The role of leaders in building research cultures in sub-Saharan African universities: A six-nation study
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Existing research attributes the problem of weak research
productivity of academics in African universities primarily to
institutional resource poverty and inadequate research skills.
However, there has been little attention to research cultures and
the role of leaders in fostering productive ones. Drawing from the
literature on organizational culture, this study examines the role
of university leaders in developing research cultures. The study
explores how institution leaders do this within the higher
education contexts in their countries. The empirical work is based
on qualitative interviews with senior and mid-level university
leaders in six countries in sub-Saharan Africa. While all of the
leaders espoused clear views about the elements of a productive
research culture, results indicate a significant gap remains
between espoused values for research and the actual research
culture. Theoretically, the research extends the concept of
research cultures by demonstrating the complex dynamics
between research cultures, culture embedding mechanisms, and
leader behavior within contextual constraints.
Description
Research Article