Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Knowledge as a Public Good: Reconceiving the Purpose and Methods of Knowledge Production

Rennick, Sarah Anne LU ; Mouawad, Jamil and Findell-Aghnatios, Andrew (2024)
Abstract
This volume originally started as a conversation between academics from across the Arab world, all of whom have bridged their academic careers or professional development expertise to the public sphere in order to use their knowledge more actively to push for progressive, democratic change in their respective countries. Over the course of the conversation, Arab engaged scholars and activists shared a decade’s worth of experiences and the lessons learned about how knowledge dissemination can help civil society organisations, community leaders, and average citizens to become informed and seasoned about the links between their grievances and demands and the public policies produced by their political systems. The conversation quickly shifted... (More)
This volume originally started as a conversation between academics from across the Arab world, all of whom have bridged their academic careers or professional development expertise to the public sphere in order to use their knowledge more actively to push for progressive, democratic change in their respective countries. Over the course of the conversation, Arab engaged scholars and activists shared a decade’s worth of experiences and the lessons learned about how knowledge dissemination can help civil society organisations, community leaders, and average citizens to become informed and seasoned about the links between their grievances and demands and the public policies produced by their political systems. The conversation quickly shifted to how knowledge production can reinstate the ‘public good’ as a cornerstone of any social contract between governing groups and governed populations. Indeed, over the last decade, the Arab region has seen the emergence of this new generation of social scientists, activist-researchers, and experts (individuals, networks, or organizations), who are seeking to use their research and the knowledge they produce for the purpose of informing the public sphere and contributing to or questioning the public policy agenda in their respective countries. Like the authors collected in this volume, they became more focused on “policy change” as a main drive for their knowledge production. Evidently, other variables fostered this shift as think tanks, INGOs, and funding agencies were keener to measure impact in terms of tangible policy change, even in hard transitional contexts like the ones which followed the collapse of the Arab Spring mobilizations and the consolidation of authoritarianism in countries such as Syria, Egypt, Sudan, Tunisia, and Lebanon. Throughout this conversation, that lasted the better part of two years as expressed in public conferences and webinars as well as private roundtables and exchanges, these knowledge producers presented how they aim to play a pivotal role in feeding and shaping the public debate and driving the momentum of social movements. For most of them, the production and dissemination of knowledge serves not only as a catalyst for awareness or advocacy, but also equally as important reference for contentious politics against the new rise of authoritarianism across the region. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
editor
LU ; Mouawad, Jamil and Findell-Aghnatios, Andrew
organization
publishing date
type
Book/Report
publication status
published
subject
publisher
Arab Reform Initiative
ISBN
979-10-93214-21-4
project
The Middle East in the Contemporary World (MECW) 2.0
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
b9224fad-cda6-475f-a0bf-1fa929cda963
alternative location
https://www.arab-reform.net/publication/knowledge-as-a-public-good-reconceiving-the-purpose-and-methods-of-knowledge-production/
date added to LUP
2024-07-05 13:03:07
date last changed
2024-07-22 11:59:48
@book{b9224fad-cda6-475f-a0bf-1fa929cda963,
  abstract     = {{This volume originally started as a conversation between academics from across the Arab world, all of whom have bridged their academic careers or professional development expertise to the public sphere in order to use their knowledge more actively to push for progressive, democratic change in their respective countries. Over the course of the conversation, Arab engaged scholars and activists shared a decade’s worth of experiences and the lessons learned about how knowledge dissemination can help civil society organisations, community leaders, and average citizens to become informed and seasoned about the links between their grievances and demands and the public policies produced by their political systems. The conversation quickly shifted to how knowledge production can reinstate the ‘public good’ as a cornerstone of any social contract between governing groups and governed populations. Indeed, over the last decade, the Arab region has seen the emergence of this new generation of social scientists, activist-researchers, and experts (individuals, networks, or organizations), who are seeking to use their research and the knowledge they produce for the purpose of informing the public sphere and contributing to or questioning the public policy agenda in their respective countries. Like the authors collected in this volume, they became more focused on “policy change” as a main drive for their knowledge production. Evidently, other variables fostered this shift as think tanks, INGOs, and funding agencies were keener to measure impact in terms of tangible policy change, even in hard transitional contexts like the ones which followed the collapse of the Arab Spring mobilizations and the consolidation of authoritarianism in countries such as Syria, Egypt, Sudan, Tunisia, and Lebanon. Throughout this conversation, that lasted the better part of two years as expressed in public conferences and webinars as well as private roundtables and exchanges, these knowledge producers presented how they aim to play a pivotal role in feeding and shaping the public debate and driving the momentum of social movements. For most of them, the production and dissemination of knowledge serves not only as a catalyst for awareness or advocacy, but also equally as important reference for contentious politics against the new rise of authoritarianism across the region.}},
  editor       = {{Rennick, Sarah Anne and Mouawad, Jamil and Findell-Aghnatios, Andrew}},
  isbn         = {{979-10-93214-21-4}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Book Editor}},
  publisher    = {{Arab Reform Initiative}},
  title        = {{Knowledge as a Public Good: Reconceiving the Purpose and Methods of Knowledge Production}},
  url          = {{https://www.arab-reform.net/publication/knowledge-as-a-public-good-reconceiving-the-purpose-and-methods-of-knowledge-production/}},
  year         = {{2024}},
}