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An Assessment of the Small Business Innovation Research Program at the National Institutes of Health
The Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program was created in 1982 through the Small Business Innovation Development Act. As the SBIR program approached its twentieth year of operation, the U.S. Congress requested the National Research Council (NRC) of the National Academies to “conduct a comprehensive study of how the SBIR program has stimulated technological innovation and used small businesses to meet Federal research and develop- ment needs” and to make recommendations with respect to the SBIR program. Mandated as a part of SBIR’s reauthorization in late 2000, the NRC study has assessed the SBIR program as administered at the five federal agencies that together make up some 96 percent of SBIR program expenditures. The agencies, in order of program size are the Department of Defense, the National Institutes of Health, the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Department of Energy, and the National Science Foundation. Based on that legislation, and after extensive consultations with both Con- gress and agency officials, the NRC focused its study on two overarching ques- tions.1 First, how well do the agency SBIR programs meet four societal objectives
CHARLES W. WESSNER - Personal Name
978-0-309-10951-2
NONE
Business Policy and Strategy
English
2009
1-457
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