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Initiating and anchoring an academic course on societal collaboration: A story about 'someotherism' and a need for reflexivity

Jonsson, Anna LU ; Eugenia, Perez Vico and Politis, Diamanto LU (2023) In Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration 27(1). p.75-98
Abstract
Collaboration between academia and society has become a key priority for many higher education institutions (HEIs). In Sweden, this is partly driven by political calls to secure the long-term provision of knowledge, innovation and competitiveness. At the system and institutional level, responses to this are reflected in governance structures and strategic documents. However, those strategic responses often fall short and attempts to organise for collaboration are often met with scepticism, and, in practice, micro-level changes are slow. This paper asks why that is the case by reflecting on the experiences gained from initiating and anchoring a course on societal collaboration at a Swedish HEI. We analyse the experiences from this bottom-up... (More)
Collaboration between academia and society has become a key priority for many higher education institutions (HEIs). In Sweden, this is partly driven by political calls to secure the long-term provision of knowledge, innovation and competitiveness. At the system and institutional level, responses to this are reflected in governance structures and strategic documents. However, those strategic responses often fall short and attempts to organise for collaboration are often met with scepticism, and, in practice, micro-level changes are slow. This paper asks why that is the case by reflecting on the experiences gained from initiating and anchoring a course on societal collaboration at a Swedish HEI. We analyse the experiences from this bottom-up initiative by building on the notion of reflexivity. Our study contributes to research on managing and organising collaboration at HEIs by highlighting and illustrating the need to adopt a scientific approach – to use scientific knowledge – and engage (more) in reflexivity when organising to ensure societal collaboration. Efforts to produce collaboration cannot be expected to be solved by ‘someother’, but require strategy to be aligned with practice. We conclude our reflexive inquiry with implications for research and practice. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
Collaboration between academia and society has become a key priority for many higher education institutions (HEIs). In Sweden, this is partly driven by political calls to secure the long-term provision of knowledge, innovation and competitiveness. At the system and institutional level, responses to this are reflected in governance structures and strategic documents. However, those strategic responses often fall short and attempts to organise for collaboration are often met with scepticism, and, in practice, micro-level changes are slow. This paper asks why that is the case by reflecting on the experiences gained from initiating and anchoring a course on societal collaboration at a Swedish HEI. We analyse the experiences from this bottom-up... (More)
Collaboration between academia and society has become a key priority for many higher education institutions (HEIs). In Sweden, this is partly driven by political calls to secure the long-term provision of knowledge, innovation and competitiveness. At the system and institutional level, responses to this are reflected in governance structures and strategic documents. However, those strategic responses often fall short and attempts to organise for collaboration are often met with scepticism, and, in practice, micro-level changes are slow. This paper asks why that is the case by reflecting on the experiences gained from initiating and anchoring a course on societal collaboration at a Swedish HEI. We analyse the experiences from this bottom-up initiative by building on the notion of reflexivity. Our study contributes to research on managing and organising collaboration at HEIs by highlighting and illustrating the need to adopt a scientific approach – to use scientific knowledge – and engage (more) in reflexivity when organising to ensure societal collaboration. Efforts to produce collaboration cannot be expected to be solved by ‘someother’, but require strategy to be aligned with practice. We conclude our reflexive inquiry with implications for research and practice. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
organizing, societal collaboration, higher education, learning, reflexivity, universities, someotherism
in
Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration
volume
27
issue
1
pages
75 - 98
publisher
University of Gothenburg, School of Public Administration
external identifiers
  • scopus:85151429809
ISSN
2001-7405
DOI
10.58235/sjpa.v27i1.11209
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
6962276f-8698-4906-a085-264238480b15
date added to LUP
2023-03-24 17:12:35
date last changed
2023-05-23 15:36:25
@article{6962276f-8698-4906-a085-264238480b15,
  abstract     = {{Collaboration between academia and society has become a key priority for many higher education institutions (HEIs). In Sweden, this is partly driven by political calls to secure the long-term provision of knowledge, innovation and competitiveness. At the system and institutional level, responses to this are reflected in governance structures and strategic documents. However, those strategic responses often fall short and attempts to organise for collaboration are often met with scepticism, and, in practice, micro-level changes are slow. This paper asks why that is the case by reflecting on the experiences gained from initiating and anchoring a course on societal collaboration at a Swedish HEI. We analyse the experiences from this bottom-up initiative by building on the notion of reflexivity. Our study contributes to research on managing and organising collaboration at HEIs by highlighting and illustrating the need to adopt a scientific approach – to use scientific knowledge – and engage (more) in reflexivity when organising to ensure societal collaboration. Efforts to produce collaboration cannot be expected to be solved by ‘someother’, but require strategy to be aligned with practice. We conclude our reflexive inquiry with implications for research and practice.}},
  author       = {{Jonsson, Anna and Eugenia, Perez Vico and Politis, Diamanto}},
  issn         = {{2001-7405}},
  keywords     = {{organizing; societal collaboration; higher education; learning; reflexivity; universities; someotherism}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  number       = {{1}},
  pages        = {{75--98}},
  publisher    = {{University of Gothenburg, School of Public Administration}},
  series       = {{Scandinavian Journal of Public Administration}},
  title        = {{Initiating and anchoring an academic course on societal collaboration: A story about 'someotherism' and a need for reflexivity}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.58235/sjpa.v27i1.11209}},
  doi          = {{10.58235/sjpa.v27i1.11209}},
  volume       = {{27}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}