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DSA UK

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Title: Comparison between the SA and Australian experimental approach Author: USER Last modified by: SCI Guest01 Created Date: 10/7/2002 12:17:20 PM – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DSA UK


1
DSA UK 3rd November 2012 What Constitutes
Effective Research Capacity Building? Lessons
emerging from a national-level initiative
involving Irish HEIs.
2
Introduction
  • Speakers
  • Prof Ronnie Munck, Dublin City University
  • Mr Peter McEvoy, Dublin City University
  • Ms Arleen Folan, Dundalk Institute of Technology
  • Dr Ogenna Uduma, Trinity College Dublin

3
Irish African Partnershipfor Research Capacity
Building IAP
Harnessing Knowledge for
Poverty Reduction
4
IAP offshoot of Universities
Irelandapex-level body of 11 institutions
  • Contribution of IAP
  • Internationalisation strategies more aligned
    with development thinking
  • Contributed visibly to social responsibility
    profile of universities
  • Added value to the work of individual
    universities by working at Ireland Inc level
  • Connected science and innovation, learning and
    teaching and research in the service of
    development

DkIT DIT
5
IAP Project Aims
  • To build individual institutional capacity in
    development-responsive research in the Irish
    universities
  • To build capacity in health, education, gender
    and ICT research with the four partner African
    universities
  • In the longer term, to develop an
    inter-institutional Irish-African development
    research capacity platform

6
IAP Project Philosophy
  • RCB contributing to poverty reduction and the
    MDGs
  • as decision-making becomes more
    knowledge-intensive, Higher Education has a vital
    role to play - alongside government and wider
    civil society - in promoting human development
  • Global Sustainable Development requires full
    participation by Africa in the knowledge
    society
  • HEIs as generators of evidence-based research,
    policy advice and training relevant to
    development agenda
  • HEIs strengthen civil society and reflective
    public policy networking with local communities
    and NGOs.

7
Products of IAP
  • Stakeholder Consultation Report on current status
    of development research capacity in Irish and
    African partner universities
  • Foresight analysis of health and education needs
  • Metrics package for Research Capacity Building
  • Webportal for community of practice in
    international development
  • Regional residential workshops on research
    management (Malawi 2010 and Dar es Salaam 2011)
  • Publication of a research capacity building
    manual and a series of academic articles (e.g.
    published by EUA)

8
Factors conducive to institutional-level Research
Capacity Building 1
  • Development of an embedded and socially-responsive
    research culture in HEIs, recognising the
    contribution of research to effective teaching,
    learning and civic engagement
  • The establishment and effective functioning of a
    Research Office to take research from
    conceptualisation through to dissemination, and
    manage the research process across the
    institution
  • Increased activity of international North-South
    and South-South partnerships and networking
  • The development of effective research
    infrastructure, in particular electronic
    connectivity facilitating on-line access to
    global research and publications databases
  • Enhanced research training, in particular through
    more and better structured modalities of
    postgraduate formation and stronger foundation in
    research methods (quantitative, qualitative,
    critical thinking) and cross disciplinary
    collaboration

9
Factors conducive to institutional-level Research
Capacity Building 2
  • Increased research funding, and more
    diversified sources of research grants.
  • N-S co-authorship of research publications, in
    particular in peer-reviewed journals but also in
    policy-relevant outlets
  • An increase in the number of women entering and
    remaining in research careers with clear support
    mechanisms to do so along with learning
    innovation and civic engagement missions
  • A well developed process of dissemination of
    research findings, in particular through linkages
    with evidence based development policy and
    practice
  • Greater emphasis on the need to relate research
    to major global challenges - poverty reduction,
    better quality of life and resilience to climate
    change.

10
What now?....
  • Even though funding expired, IAP continues as an
    inter-institutional network, focused on RCB
  • Learning is being disseminated into
  • New phase of Irish Aid Programme of Strategic
    Cooperation
  • EU-Africa DocLinks project funded by Erasmus
    Mundus
  • Encourage university sector and development
    sector unifying initiatives, such as DSA Ireland
  • Brain Retain - distance mentoring of research
    students / early career researchers in Africa
  • www.irishafricanpartnership.ie

11
Water is Life
  • Funded by Irish Aid/HEA Programme for Strategic
    Co-operation
  • Goal of this programme
  • to build research capacity in Ireland and Africa
    in relation to safe and sustainable water
    provision in Africa
  • Water is Life - 5 year programme - 2009 to 2014
  • Large numbers of partners - both Southern and
    Northern

12
Key activities
  • Develop appropriate activities in the area of
    water resource sustainability monitor its
    effects on community health, gender poverty
    through a combination of 8 PhD research projects
    community engagement
  • Support research with a water-centred focus
  • Examine water sourcing, distribution
    sanitation
  • Assess impact on community health gender
  • Engage community interest support
  • Generation and provision of an appropriate GIS
    database and,
  • Ultimately inform a jointly developed taught
    Masters degree programme (Ireland/Uganda).

13
Key features
  • Inter / Intra institutional
  • Multi- / Trans-disciplinary
  • Research in the field
  • Multiple levels of engagement
  • academic, state, community and policy influencers
  • Top-down and bottom-up approach
  • Focus on policy implementation - from practice to
    policy

14
Water is Life embodies coordination across all
levels of disciplines
Water is Life approach
produce sound and societally relevant
research through active collaboration
capacity building promote strong N-S
partnerships provide evidence for decision
making engagement policy dialogue
education adaptive management technology
advances hydrology anthropology health
science engineering geography sociology
political science
What should we do? How to do what we want to do?
What we want to do
What we are capable of doing
What exists
adapted from MaxNeef (2005)
15
WIL - tangible outcomes
  • Doctoral training (collaborative approach)
  • 8 African researchers
  • Production of joint N-S Masters
  • Cert. in Sustainable Water Management
  • Publications
  • Journal articles (at least 10)
  • Project book
  • Spatial database
  • Policy briefs
  • International /national colloquia / conference
    presentations
  • Ongoing public engagement / community training

16
Project schedule
Ongoing collaboration and dissemination
Feb 2010
Nov 2010
Aug 2012
Jan 2010
Dec 2011
Nov 2012
Student recruitment
Student initiation training (Ireland)
1st WIL workshop (Uganda)
Research-informed module development for joint
N-S Masters
External WIL mid-term review
2nd WIL workshop (Ireland)
  • Cert. in Sust. Water Management
  • Agreed work plans
  • Identification of cross-cutting themes
  • Cementing of partnerships
  • Ongoing production of spatial
    database
  • Collation and analysis of localised health
    database
  • Student fieldwork ongoing
  • Collaborative supervision
  • Various conference presentations
  • Production of peer reviewed papers

17
Learning to date
Challenge WIL response
Ensuring partner and stakeholder buy-in (including supervisory arrangements) Set the agenda together including defined roles and responsibilities Determine most appropriate channels/methods of communication for each stakeholder group at an early stage Monitor commitment (accountability) Agree on an MOU and a strategic plan
Ensure mutual learning Acknowledge cultural backgrounds of all partners involved Shared ownership of all outcomes Promote platforms for exchange of outcomes - appropriate to stakeholder groups Direct exposure of North and South participants to broad range of partner expertise
PhD completion North and South supervisory arrangements (joint supervision) Frequent supervisory visits Realistic stipends and travel allowances (rate per country) 4 year completion targets
18
Learning to date
Challenge WIL response
Effective implemetation of research results Ensure societal relevance (initial goal) Ongoing dialogue - academic, community, policy level, etc. Speak the language of the end-user
Sustainability and legacy Prevention of brain-drain Enhanced visibility of Southern academic partners through impact peer-reviewed publications Creation and expansion of networks within the network Plan a future sequence of projects from these alliances Provision of robust research findings that can inform decision-making for the future benefit of the end-users (rural Ugandan communities)
19
Strengthening higher education in and for
Africa
  • Collaborative delivery with African partners of
    doctoral training focussed on students based in
    Africa
  • Raising awareness and building development skills
    of Ireland-based doctoral students
  • Analysis, evaluation and communication managed by
    a new institutional platform for development
  • Co-funded by Irish Aid under the Programme for
    Strategic Cooperation between Irish Aid and
    Higher Education and Research Institutes 2007-11.

20
Three partnership models
  • Multilateral Indigo International Doctorate in
    Global Health
  • Bilateral TCD and Makerere University
    (Environment and Medicine). One co-registered
    doctoral student from Makerere in the field of
    wetlands and climate change.
  • Africa-led African Economics Research
    Consortium (AERC) . TCD Teaching in the CPP.

21
Current status
  • Multilateral
  • 12 Indigo students now registered at TCD (6
    funded by Irish Aid) from Ethiopia, Malawi,
    Uganda, Nigerian, Finland, Sudan, Ireland, Canada
    and United States.
  • Bilateral
  • One student currently in his fourth year in
    Makarere and visiting TCD in September.
  • AERC
  • Two students currently in their fourth year. TCD
    staff contributing in the CPP

22
Review
  • Semi- structured interviews with all partners,
    supervisors and students in all model.
  • Multilateral 37, bilateral 5, African-led 11 and
    11 Externals
  • SWOT Analysis

23
African - led SWOT
Strengths Good partnership model Strengthens economics training in local universities in Africa Contributes to capacity building and economic development in Africa CPP Biannual conference Cost effective Weaknesses   Funding structure AERC strong emphasis on the course work (CPP) and not on the overall research process Non Standardisation of PhD Lack of adequate Infrastructure
Opportunities Unmet demand for PhD in the South due to lack of resources Building on collaborative networks Knowledge exchange Threats   Current Financial climate Enabling environment High management costs
24
Bilateral SWOT
Strengths Equitable partnership structure Supervision Model Student Centred Cost effective and a good sandwich programme Weaknesses Limited capacity of the programme Nature, timing and planning of the sandwich programme  
Opportunities   Scale up and broaden the programme Threats   Small scale of the programme Funding
25
Multilateral SWOT
Strengths   Innovative nature of the programme Sandwich nature of the programme Capacity building element of the programme Programme design and structure Weaknesses   Institutional Challenges Managing partners and expectations Financial Constraints Programme design and structure
Opportunities   Need to build health research capacity in the South Focus on Southern led initiatives and joint partnerships Threats   Funding and research infrastructure Building and maintaining equitable partnerships
26
Recommendations
  • The needs, motivations, and expectations of each
    of the groups involved in this type of programme
    should be articulated and attended to from the
    start.
  • The systems within which the programmes are being
    established should also be understood and
    articulated including constraints and resources
    available.
  • The added value of participating in a network,
    particularly an international network, beyond the
    individual student and supervisor was emphasised
    by participants across all models .
  • The selection of students, supervisors and
    research topics are crucial stages and should be
    considered carefully.
  • The selection of junior staff members who have
    existing positions in Southern universities to
    participate in PhD programmes is aligned with
    core objectives of research capacity building.

27
Recommendations contd.
  • The objectives of the programme should help
    determine the degree of input individual
    supervisors, students and a wider advisory group
    should have to the topic.
  • Research topics should match the particular
    objectives of the programme.
  • Good project planning and communication is
    crucial to the success of the programme
    throughout.
  • All partners should be involved in the earliest
    stages of planning to build the foundation for
    equal partnership.
  • Each of the models of partnership builds capacity
    and is a worthwhile investment in the development
    of African education systems.
  • Continued investment is recommended.

28
Overall conclusions
  • What do we mean by partnership over and above the
    rhetoric?
  • How does higher education feed into
    socio-economic development and poverty reduction
    in practice?
  • Who sets the development research agenda and
    decides on priorities?
  • Is the Northern/Western model of higher education
    relevant/replicable in  Sub Saharan Africa?
  • Is there an 'Irish' model of research capacity
    building?

29
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