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Appropriate technology
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===E. F. Schumacher=== Despite these early examples, [[E. F. Schumacher|Dr. Ernst Friedrich "Fritz" Schumacher]] is credited as the founder of the appropriate technology movement. A well-known economist, Schumacher worked for the British National Coal Board for more than 20 years, where he blamed the size of the industry's operations for its uncaring response to the harm [[Black lung disease|black-lung disease]] inflicted on the miners.<ref name=Akubue /> However it was his work with developing countries, such as [[India]] and [[Burma]], which helped Schumacher form the underlying principles of appropriate technology. Schumacher first articulated the idea of "intermediate technology," now known as appropriate technology, in a 1962 report to the Indian Planning Commission in which he described India as long in labor and short in capital, calling for an "intermediate industrial technology"<ref name=mcrobie>{{cite book|last=McRobie|first=George|title=Small Is Possible|year=1981|publisher=Harper & Row|location=New York|isbn=0-06-013041-5|page=[https://archive.org/details/smallispossible0000mcro/page/19 19]|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/smallispossible0000mcro/page/19}}</ref> that harnessed India's labor surplus. Schumacher had been developing the idea of intermediate technology for several years prior to the Planning Commission report. In 1955, following a stint as an economic advisor to the government of Burma, he published the short paper "Economics in a Buddhist Country," his first known critique of the effects of Western economics on developing countries.<ref name=mcrobie /> In addition to Buddhism, Schumacher also credited his ideas to Gandhi. Initially, Schumacher's ideas were rejected by both the Indian government and leading development economists. Spurred to action over concern the idea of intermediate technology would languish, Schumacher, George McRobie, [[Mansur Hoda]]<ref name=Guardian>[https://www.theguardian.com/news/2001/mar/05/guardianobituaries2], [[The Guardian]] obituary, 5 March 2001.</ref> and Julia Porter brought together a group of approximately 20 people to form the [[Intermediate Technology Development Group]] (ITDG) in May 1965. Later that year, a Schumacher article published in ''[[The Observer]]'' garnered significant attention and support for the group. In 1967, the group published the ''Tools for Progress: A Guide to Small-scale Equipment for Rural Development'' and sold 7,000 copies. ITDG also formed panels of experts and practitioners around specific technological needs (such as building construction, energy and water) to develop intermediate technologies to address those needs.<ref name=mcrobie /> At a conference hosted by the ITDG in 1968 the term "intermediate technology" was discarded in favor of the term "appropriate technology" used today. Intermediate technology had been criticized as suggesting the technology was inferior to advanced (or high) technology and not including the social and political factors included in the concept put forth by the proponents.<ref name=Akubue /> In 1973, Schumacher described the concept of appropriate technology to a mass audience in his influential work ''[[Small Is Beautiful: A Study of Economics As If People Mattered]]''.
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