Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value

This paper reviews, critically, the discourse of research publication policy and the directives of the regional and global organisations that advise African countries with respect to their relevance to African scholarly communication. What emerges is a readiness to use the concepts and language of t...

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Main Author: Eve Gray
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM) 2010-02-01
Series:The African Journal of Information and Communication
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spelling doaj-c5e0b317bdd442a09a8529f0ff5f0ec22020-11-25T03:33:50ZengLINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM)The African Journal of Information and Communication2077-72052077-72132010-02-0110419https://doi.org/10.23962/10539/19767Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value Eve Grayhttps://orcid.org/0000-0002-2176-0143This paper reviews, critically, the discourse of research publication policy and the directives of the regional and global organisations that advise African countries with respect to their relevance to African scholarly communication. What emerges is a readiness to use the concepts and language of the public good, making claims for the power of technology to resolve issues of African development. However, when it comes to implementing scholarly publication policies, this vision of technological power and development-focused scientific output is undermined by a reversion to a conservative research culture that relies on competitive systems for valuing and accrediting scholarship, predicated upon the systems and values managed by powerful global commercial publishing consortia. The result is that the policies put in place to advance African research effectively act as an impediment to ambitions for a revival of a form of scholarship that could drive continental growth. While open access publishing models offer solutions to the marginalisation of African research, the paper argues that what is also needed is a re-evaluation of the values that underpin the recognition of scholarly publishing, to better align with the continent’s articulated research goals.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eve Gray
spellingShingle Eve Gray
Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value
The African Journal of Information and Communication
author_facet Eve Gray
author_sort Eve Gray
title Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value
title_short Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value
title_full Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value
title_fullStr Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value
title_full_unstemmed Access to Africa’s Knowledge: Publishing Development Research and Measuring Value
title_sort access to africa’s knowledge: publishing development research and measuring value
publisher LINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM)
series The African Journal of Information and Communication
issn 2077-7205
2077-7213
publishDate 2010-02-01
description This paper reviews, critically, the discourse of research publication policy and the directives of the regional and global organisations that advise African countries with respect to their relevance to African scholarly communication. What emerges is a readiness to use the concepts and language of the public good, making claims for the power of technology to resolve issues of African development. However, when it comes to implementing scholarly publication policies, this vision of technological power and development-focused scientific output is undermined by a reversion to a conservative research culture that relies on competitive systems for valuing and accrediting scholarship, predicated upon the systems and values managed by powerful global commercial publishing consortia. The result is that the policies put in place to advance African research effectively act as an impediment to ambitions for a revival of a form of scholarship that could drive continental growth. While open access publishing models offer solutions to the marginalisation of African research, the paper argues that what is also needed is a re-evaluation of the values that underpin the recognition of scholarly publishing, to better align with the continent’s articulated research goals.
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