Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnerships

As a leading mobilizer of international development and educational knowledge, the World Bank has been critiqued in two key areas: (1) the dominance of economic thinking in its policies, and (2) its Northern-generated knowledge which informs its work in the Global South. In this paper, we investigat...

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Main Authors: Francine Menashy, Robyn Read
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Arizona State University 2016-09-01
Series:Education Policy Analysis Archives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2523
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spelling doaj-62f93467be0d43df82fcf0de8a0917862020-11-25T02:50:01ZengArizona State UniversityEducation Policy Analysis Archives1068-23412016-09-0124010.14507/epaa.24.25231540Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnershipsFrancine Menashy0Robyn Read1University of Massachusetts - BostonUniversity of Toronto/Ontario Institute for Studies in EducationAs a leading mobilizer of international development and educational knowledge, the World Bank has been critiqued in two key areas: (1) the dominance of economic thinking in its policies, and (2) its Northern-generated knowledge which informs its work in the Global South. In this paper, we investigate the disciplinary foundation of Bank knowledge, as well as its geographic representation. This study pays particular attention to knowledge mobilization relating to one of the most contentious policy prescriptions worldwide, and one that the Bank has historically supported: private sector engagement in education. By employing the concepts of economic imperialism and policy networks to frame our study, and through the use of a bibliometric methodological approach, we trace the authorship patterns of publications cited in a series of key World Bank documents on private sector engagement in education. Our findings show that the World Bank mobilizes research production from the Global North, which reflects a disproportionate economic disciplinary focus. Moreover, through a mapping of the cited authors, this network is shown to be highly narrow and privileges authors from a small subset of elite institutions.https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2523World Bankglobal education policybibliometric analysispolicy network
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Francine Menashy
Robyn Read
spellingShingle Francine Menashy
Robyn Read
Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnerships
Education Policy Analysis Archives
World Bank
global education policy
bibliometric analysis
policy network
author_facet Francine Menashy
Robyn Read
author_sort Francine Menashy
title Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnerships
title_short Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnerships
title_full Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnerships
title_fullStr Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnerships
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge banking in global education policy: A bibliometric analysis of World Bank publications on public-private partnerships
title_sort knowledge banking in global education policy: a bibliometric analysis of world bank publications on public-private partnerships
publisher Arizona State University
series Education Policy Analysis Archives
issn 1068-2341
publishDate 2016-09-01
description As a leading mobilizer of international development and educational knowledge, the World Bank has been critiqued in two key areas: (1) the dominance of economic thinking in its policies, and (2) its Northern-generated knowledge which informs its work in the Global South. In this paper, we investigate the disciplinary foundation of Bank knowledge, as well as its geographic representation. This study pays particular attention to knowledge mobilization relating to one of the most contentious policy prescriptions worldwide, and one that the Bank has historically supported: private sector engagement in education. By employing the concepts of economic imperialism and policy networks to frame our study, and through the use of a bibliometric methodological approach, we trace the authorship patterns of publications cited in a series of key World Bank documents on private sector engagement in education. Our findings show that the World Bank mobilizes research production from the Global North, which reflects a disproportionate economic disciplinary focus. Moreover, through a mapping of the cited authors, this network is shown to be highly narrow and privileges authors from a small subset of elite institutions.
topic World Bank
global education policy
bibliometric analysis
policy network
url https://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/2523
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AT robynread knowledgebankinginglobaleducationpolicyabibliometricanalysisofworldbankpublicationsonpublicprivatepartnerships
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