This document discusses collaboration in doctoral education and international research. It notes the increasing technological capabilities that enable greater collaboration. It also notes the growth in doctoral education and research in countries like China, India, and Brazil. However, it states that while the research landscape is becoming more multipolar with new hubs, it is not necessarily more inclusive. It argues that creating an inclusive global research community requires building capacity through collaborations between equal partners. However, there is a risk that collaborations could reinforce existing hierarchies if not properly structured to foster self-sustainability and local investment in developing countries.
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Collaborative Doctoral Education and Research Globally
1.
2. Collaboration in doctoral education
and in common
research
Dr Thomas Jorgensen
European University Association
29 March 2017
UNIMED Week
3. …3…
Brief Profile of EUA
• Established in 2001
• Non-governmental membership
organisation
• 750 individual university
members
• 34 National Rectors’ Conferences
Members
• 47 countries
• Independent voice for the
university sector
4. Long-term trends in international research
• Technological possibilities
Revolution in gathering and sharing data
Ease of communication (email, Skype, teleconferences)
Ease of physical mobility
• Large investment in research and development in
emerging economies in the 2000s
China, India and Brazil prominent
Large increases in doctoral education – Brazil 100 %
increase 2000-2009, China 400 % (!) 1998-2008
• Beginnings of a more multipolar research landscape?
• Global convergences?
…4…
5. Convergence I - Discourse
• The language of the knowledge society has become
global
Challenges are to be met with new knowledge and innovation
CODOC survey responses:
• “[Doctoral education] is key. It is the basis of innovative
and research interventions in society’s problems” (South
Africa)
• “Doctoral education is very important since it is the driving
force towards societal and economic development.
Additionally, societal and economic development require
knowledge societies that are based on high skilled human
resources” (Malaysia)
• ”Extremely important in the current world of global
knowledge society, where the complexities of world and
local problems require people with high level education to
solve them” (Tanzania)
…5…
6. Convergence II - Growth
• We have seen remarkable growth over the last decade
…6…
90
100
110
120
130
140
150
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Growth in doctorates awarded in the EU, USA and
Latin America 2004=100
European Union (27
countries)
United States
Latin America
7. Convergence III - Collaborations
• Collaborations were emphasised in the regional reports, in
the CODOC survey and workshops
…7…
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Africa Asia Latin America
How important is doctoral education in relation to
internationalisation at your institution?
Very important
Rather important
Rather unimportant
8. Multipolar or inclusive global research
community?
• Particularly the rise of Asia has made global research
multipolar, but
• The share of highly cited publications have not
changed between the big players
About half are produced in the US, UK, and Germany
China less than 10 %
• Multipolar has meant adding a few more,
concentrated hubs
Shanghai, Sao Paulo, Seoul
• Few indications that it has made the global
community more inclusive
9. Source: Science, Research and Innovation performance of
the EU, DG RTD 2016
Little change in co-publication outside main
players
10. How can we approach an inclusive research
community
• Creating a more level playing field
Having more countries and institutions to work as equal partners
Including research perspectives from across the world
Allowing local talent to develop
• Building capacity
On the system level – autonomy, quality assurance, funding, governance
On the institutional level – management capacity, know-how
Concrete research projects
11. Attaining capacity through collaborations
• Self-sustainable research at an international level is
increasingly difficult
Some disciplines are too expensive to be run in one institution (high-
energy physics)
Researchers are increasingly sharing work across institutional
boundaries (Open science/Science 2.0)
Financing tends to favour the strong (excellence schemes)
• Rankings are enforcing hierarchies, competition and
collaboration
Universities seek allies to strengthen their ‘brand’
International research is a factor in rankings (and in performance-
based funding)
12. Collaboration for capacity building I
• There needs to be more than mobility from strong to
weak partner (more than outsourcing)
14. Sharing in partnerships can work...
• Ideally, they could lead towards self-sustainability
• ... but there are pitfalls
The temptation of ‘outsourcing’_ research is accredited to the sending
institution, but produced at the host institution
No creation of self-sustainability
The collaboration is dominated by the strong institution (and the
funder)
• ... and it does not happen by itself
The sending institution must assess if it is ready for the partnership
There needs to be local investment in institutions
There needs to be an awareness of what is needed
... and the capacity to achieve this locally
It must be attractive to do research with both partners – otherwise
there is risk of brain drain
15. Fitness for purpose
• What is international collaboration for?
• Where do we want to go?
• How do we get there?
• How do we know that it is working?
• The new discussion about internationalisation is
trending away from mobility
• ... and towards institutional development and
governance questions