Re-making the global economy of knowledge: do new fields of research change the structure of North-South relations
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Authors
Connell, Raewyn
Pearse, Rebecca
Collyer, Fran
Maia, Joao
Morrell, Robert
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
How is global-North predominance in the making of organized knowledge
affected by the rise of new domains of research? This question is examined
empirically in three interdisciplinary areas – climate change, HIV-AIDS, and gender studies – through interviews with 70 researchers in Southern-tier countries
Brazil, South Africa and Australia. The study found that the centrality of the
North was reinstituted as these domains came into existence, through resource
inequalities, workforce mechanisms, and intellectual framing. Yet there are tensions in the global economy of knowledge, around workforce formation, hierarchies of disciplines, neoliberal management strategies, and mismatches with
social need. Intellectual workers in the Southern tier have built significant
research centres, workforces and some distinctive knowledge projects. These create wider possibilities of change in the global structure of organized knowledge
production.
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British Journal of Sociology
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Restricted until
2099-12-31
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