• Research excellence is a neo-colonial agenda (and what might be done about it)

    Author(s):
    Cameron Neylon (see profile)
    Date:
    2019
    Group(s):
    Cultural Studies, HuMetricsHSS
    Subject(s):
    Publishers and publishing, Higher education and state, Imperialism
    Item Type:
    Book chapter
    Tag(s):
    research evaluation, excellence, Development, Publishing, Higher education policy, Colonialism
    Permanent URL:
    http://dx.doi.org/10.17613/bta3-6g96
    Abstract:
    Research “excellence” is a central target of policy, researchers and institutions. Increasingly it is a target of criticism for the way in which it reinforces systemic biases in power, reduces diversity, and excludes many participants from the processes of scholarship. In this chapter I argue that in the context of post- colonial and transitional countries research excellence is particularly dangerous because it represents a neo-colonial agenda, one in which powerful actors at the traditional centres of western scholarship are imposing systems, infrastructures and services that will enable expropriation and dominance. The term “neo-colonial” is deployed deliberately to emphasise that this is a new cycle of imposing imperial systems on post-colonial and transitional nations that damage the ability to create or preserve local institutions that support knowledge production for society. Using the Sabato-Botana Triangle as a model to describe and analyse interconnectedness among local systems of industry, knowledge production and government the paper will examine how an over-emphasis on international, or non- local, connections is damaging to research systems and society more broadly. The “Research Excellence” agenda systematically privileges and reinforces connections between local knowledge production and “international” power centres. Addressing this will require building new infrastructures, institutions and culture that privilege an “interconnectedness of the local” and track and reward the information flows that strengthen local ties, and to build trust and credibility in locally relevant and valuable scholarship.
    Notes:
    Neylon, C (forthcoming). Research excellence is a neo-colonial agenda (and what might be done about it). In E Kraemer-Mbula, R Tijssen, M Wallace & R McLean (eds), Transforming Research Excellence. Cape Town: African Minds.
    Metadata:
    Status:
    Published
    Last Updated:
    4 years ago
    License:
    Attribution
    Share this:

    Downloads

    Item Name: pdf neylon-in-transforming-research-excellence.pdf
      Download View in browser
    Activity: Downloads: 683