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Fixing graduate research in Sub-Saharan Africa: faculty must set the agenda
Abstract
Graduate research in Sub-Saharan Africa remains fragmented, largely driven by student-initiated topics that often lack alignment with institutional expertise or national development priorities. This model represents a missed opportunity to harness graduate education as a strategic tool for innovation and policy-relevant knowledge production. This paper calls for a structural shift toward faculty-led research ecosystems. In this model, graduate students, regardless of funding source, are embedded in ongoing thematic research hubs. Students contribute to faculty-defined agendas through structured proposal incubation and interdisciplinary co-supervision, ensuring coherence, quality, and applied relevance. The paper outlines reforms needed to support this shift, including institutional incentives for mentorship, integration of supervision into quality assurance systems, and funding frameworks that prioritize collaborative and development-linked research. A faculty-led approach offers a scalable and contextually grounded pathway to elevate research capacity, enhance developmental impact, and reposition graduate education at the heart of Africa’s knowledge economies.
| Volume | 11 |
| Publication status | Published - 2026 |
UN SDGs
This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
UN SDGs
This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
UN SDGs
This research output contributes to the following United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)