Building effective research policy networks: linking function and form

Author(s)
Mendizabal, E.
Publication language
English
Pages
29pp
Date published
01 Jun 2006
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Networks

We are constantly talking about networks. Banks use their networks to offer global services to
customers; airlines fly passengers all over the world via their networks of partners; news agencies use media networks to keep us informed every minute of the day; and terrorist networks threaten citizens around the world. The importance of networks extends to the development sector: they organise civil society to advocate for and implement change; they link the local with the global, the private with the public; and they provide spaces for the creation, sharing and dissemination of knowledge.


In a way, networks seem to make anything and everything happen. But we have yet to understand what they are and what they can and cannot do. In the development literature, a huge variety of policy and social network concepts and applications exists. This paper attempts to set out a framework to help clarify what research policy networks do.