Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Dangles Olivier, Struelens Quentin, Ba M.P., Bonzi-Coulibaly Y., Charvis Philippe, Evens E., González Almario C., Hanich L., Koita Ousmane, León-Velarde F., Mburu Y.K., Ntoumi F., Restrepo S., Vidal Laurent. (2022). Insufficient yet improving involvement of the global south in top sustainability science publications. PloS One, 17 (9), e0273083 [9 p.]. ISSN 1932-6203.

Titre du document
Insufficient yet improving involvement of the global south in top sustainability science publications
Année de publication
2022
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000892263300043
Auteurs
Dangles Olivier, Struelens Quentin, Ba M.P., Bonzi-Coulibaly Y., Charvis Philippe, Evens E., González Almario C., Hanich L., Koita Ousmane, León-Velarde F., Mburu Y.K., Ntoumi F., Restrepo S., Vidal Laurent
Source
PloS One, 2022, 17 (9), e0273083 [9 p.] ISSN 1932-6203
The creation of global research partnerships is critical to produce shared knowledge for the implementation of the UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Sustainability science promotes the coproduction of inter- and transdisciplinary knowledge, with the expectation that studies will be carried out through groups and truly collaborative networks. As a consequence, sustainability research, in particular that published in high impact journals, should lead the way in terms of ethical partnership in scientific collaboration. Here, we examined this issue through a quantitative analysis of the articles published in Nature Sustainability (300 papers by 2135 authors) and Nature (2994 papers by 46,817 authors) from January 2018 to February 2021. Focusing on these journals allowed us to test whether research published under the banner of sustainability science favoured a more equitable involvement of authors from countries belonging to different income categories, by using the journal Nature as a control. While the findings provide evidence of still insufficient involvement of Low-and-Low-Middle-Income-Countries (LLMICs) in Nature Sustainability publications, they also point to promising improvements in the involvement of such authors. Proportionally, there were 4.6 times more authors from LLMICs in Nature Sustainability than in Nature articles, and 68.8-100% of local Global South studies were conducted with host country scientists (reflecting the discouragement of parachute research practices), with local scientists participating in key research steps. We therefore provide evidence of the promising, yet still insufficient, involvement of low-income countries in top sustainability science publications and discuss ongoing initiatives to improve this.
Plan de classement
Environnement, écologie générale [021ENVECO] ; Développement, politique de développement, projets de développement [095DEVEL] ; Politique scientifique et sociologie de la science [116RESCI]
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010086242]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010086242
Contact