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NEW BOOK: University and Academics’ Societal Engagement in Sub-Saharan Africa Benefits, Drivers, and Constraints of Knowledge Production by Nelson Casimiro Zavale, Christian Schneijderberg
Responding to the call for increased visibility of otherwise marginalised voices in SSA’s extant global literature on knowledge production, chapters in the book explore questions around Knowledge-based Economies and forms of knowledge, and suggest an alternative framework to overcome conventional bias and limits present in prominent concepts, such as National Systems of Innovation, Triple Helix, and Mode 2. Further, the authors examine the main drivers, constraints, and barriers to this engagement, and the typology of those with a vested interest in its development.
Ultimately exploring how higher education institutions in SSA engage with, and transfer knowledge to, different external stakeholders, this book will be of value to academics involved with the study of higher education and science, innovation studies, the sociology of education, and education and development more broadly. In addition, politicians, administrators, and practitioners related to higher education, science, and innovation will also find the book of use.
Zavale, Nelson Casimiro and Schneijderberg, Christian (2024): University and Academics’ Societal Engagement in Sub-Saharan Africa. Benefits, Drivers, and Constraints of Knowledge Production. New York. Routledge, doi: 10.4324/9781003383864
About the authors:
Nelson Casimiro Zavale is Associate Professor at Eduardo Mondlane University, Maputo-Mozambique, and a Senior Research Fellow at RWTH Aachen University, Germany. Professor Zavale has been Alexander-von-Humboldt-fellow at INCHER from 2018 to 2022.
Dr. Christian Schneijderberg, is Senior Researcher at the International Center for Higher Education Research (INCHER), University of Kassel, Germany.