Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7334749 | Social Science & Medicine | 2014 | 27 Pages |
Abstract
Although inequalities in the global knowledge economy are probably perpetuated primarily by macro-level factors, in line with Dependency Theory, meso-level factors are also important. The current research market and institutional structures in Uganda appear to create career paths that seriously impede the development of high quality social science research capacity, undermining donor investments and professional effort to strengthen this capacity. These problems are probably generic to much of sub-Saharan Africa. However, both commissioning and research organizations seem ready, in principle, to establish national guidelines for institutional research consultancies. These could develop both institutional and individual research capacity, improve output and accountability, and facilitate academic research funding and indigenous research agendas.
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Authors
Daniel Wight, Josephine Ahikire, Joy C. Kwesiga,