutions never having heard of it. The Dutch sub-region is worst in this regard having the highest percentage of respondents who had never heard of it (42%) and was the only sub-region which had no respondents in the "know something about it" category. Knowledge of the programme seemed no better in EU Caribbean territories than in independent Caribbean countries. All respondents except one indicated they would be interested in applying for FP7 support for future research activities.

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4. GENERAL CONCLUSIONS OF THE COMBINED STUDIES

4.1 INTRODUCTORY REMARKS The bibliometric study quantitatively maps the research output of the Caribbean region comprehensively in an objective manner based on quality publications in the WoS database. It speaks to general productivity, the subject areas of the publications, the visibility of the output and the collaborations involved in the publications. The survey of Caribbean scientific institutions (hereafter the survey) is by its nature based on a sample of the complete set of institutions whose publications were analysed in the bibliometric study and so is more subjective but ideally is based on a representative sample. Lastly, while the survey elicited 94 usable responses - 50 from the English sub-region, 20 from the French sub-region, 9 from the Dutch region and 15 from the Dominican Republic - typically this translates into a relatively small number of responses from any one country. This meant that analysing the survey results on a country basis would not be statistically meaningful and so these data are analysed at the sub-regional level with country-data restricted to the bibliometric survey, except in the case of the Dominican Republic.

4.2 RESEARCH OUTPUT IN THE CARIBBEAN REGION The analysis of the Caribbean publications for 1999-2009 showed that the thirty-two countries/territories together published 12,817 papers, an estimated 0.08% of world publications for that same period.  Of the thirty-two Caribbean countries/territories targeted in the bibliometric study, the following sixteen are the focus as they account for 98.3% of the publications, namely, the Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Bermuda, Cuba, Curacao, the Dominican Republic, French Guiana, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Guyana, Haiti, Jamaica, Martinique, Suriname and Trinidad & Tobago. Of these, two will be omitted from further discussion. Geographically, Bermuda was always a questionable inclusion in the project and the failure of its institutions to partake in the survey suggest it does not consider itself part of the Caribbean and will not be considered further. Haiti is very much a Caribbean nation but it was early on agreed by the EUCARINET partners that due to the devastation caused by the recent earthquake there it was not practical to actively include it in this phase of the project.  Just over half of the publications are produced by the Spanish-speaking Caribbean (mainly Cuba), about 32% by the Anglophone Caribbean, about 13% by the French Caribbean and less than 2% by the Dutch Caribbean (Table 4). The Spanish, French and English Caribbean all showed an annual growth in publications of about 5% but there was no growth for the Dutch sub-region (Figure 2). In harmony with this, the total number of publications in the survey reported by the English Caribbean is about three times that reported by the French sub-region while those for the Dutch sub-region are an order of magnitude less. These similar trends from the survey suggest we are dealing with a representative sample although the absolute numbers of publications for the decade differ, as expected, from those reported in the bibliometric study.

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 Half the publications in the 11 year period were produced by Cuba (Table 3) making it the most productive country scientifically in the study. Unfortunately, Cuba did not participate in the survey of scientific institutions and so further discussion of Cuba is based on the bibliometric study alone. The other major publication centres in decreasing order of output (Table 3) are Jamaica (1465), Trinidad & Tobago (1353), Guadeloupe (818), Barbados (485), French Guiana (421), the Dominican Republic (276) and Martinique (242). Not surprisingly these are the countries with the highest representation in the survey. Curacao while not in this league is the highest output territory from the Dutch Caribbean.

4.3 THEMATIC PROFILE OF CARIBBEAN RESEARCH The bibliometric study shows objectively the thematic areas in which the Caribbean has been actively researching and publishing.  Most of the publications from the region fall into three thematic domains – Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences (28%); Biomedical Research (21%); Clinical Medicine (18%) [Figure 3]. Unfortunately, these thematic domains to which WoS publications have been assigned do not match exactly the FP7 thematic areas but comparisons are simple. The Agriculture, Biology & Environmental Sciences is a combination of two FP7 categories, Agriculture & Food (KBBE) and Environment & Climate, while Biomedical Research and Clinical Medicine equate to the single Biology & Medicine (Health) FP7 category. Chemistry, then Engineering & Technology then Physics were the next three largest areas of publications respectively (Table 5). These have no clear FP7 equivalents but the FP7 domains ICT and Industrial & Industrial Technology fall under the Engineering & Technology publication grouping.

In the survey, subject areas of active research were determined in two ways, by asking respondents to provide key words describing their research and by having institutions select which of the eight FP7 domains reflected their active research.  By both methods the French and English Caribbean selected Environment & Climate, Medicine & Biology (Health) and Agriculture & Food Supply (KBBE) as their three top research areas (Figure 20 & 21). These three choices clearly agree with what was found to be the case in the bibliometric study.  According to the bibliometric survey, the Dutch sub-region and the Dominican Republic also published most in the same top three areas as the English and French Caribbean (Figure 7 & 8). In contrast, in the survey the Dutch Caribbean reported socio-economic concerns as the prime current research focus while for the Dominican Republic only the Environment/Climate FP7 area remained at the top, a ranking shared with ICT and Industry & Industrial Technology (Figure 20 & 21).  This discordance between the publication profiles and the survey for the Dutch sub-region and to a lesser extent the Dominican Republic suggest the sampling for the survey in these regions may not have been representative or that there has been a recent marked shift in research focus.

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 In all sub-regions except the Dutch Caribbean, the majority of surveyed respondents belong to the University/Higher Education category (Figure 12) and this discrepancy for the Dutch sub- region survey might be symptomatic of a sampling issue.  Key words recurring in the active research topics from all sub-regions were natural hazards, climate change, water resources, biodiversity, marine ecosystems, chronic diseases, HIV/AIDS, public health and renewable energy.  Related to all this, in the survey, institutions were asked what areas of STI were most important for the region for the next five years. Agriculture & Food Supply and Environment & Climate still remained in the top three in all sub-regions but Energy was now consistently prioritised over Medicine & Health (Figure 24).

4.4 VISIBILITY OF CARIBBEAN RESEARCH This mapping exercise has focussed more on identifying what S&T research is being done in the region rather than singling out centres of excellence. That said, the bibliometric study used the WoS database which only indexes journals with high editorial standards and this stringency ensures that the output assessed was of high quality. In one area, however, objective comparisons were made and this was in the relative visibility or impact of a country's publications. In the bibliometric study this was assessed based on whether papers of one country in a particular research area were more highly cited than the regional average using two indices, Citation Share (CS) and Non-citation share (NCS). By this approach:  Curacao then Belize have the highest visibility in the Agriculture/Biology/Environment domain (Table 25). For Biomedical research, the top performers are Barbados followed by the Dominican Republic (Table 26) while for Clinical Medicine it is the Dominican Republic that leads followed by Haiti (Table 28). For Chemistry, Jamaica is most visible followed by Trinidad & Tobago (Table 27) while for Engineering/Technology it is Guadeloupe first with Jamaica in second place (Table 29). For Mathematics, Jamaica, Martinique and Guadeloupe are all top performers (Table 31) while in Physics the Dominican Republic and Guadeloupe out-perform other countries (Table 32).  A specialisation index was also calculated to assess whether some countries tend to publish more in particular areas than the regional average and in most cases the research areas of specialisation or apparent focus were not necessarily the areas with high impact. This is clearly a matter of concern as a country would like to think that its emphasis on a particular discipline pays off in high impact publications in that discipline.

4.5 COLLABORATION OF CARIBBEAN COUNTRIES The degree of collaboration between Caribbean countries and between Caribbean countries and Europe was examined objectively in the bibliometric study.  Low output Caribbean countries/territories mainly publish in collaboration with others while the percentage of collaborative publications is often much less for the higher output members, e.g. Barbados, 53%; Cuba, 59%; Martinique, 58% (Table 34).

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 While this probably reflects the relatively developed state of these societies and their research capacity, some higher output countries/territories almost entirely publish in collaboration with other countries, e.g. Belize (94%) and the Dominican Republic (95%).  Caribbean countries collaborate widely, with some Caribbean countries publishing with over 100 countries. The Anglophone Caribbean tends to collaborate more with North America than Europe while the other sub-regions generally collaborate more with Europe than North America (Table 34). Cuba and the Dominican Republic are distinct in also having very strong collaboration with Latin America.  In terms of intra-Caribbean collaboration, the bibliometric study shows that the English and French sub-regions collaborate most with countries in their own sub-region while the Dutch and Spanish sub-regions publish most with Anglophone Caribbean countries (Table 36).  The survey confirmed that the majority of institutions had collaborations with other Caribbean territories (Figure 31) and for the English and Dutch Caribbean most of these were with the English Caribbean (Figure 36), as the bibliometric study also reported.  The survey, however, suggests that the intra-Caribbean collaborations for the French Caribbean and Dominican Republic are not biased toward any sub-region (Figure 36), as indicated by the bibliometric study. In assessing EU-Caribbean collaborations, the bibliometric study shows that:  Spain, France and the UK are the main EU collaborators for the Caribbean but the Netherlands, despite equally strong colonial links, is less engaged and lags well behind (Table 37). Most of France's Caribbean co-publications are with its overseas departments, for the Netherlands most are with its overseas territory Curacao, for Spain most are with Cuba and for the UK most are with the English Caribbean (Table 37). This same pattern of collaboration, reflecting strong historical ties, is confirmed by the survey (Figure 36).  It should be noted that most co-publications with the EU involve only one EU country, suggesting a limited involvement of the Caribbean in large, multi-partner EU projects. This is not surprising based on the survey findings that Caribbean institutions are not knowledgeable about the EU FP7 programme (Figure 37).  It is important to note that the output of Caribbean-EU publications is growing faster than that of Caribbean publications without EU collaboration for the French and Spanish sub-regions but the opposite is true for the English Caribbean (Figure 9 & 10). (The trends in the Dutch sub- region are unclear in this regard.) There therefore seems to be an opportunity for increasing collaboration between the English Caribbean and the EU to reverse this trend, especially since this sub-region tends to publish more with North America. There are clear advantages for the Caribbean in increasing its collaboration with Europe:  From the bibliometric study, Caribbean publications produced in collaboration with EU authors have higher visibility than those without EU partners, on average being cited twice as much (Table 43).  The differences in EU collaboration seen within the Caribbean probably relate to funding opportunities. The survey, based on research grants, reports that the French and Dutch

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Caribbean get most of their research funding from the EU while the Dominican Republic lacks EU funding and the English Caribbean supports research from a broad mix of sources, viz. Caribbean governments, the EU, international agencies, US, Canadian and European governmental agencies and a range of private international charitable foundations.  Greater collaboration between the English and Spanish Caribbean and the EU will require greater access to EU funding for these sub-regions.

4.6 INDICATORS FOR MONITORING CARIBBEAN STI ACTIVITY This study has generated a range of indicators of STI activity of Caribbean countries which identify trends and reflect performance of the S&T sector and can be used to help formulate STI policy. Indicators may be on the input side, reflecting the human or financial resources devoted to S&T or on the output side such as the various bibliometric indices reported right up to the level of changes in national development. We conclude:  The bibliometric indicators reported can be used to benchmark Caribbean countries with respect to other parts of the world and have the advantage of being objective and are derived from reliable raw data which is relatively easy to obtain.  While we have attempted to gather some data on human resources in science and technology (HRST) in the survey, these and other economic and social data relevant to S&T activities require the gathering of these statistics by institutions dedicated to this purpose, so called S&T observatories.  The Caribbean Council on Science & Technology (CCST) has demonstrated leadership in this regard but requires the resources to do this systematic and consistent gathering of S&T statistics from across the region.

4.7 CARIBBEAN-EU COLLABORATION - BARRIERS, CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES The Caribbean region is a complex one comprising some thirty islands varying greatly in size and economic development. It is a mixture of ethnicities and languages and of political and economic systems and a region of inadequate internal travel links. Below we highlight some opportunities, barriers and challenges which can be translated into future EU-collaboration: Opportunities  The Caribbean's very geographic location presents an opportunity to forge stronger economic links with North, South and Central America.  The Caribbean is also a biodiversity hotspot which can be sustainably exploited and through a bio-economy sector generate new jobs.  As island states, the Caribbean has great potential to develop new renewable energy resources, be they solar, geothermal or ocean energy, while those mainland Caribbean states of Belize and the Guianas complement the insular Caribbean with their mineral, forestry and land resources.

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 In all of this, the overarching advantage that the Caribbean possesses is a well-educated, resilient people who as this report demonstrates have built capacity in RTD and generated a body of scientific knowledge in this region despite the challenges they face.  Innovation is not simply the application of technology but typically transforms the existing economy and involves economic and social processes and actors besides those who create new technologies (Holbrook, n.d.). All nations engage in the importation of knowledge and this may be a more important engine for fuelling innovation in the small countries of the Caribbean than formal R&D (Holbrook, n.d.). Barriers  Public research funding is very limited and is primarily organised at the national level and this leads to costly duplication and fragmentation.  Regional integration is key to addressing this but the main vehicle for this, CARICOM, is essentially an affiliation of Anglophone Caribbean countries, Haiti and Suriname being the exceptions. While most CARICOM members are independent countries, the French and Dutch Caribbean territories (Haiti and Suriname excepted) are parts of France and the Netherlands respectively. This political disparity does not foster regionalism. Cuba and the Dominican Republic have also been on the periphery of Caribbean regionalism probably due to their large size, location and language.  There is no regional funding mechanism for S&T.  The private sector does not effectively link the region. It is largely focused on distribution and sales of goods and tends to comprise small national companies with few regional entreprises and these generally do not cross linguistic barriers.  In developed countries there is typically a National System of Innovation (NSI) which is based on relationships between public and private institutions involving the movement of knowledge, finances and human resources. No such NSIs have been identified among Caribbean states (except possibly in the French Caribbean) but ideally if these existed they should interact to generate a Caribbean Regional System of Innovation which is greater than the sum of its parts.  While there are many opportunities for the EU to collaborate with the Caribbean in STI for mutual benefit, the diverse political systems of the Caribbean seem a serious barrier to the regionalism that seems critical to EU-Caribbean collaboration. This suggests that to be successful future EU-Caribbean STI collaboration must include the provision of a mechanism to forge a regional public-private sector framework through which multiple Caribbean states and territories can collaborate with Europe.  Critical mass is a serious issue which is inescapable for the majority of Caribbean countries. The smallest islands will probably always have limited research capacity for this reason alone. For the larger more developed Caribbean territories there are a few regional institutions (e.g. UAG, UWI) and frameworks which can lead to coordinated division of labour with different research activities focused in different parts of the region.

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 There is a disconnect between research which takes place largely in academic centres and the limited product and process development undertaken by business entreprises. All this means that there is underinvestment in research and innovation.  The diverse countries of the region with a matching complexity of legislation and regulations do not make matters easier. Challenges The Caribbean faces a number of societal challenges which can be addressed by coordinated research action and Science and Technology need to be harnessed to find new ways to improve the economic future of the region.  The insular Caribbean is also an area at great risk from natural hazards. Each year tropical storms and hurricanes cause major damage and loss of life and, in addition, most of the islands of the Lesser Antilles are volcanic. The region is also one of great seismological activity as the people of Haiti were recently reminded. Added to these threats is the potential for sea level rise as a result of global warming for islands that are already small in area. Natural hazard mitigation and management is therefore an absolute priority for regional scientific research.  The Caribbean is currently a net importer of food and with a year long growing season this should not be. Likewise surrounded by bountiful marine resources that can be exploited sustainably and more profitably, this should not be.  Another major challenge is the very nature of the region, islands scattered over a broad expanse of ocean, in need of an efficient, green transport system to allow them to work efficiently together and of cutting edge ICT that effectively eliminates this insularity.  Above all, unless the Caribbean can find new ways to increase competitiveness and create jobs the current problems of increasing crime and lack of security will only get worse.  The over-riding challenge is to increase the interaction between neighbouring countries/territories and create a synergism in the Caribbean through the creation of a Regional System of Innovation.

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5. REFERENCES

Cetto AM, Alonso-Gamboa JO (2010) Latin America and Caribbean scientific journals, pp 64-65, in National Science, Technology and Innovation Systems in Latin America and the Caribbean. Lemarchand, GA (ed.). UNESCO Regional Bureau for Science in Latin America and the Caribbean, Montevideo. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0018/001898/189823e.pdf. Chinchilla-Rodríguez Z, Vargas-Quesada B, Hassan-Montero Y, González-Molina A, Moya-Anegón F (2009) New approach to the visualization of international scientific collaboration. Information Visualization 9: 277-287. Cortés U, Davidziuk A, Moreau O, Muñoz D, Nascimbeni F, Pimienta D, Sanatan R, Eds. (2009) ICT Research in the Caribbean: Insights and perspective of Cooperation with Europe. MENON Network EEIG, Brussels. http://www.winds-la.eu/winds/images/WINDS-Caribe%20ICT%20R&D%20in%20the%20Caribbean %20Report.pdf Gómez I, Bordons M, Morillo F, DeFilippo D, Aparicio J (2009) Science & technology indicators for EULARINET. A Report prepared for the EULARINET project funded by the EC. 108pp. Holbrook, JAD (n.d.) Capacities of Anglophone Caribbean countries for collecting and analysing indicat- ors on science, technology and innovation. Inter-American Development Bank, Washington. http://docs.politicascti.net/documents/Doc%2005%20-%20regional%20caribe.pdf. Johann D (ed.) (2008) Directory LAC Access2008, Austrian Latin American Institute, Vienna. http://lac-access.net/images/directorio_lac_access_final.pdf Lemarchand GA, ed. (2010) National Science, Technology and Innovation Systems in Latin America and the Caribbean. UNESCO Regional Bureau for Science in Latin America and the Caribbean, Montevideo. http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0018/001898/189823e.pdf Mustar P, Esterle L (eds.) (2006) Key Figures on Science and Technology. Observatoire des Sciences et des Techniques. Paris. OECD (2002) Frascati Manual. Propoposed standard practice for surveys on research and experimental development. OECD Publications Service, Paris. Ramkissoon H, Kahwa IA (2010) pp 133-146 in UNESCO Science report 2010. The Current Status of Science around the World. UNESCO, Paris. http://www.unesco.org/new/fileadmin/MULTIMEDIA/HQ/SC/pdf/sc_usr10_caricom_EN.pdf. Rosebroom J, Cremers M, Lauckner B (2001) Agricultural R&D in the Caribbean: An Institutional and Statistical Profile. International Service for National Agricultural Research (ISNAR ), the Hague.

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6. ABBREVIATIONS

AMLC, Association of Marine Laboratories of the Caribbean CARICOM, Caribbean Community CCCCC, Caribbean Community Climate Change Centre CCST, Caribbean Council on Science & Technology CDB, Caribbean Development Bank CDRC, Chronic Diseases Research Centre CERCAL, Centre d'Étude des Relations entre l'Union Européenne et l'Amérique Latine CFCS, Caribbean Food Crops Society CIDA, Canadian International Development Agency CIRAD, Centre de Coopération Internationale en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement CITMA, Cuban Ministry of Science, Technology & the Environment COSEHC, Consortium of Southeastern Hypertension Control CS, Citation Share CYTED, Programa iberoamericano de ciencia y tecnología para el Desarrollo DAAD, Deutscher Akademischer Austauschdienst EL&I, Economische Zaken, Landbouw en Innovatie EU, European Union EUCARINET, European Union - Caribbean research and innovation networks EULARINET, European Union - Latin American research and innovation networks FP7, Framework Programme 7 GCFI, Gulf & Caribbean Fisheries Institute GDRI, Groupe de recherche international GEF, Global Environmental Facility HE, Higher Education HIV/AIDS, Human Immunodeficiency Virus/Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome HRST, Human resources in science and technology IADB, Inter-American Development Bank ICT, Information and Communication Technologies IDRC, International Development Research Corporation of Canada IICA, Inter-American Institute for Co-operation in Agriculture INRA, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique ISRS, International Society for Reef Studies

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KBBE or Knowledge Based Bio-Economy NCS, Non-citation share NIH, National Institutes of Health NOAA, National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Agency NSF, National Science Foundation NSI, National System of Innovation OAS, Organisation of American States OCT, Overseas Countries & Territories OECD, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development OVSG, Observatoire volcanologique de Guadeoupe PAHO, Pan-American Health Organisation RTD, Research & Technical Development S&T, Science & Technology SI, Specialisation Index STI, Science, Technology & Innovation UAG, Université des Antilles et de la Guyane UK, United Kingdom UNA, University of the Netherlands Antilles UNEP, United Nations Environment Program UNESCO, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization UNIBE, Universidad Iberoamericana UNICEF, United Nations Children's Fund USAID, US Agency for International Development UWI, University of the West Indies WB, World Bank. WHO, World Health Organisation WIDECAST, Wider Caribbean Sea Turtle Conservation Network WINDS, Widening IST Networking Development Support WoS, Web of Science

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7. APPENDIX 1

Survey Questionnaire 1. Guidance note

This survey aims to compile information about the known research centres in the Caribbean. The ultimate goal of collecting such information about Caribbean Research & Technology Development (RTD) is to have a clear map of: - The kinds of research going on - The level of excellence - The sources and levels of funding - The familiarity of the region with the EU 7th Framework Programme (FP7) - The barriers, opportunities and special needs relating to regional FP7 participation - Regional and international Science & Technology (S&T) collaboration

2. The structure of the questionnaire

The questions that follow collect several types of information about the research centres. Those in the first part will be used to make a public on-line directory of Caribbean research institutions. Those in the second part will be treated confidentially. The questions address the following:-: - Identification of the research centre - Identification of the contact person - Research activities - Priority settings - Resources/Funding - Training - Cooperation, connections and collaboration

IF YOU ARE RESPONDING AS HEAD OF A DIVISION WITHIN A LARGE ORGANISATION YOUR ANSWERS SHOULD PERTAIN TO YOUR DIVISION SPECIFICALLY, NOT THE ENTIRE ORGANISATION.

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IDENTIFICATION OF THE RESEARCH CENTRE

1. Organisation name:

2. Division/Department: (if applicable)

3. Acronym: (if any)

4. Country:

5. Postal Address:

6. Website:

7. Type of Organisation:

University or Higher Education  Business enterprise  Government Agency  Private non-profit  Other specify : 

8. Which sectors fund your Organization?: Private  Public  Both 

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9. Is your organisation? :

National (located only in your country)  Regional (located also in other regional countries)  International (located also beyond the Caribbean) 

10. Is your Institution involved in postgraduate training?  Not at all  Taught Masters progamme(s)  Research Masters progamme(s)  PhD programmes

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IDENTIFICATION OF THE CONTACT PERSON

11. Gender: Male  Female 

12. Title: Mr.  Mrs.  Ms.  Dr.  Prof. 

13. Last name:

14. First name:

15. Position (e.g. Director):

16. Tel. No.:

17. Email:

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RESEARCH ACTIVITIES

18. Indicate the approximate % of time your institution devotes to the following:

Teaching Research Product development Administrative tasks Other (specify):

19. Summarise (<15 words) your institution’s Research & Development activities:

20. List up to five keywords that indicate these Research Areas: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

21. In which of these research areas is your institution/division active?

Very Active Active Not active Agriculture & Food Supply    Biology & medicine    Energy    Environment and climate    Industry & industrial technology    Information and communication technology    Social & economic concerns    Transport and construction   

22. What kind of research are you doing?

Basic research: to acquire new knowledge without regard to its applicability 

Applied research: original research mainly directed to a specific problem 

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Experimental research: draws on previous studies to produce new 

or improved products or processes.

23. Do visiting, overseas-based scientists contribute much to your research output?

Not at all  Minor contribution  About half of our publications  Most of our publications 

24. Please indicate the number of publications and patents your institution had in the past ten years

Scientific publications Patents

25. How aware are you of the EU 7th Framework Programme (FP7) on RTD?

Never heard of it  Heard about it, but know little about it  Aware of it and know something about it 

26. Would you be interested in applying for FP7 support for your research?

Yes  No 

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PRIORITY SETTINGS

27. Aside from your research area, what TWO research areas do you think are the most important for the Caribbean over the next 5 years?

Agriculture & Food Supply  Biology & medicine  Energy  Environment and climate  Industry & industrial technology  Information and communication technology  Social & economic concerns  Transport and construction  Other (specify)...... 

28. Would you be willing to provide further feedback on research priorities and needs for your country? Yes  No 

29. Do you agree to allow us to use the information you have provided so far for our study of Caribbean RTD and for our public on-line directory of Caribbean research institutions?

Yes  No 

YOUR ANSWERS TO THE QUESTIONS THAT FOLLOW WILL NOT FORM PART OF THE ON-LINE DIRECTORY AND WILL BE TREATED CONFIDENTIALLY.

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RESOURCES – FUNDING

30. List the largest current or recent research projects of your division or institution:

Project Title Funding Agencies Collaboratoring Project institutions and countries budget (USD) 1. 2. 3.

31. Please indicate for your division/institution the: total number of employees number of researchers who are full-time employees: number of researchers who are full-time researchers: number of PhD-level Researchers: annual Research Budget :

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COOPERATION, COLLABORATION AND CONNECTIONS

32. Give the names of some of the research networks in which your staff participate.

Research network Acronym 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

33. Does your institution have any industrial collaborations? Give examples.

Company name Acronym Country 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

34. Does your institution work with other Caribbean research Institutions? Give examples.

Institution name Country 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

35. Does your institution work with European research Institutions? Give examples.

Institution name Country 1. 2. 3. 4. 5.

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8. APPENDIX 2

SUMMARY OF SURVEY RESPONDENTS

Dutch Sub-region ARUBA Centrale Bank van Aruba, Research Department, Aruba J.E. Irausquin Boulevaard 8 www.cbaruba.org Private non profit organisation (bv. Stichting), Public sector; National Mr. Rendell de Kort, Economist, Research Department 2975252173 [email protected] Central banking related research mostly using economic tecnhiques, monetary, economics, finance, forecasting, banking

Fundacion Aruba Consciente, F.A.C., Aruba http://www.facebook.com/ArubaConsciente Private non profit organisation (bv. Stichting), Public&Private sector; National Mr. Urvin Leest, [email protected] Reduce dependence on food imports through promoting, Permaclture practices, Permaculture, Aquaponics, Cultural awareness, Environmental awareness, Social awareness

Government of Aruba Enseñansa Pa Empleo Aruba EPE Aruba Governmetnal organization, Public sector, National Mr. Gregory Koolman, Director, (297) 582-5662, [email protected] Consult with Private Sector to see what training demands exist in the marketplace., Customer Service,Business Ethics, Professional Needs, Communications (Language), Technical (Computer)

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Instituto Pedagogico Arubano Centro di Investigacion y Desaroyo di Ensenansa CIDE I. Wagemakerstraat 11 www.ipa.aw University or higher education institution. Private sector, National Mrs. Regine Croes coordinator of the Center for Educational R&D (CIDE), 00-297-5843100, [email protected] Researching and developing innovative educational practices in Aruban education within cooperative learning communities, Multilingual education, Active learning in meaningful contexts, Parent and Community Involvement Healthy schools

BONAIRE STINAPA Bonaire STINAPA P.O. Box 368 www.stinapa.org Private non-profit. Both. National No postgraduate programmes Ms. Elsmarie Beukenboom Director, 5997178444, [email protected], Marine, terrestrial

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CURACAO Caribbean Management and Research of Biodiversity, CARMABI, Curacao, Piscaderabaai z/n www.researchstationcarmabi.org Private non profit organisation, Public&private sector, International PhD programma’s Dr. Mark Vermeij, Science director, 59995103067, [email protected] nature management, research support, Coral reef ecology, Geology, Terrestrial biology, Bat biology, Nature conservation

Curacaosche Huisartsen Vereniging, CHV, Curacao chv-site.org Anders Business enterprise; Private sector; National Mr. Human Jeung, voorzitter, 5999-5611999, [email protected] interests in preparation, teaching assistants, epidemiology

Fundashon Antiyano Pa Energia, FAPE, Curacao, Jan Noorduynweg 111, Greater Willemstad, Curaçao Private non profit organisation, Public&Private sector, National Mrs. Margo Guda, manager & senior scientist, +5999-869-6970, [email protected] project acquisition, mostly wind resource assessment both island-wide and for specific sites, wind energy

UNIVERSITEIT NETHERLANDS ANTILLES FACULTY SOCIAL AND BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES FMG 1234 www.una.an University or higher education institution. Public&Private sector. Regional PhD programma’s Prof. Jeanne De Bruijn, HOOGLERAAR, 005999 5164913, [email protected] Small island development, Gender studies, matrifocality, migration studies, higher education, social work, public administration, good governance, fraude, creative society, small island development gender relations and matrifocality, good governance, migration and integration, creative society

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SURINAME University of Suriname, Faculty of Technological Sciences, Departement of Infrastructure, Orientation: Land and water management AdeKUS-FTeW-Infra- LWB Leysweg 86, WBL http://adekus.uvs.edu/ University or Higher Education, Public&Private sector, National, Taught Masters programme(s) Prof. Sieuwnath Naipal Coordinator, 597-8715714, [email protected]; [email protected] Early Flood Warning Systems; Renwable energy implementation coastal zone mangement and Climate change, coastal zone management, climate change and impacts, renewable energy, water resources, early flood warning systems

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SPANISH SUB-REGION DOMINICAN REPUBLIC Fundación Naturaleza, Ambiente y Desarrollo FNAD Costa Rica 139 Ens. Alma Rosa, Santo Domingo Este. Private non-profit organisation. Public&Private sector. National Dr./Dra. Santana Richardson Frank Presidente, 809-594-3460, [email protected] Technical assistance, basic research on environmental and clean energy technologies and developing them., Clean energy, food security, environmental quality, natural resources management, institutional strengthening

Fundación Redes y Desarrollo FUNREDES Aptdo 2972 Santo Domingo http://funredes.org Private non-profit organisation. Public&Private sector. International Sr. Daniel Pimienta, Director, , pimienta2funredes.org Creating indicators of linguistic diversity on the Internet. Action Research in ICT for development (social, virtual communities, multilingüísnmo), indicators, languages, TICpD (ICT4D), methodologies, virtual communities

Instituto Dominicano para el Estudio de la Salud Integral y la Psicología Aplicada IDESIP Calle Eugenio Deschamps #5, Esquina Mercedes Mota. La Castellana, Santo Domingo, D.N. 10133. Republica Dominicana www.idesip.org Private non-profit organisation. Private. National Taught Masters programme, PhD programmes Dr./Dra. Cesar Ernesto Castellanos Araujo, Director Ejecutivo, +1 (809) 549-7071, [email protected] Mental Health Clinical Services, Mental Health and natural disasters, neuroscience and HIV / AIDS, domestic violence, development of protocols for mental health care, AIDS, Disaster, Cognitive Neuroscience, Rehabilitation, Violence

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Instituto Tecnológico de Las Américas ITLA Aut. Las Américas km. 27 1/2, La Caleta, Boca Chica www.itla.edu.do University or Higher Education, Public. National Srta. Liana Marien Polanco Ramos Vicerrectora Academica,0118097384852 ext. 305 ó 254, [email protected] Technology Solutions, Development of a technological model that integrates Radio Frequency Identification, Global Positioning System and Geographic Information Systems for inventory management. Identification, Radio Frequency, Global Positioning System, GIS, Inventories

Instituto Tecnológico de Santo Domingo Vicerrectoría de Investigación y Vinculación INTEC Avenida de Los Próceres, Galá, P.O. Box 342-9 y 249-2 www.intec.edu.do University or Higher Education, Private. National Taught Masters programme Sra Andrea Paz López , ,Directora Ejecutiva de Investigación, (809) 567-9271, [email protected] Draw lines with respect to the pursuit of human and financial resources to further develop research to strengthen the scientific-technological development, Human Development, Science and Technology Development, Innovation, Knowledge Creation, Transfer

Instituto Virtual de Programación Avanzada Desarrollo de Software INVIPROA Calle 3 #2 Residencial Caribe http://www.inviproa.com Business enteprise. Private. National Research Masters programme Dra. Rina Familia Director, 18099386271, [email protected] Development of specialized software to control robots, mechatronics, mobile applications and software engineering of real time., Real Time Software, Control, Robotics, Mobile Applications, Mechatronics

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Ministerio de Educación Superior, Ciencia y Tecnología Dirección de Fomento a la Investigación Científica y Tecnológica MESCyT Av. Máximo Gómez No.31 es. Pedro Henriquez Ureña, Santo Domingo 10204 www.seescyt.gov.do Governmental agency. Public. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme Dr./Dra. Carlos Manuel Rodríguez Peña, Director Fomento Investigación Científica y Tecnológica, 829- 452-8046 [email protected] Regulates and supports your research work. The promotion is done by funding research projects with grant funds., Basic Sciences, Environment, Technology, Innovation, Biotechnology

Pontificia Universidad Catolica Madre y Maestra Vicerectoria de Investigacion PUCMM Autopista Duarte km 1 1/2 http://www.pucmm.edu.do/PUCMM/ University or Higher Education, Private. National Taught Masters programme Dr. Fabrice Piazza, Lider del grupo de investigacion en materiales nanoestructurados de carbono, NANOCARBON, +1 809 580 1962 ext. 4081, [email protected] Sevice to society, supports the implementation of research projects sponsored by the Ministry of Higher Education, Science and Technology. It has an internal fund to promote research (seed fund). It is in the process of defining institutional policy matter and a strategic plan of development for 4 years, At an early stage of development, limited financial resources, some doctors with experience to develop new research programs, some linked to teaching, disconnected from the productive sector

Universidad Abierta Para Adultos, UAPA Centro Universitario de Información y Comunciación Educativa UAPA Avenida Hispanoamericana, URb. Thomén #100 www.uapa.edu.do University or Higher Education, Private. National Taught Masters programme Dra. Reyna María Hiraldo Trejo, Directora, 1-809-724-0266 ext 257 [email protected] Outreach Program to support communities, Ivestigaciones in the interest of the institution and according to themes or issues that affect society. Social problem, Relevance, institutional interest, originality, novelty

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Universidad APEC (UNAPEC) Centro de Innovación, Desarrollo y Transferencia Tecnológica de la Universidad APEC CIDTEC Ave. Máximo Gómez #72, El Vergel, Santo Domingo www.unapec.edu.do University or Higher Education, Private. National Taught Masters programme, PhD programmes Sra Teresa Hidalgo, Directora, 809 686 0021 Ext. 2323/2283, [email protected] No keywords given.

Universidad Autonoma de Santo Domingo Escuela de Ingenieria Quimica UASD Escuela de Ingenieria Quimica, Facultad de Ingenieria y Arquitectura, Cuidad Universitaria http://www.uasd.edu.do University or Higher Education, Public&Private sector. National Taught Masters programme Prof. Luis Mejia Terrero Docente-investigador, (809) 6861124 (Ext 26, Ingenieria Quimica), [email protected] Participation in research projects with contestants from public and private financial, energy, biotechnology, fermentation, Biorefinery Nanotechnology. Participating in projects of research, product and process design and participation in Fermentation Bioprocess Day científica.Biotecnologia Biofuels Biomass Conversion

Universidad autónoma de Santo Domingo Dirección de Investigaciones Científicas y Tecnológicas UASD Av. Alma Mater, Distrito Nacional, santo Domingo www.uasd.edu.do University or Higher Education, Public. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Profra. Bélgica Cesarina Naut Medina, Directora, 1-809-682-9052, [email protected] Extension days will be credited scientific research in universities, a day reliza year scientific research which includes the results of completed investigations. Projects that are prepared will be subject to competition at national and international funds. Has some 18 sections of the Council for Scientific and Technological year, which approves the hiring of researchers themselves and partners, as well as new research projects. Are monitored ongoing projects., Applied Sciences, Renewable Energy, Environment, Health, Agriculture Has implemented 70 projects of research: humanities Area (7), economic and social area (7), Area of science (34), legal and political area (3), area of engineering and architecture (7), Area health (1), agricultural and veterinary Area (9). Applied Sciences Gender Renewable Agricultural Health has 20 institutes. They run 48 projects of research, some funded FONDOCYT or international organizations, others with own funds. Scientific conferences conducted in each school (8) and a general where the results of the investigations are reported. Promoted the Investigator of the Year Award. We

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keep constantly updated. Our researchers are involved in national and international scientific conferences. Renewable Energies Applied Sciences, Agricultural Development, Health

Universidad Nacional Pedro Henríquez Ureña UNPHUAutopista Duarte Km. 6 1/2 Santo Domingo, D. N: www.unphu.edu.do University or Higher Education, Public&Private sector. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Dr. José Guillén Sarita, , Esc. Informática, (809) 562 6601 ext. 2202, [email protected] Extension services, institutional research are limited to institutional interests, and scientific research are restricted to the area of agriculture and the environment. Environment, agriculture, natural resources, basic science, innovation

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FRENCH SUB-REGION GUADELOUPE CIRAD Guadeloupe UMR CMAEE Domaine Duclos, prise d'eau 97122 Petit Bourg University or Higher Education. Public&Private sector. International Research Masters programme, PhD programmes M. Thierry, Lefrancois, Directeur adjoint UMR CMAEE, 590590255995, [email protected] epidemiology, animal diseases, Caribbean, emerging diseases, ticks and diseases,

CRPMEM Guadeloupe 2 bis rue Schoelcher 97 110 Pointe-à-Pitre FWI Business enterprise. Public. National Research Masters programme M. Nicolas, Diaz,Secrétaire Général, 590590909787, [email protected] Fisheries, Fisheries, Sustainable, Sea, Aquaculture

Inserm - Université des Antilles et de la Guyane UMR 763 CHU, Hôpital Ricou, BP465, 97159 Pointe-à-Pitre Governmental agency. Public. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes M. Jacques, Elion, Director, 33140032339, [email protected] Sickle cell anemia, genetic diseases, cell biology, molecular genetics, clinical research,

Université des Antilles et de la Guyane Biologie UMR 7138 SAE UFR SEN. Département de biologie. BP 592. 97159 Pointe à Pitre cedex http://www2.univ-ag.fr/SAEmangrove/index.html University or Higher Education. Public. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Prof. Olivier, Gros, Directeur du laboratoire de biologie Marine. responsable de l'equipe Biologie de la Mangrove au sein de l'UMR 7138 SAE, 00 590 590 48 30 06, [email protected] Biodiversity, Microbiology, interactions between bacteria and invertebrates, mangrove and seagrass ecosystem, Phanerogams, molecular interactions

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Institut Karibéen et Amazonien de l'Elevage IKARE BP 35 Convenance 97122 Baie Mahault - Guadeloupe University or Higher Education. Public. Public&Private sector. Régional. No postgraduate programmes M. Frederic Galan, responsable de projet, (590)0590320886, [email protected] Forage systems in breeding ruminants, monogastric feed production, environmental, technical and economic references, quality initiatives

Centre de Recherches et de Ressources en Education et Formation CRREF IUFM de Guadeloupe, Morne Ferret, BP 517, 97178 Abymes Cedex (Guadeloupe) http://www.iufm.univ-ag.fr/guadeloupe/RECHERCHE/1-presentation.php University or Higher Education. Public. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Prof. Antoine, Delcroix, Directeur, 590 (0) 590 21 36 13, [email protected] Analysis of practices, teaching, learning contextualisation, education, vocational training

INRA Antilles-Guyane 97170 Petit-Bourg www.antilles.inra.fr Governmental agency. Institut de Recherches Agronomiques. Public. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Mme. Danielle Alice, Celestine-Mirtyl-Marlin, Présidente, 0590 590 25 59 00, Danielle.Celestine-Mirtyl- [email protected] Tropical crops, livestock, forestry, sustainable development,

Institut Pasteur de Guadeloupe IPGp Morne Joiliviere BP 484 97183 ABYMES CEDEX http://www.pasteur-guadeloupe.fr/ Private non-profit organisation. Public&Private sector International Research Masters programme, PhD programmes M. Antoine, Talarmin, Directeur, 00 590 590 89 76 60, [email protected] Mycobacterium tuberculosis, molecular epidemiology, arbovirus vectors, antiobioresistance, environmental pathogens

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L'Office National des Forêts Direction Régionale Gaudeloupe ONF Jardin Botanique BP 648 97109 Basse-Terre Cedex http://www.onf.fr/ Autre; Governmental Agency. Public&Private sector. National. No postgraduate programmes Dr./Dre. Patrice, Mengin-Lecreulx, Directeur Régional, (590) 5 90 99 28 99, patrice.mengin- [email protected] Forest biodiversity, Continuous monitoring of the forest, Sylvicuture Mahogany, Pear Breeding countries, Invasive Species

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FRENCH GUYANA (GUYANE)

Bibliothèque Numérique de Recherche en Mathématiques et Informatique Mathématiques et Informatique BNRMI Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG) http://malavoi3.martinique.univ-ag.fr/buag/bnrmi/ University or Higher Education. Public. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes M. Abdennebi, Omrane, Directeur Scientifique, + (590) 590 48 30 85, [email protected] All research areas in Mathematics and Computer Science: Analysis, Algebra, Geometry, Statistics, Applications, Image, Artificial intelligence, reconnaissance, partial differential equations, optimization, control, image processing, numerical analysis, distributed systems

UAG Epidémiologie des Parasitoses Tropicales Equipe UPRES EA 3593 EPaT Campus Saint Denis, 97306 Cayenne En cours de réfection University or Higher Education. Public. National Research Masters programme Prof. Carme Bernard, Directeur, (594) 594 39 53 09, [email protected] Epidemiology, parasitic, fungal infections, Diagnosis, Public Health

Institut PASTEUR de la Guyane IP-Guyane 23 avenue Pasteur BP 6010 - 97306 Cayenne Cedex http://www.pasteur-cayenne.fr Private non-profit organisation. Public&Private sector. National No postgraduate programmes. Prof. ,Andre, Spiegel, Director, +594 594 29 26 01, [email protected] dengue (virological and entomology), malaria (resistance and entomology), vriales emerging diseases, immunology and leishmaniasis, arbovirus

UMR Ecologie des Forêts de Guyane UMR EcoFoG Campus agronomique / BP 316 / F97310 Kourou http://www.ecofog.gf University or Higher Education. Public. National Research Masters programme, PhD programmes M., Eric, Marcon, Director, +594 594 32 93 00, [email protected] Ecology, Forest, Tropical Biodiversity, Carbon

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Adaptation, Climat Tropical, Exercice et Santé UFR-STAPS ACTES UFR-STAPS, Université des Antilles et de la Guyane, Campus de Fouillole, 97157 pointe à Pitre http://calamar.univ-ag.fr/uag/staps/actes/index.html University or Higher Education. Public&Private sector. National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Prof. Christian Olivier, Dominique, Hue, Directeur, 00 590 690 55 19 95, [email protected] Physiology, physical activities and sports, health, tropical climate, Caribbean environment,

MARTINIQUE

CIRAD Direction Régionale Antilles-Guyane CIRAD-DRAG PRAM, B.P. 214, F-97285 Lamentin Cedex 2 www.cirad.fr Governmental agency. Public&Private sector. International Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Dr. Christian, Chabrier, Directeur, (596)596423042, [email protected] Agro-ecology, nematology, entomology, modeling, soil science

Bureau de Recherches Géologiques et Minières / French Geological Survey Service Géologique Régional Martinique / Regional Office in Martinique BRGM 4 Lot. Miramar, Route Pointe des Nègres, 97200 Fort-de-France www.brgm.fr/brgm//Fichiers/SGR/fiche_mar.pdf Governmental Agency. Public&Private sector. International PhD programmes Dr. Jean-Christophe, Audru, Directeur régional / Regional Director, +(596)596 711 770, [email protected] Natural Hazards, Groundwater, Geology, Geothermal Energy, Contaminated land

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Centre de recherche sur les pouvoirs locaux dans la Caraïbe CRPLC Faculté de droit de Martinique, BP 7209, 97275 Schoelcher Cédex http://www2.univ-ag.fr/CRPLC/ University or Higher Education. Public. National PhD programmes M., Daniel Justin, Directeur, (596)596727418, [email protected] Governance, regional cooperation, sustainable development, local government, public policy

CIRAD Performance des systèmes agronomiques unité HortSys PRAM petit Morne entrée CTCS 97232 LE LAMENTIN www.pram-martinique.org University or Higher Education. Public Public&Private sector. International Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes Dr. Magalie, Lesueur Jannoyer, chercheur, responsable d'équipe de recherche, 596-596423039, [email protected] Agricultural innovation, agricultural practices, health and environmental impact, biological regulation, agro ecosystem

Institut de recherche pour le développement Martinique - Guadeloupe IRD - Martinique IRD BP 8006 97259 - Fort-de-France cedex www.mq.ird.fr University or Higher Education. Public. International Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes M. Marc, Morell, Représentant, 596596397739 , [email protected] Nematology, soil physics, microbiology, hydrology, remote sensing,

Observatoire Volcanologique et Sismologique de la Martinique, Institut de Physique du Globe de Paris OVSM/IPGP Morne des Cadets, Fonds Saint Denis http://www.ipgp.fr/pages/030303.php University or Higher Education. Public.National Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes DR. Valérie, Clouard, Directrice +596 596 78 41 41, [email protected] Monitoring, volcano seismology, instrumentation, tsunami

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UNIVERSITE DES ANTILLES ET DE LA GUYANE (UAG) CENTRE D'ETUDE, DE RECHERCHE EN ECONOMIE, GESTION MODELISATION ET INFORMATIQUE APPLIQUEE CEREGMIA Faculté de Droit et d'Economie - Campus de Schoelcher- BP 7205 - 97275 SCHOELCHER CEDEX www.ceregmia.eu University or Higher Education. Public&Private sector. Regional Taught Masters programme, Research Masters programme, PhD programmes M. Fred, Celimen, Professeur, Directeur du CEREGMIA, 00 596 72 73 98, [email protected] Optimization, Health, Environment, Society and territories, Risk

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ENGLISH SUB-REGION ANTIGUA & BARBUDA Environmental Awareness Group EAG Antigua & Barbuda PO Box 2103, St. John's, Antigua www.eagantigua.org Private non-profit. Both. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Ms. Lia Nicholson, Executive Director, (268) 462-6236, [email protected] Biodiversity, Invasive Species, Sea Turtles, Flora, Roaming Livestock

THE BAHAMAS The College of The Bahamas COB P O Box N 4912, Nassau, The Bahamas www.con.edu.bs University or Higher Education. Both. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s) Mr. William Fielding, Director, 242 302 4311, [email protected] Social issues, Environment and sustainability, Health, Marine Technology,

The Cape Eleuthera Institute CEI Cape Eleuthera Institute, PO Box 29, Rock Sound, Eleuthera, The Bahamas http://www.ceibahamas.org/about-us.aspx Private non-profit. Both. National (located only in your country) PhD programmes Mr. Aaron Shultz, Research Manager, 609-945-0710, [email protected], Flats Ecology, Shark Ecology, Marine Ecology, Terrestrial Ecology, Sustainable Food,

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BARBADOS

Agronomy Research and Variety Testing Unit ARVTU Groves, St. George University or Higher Education.Both. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Mr. Harm de Boer, Senior Agronomist, (1246) 433 4157, [email protected] Varieties, sugarcane, energycane, extension, recommendations

BARBADOS PRIMATE RESEARCH CENTER AND WILDLIFE RESERVE BPRC & WR Farley Hill, St. Peter, Barbados Private non-profit. Private. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Mr. Jean Baulu, Director, 1 246 422 8826, [email protected] Wildlife Management, SPF Breeding - Polio Vaccine, Medical Devices, Pharmaco Kinetics, Inflammation

Bellairs Research Institute of McGill University Bellairs or (BRI) Folkestone, St. James, Barbados http://www.mcgill.ca/bellairs/ University or Higher Education. Both. International (located also beyond the Caribbean). Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Ms., Susan Mahon, Managing Director, (246) 422-2087, [email protected] Ecosystems, efficiency, people, creativity, ,sustainability,

Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute Breeding and Biotechnology CARDI P.O. Box 64, Cave Hill Campus, UWI www.cardi.org Government Agency. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries). Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr., Cyril Roberts, CARDI Representative, Barbados, 246-425-1334, [email protected] Pepper, sheep, marketing, cassava, biotechnology

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Caribbean Institute for Meteorology & Hydrology CIMH Husbands, St. James, Barbados www.cimh.edu.bb University or Higher Education. Public. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr., David Farrell, Principal, +12464251362/63, [email protected] tropical meteorology, water resources management for small island developing states, disaster risk reduction (flood and drought forecasting), instrument development, climatology,

Coastal Zone Management Unit Ministry of the Environment, Water Resouces and Drainage CZMU Bay Street, St. Michael, BB11156 www.coastal.gov.bb Government Agency. Public. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Dr., Leo Brewster, Director, 246 - 228 – 5955, [email protected] Coastasl Zone Management t

The University of the West Indies Faculty of Medical Sciences FMS Cave Hill, St. Michael http://www.cavehill.uwi.edu/fms/ University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof. Joseph Branday, Dean, 1246 417 – 4260, [email protected] Chronic diseases, Epidemiology, Infectous diseases, Human Immunodeficiency Disease, Health promotion

The University of the West Indies Chronic Disease Research Centre CDRC Jemmott's Lane, Bridgetown, BB 11115 University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof. Anselm Hennis, Director, 246 426 6416, [email protected] cardiovascular surveillance, cancer genetic risk factors, mecahnisms of vascular inflammation, chronic non-, Communicable disease risk factors, informing policy

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The University of the West Indies Faculty of Pure & Applied Sciences FPAS Cave Hill Campus, St. Michael, Barbados cavehill.uwi.edu University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Mr., Peter Gibbs, Dean, 246-417-4715, [email protected] Biotechnology, Renewable Energy, Telecommunications, Mobile Applications, Computer Simulations

The University of the West Indies Centre for Resource Management and Environmental Studies CERMES Cave Hill Campus, St. Michael www.cavehill.uwi.edu/cermes University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof., Robin Mahon, Director, 246-417-4570, [email protected] water management, climate change, goverance, fisheries, marine affairs

West Indies Central Sugar Cane Breeding Station WICSCBS Barbados Groves, St. George wicscbs.org Private non-profit. Private. Regional (located also in other regional countries) PhD programmes Dr. Anthony Kennedy, Director, , [email protected] Genetics, Breeding, Selection methods, Statisical analysis experimental design, Sugar cane

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BELIZE Galen University www.galen.edu.bz University or Higher Education. Private. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s) Dr. Henry Alegria Provost/Professor, 501-824-3226, [email protected] Project Management Services, IT Planning, Design, System Selection & Implementation, Environmental & , ecological Studies, Organizational and Management Consulting Services, Strategic Planning, Budgeting & New Development

Ministry of Health Belize POlicy Analysis and Planning Unt PAPU www.health.gov.bz Government Agency. Public. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Ms. Michelle Vanzie, Ag. Director / Health Economist, 822-2059, [email protected]

University OF Belize Faculty of Science and Technology FST Belmopan, Belize, Central America www.ub.edu.bz University or Higher Education. Public. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Dr. Thippi Thiagarajan, Dean, 501-605-1164 [email protected] Watershed Management, Antimicrobial plant products, Plant tissue culture, Organic chemistry, human impact on ,Ecosystems and conservation

University of Belize Environmental Research Institute ERI P.O. Box 340 www.eriub.org University or Higher Education. Private. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s) Dr. Leandra Cho-Ricketts Marine Science Director 501-822-2701 [email protected] Wildlife corridors Marine ecosystem health, Lowland savannah diversity, Fisheries monitoring, Climate change

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CAYMAN ISLANDS Cayman Islands Government, Department of Environment Department of Environment DOE P.O. Box 486, Grand Cayman KY1-1106, Cayman Islands. www.doe.ky Government Agency. Public. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Mr. Timothy Austin, Deputy Director, Research and Assessment, +(345) 949-8469, [email protected] Conservation, Protected areas, Monitoring, Invasive species, Coral reefs

Central Caribbean Marine Institute Little Cayman Research Centre CCMI PO Box 37 http://reefresearch.org Private non-profit. Both. International (located also beyond the Caribbean) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr. Carrie Manfrino, President, 609 933 4559, [email protected] Deep Corals, Recruitment and regeneration, Climate and stress, coral fluorescence, reef monitoring

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DOMINICA Ross University School of Medicine RUSM PO Box 266, Roseau, Dominica http://www.rossu.edu/medical-school/ University or Higher Education. Private. International (located also beyond the Caribbean) No postgraduate programmes Dr. Mary Moore, Chair, Research Committee, 767-445-5355 x6316, [email protected] medical education, community health, biomedical

Institute for Tropical Marine Ecology Inc.(ITME) ITME www.itme.org Private non-profit. Private. National (located only in your country) Research Masters programme(s) Dr. Sascha Steiner, Founder & Director, [email protected], habitat surveys, monitoring, impact assessments, data base development, curriculum development

GRENADA Windward Islands Research & Education Foundation WINDREF P.O. Box 7, St. George's, Grenada http://etalk.sgu.edu/windref/index.html Private non-profit. Both. International (located also beyond the Caribbean) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr. Calum Macpherson, , Director, 473-444-3997, [email protected] Public Health, Tropical Medicine, Climate Change, Renewable Energy,

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GUYANA Guyana Rice Development Board Rice Research Station, Burma GRDB 117 Cowan Street, Kingston, Georgetown http://www.grdb.gy/ Other. Private. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Dr. Mahendra Persaud, Plant Breeder/Chief Scientist, 592-6146234,2321301, [email protected] Varietal improvent, Improved crop management, Diseases management, Integrated Pest Management, High Quality Seed

University of Guyana School of Earth and Environmental Sciences SEES School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Guyana, Turkeyen Campus, Greater Georgetown, Guyana www.uog.edu.gy/sees University or Higher Education. Public. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s) Dr. Paulette Bynoe, Director, 592 222 4180, [email protected] Geographical, Environmental, Policy Formulation and Implementation, Climate Change and the Low Carbon , Development, Urban Planning

University of Guyana Faculty of Agriculture and Forestry FAF Turkeyen Campus, PO Box 101101 www.uog.edu.gy University or Higher Education. Public. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s) Mr. Lawrence Lewis, Dean, 1 592 222 3599, [email protected] Estimating the use of NTFP in communities, The effects of Crabwood seed harvesting on natural predators, Biomass estimation for the ACP countries, Understanding whiteflies assemblages and their natural predators, Microscopic identification of mushrooms in the Upper Potaro Basin & Examining the water quality and community composition on the sea coast of Guyana.

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Iwokrama International Centre for Rain Forest Conservation and Development 77 High Street, Kingston, Georgtown, Guyana, South America www.iwokrama.org International NGO. Private. National (located only in your country) PhD programmes Dr. Raquel Thomas-Caesar, Director, Resource Management and Training, 592 225 1504, [email protected] Biodiversity, Climate and Hydrology, Business Development, Livlihoods and Capacity building, Ecosystem Services

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JAMAICA Institute of Jamaica Natural History Museum of Jamaica NHMJ 10-16 East Street, Kingston www.instituteofjamaica.org.jm Government Agency. Public. National (located only in your country) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Mrs. Tracy Commock, Director, (876) 948-8116 or (876) 922-0620-7, [email protected] Taxonomic, Biodiversity (Endemic, endangered, invasives), Protected areas, Collections Management, Bioinformatics

International Centre for Environmental & Nuclear Sciences ICENS 2 Anguilla Close, University of the West Indies, Mona, Kingston 7 icens.org University or Higher Education. Both. National (located only in your country) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof. Gerald Lalor, Director General, 876 927-1777, [email protected]; [email protected];jm soil geochemistry, lead exposure, cadmium, trace elements

Mona GeoInformatics Institute MGI University of the West Indies, Mona Campus, Kingston 7, Jamaica Www.monagis.com Hybrid R&D and commercial organization. Both. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s) Dr. Parris Lyew-Ayee, Director, 876-977-3160, [email protected] Crime, Natural hazards, Software development, Mapping, GPS

SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH COUNCIL PRODUCT RESEARCH & DEVELOPMENT SRC P.O. BOX 350, HOPE GARDENS, KINGSTON 6 www.src-jamaica.org Government Agency. Public. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Mrs. Ann Marie Smith, MANAGER, (876) 927-1771, [email protected] Bioactivity, nutraceuticals, functional foods, food products, chemical & microbial analysis

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The University of the West Indies The Biotechnology Center Mona Campus, Kingston 7, Jamaica http://myspot.mona.uwi.edu/biotech. University or Higher Education. Both National (located only in your country) Research Masters programme(s),PhD programmes Prof. Roye Ahmad, Director, 1 876 977 1828,, [email protected], [email protected] Microbiology, Genetics, Agro-Technology, Tissue-Culture, Medicine

The University of the West Indies Faculty of Medical Sciences, Mona Campus Mona, Kingston 7 www.mona.uwi.edu University or Higher Education. Public. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof. Archibald McDonald, , Dean, 876-927-2556 [email protected] Chronic non- communicable disease, HIV/ AIDS, Trauma and injuries, Early Childhood Development, Cancer

The University of the West Indies Discovery Bay Marine Laboratory, Centre for Marine Sciences DBML P.O. Box 35 Queen’s Highway Discovery Bay ; St. Ann; JAMAICA http://www.mona.uwi.edu/cms/dbml.htm University or Higher Education. Both. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s),PhD programmes Prof. Dale Webber, Director, 876 935 8835/6, [email protected] reef monitoring, coral gardening, fisheries management, coral bleaching, Lionfish

The University of the West Indies, Mona Campus Faculty of Pure and Applied Sciences FP&AS, UWI Mona Kingston 7, Jamaica http://www.mona.uwi.edu/ University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof., Ishenkumba Kahwa, Dean, 1-876-702-4660, [email protected] stochastic processes, ICT Services, Climate change, viral diseases, natural product

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University of Technology, Jamaica Faculty of Engineering and Computing - Graduate Studies Research and Enterpreneurship FGSRE 237 Old Hope Road KIngston 6 www.utech.edu.jm University or Higher Education. Public. National (located only in your country) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr. Felix Akinladejo, Vice Dean, 1-876-9704309, [email protected], Tribology, Mechanical Engineering, Computer Science, Alternative/Renewable Energy, Internet Security, Identity Management

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MONTSERRAT Montserrat Volcano Observatory MVO Flemmings, Montserrat West Indies www.mvo.ms Government Agency. Both. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Dr. Paul Cole, Director, [email protected] Volcanology, Monitoring, Surveillance, Petrology

ST KITTS & NEVIS Ross University School of Vetinary Medicine Research RUSVM P.O. Box 334 www.rossu.edu University or Higher Education. Private. International (located also beyond the Caribbean) No postgraduate programmes Dr. Rosina Krecek, Associate Dean for Research, 1 869 465 4161, ext 119, [email protected] Public Health, Epidemiology, Zootonic Infections and Parasitic Diseases, Conservation Medicine, Novel Teaching , Methodologies

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ST. LUCIA Ministry of Agriculture, Lands, Forestry and Fisheries Forestry Department MALFF; DFOR MINISTRY OF AGRICULTURE, FORESTRY DEPARTMENT, UNION, BALATA ST. LUCIA Government Agency. Public. National (located only in your country) No postgraduate programmes Mr. Andrew Gaspard, CHIEF FOREST OFFICER, 7584502078;7584685634;7584685635;7585207065, [email protected];[email protected] Sustainable Livelihoods, Participatory, Low costs, Conservation, Rural economy

ST.VINCENT AND THE GRENADINES Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute Root / Tuber Crops and Fruit Crops CARDI CARDI, P.O.Box 594, Kingstown, St.Vincent and the Grenadines www.cardi.org Government Agency. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr. Gregory Robin, CARDI Representative, OECS Technical Coordinator, 1 784 494 2715, 1 268 788 6988, 1 767 616 2715, [email protected] Productivity, , Poast-harvest,Technical assistance, Training, Value adding

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TRINIDAD & TOBAGO Seismic Reseach Centre SRC The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad, W.I. www.uwiseismic.com University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr. Richard Robertson, Director, 868-662-4659 , [email protected] Physical Volcanology, Seismic Hazard and Risk Assessment, Natural Hazard and Risk Communication, ICT , Applications in monitoring geologic hazards, Seismology

Caribbean Epidemiology Centre CAREC/ PAHO/ WHO 16-18 Jamaica Blvd., Federation Pk, Port of Spain, Trinidad www.carec.org International Public Health Agency of PAHO. Both. International (located also beyond the Caribbean) No postgraduate programmes Dr. Beryl Irons, Director, 1 868 622 4261 OR 1 868 622 4262, [email protected] Public Health, Communicable Diseases, Non-Communical Diseases, Mortality Risk Factors

The University of the West Indies Faculty of Medical Sciences UWI The University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad & Tobago, West Indies, Faculty of Medical Sciences, Office of the Dean [email protected] University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof. Samuel Ramsewak, Campus Dean, 1 868 645 3232, [email protected] Diabetes, Asthma, Child Dental Health, Tropical Medicine/ Diseases, Capacity building in HIV/ AIDS treatment, ,

Caribbean Agricultural Research and Development Institute CARDI P.O. Bag 212, University of the West Indies, St. Augustine Campus, St. Augustine, TRINIDAD AND TOBAGO www.cardi.org University or Higher Education. Both. Regional (located also in other regional countries) No postgraduate programmes Dr. H. Arlington Chesney D., Executive Director, 868-645-1205/1206/1207, [email protected] Crops: Roots & Tubers, Hot Peppers, Fruits, Vegetables, Cereals and Grain Legumes, Small Ruminants, Natural Resource Management, New & Emerging Issues

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Caribbean Natural Resources Institute CANARI Fernandes Industrial Compound, Eastern Main Road, Laventille www.canari.org Private non-profit. Both0 Regional (located also in other regional countries) No postgraduate programmes Ms., Nicole Leotaud, Executive Director, 868-626-6062, [email protected], Participation, livelihoods, natural resources, Caribbean,

THE UNIVERSITY OF THE WEST INDIES FACULTY OF SCIENCE AND AGRICULTURE FSA ST. AUGUSTINE, TRINIDAD http://sta.uwi.edu/ University or Higher Education. Public. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof. Dyer Narinesingh, PROFESSOR AND DEAN1-868-662-5012, [email protected] Agri-food Systems, Material Science, Ecosystems services, Alternate energy, ICTs

University of Trinidad and Tobago Office of the Vice Provost UTT O'Meara Industrial Estate, Arima www.edu.tt University or Higher Education. Public. National (located only in your country) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Prof. Adel Sharaf, VICE PROVOST, 18686428888, [email protected] Value Added Research, Technological innovation, Vanguard of Engineering, emerging technologies in the , National and global contexts Post Graduate Studies

U.W.I, St. Augustine Department of Mathematics & Statisitcs DMS St. Augustine Trinidad & Tobago University or Higher Education. Public. Regional (located also in other regional countries) Taught Masters programme(s), Research Masters programme(s), PhD programmes Dr. Shanaz Wahid, HEAD OF DEPARTMENT, 868-498-6007, [email protected], Applied Mathematics, High Performance Computing, E Learning, Fluid Dynamics

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TURKS AND CAICOS ISLANDS The School for Field Studies Center for Marine Resource Studies SFS-CMRS Turks and Caicos Islands 1 West Street, South Caicos, Turks and Caicos Islands www.fieldstudies.org University or Higher Education. Private. International (located also beyond the Caribbean) No postgraduate programmes Dr. John Claydon, Centre Director, +1 649 332 3365, [email protected] Lionfish, Fisheries, socio-econ, tourism, tropical marine systems,

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