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Response To Maurice Iwu’s Rejoinder On The Sale Of Nigeria’s Collective Inheritance
That Professor Iwu is a world renowned researcher in the field of Pharmacognosy is in no doubt, should we even restrict our judgement to his professional and well articulated response. I would have refrained from further questioning of his eloquent submissions, but, for the fact, that like him, I happen to share the strong conviction that, indeed, younger Nigerian and African scientists must not be misled; I would, however, sharply deviate from Professor Iwu at this point. Professor Iwu chose to respond to my article so that younger scientist may not be “misled into believing that it is wrong to conduct research on natural products and patent the products of such research.” I have chosen to respond to him, so that younger Nigerian scientists will not be misled by their older peers in consolidating a scientific culture that has perpetuated gross underdevelopment and poverty across the continent of Africa. I fear that upcoming researchers, if not shown the right path, would –unintentionally - be misinformed by their senior colleagues in the continuous promotion of the dependency paradigm that have been largely perpetuated in the name of scholarly research, and extolled as achievements.
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Response To Maurice Iwu’s Rejoinder On The Sale Of Nigeria’s Collective Inheritance|
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