Abstract

The Ethiopian educational system has made promising advancements since the turn of the century. Despite this progress, education continues to grapple with a myriad of challenges, including differences in educational access and quality, insecure living conditions, and gender inequalities. Research can offer knowledge for tackling these challenges, but often it is knowledge from the global North that dominates, despite its questionable relevance to the global South. Therefore, this study analyses the evolvement of a Center for Comparative Education and Policy Studies, situated in an Ethiopian higher education context and supported by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA), and how the Center has contributed to developing knowledge that is relevant to local contexts. An important outcome of the Center was the development of a doctoral program in International and Comparative Education and the knowledge produced in the doctoral theses that emerged. Our inquiry concerns how Southern theory contributes to an increased understanding of the development of the Center and the relevance of the doctoral theses. The findings underscore the importance of expanding Southern knowledge in education and the need for further reflection on the geopolitics of knowledge in research capacity development cooperation.

Highlights

  • A cardinal aim of African universities is to contribute knowledge that can help in overcoming poverty (Gutema, 2013)

  • This study was about important agents and events involved in the construction of the Center and the doctoral program, hopes, and fears expressed by system actors, and outcomes in terms of knowledge contributions of the doctoral theses

  • The study showed that over time several agents have been important to the evolvement of Center for Comparative Education and Policy Studies (CCEPS) and its doctoral program in international and comparative education

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Summary

Introduction

A cardinal aim of African universities is to contribute knowledge that can help in overcoming poverty (Gutema, 2013). One aim of this study is to analyze the evolvement of the Center, situated in an Ethiopian context but as intertwined with SIDA and Swedish universities. Another aim is to discuss the contribution of knowledge from the Center. The study is based on previous research and documentation from AAU regarding the establishment and evolvement of CCEPS and its doctoral program in cooperation with SU and GU, and on our experiences of being involved in the work at the Center, mainly concerning joint supervision. We present a case study of collaboration in doctoral education between higher education partners from the global North and South (Woldegiyorgis, 2020)

38 On North-South Collaboration
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