The structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.

This research sought to explore the patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international authors who have published together in journals relating to the field of social psychology. Bibliographic data was used to extract and produce social network maps of academic co-author colla...

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Main Author: Greer, Megan.
Other Authors: Quayle, Michael Frank.
Language:en_ZA
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10413/11009
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ukzn-oai-http---researchspace.ukzn.ac.za-10413-110092014-07-08T04:01:13ZThe structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.Greer, Megan.Psychology--Authorship.Authorship--Collaboration.Psychological literature--Publishing.Communication in psychology.Theses--Psychology.African authors.Social psychology.Bibliometric analysis.Social network analysis (SNA)African collaboration.African scholarship.This research sought to explore the patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international authors who have published together in journals relating to the field of social psychology. Bibliographic data was used to extract and produce social network maps of academic co-author collaborations in which one of the authors was African or affiliated to an author from an African country. These patterns of collaboration were analysed using social network analysis and it was found that, on average, African authors are poorly interconnected with other international authors in the field of social psychology and are also poorly interconnected with other African authors across the continent. It is likely that these structures of collaboration constrain the ability of African authors to produce their own relevant knowledge within the field of social psychology, in that their collaborations are limited and usually mediated by international connections. This pattern of interconnection makes it more likely that African social psychologists will operate within paradigms generated by academics in international and well-resourced countries and militates against the development of African paradigms.Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2014.Quayle, Michael Frank.2014-07-03T09:54:56Z2014-07-03T09:54:56Z20142014-07-03Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/10413/11009en_ZA
collection NDLTD
language en_ZA
sources NDLTD
topic Psychology--Authorship.
Authorship--Collaboration.
Psychological literature--Publishing.
Communication in psychology.
Theses--Psychology.
African authors.
Social psychology.
Bibliometric analysis.
Social network analysis (SNA)
African collaboration.
African scholarship.
spellingShingle Psychology--Authorship.
Authorship--Collaboration.
Psychological literature--Publishing.
Communication in psychology.
Theses--Psychology.
African authors.
Social psychology.
Bibliometric analysis.
Social network analysis (SNA)
African collaboration.
African scholarship.
Greer, Megan.
The structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.
description This research sought to explore the patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international authors who have published together in journals relating to the field of social psychology. Bibliographic data was used to extract and produce social network maps of academic co-author collaborations in which one of the authors was African or affiliated to an author from an African country. These patterns of collaboration were analysed using social network analysis and it was found that, on average, African authors are poorly interconnected with other international authors in the field of social psychology and are also poorly interconnected with other African authors across the continent. It is likely that these structures of collaboration constrain the ability of African authors to produce their own relevant knowledge within the field of social psychology, in that their collaborations are limited and usually mediated by international connections. This pattern of interconnection makes it more likely that African social psychologists will operate within paradigms generated by academics in international and well-resourced countries and militates against the development of African paradigms. === Thesis (M.Soc.Sc.)-University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 2014.
author2 Quayle, Michael Frank.
author_facet Quayle, Michael Frank.
Greer, Megan.
author Greer, Megan.
author_sort Greer, Megan.
title The structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.
title_short The structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.
title_full The structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.
title_fullStr The structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.
title_full_unstemmed The structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between African and international countries.
title_sort structure of knowledge production : mapping patterns of co-authorship collaboration between african and international countries.
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10413/11009
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