Free Standard AU & NZ Shipping For All Book Orders Over $80!
Register      Login
Historical Records of Australian Science Historical Records of Australian Science Society
The history of science, pure and applied, in Australia, New Zealand and the southwest Pacific
RESEARCH ARTICLE (Open Access)

Promoting Australian industry: CSIRO 1949–79

Garrett Upstill A
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Faculty of Business and Law, Centre for Transformative Innovation, Swinburne University of Technology, PO Box 218, Hawthorn, Vic. 3122, Australia. Email: hupstill@swin.edu.au

Historical Records of Australian Science 30(1) 1-11 https://doi.org/10.1071/HR18016
Published: 6 December 2018

Journal compilation © Australian Academy of Science 2019 Open Access CC BY-NC-ND

Abstract

This paper addresses the manner in which the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO) transferred its technology to Australian industry during the period 1949 to 1979. The analysis is framed within the changing economic and political scene in Australia and the changing expectations for public research organisations such as CSIRO. During the 1950s and 1960s CSIRO gave little direct attention to the processes of technology transfer but instead, following the prevailing wisdom, focused on high quality science and relied on existing extension services and patenting to capture the benefits from its research. This ‘science-push’ approach proved successful for Australia’s rural industries but, with a few exceptions, less so for the country’s secondary industries. By the early 1970s CSIRO faced pressures for change, induced by a tougher economic climate and changing views on the role of public research institutions. A shift toward greater customer relevance in its research would also need to be matched by new thinking about technology transfer.


References

Australian Academy of Technological Sciences and Engineering (1988) Technology in Australia, 1788–1988, Melbourne. Updated online version available at http://www.austehc.unimelb.edu.au/tia/titlepage.html viewed 31 May 2018.

Australian Treasury (2001) Australia’s century since Federation at a glance, Economic Roundup, (1), 53–63.

Bastow, S. H. (1964) Research in the manufacturing industry in Australia, Journal of the Institution of Engineers, Australia, 36, N39.

Bear, I. J., Biegler, T., and Scott, T. R. (2001) Alumina to Zirconia: the History of the CSIRO Division of Mineral Chemistry, Melbourne.

Birch, A. J. (1977) Report of the Independent Inquiry into CSIRO, Commonwealth of Australia Parliamentary Paper 283/1977, Canberra.

Boardman, K. (2001) ‘The pace of change in science and innovation’, in Year Book Australia 2001, Australian Bureau of Statistics.

Bush, V. (1945) The Endless Frontier: a Report to the President, New York.

Collins, D. J., Simpson, G. W., Solomon, D. H., and Spurling, T. H. (2004) James Robert Price 1912–1999, Historical Records of Australian Science, 15, 95–120.
James Robert Price 1912–1999Crossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Collis, B. (2002) Fields of Discovery: Australia’s CSIRO, Sydney.

Commonwealth of Australia (1949) Science and Industry Research Act 1949, Acts of Parliament 1901–1950, Canberra, paragraph 9(a).

Commonwealth of Australia (1978) Science and Industry Research Act (as amended 1978).

Currie, G., and Graham, J. (1966) The Origins of CSIRO: Science and the Commonwealth Government 1901–1926, Melbourne.

Gillitzer, C., and Kearns, J. (2005) ‘Long-term patterns in Australia’s terms of trade, Research Discussion Paper 2005–01’, Reserve Bank of Australia.

Grant, P. A. (1977) ‘Technology transfer concepts in CSIRO’, in-house report to the CSIRO Patents, Licenses and Contracts Committee, July.

Harrison, H. P. (1957) ‘Aspects of the Administration of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organization’, PhD Thesis, Australian National University, pp. 155–178.

Hounsell, D. (1996) ‘The evolution of industrial research in the United States’, in Engines of Innovation: U.S. Industrial Research at the End of an Era, eds R. S. Rosenbloom and W. J. Spencer, Boston, pp. 13–85.

Keating, M. (2014) ‘The Evolution of Australian Macroeconomic Strategy since World War II’, in Cambridge Economic History of Australia, eds S. Ville and G. Withers, Cambridge, pp. 438–462.

McKay, A. (1976) Surprise and Enterprise: Fifty Years of Science for Australia, Melbourne.

Murray, K. A. H. (1957) Report of the Australian Universities Commission on Australian Universities, Canberra.

OECD (1974) OECD Examiners Report of Science and Technology in Australia, Paris.

OECD (1989) The Changing Role of Government Research Laboratories, Paris.

Price, J. R. (1976) CSIRO: Fifty years of research: Looking to the future, Nature, 261, 631–632.
CSIRO: Fifty years of research: Looking to the futureCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |

Rothschild, V. (1971) A Framework for Government Research and Development: Presented to Parliament by the Lord Privy Seal, London.

Roussel, P. A., Saad, K. N., and Erickson, T. J. (1991) Third Generation R&D: Managing the Link to Corporate Strategy, Cambridge, MA.

Schedvin, C. B. (1987) Shaping Science and Industry: a History of Australia’s Council for Scientific and Industrial Research 1926–1949, Sydney.

Schedvin, C. B. (1989) CSIRO: What went right? What went wrong?, Australian Physicist, 26, 211–215.

Solomon, D., and Spurling, T. (2014) The Plastic Banknote: from Concept to Reality, Collingwood, Vic.

Stevens, G. (2008) ‘The Australian economy: Then and Now’, Reserve Bank Governor Address at University of Sydney, May 2008. https://www.rba.gov.au/speeches/2008/sp-gov-150508.html, viewed 15 May 2018.

Stokes, D. E. (1997) Pasteur’s Quadrant: Basic Science and Technological Innovation, Washington, D. C.

Walsh, A. (1973) Invention and innovation, Search, 4, 69–74.

White, F. W. G. (1976) A personal account of the historical development of CSIRO, Nature, 261, 633–636.
A personal account of the historical development of CSIROCrossref | GoogleScholarGoogle Scholar |