New Platform Facilitates International Research Collaboration to Help Solve our Biggest Global Challenges

Editor’s Note: March’19 post by Andy Nobes, Programme Officer for Research Development and Support at INASP

For those who are privileged to be able to access around-the-clock online news, social media, and international research literature, it’s impossible not to have noticed that the world is faced with multiple major threats — ‘wicked problems’ as they are often called. The challenge of sustainable energy, the threat of climate change and infectious diseases, and poverty are truly global challenges more now than ever, affecting both the Global North and South.

Innovative scientific and academic research that combines talent across international borders has the potential to solve many of these problems. As Professor Tyrone Pretorius, vice-chancellor of the University of the Western Cape in South Africa, has rightly pointed out:

“It will not be a single scientist working in isolation in his or her laboratory that will make an impact on the challenges.”

International collaboration, as measured by co-authorships, has continued to increase and broaden geographically over the previous decade, and research outputs in the Global South have also increased, although they still make up a small percentage of global outputs. For example, Sub Saharan Africa apparently accounts for less than 1% of global output (which is nevertheless double what it was a decade ago), while representing 12% of the global population, hinting at a significant research potential that is yet to be fully realized.

Digital globe

BARRIERS TO THE PARTICIPATION OF THE GLOBAL SOUTH

Some of the brightest and best (and well-connected) researchers in the Global South are already able to take advantage of collaborative opportunities. However, finding overseas research partners and opportunities are significant challenges in the South, exacerbated by institutional funding to travel and attend conferences being very limited.

In addition, while there are a growing number of digital tools for collaboration, researchers in the South are not always in a position to fully utilize them due to low internet bandwidth and limited digital literacy skills. ResearchGate is commonly used by researchers, but it’s more likely to be used for profile building, archiving, and sharing papers. Online tools such as Authorea and OverLeaf provide innovative solutions in collaborative writing for researchers, but only if researchers have found suitable partners to work with beforehand.

Another challenge is that research in the South is often dependent on foreign funding for research projects, which can dictate research agendas and requires researchers to have strong proposal writing skills (in English, of course). In some cases, funding calls require research partners in specific fields or regions in which they have no existing contacts. I have responded to emails in the last few months from researchers in Africa who wanted to apply for a funding call (with a challenging deadline) that would fund their current research idea but they needed, and were struggling to find, an eligible European university with which to partner.

And it is not just ‘North/South’ collaboration that is crucially important. Recent research has identified a very real need for increased ‘South/South’ partnerships to overcome challenges unique to the Global South. Establishing such connections is equally as challenging.

At INASP (where I work as a Programme Officer in our Research Development and Support team), we’ve been attempting to address many of these issues through the AuthorAID project, which celebrated its tenth anniversary last year. Our website provides a free support platform for researchers with an online mentoring system, and free resources and online courses in proposal writing and research communication. The platform is currently used by more than 17,000 global researchers – mostly from Africa, Asia and Latin America. Over the past year, more than 3,200 of these members (and 99% of new members since the option has been available) have marked themselves on their online profile as ‘open to collaboration’ in a wide number of different development topics including agriculture, healthcare/medicine, environmental sciences, and business.

In addition, a survey of members we carried out in 2017 found that the majority (95%) of researchers in the Global South need help and support in finding research collaborators. Respondents identified a need for some form of online space for thematic discussions around collaboration topics, and an interactive platform for researchers to post details of their research and/or funding, and seek collaborators.

Many researchers in our community want to collaborate with a wide range of other stakeholders, both in-country and internationally, in their own subject area and in multi-disciplinary work. They want to embark on ambitious research projects that address the development problems they see in their own countries, but they don’t always have the capacity, contacts and resources (or the know-how to jump through bureaucratic funding hoops) of those in the Global North to make these research goals a reality. The key skills that survey respondents say they look for in collaborators include writing, applying for funding, and international experience.

On top of these findings, another challenge that was identified was maintaining research relationships once they had been established. Many researchers reported that, after successfully finding collaborators, projects quite often broke down, or communication and enthusiasm fizzled out. There was not always clarity in roles and responsibilities (particularly around funding and authorship), setting goals, and project scheduling, perhaps due to lack of experience in these areas. Researchers expressed a need for advice and resources/frameworks on the increasingly complex world of cross-border, cross-cultural relationships and power balances.

In response to these findings, we have further developed the AuthorAID online platform with a new forum area. This includes a ‘Research Collaboration Space’ that offers an opportunity for researchers to post details of their research projects and put out a call for collaborators. The new platform is intended as both a collaboration hub and a support network. It sits alongside a forum for research communication discussion and support, which is moderated by experienced volunteer mentors and facilitators. It also sits alongside a forum for finding and sharing funding, scholarships, and other opportunities, which is crowd-sourced by the AuthorAID community. There are also sub-forums for women researchers, librarians and journal editors.

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