The Role of Mobility in Mitigating Core-Periphery Inequalities: Contribution Statements of African Scholars in International Collaboration
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/94560Metadata
Show full item recordAuthor
Van Schalkwyz, François; Robinson García, Nicolás; R. Ferreira, Márcia; González-Salmón, ElviraMateria
scientific mobility scientometric africa contribution statements collaboration
Date
19-09-19Referencia bibliográfica
van Schalkwyk, F., González-Salmón, E., Robinson-Garcia, N., & R. Ferreira, M. (2024, septiembre 19). The Role of Mobility in Mitigating Core-Periphery Inequalities: Contribution Statements of African Scholars in International Collaboration. 28th International Conference on Science, Technology and Innovation Indicators (STI 2024), Berlin. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13767580
Sponsorship
COMPARE project funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science, (MCIN/AEI/https://doi.org/10.13039/501100011033) FSE invierte en tu future. Nicolas Robinson-Garcia is supported by a Ramón y Cajal Fellowship granted by the Spanish Ministry of Science (PID2020-117007RA-I00). Elvira González-Salmón is currently supported by an FPU grant from the Spanish Ministry of Science (Ref: FPU2021/02320)Abstract
This paper explores the impact of international mobility on the distribution of tasks within core-periphery scientific
collaborations, particularly focusing on Africa. Utilizing a dataset with contributions statements from
ScienceDirect, the study categorizes publications and author contributions from 2017-2023 involving African
researchers. It finds significant disparities in task assignment, where authors from the global scientific periphery
often perform menial roles. The paper highlights that mobility, especially international, potentially mitigates these
inequalities by positioning periphery scholars in more substantial roles, enhancing their visibility and career
progression. Initial results indicate that mobile researchers tend to secure prominent authorial positions and are
more involved in conceptual and supervisory tasks. These findings suggest that increasing international mobility
and integration into global networks could promote a more equitable distribution of intellectual labour and
recognition in global science collaborations.