Kropf Simone Petraglia, Azevedo Nara
Departamento de Pesquisa em História das Ciências e da Saúde, Casa de Oswaldo Cruz/Fundação Oswaldo Cruz. Av. Brasil 4365, Manguinhos. 21040-900 Rio de Janeiro RJ Brasil.
Cien Saude Colet. 2024 Oct;29(10):e02612024. doi: 10.1590/1413-812320242910.02612024. Epub 2024 Apr 15.
This article analyzes the Integrated Endemic Disease Program (PIDE), which was established in 1973 by the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development CNPq, financed by the Brazilian Funding Authority for Studies and Projects FINEP. The program was established to finance research on diseases considered strategic to the economic development plans of the military regime (1964-1985). Acknowledged to be a landmark program in the history of Brazilian parasitology, PIDE was set up during a period when the dictatorship was both violently repressing scholars and investing heavily in science and technology (S&T). The article examines the context in which the program was implemented and analyzes what it signified for planners in the S&T field and for the scientists who coordinated it. The contention is that PIDE was an example of how the scientific community managed to use financial and institutional resources available under the S&T policy in the 1970s to advance research on parasitic diseases and update its agenda. This analysis contributes to recent historiography that, based on specific historical cases, reflects on the paradoxical nature of a regime that, in its authoritarian modernization project, simultaneously persecuted scientists and supported science.
本文分析了综合地方病项目(PIDE),该项目由巴西国家科学技术发展委员会(CNPq)于1973年设立,由巴西研究与项目资助局(FINEP)提供资金。该项目旨在资助对军政府(1964 - 1985年)经济发展计划具有战略意义的疾病研究。PIDE被认为是巴西寄生虫学史上的一个里程碑项目,它设立于独裁政权既暴力镇压学者又大力投资科学技术的时期。本文考察了该项目实施的背景,并分析了它对科技领域的规划者以及协调该项目的科学家意味着什么。本文的论点是,PIDE是科学界如何利用20世纪70年代科技政策下可用的财政和机构资源来推进寄生虫病研究并更新其议程的一个例子。这一分析为近期的史学研究做出了贡献,该史学研究基于具体历史案例,反思了一个政权在其威权现代化项目中同时迫害科学家和支持科学的矛盾本质。