School of Public Health, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa.
Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Canada.
Global Health. 2019 Jun 7;15(1):37. doi: 10.1186/s12992-019-0477-7.
Globalization and funding imperatives drive many universities to internationalize through global health programmes. University-based global health researchers, advocates and programmes often stress the importance of addressing health inequity through partnerships. However, empirical exploration of perspectives on why universities engage in these partnerships and the benefits of them is limited.
To analyse who in international partner universities initiated the partnerships with four East African universities, why the partnerships were initiated, and what the international partners value about the partnerships.
Fifty-nine key informants from 26 international universities partnering with four East African universities in medicine, nursing and/or public health participated in individual in-depth interviews. Transcripts were analysed thematically. We then applied Burton Clark's framework of "entrepreneurial" universities characterized by an "academic heartland", "expanded development periphery", "managerial core" and "expanded funding base", developed to examine how European universities respond to the forces of globalization, to interpret the data through a global health lens.
Partnerships that were of interest to universities' "academic heartland" - research and education - were of greatest interest to many international partners, especially research intensive universities. Some universities established and placed coordination of their global health activities within units consistent with an expanded development periphery. These units were sometimes useful for helping to establish and support global health partnerships. Success in developing and sustaining the global health partnerships required some degree of support from a strengthened steering or managerial core. Diversified funding in the form of third-stream funding, was found to be essential to sustain partnerships. Social responsibility was also identified as a key ethos required to unite the multiple elements in some universities and sustain global health partnerships.
Universities are complex entities. Various elements determine why a specific university entered a specific international partnership and what benefits it accrues. Ultimately, integration of the various elements is required to grow and sustain partnerships potentially through embracing social responsibility as a common value.
全球化和资金需求促使许多大学通过全球健康计划实现国际化。大学的全球健康研究人员、倡导者和项目通常强调通过伙伴关系解决健康不平等问题的重要性。然而,对于大学为何参与这些伙伴关系以及从中获得的益处的观点的实证探索是有限的。
分析与东非四所大学合作的国际伙伴大学中是谁发起了这些伙伴关系,为什么发起这些伙伴关系,以及国际伙伴对这些伙伴关系的重视。
26 所与东非四所大学在医学、护理和/或公共卫生领域合作的国际大学的 59 名主要知情人参加了个人深入访谈。对抄本进行了主题分析。然后,我们应用了 Burton Clark 的“创业型”大学框架,该框架以“学术核心”、“扩展发展外围”、“管理核心”和“扩展资金基础”为特征,用于研究欧洲大学如何应对全球化的力量,通过全球健康视角解释数据。
对大学“学术核心”——研究和教育——感兴趣的伙伴关系对许多国际伙伴最感兴趣,尤其是研究密集型大学。一些大学在符合扩展发展外围的单位内建立并协调其全球卫生活动。这些单位有时有助于建立和支持全球卫生伙伴关系。成功地发展和维持全球卫生伙伴关系需要加强指导或管理核心的一定程度的支持。以第三流资金形式获得的多元化资金被发现对维持伙伴关系至关重要。还确定了社会责任是团结一些大学中多个要素并维持全球卫生伙伴关系所需的关键精神。
大学是复杂的实体。各种因素决定了一所特定的大学为何进入特定的国际伙伴关系以及从中获得什么收益。最终,需要整合各种要素,通过将社会责任作为共同价值观来促进和维持伙伴关系。