Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (New Zealand)
Former government science agency of New Zealand From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Former government science agency of New Zealand From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Department of Scientific and Industrial Research (DSIR) was a government science agency in New Zealand, founded in 1926 and broken into Crown Research Institutes in 1992.
Agency overview | |
---|---|
Formed | 1926 |
Preceding agencies |
|
Dissolved | 1 April 1992 |
Superseding agency |
|
Employees | 2,000 in 1976[1] |
Minister responsible |
DSIR was founded in 1926 by Ernest Marsden[1] after calls from Ernest Rutherford for government to support education and research[2] and on the back of the Imperial Economic Conference in London in October and November 1923, when various colonies discussed setting up such departments.[3] It initially received funding from sources such as the Empire Marketing Board.[4] The initial plans also included a new agricultural college, to be jointly founded by Auckland and Victoria University Colleges, Palmerston North was chosen as the site for this and it grew to become Massey University.[5]
DSIR initially had five divisions:[6]
The later Antarctic Division became Antarctica New Zealand in 1996.[8]
The Grasslands Division originally included the New Zealand Dairy Research Institute, which became the Fonterra Research and Development Centre in 2001.[9]
The following is a list of Directors-General (Chief Executive) of DSIR:[10]
Reconstituted into initially 10 semi-independent entities called Crown Research Institutes by the Crown Research Institutes Act 1992, with some further consolidation since.[11]