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What is Networked Research?

One of the key challenges for researchers and those supporting research activities, particularly in the field of poverty reduction and development, is to ensure that research findings are relevant to and taken up by poor people and/or the people/organisations working with them. The International Forum for Rural Transport and Development (IFRTD) has responded to this challenge by developing a networked research methodology that builds ownership and communication into the design of the research programme itself.

This methodology brings together people from different countries or contexts to work together and build a common analytical framework for their research. During the research phase support and/or technical back-stopping is provided to the researchers from their peers (via an email discussion list) and/or the core project team. The programme then culminates in a researcher’s workshop bringing together all the participants to analyse and peer-review their findings. This synthesis and the original research is shared at an international event alongside other dissemination activities.

This methodology has demonstrated several significant impacts:

A networked research programme does not place any institutional ownership on the knowledge or information it generates. Attempts to copyright or own the outputs of networked research would in fact undermine the methodology’s core values of peer learning, south – south exchange, and action-oriented research. Programme participants are encouraged to share the research outputs and use them to leverage change in relation to their own work and their national context.

There is nothing really new in the concept of Networked Research, ‘participation’ and ‘ownership’ are familiar buzz words for the development community. This methodology was born from the recognition that if we are to achieve truly southern driven, pro-poor development, then we need to tackle research, the pillar that supports our development agenda, in a much more participative way.

To see how the theory of networked research inspired the production of the Mobility and Health programme's 'Research Guidance Manual', where researcher's themselves design the methodology they will be using click here.

For examples of other Networked Research Programmes visit:

Waterways and Livelihoods – www.ruralwaterways.org
Balancing the Load – www.ifrtd.gn.apc.org/new/proj/bal_load.php

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