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dc.contributor.authorSchriver, Michael
dc.contributor.authorCubaka, Vincent Kalumire
dc.contributor.authorKyamanywa, Patrick
dc.contributor.authorCotton, Phil
dc.contributor.authorKallestrup, Per
dc.date.accessioned2022-04-11T11:39:23Z
dc.date.available2022-04-11T11:39:23Z
dc.date.issued2015
dc.identifier.citationSchriver, M., Cubaka, V.K., Kyamanywa, P., Cotton, P. and Kallestrup, P. (2015). Twinning Ph. D. students from south and north: towards equity in collaborative research. Education for Primary Care, 26(5), pp.349-352.en_US
dc.identifier.issn1473-9879 / 1475-990X
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12280/2938
dc.description.abstractWhat works well in primary care education in your locality, region or country? • In this case, we focus on primary care research education. Twinning of individual Ph.D. students under strong institutional south–south or south–north partnerships may help build capacity for locally anchored primary care research potentially unaddressed by other projects and organisations, as well as enforce the quality of research and learning outcomes What challenges have you faced? • The high level of interdependency and sharing between the Ph.D. twins entails risks for project completion. Also, differences between the twins, their institutions and their country regulations pose challenges both for formal requirements and daily collaboration How have you addressed them? • Advocacy, timely planning, institutional commitment and information sharing at administrative levels help facilitate formal and informal institutional collaboration. Social investment, friendship, flexibility and alignment of expectations of the twins help streamline daily collaboration. Local employment of southern twin and inclusion of bilateral co-supervisors anchor the project locally What is the generalisable learning? • This pilot of matching and twinning Ph.D. students shows potential for equitable research capacity building in resource-constrained settings. It extends principles of collaborative learning to the doctoral level where the Ph.D. twins may compensate and challenge each other as well as share benefits and risks, successes and failures, joys and frustrations in their work, synergistically empowering one another as international collaborators, communicators and researchersen_US
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherTaylor & Francis Inc , 530 Walnut Street, Ste 850, Philadelphia, Usa, Pa, 19106en_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesEducation for Primary Care;26(5)
dc.subjectInternationalen_US
dc.subjectPhDen_US
dc.subjectResearchen_US
dc.subjectRwandaen_US
dc.titleTwinning Ph. D. Students From South and North: Towards Equity in Collaborative Researchen_US
dc.typeArticleen_US


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