Abstract

Collaborative research requires synergy among diverse partners, overall direction, and flexibility at multiple levels. There is a need to learn from practical experience in fostering cooperation towards research outcomes, coordinating geographically dispersed teams, and bridging distinct incentives and ways of working. This article reflects on the experience of the Collaborative Adaptation Research Initiative in Africa and Asia (CARIAA), a multi-consortium programme which sought to build resilience to regional climate change. Participants valued the consortium as a network that provided connections with distinct sources of expertise, as a means to gain experience and skills beyond the remit of their home organisation. Consortia were seen as an avenue for reaching scale both in terms of working across regions, as well as in terms of moving research into practice. CARIAA began with programme-level guidance on climate hotspots and collaboration, alongside consortium-level visions on research agenda and design. Consortia created and implemented work plans defining each organisation’s role and responsibilities and coordinated activities across numerous partners, dispersed locations, and diverse cultural settings. Nested committees provided coherence and autonomy at the programme, consortium, and activity-level. Each level had some discretion in how to deploy funding, creating multiple collaborative spaces that served to further interconnect participants. The experience of CARIAA affirms documented strategies for collaborative research, including project vision, partner compatibility, skilled managers, and multi-level planning. Collaborative research also needs an ability to revise membership and structures as needed in response to changing involvement of partners over time.

Highlights

  • Collaborative research is becoming increasingly commonplace and seeks to apply a transdisciplinary approach to Communicated by Chandni Singh Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.real-world issues

  • It provides an example of what collaborative research looks like in practice, combining insights on how to structure arrangements among participants and how to foster their interaction during the lifespan of a research programme based on multiple consortia

  • This article describes the experience of the CARIAA programme which supported collaborative research examining regional environmental change across Africa and Asia

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Summary

Introduction

The experience of implementing CARIAA is described as approaches to supporting collaboration, namely, creating synergy among diverse partners, providing direction despite limited formal authority, and offering flexibility and funding at multiple levels. A participant could see herself as part of the Sustainable Development Policy Institute, as a partner organisation, part of PRISE as a consortium, and part of the cross-programme collaborative space on migration research.

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