Brokering communities of knowledge and practice: reflections on the African Centre for Cities’ CityLab programme

Anderson, P. M. L., Brown-Luthango, M., Cartwright, A., Farouk, I., & Smit, W. (2013). Brokering communities of knowledge and practice: Reflections on the African Centre for Cities’ CityLab programme. Cities, 32, 1–10. doi:10.1016/j.cities.2013.02.002

Platform
Cape Town
Publication type
Scientific article (peer-reviewed)
Projects
CityLab Programme
DOI Title
Brokering communities of knowledge and practice: Reflections on the African Centre for Cities’ CityLab programme
Journal
Cities
ISSN/ISBN
0264-2751
DOI
10.1016/j.cities.2013.02.002
Author(s)
P.M.L. Anderson M. Brown-Luthango A. Cartwright I. Farouk W. Smit
Published year
Subject
Tourism, Leisure and Hospitality Management Development Sociology and Political Science Urban Studies
Tags
Interdisciplinary urban Cape Town Knowledge communities CityLab programme

 

Abstract

Calls for greater engagement between academia and society to address mounting societal problems persist. The African Centre for Cities, a University of Cape Town research entity, set up the CityLab programme to broker interdisciplinary engagement, both across academic disciplines and between academia and broader society, to engage with the issues pertinent to sustainable urban development in Cape Town. CityLabs were formed around specific themes and sought to share and co-produce knowledge. Reflections on the running of six distinct CityLabs within this innovative programme over the first 2 years corroborate views emerging in the literature around the outcomes of, and challenges to, interdisciplinary work. The creation of productive and engaged communities, emerging publications and the professional growth and development of researchers heading up the CityLabs stand testimony to the success of the programme. Challenges include issues around micro-politics, getting people to move out of their disciplinary and practice biases, the difficulties of writing and producing knowledge in interdisciplinary groups, and the fact that this type of work takes longer than standard research work. Reflections suggest that the personal biography of the research leader of each CityLab, the role of funders, the history of the discipline in question, and the actual space in which meetings are held are significant influencing factors in determining how interdisciplinary work plays out.

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