Collaboration Paradox

Author:

Duque Ricardo B.1,Ynalvez Marcus1,Sooryamoorthy R.2,Mbatia Paul3,Dzorgbo Dan-Bright S.4,Shrum Wesley5

Affiliation:

1. Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge,

2. University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa,

3. Department of Sociology, University of Nairobi, Kenya,

4. University of Ghana, Legon,

5. Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Society for Social Studies of Science,

Abstract

We examine the ways in which the research process differs in developed and developing areas by focusing on two questions. First, is collaboration associated with productivity? Second, is access to the Internet (specifically use of email) associated with reduced problems of collaboration? Recent analyses by Lee & Bozeman (2005) and Walsh & Maloney (2003) suggest affirmative answers to these questions for US scientists. Based on a comparative analysis of scientists in Ghana, Kenya, and the State of Kerala in south-western India ( N 918), we find that: (1) collaboration is not associated with any general increment in productivity; and (2) while access to email does attenuate research problems, such difficulties are structured more by national and regional context than by the collaborative process itself. The interpretation of these results suggests a paradox that raises issues for future studies: those conditions that unsettle the relationship between collaboration and productivity in developing areas may undermine the collaborative benefits of new information and communication technologies.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,History

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