International Collaborative Research, Systems Leadership And Education: Reflections From Academic Biomedical Researchers In Africa
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Frontiers in Education
Abstract
Scope: Academic biomedical researchers and educators in African countries
navigate complex local, national, and international systems to conduct grant-funded research. To secure funding, collaboration with researchers from high-income countries is often necessary. Existing literature highlights that these
global health initiatives are commonly fraught with unequal power dynamics
and led by the foreign partners. Despite these inequalities, African faculty can
benefit from these collaborations, fostering the development of their labs and
careers. This study delves into reflections on lived experiences from academic
biomedical researchers in Africa to better understand the impact of foreign
collaborations.
Methods: We designed a qualitative study using the Interpretative
Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) method and used Self-determination and
Complex systems leadership theories to frame this study. Ten academic
Biomedical researchers in Africa consented to join this study. The participants
submitted a four-week series of reflective journals through an online data
management platform. Subsequently, IPA methods were employed to analyze
the collected journals.
Results: Participants’ reflections yielded six thematic key findings, encompassing
their experiences in international collaborative research. The findings included:
foreign dominance within the international macrosystem; resource challenges
in their local microsystems; mesosystem dependency from collaborations;
scholarly identity within research relationships; collaborative leadership; and
the impact of the foreign perspective. From these findings, there are three implications
were drawn, suggesting that participants were (1) motivated by scholarly identity
found in collaborations; (2) depended on collaborations that were colonialist but
beneficial; and (3) created change through leadership at the microsystem level.
Implications: Foreign collaborators and funders in global health education
and research should critically consider how implications of this study relate to
their collaborative work. Based on our analysis, recommendations for foreign
collaborators and funders include prioritizing local leadership and perspectives
in education initiatives and research grants; reviewing and leveraging collective
leadership; engaging in bidirectional training and mentoring opportunities;
participating in power assessments; and removing publication barriers for
researchers in Africa (and low- and middle-income countries). Insights from
this study could impact global health research and education in multiple
ways, including new initiatives in mentorship and training in international
collaborations, along with increased awareness and correction of colonialism
within these collaborations.
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Research Article