When I started my PhD, I initially proposed conducting an in-depth case study of a partnership between a Kenyan university and the University of Toronto in Canada. As program manager of the partnership, I knew the partnership well and thought it was a good model for capacity strengthening.
Instead, my supervisor suggested I examine a range of partnerships before trying to state what was a good model. This way, I could gain a deeper understanding of the diversity of approaches and results achieved. I took her suggestion and, 125 partnerships later, I identified three characteristics common across the higher-value related to their health sciences programmes.
Being an institute of higher learning, you would expect research to be first but you need to develop the researchers. That is why education is up. [Be]cause for them to become researchers you need to develop them … if you come to do research and I don’t have the capacity to do the research, I’m not seeing it [the value of linking].
– Kenyan university representative
The representatives I interviewed from the four universities identified between 25 and 36 international partners at their universities. During interviews, I encountered a variety of interpretations of the meaning of ‘higher-value partnerships’. I found that the size (number of faculty or students involved) and scale (number of departments or schools involved) of partnerships varied widely, as did their duration and budgets. I even found variations within universities: representatives from one school might consider
lower-, medium- or higher-value? I reviewed the interview data again and again.
It turned out that the 31 ‘higher-value’ partnerships at the four East African universities shared three general characteristics:
- The outputs and outcomes of the partnership were considered a priority need by the representative(s).
- The long-term capacity of their university to provide education or conduct research was increased.
- The overall capacity building benefits realized by the East African university were perceived to be fair when compared to the international partner(s). In other words, it had to be viewed as equitable.
All three of these characteristics needed to exist for a partnership to be considered ‘higher-value’.
Clearly, funding is not the only consideration when it comes to valuable partnerships. In any enduring human partnership, both sides need to achieve some tangible or intangible benefit. If inequity is going to be addressed, more times than not the partner whose capacity is deemed to require more strengthening needs to have its capacity strengthened as least as much, if not more, than the partner whose capacity is greater.
Comments