2024 UFS Exceptional Academic Achievement for Team Research at UFS Awarded to Higher Education and Human Development Research Group  

 

Overview

Sustained effort over 12 years has gone into building this new and rather remarkable research group in which Prof Melanie Walker’s leadership, hard work, and long-term commitment to the group and to the UFS have been central at all times.  Her focus has been on fostering a collective that understands the importance of each person’s own development, achievement, and ownership of their own project, but always with a mutual responsibility, solidarity, and care towards all others in the group. Collective learning is a core feature of how the group operates.  We have tried to live by and operationalise ubuntu principles in forming and sustaining the well-being and achievements of our group, where the well-being of the group turns on the well-being of all the team members. We acknowledge, too, the families who stand behind each person in the group. Our students do not come from well-off backgrounds and the majority have been first-generation PhDs, making for a significant and important equity contribution to class, country, and heritage by the group, by Prof Melanie Walker, and by the UFS.

Each person matters and is supported, and their full potentiality nourished in and by the team and by wider networks of exposure to international visitors. All are encouraged (and funded) to attend national and international conferences and present their own research. Achievements are celebrated and valued at public events and via our WhatsApp group:  graduations, our HEHD book posters ‘wall of fame’, small-scale ECR funding awards, new publications, personal birthdays, and so forth. As people spend more time in the group, expectations are raised as to what they do and contribute, all building towards a CV and career pathway.

However, it is important to emphasise that all of this is underpinned by the expectation and achievement of the highest quality research, which can be compared with the best universities in the world – this is affirmed year after year by external examiners, by successful funding bids and publications, and by the feedback we get from our steady stream of international visitors. Moreover, having a cohesive theme in common – human development in the space of higher education – enables constructive and creative interaction across the range of our projects, while also being sufficiently broad to allow each person to explore their own particular interest. In short, a ‘broad but vague’ common approach allows us to break new-knowledge ground and produce cutting-edge work. Nor could it happen without the sustained institutional commitment by the UFS – which funds most of our PhDs and half of our postdoctoral fellows, the support of successive deputy vice-chancellors, as well as the vice-chancellor. In addition, core funding from the NRF under Prof Melanie Walker’s SARCHi Chair enables the range of our development activities.

The core team members are Professor Melanie Walker, Associate Professor Mikateko Mathebula, and Associate Professor Faith Mkwanazi. The latter two are PhD graduates of the programme. There is a revolving cohort of full-time doctoral students (up to nine in any one year) who all graduated in just over three years before moving on to postdoctoral positions, or in the case of postdoctoral fellows (up to six in any one year) to university appointments, and the occasional international early-career fellowship attachment (three so far). Current PhDs (2024) are Judith Sikala (F, Zimbabwe); Daizy Nalwamba (F, Zambia), Tsholofelo Motlogeloa (M, South Africa), Crespen Ndlovu (M, Zimbabwe), Suzyika Nyimbili (Zambia), Aluwani Mauda (F, South Africa), Monthusi Magosi (M, Botswana), Gloria Adjei (F, Ghana), Tolulope Mshelia (F, Nigeria). Current postdocs are Fenella Somerville (F, South Africa), Tiffany Banda (F, Malawi), Simon Ngalomba (M, Tanzania), Edward Mboyonga (M, Zambia), Kurauone Masungo (M, Zimbabwe) and Chimwemwe Phiri (M, Malawi). Some of the postdocs and PhDs have been involved in research projects as fieldworkers and researchers (for example, Mathebula started as researcher on a four-year funded project); most recently, Fenella Somerville and Tiffany Banda worked on the Sustainability Universities in South Africa project.

For the first five-year review in 2018 (the second, successful review was in 2022), one international evaluator wrote: The work that has been done since the original grant was awarded is considerable and the outputs both from Prof Walker and from her colleagues and students is impressive … I have seldom seen such a strong application, either from NRF or from any of the other funding bodies for which I provide advice (including ESRC, Australian Research Council, and various Canadian and European funding agencies). The achievements of both Melanie Walker and the group of people with whom she works (staff and students) at the UFS are remarkable’.

The success of this team is due to hard work, dedication, and partnering with others to contribute to knowledge building for a better world. Together we have built a remarkable and sustainable research ecosystem, where individual and collective excellence can flourish.

Significant contributions to our field of expertise, and contributions to South African (and global) scholarship with impact

The research programme of this interdisciplinary group (across education, sociology, philosophy and development studies) 1) theorises, operationalises, and critically analyses higher education policy and practices, framed by concerns about justice, an ecology of knowledges, decolonisation, and solidarity; 2) connects the processes and findings of research with practice to support public reasoning and dialogue; 3) attempts to influence transformative change in higher education in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA); and 4) contributes to critical reflection on global higher education dynamics in ways that foreground human development and justice. The programme has been coherent, with three distinctive but intersecting themes: 1) Transitions and trajectories: access, success, and participation in and beyond higher education; 2) Knowledge, curriculum, pedagogies and in/equalities; 3) The public good. Broadly, the linked key activities under the chair are 1) Southern scholarship/knowledge generation, and 2) capacity building of graduate students and early career researchers.

The research group is remarkable in that it has been built from the bottom up from PhD and early career projects under the leadership of the chair and in pioneering and producing a distinctive national and global research space of human development in higher education spaces.  The team now comprises three senior researchers, graduate students, and postdoctoral fellows, all carrying out cutting-edge research of national importance and continental and global significance, focused on well-being, equalities, and freedoms in and through higher education in South Africa and sub-Saharan Africa (SSA).

Over 12 years, an inclusive and sustainable research eco-system has been built. Importantly, high-quality social science research is never the work of just one talented researcher; it is an ever-evolving property of the ecosystem in which people collaborate and support each other as a diverse but cohesive team. The team has a clear and shared goal – to contribute to capabalitarian scholarship in and from SSA, with work oriented to producing knowledge on higher education justice and equality in the human development space, to build capacity through training, and to do work with societal relevance and impact.  The global quality of work and thinking done at all levels is always central, while creative freedom allows researchers from early career to senior researchers to develop and pursue the research interests that matter to them.

Having pioneered work on higher education in human development as a small team, we ‘punch above our weight’ in terms of global recognition and standing (evident, for example, in Prof Walker being elected as President of the HDCA, and various team members leading thematic groups or serving on the HDCA executive committee over the years). The team has contributed to a substantial body of research knowledge through the 25 PhD theses completed thus far, to numerous books and journals, and through regular participation in conferences nationally (SAERA, HELTASA) and globally (HDCA, BAICE, CIES, UKFIET, SRHE, HECU). Global research and development links have been forged with SSA, Europe (Spain, Italy, Germany), the UK (Lancaster, Bristol, Oxford, UCL, Warwick, Nottingham), and the USA (Minnesota). This has enabled us over 12 years to generate innovative and original ideas in a team that learns from each other.

Research Team Impact: 22 Books (2013-2024), Core Team and Postdoctoral Fellows

AUTHOR/S

BOOK TITLE / PUBLISHER

  1. Walker/McLean

Professional education, capabilities and the public good (Routledge, 2013)

  1. Boni/Walker

Human development and capabilities: re-imagining the university of the twenty-first century (Routledge, 2013)

  1. Wilson-Strydom

University access and success. Capabilities, diversity and social justice (Routledge, 2015)

  1. Boni/Walker

Universities and global human development: theoretical and empirical insights for social change (Taylor & Francis, 2016)

  1. Walker/Fongwa

Universities, employability and human development (Palgrave, 2017)

  1. Walker/Wilson-Strydom

Socially just pedagogies, capabilities and quality in higher education: global perspectives (Palgrave, 2017)

  1. Otto/Walker/Ziegler

Capability-promoting policies: enhancing individual and social development (Policy Press, 2018)

  1. Walker/Boni

Participatory research, capabilities and epistemic justice: a transformative agenda for higher education (Palgrave, 2020)

  1. Walker/McLean/ Mathebula/Mukwambo

Low-income students, human development and higher education in South Africa: opportunities, obstacles and outcomes (African Minds, 2022)

  1. Walker/Boni/Velasco

Reparative futures and transformative learning spaces (Palgrave, 2023)

  1. LM Okkolin

Education, gender and development (Taylor and Francis, 2017)

  1. M Mathebula

Engineering education for sustainable development: a capabilities approach (Routledge, 2018)

  1. T Calitz

Enhancing the freedom to flourish in higher education (Routledge, 2019)

  1. O Mutanga

Students with disabilities and the transition to work: a capabilities approach (Routledge, 2019)

  1. WF Mkwananzi

Higher education, youth and migration in contexts of disadvantage: understanding aspirations and capabilities (Palgrave MacMillan, 2019)

  1. P Mukwambo

Quality in higher education as a tool for human development: enhancing teaching and learning in Zimbabwe (Routledge, 2019)

  1. N Mtawa

Human development and community

engagement through service-learning (Palgrave MacMillan, 2019)

  1. C Martinez-Vargas

Democratising participatory research: pathways to social justice from the South (Cambridge, 2022)

  1. WF Mkwananzi/

FM Cin

Post-conflict participatory arts: socially engaged development (Routledge, 2022)

  1. B Kibona

Human development and the university in Sub-Saharan Africa: insights from Tanzania (Palgrave, 2023)

  1. K Masungo

Student activism in the Global South: the formation of political capabilities in higher education (Palgrave, 2024)

  1. E Mboyonga

Access to higher education (Routledge, 2024)

 

Research Team Impact: 27 book chapters and 29 articles, all on the DHET list and accepted for RIMS subsidy (book chapters as well); around 80% in international journals and publishers, including journals in higher education, comparative education, and development studies, for example: Third World Quarterly, Oxford Development Studies, Journal of Human Development and Capabilities, Cambridge Journal of Education, Comparative and International Education Journal (COMPARE), Comparative Education, Journal of Global Ethics, Educational Action Research, Journal of Student Affairs in Africa, Comparative Education, Critical Studies in Education, Higher Education, Studies in Higher Education, and Asia Pacific Education Review.  (Rims Excel spreadsheet available).

Moreover, the team contributes to capacity beyond itself – enabling graduates and postdocs to take up positions across South Africa, in SSA, and globally at CODESRIA, UP, UWC, Wits, NWU, Unisa, Malawi, UK (Glasgow, Lancaster), Zimbabwe, USA (Ohio), Kazakhstan, and New Zealand. 

Further, we are productive academic citizens who are giving back through peer review, for example, the Journal of Human Development and Capabilities, Compare, CriSTal, Journal of Action Research, and the Migration and Ethnic Minorities Journal, reviewing funding applications for CODESRIA (2024) and the ESRC over many years, and refereeing book proposals.  We have taken on roles on editorial boards and in association special interest groups (SIGs) and African early career researcher networks.

Thus, impact in our case should be understood as the following: 1) Considerably expanding the training of young African scholars in the context of the marginalisation of SSA scholarship (most recently as co-leads on the Strengthening Research in SSA Initiative, through which a collaborative agreement has been signed with the University of Zambia (2024-2028). 2) Contributing to scholarship and training through publications and conferences/webinars/workshops. 3) Popular writing, such as research briefs on our website. 4) Participatory research projects, which empower and expand the agency of youth and community. 5) In the substantive education and societal relevance of the knowledge we produce around issues and challenges, such as public-good professional education, access and participation in higher education for black youth, gender and agency, employability, arts-based education, life after university for rural black graduates, citizenship, disability, international students, and more.

Having pioneered the capability approach, we now find this being taken up in higher education in spaces and places as diverse as Minnesota, Valencia, Oxford, Lancaster, Bristol, Bulgaria, Poland, Kazakhstan, Zimbabwe, China, and more. Work by team members, including but not limited to the work of Prof Melanie Walker, has had and continues to have a very significant impact on a global cohort of new generation and mid-career scholars.

Research Team Impact, 2023: 69 Contributions via Webinars and Conferences

 

Name

 

Conference/ Webinar

Type

Title

Place

Date

Melanie Walker

Research Institute Ingenio Universitat Politècnica de València

Seminar

Doing doctoral education

Valencia, Spain

12-16 May

School of Education, University of Nottingham

Keynote

The Miratho capability list

Nottingham, London, UK

16-19 May

2023 HDCA

Keynote

Repair in education spaces

Sofia, Bulgaria

10-13 Sep

2023 HDCA

Conference panel

Sustainable futures and universities in South Africa

Sofia, Bulgaria

10-13 Sep

Kura Masungo

2023 HDCA Conference

Conference paper

Student activism for political capabilities in South African higher education

Sofia, Bulgaria

12 Sep

Kura

Masungo, Faith Mkwananzi, Melis Cin

2023 HDCA Conference

Conference paper

Narrative capability through cultural heritage

Online

(Sofia, Bulgaria)

13 Sep

Fenella Somerville

Erasmus 20+

Seminar

Sustainable universities in South Africa (SUSA)

UPV, Valencia, Spain

25 May

HDCA Summer School

Seminar presentation

Precarity living: researching with the Tembo Mvura communities in Zimbabwe

Sofia, Bulgaria

8 Sep

HDCA Conference

Conference paper (panel)

A framework for understanding sustainability universities

Sofia, Bulgaria

12 Sep

HEHD Colloquium

Seminar discussant

Social structures and HE possibilities

UFS

12 Oct

SUSA exhibition, seminar, and open dialogue

Seminar presentation

A sustainability university: insights from a staff and student participatory storytelling project

UFS

25 Oct

Crespen Ndlovu

The Fourth International Conference on Entrepreneurship Development 2023 – Central University of Technology

Conference paper presentation

The impact of Enactus on South Africa’s social and solidarity economy: case study of a university of technology

Online

17-18 Aug

YALI RLC-SA webinar: Fostering equality in learning: the inclusive education imperative

Webinar presentation

Fostering equality in learning – the inclusive education imperative: an elusive moving target

Online

16 Sep

CDS City Region Economies Seminar

 

BBT

How SE (Enactus) could enhance human development (student capabilities and competencies) in HEIs – a literature review

Online

9 Oct

Resilient Urban Communities (RUC) PhD Seminar Conference

Conference presentation

Enhancing human development through social entrepreneurship: a case study of Enactus in South African higher education institutions

American University in Cairo, Egypt

9-12 Oct

Faith Mkwananzi

Human Development and Capability Association (HDCA) Conference

Conference presentation

Narratives in research

Sofia, Bulgaria

11-13 Sep

Seminar

Seminar

Researching higher education in Africa

University of Malawi, Malawi

25-29 Sep

ANIE Conference

Conference presentation

Internationalisation, regionalisation, or localisation of higher education? Reflections and ideas for universities in Southern Africa

Zanzibar, Tanzania

4-6 Oct

ANIE

Conference presentation

Fostering sustainable academic environments through intra and inter-collaborative research spaces

Zanzibar, Tanzania

4-6 Oct

Tiffany Banda

SAERA Conference 2023

 

Conference paper

 

South African higher education and repairing of injustices for a sustainable future

East London, South Africa

 

30 Oct-3 Nov 2023

HEHD colloquium

Keynote discussant

Towards an ethics of trust: reimagining how to do higher education research in Africa

UFS

12 Oct

EEASA Conference

Conference paper

Sustainability starts with teachers (SST) Malawi experience

Johannesburg, South Africa

18-22 Sep

HDCA Conference

Panel presentation

Sustainability universities in South Africa (SUSA)

 

Sofia, Bulgaria

10-13 Sep

SUSA participatory workshop on photo stories

Co-facilitator

Sustainability universities

Benito Khotseng, UFS

24 Aug, 30 Aug and 28 Sep

CHE Conference

Two conference papers

1) Lived experiences of international students in accessing and succeeding in South African universities

2) An exploration study on readiness of students to pursue postgraduate studies

Pretoria, South Africa

31 Mar-2 Apr

Carmen Martinez Vargas

TESF Network Legacy Conference

Network discussion panels

Network informal presentations regarding local projects

(universities as sustainable communities)

Online

24-26 Apr

Mikateko Mathebula

DHET Future Professors Programme Phase 01

Mini conference

Conference paper

Conceptualising higher education (im)mobilities for youth at the margins of, within, and beyond universities in South Africa

Magaliesburg, Gauteng

5 May

HEHD webinar by Prof Alvaro Fernandez-Baldor

Discussant

Citizen science and the capabilities approach

UFS, Bloemfontein

19 Jul

HDCA Annual Conference

Panel discussion

The experiences of African scholars in transit to Europe for academic purposes

Sofia, Bulgaria

14 Sep

DHET Future Professors Programme Phase 01

Mini conference 2:

Conference paper

Towards a broader understanding of higher education (im)mobilities in South Africa

De Oude Kraal, Bloemfontein

26 Sep

HEHD 2023 colloquium

Keynote

Towards an ethics of trust: reimagining how we do higher education research in Africa

UFS, Bloemfontein

12 Oct

HDCA global dialogue

Conference paper

Enhancing narrative capabilities and repairing relationships through participatory research: possibilities, complexities, and limitations

Online

16 Nov

End of module panel discussion EQ923 – Global education and international development

Panel discussion

Rethinking research ethics from a relational perspective

University of Warwick

5 Dec

SRHE annual conference

Conference paper

Reflections on the complexities of using participatory methods for higher education research in South Africa

Birmingham, UK

7 Dec

Seminar

Seminar

Complexities in developing partnerships for meaningful change through participatory research

Lancaster University, UK

11 Dec

Moffat Machiwenyika

JES Conference

Presentation

Student and staff perceptions of decolonisation: a capabilities analysis

Skukuza Safari Lodge, Mpumalanga, South Africa

27-30 Jul

Edward Mboyonga

21st International Conference on Private Higher Education in Africa

Conference paper presentation

Re-positioning higher education curriculum for sustainable development in Africa: insights from Zambian private universities

Addis Ababa, Ethiopia (online presentation)

15-11 May

Colloquium on African higher education

Paper presentation

Re-positioning higher education curriculum for sustainable development in Africa: insights from Zambian private universities

Technical University of Valencia (UPV), Valencia, Spain

25 May

British Academy/ Journal of Southern African Studies early career researchers writing workshop

Paper presentation

Wither Kampala declaration? Academic freedom, university autonomy and politics in Zambia

Lusaka, Zambia

15-18 Aug

Conference –Negotiating the fabric of the African university: global trends and local realities

Paper presentation

Towards decolonising and humanising African higher education for human development: revisiting Kenneth Kaunda’s humanism philosophy

Cape Town, South Africa

12-14 Sep

National Symposium on Higher Education

Paper presentation

Skills development and student employability in Zambian private universities: unpacking the enablers and deterrents

Copperbelt University, Kitwe, Zambia

30 Nov-1 Dec

Bertha Kibona

TESF Legacy Conference

Conference paper

Creating and expanding learning spaces in higher education and TVET

Online

24 Apr

Simon Ngalomba

Erasmus 20+ staff mobility

Paper presentation

Decolonising higher education: can education for self-reliance philosophy contribute something?

Technical University of Valencia, Spain

22-27 May

Negotiating the fabric of the African university: global trends and local realities

Conference paper

Research culture, trends and productivity in Tanzanian universities: unpacking the enablers and deterrents

University of Western Cape

12-14 Sep

International Conference on Educational Research for Development in Africa (ICERDA)

Conference paper

Digital leadership roles and technology capabilities in Tanzania’s public secondary schools

University of Cape Coast, Ghana

18-22 Sep

ANIE Annual Conference

Conference paper

Internationalisation, regionalisation, or localisation of higher education? Reflections and Ideas for universities in Southern Africa

Zanzibar

2-4 Oct

ANIE Annual Conference

Conference paper

From learning disruption to post-pandemic digital transformation in Tanzanian higher education

Zanzibar

2-4 Oct

ARUA Biennial International Conference

Conference paper

Job satisfaction among early-career academics in Tanzania’s universities

University of Lagos, Nigeria

14-17 Nov

Commemoration of African University Day

Conference paper

Artificial intelligence and the future of African universities

Online

11 Nov

Conference on International Student Mobility

Conference presentation

Theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of international students

University of Manchester, UK

9-16 Dec

 

Contribution to diversity and inclusion in our field of expertise

There is a proud record of supporting the next generation of SSA researchers.

Currently, the core team comprises three female researchers: one white South African female (Walker), one black South African female (Mathebula), and one black Zimbabwean female with permanent residence (Mkwananzi). Over the years, there have been three white South African doctoral students, three black South Africans and one from Spain, the remainder being black students from SSA (Tanzania, Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, Nigeria, Ghana, Malawi). There has been a good balance of female and male students and postdoctoral fellows over the years. The postdoctoral fellows included three white South Africans, two black South Africans, and fellows from Finland, India, Vietnam, Spain, Argentina, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Zambia, and Tanzania. Thus, the team is diverse in heritage, representing many different countries, different career stages, and with different projects.

Further, recognising the importance of inclusive leadership development in higher education studies, early career researchers are encouraged to develop crucial soft skills such as teamwork, communication, problem-solving, emotional intelligence, and collective leadership (organising a semester of webinars for example – selecting and inviting speakers, organising chairs, discussants, timing, and so on). Social skills are just as important, as research achievements do not happen in isolation.

A record of sustained academic excellence in our fields and our international reputation in terms of scholarship

In addition to the above narrative, we note:

NRF ratings: A1 (Walker), Y1 (Mkwananzi), Y2 (Mathebula), C2 (Wilson-Strydom, core member left in 2018)

International reputation, for example, Prof Melanie Walker elected President of HDCA 2022-2024.

International expertise, for example, Prof Melanie Walker: International reviewer of master’s programme (Development Studies), University of Antwerp, May 2023; appointed by Spanish Research Council (CSIC) to Scientific Advisory Board, INGENIO; invitations to examine PhDs (in 2023, Oxford and UCT), top 2% of researchers globally, various keynotes (Seoul, Taiwan, Sofia, Bratislava, etc.).

Body of knowledge: 25 PhD research projects completed since 2016 in the field of human development and higher education; around 23 funded research projects.

Co-hosting international HDCA conference in 2017 (with UCT, UWC, and HSRC).

International collaborations previous and current including:  Boni (Spain), Buckler (UK), McCowan (UK), Cin (UK), Martinez-Vargas (UK), McLean (UK), Bathmaker (UK), Henderson (UK), TESF Programme (UK/Bristol), Dejaeghere (USA), Otto (Germany), Chiappero-Martinetti (Italy), Ashwin (UK), Naidoo (UK), Case (USA).

PhD and postdoc destinations testify to the quality of our early career researchers and our reputation.

Significant competitive national and international funding (see table below), with SARCHI Chair funded since 2013

Date

Project

Funder

Total

Team

2013-2014

ESRC Doctoral Centre Research Training Partnership

ESRC

7000GBP

Melanie Walker (UFS),
Elaine Unterhalter (UCL),
Emily Henderson (UCL/Warwick)

2013-2016

Universities, employability and inclusive development

British Council

750 00 GBP

Around 12-15 million ZAR

Tristan McCowan (UCL, PI),

Melanie Walker (CI, UFS, SA),

Sam Fongwa (RA, UFS, SA),

Ibrahim Oanda (CI, Kenya),

Eric Ananga (CI, Ghana),
Segun Adejeji (CI, Nigeria

2015-2018

Pathways to Personal and Public Good

ESRC-NRF

3,4 million GBP

Paul Ashwin (PI, Lancaster) and
Jenni Case (PI, UCT, and Virginia Tech) plus 32 others,
including Melanie Walker as SA PI

2016-2021

Miratho project: Inclusive higher education learning outcomes for rural youth: developing a multi-dimensional capabilities-based higher education index

ESRC/ DfID

700000

GBP

Around 12-15 million ZAR

Melanie Walker (PI),

Monica McLean, Nottingham, CI,
Mikateko Mathebula, UFS, SR,
Patience Mukwambo, UFS, SR

2019

Initiation project for internationalising teaching and research for social engagement and social justice

STINT Sweden

 

ZAR 260 000

Chris High (Linnaeus, Sweden),

Melanie Walker (UFS)

2020-2022

Mobility exchanges of staff and students

Erasmus 20+ (EU)

Approximately 20 000 euros

Sandra Boni (Valencia) and

Melanie Walker (UFS)

2023

Mobility exchanges of staff and students

Erasmus 20+ (EU)

Approximately 20 000 euros

Sandra Boni (Valencia) and

Melanie Walker (UFS)

2022

Making public interest lawyers: the contribution of universities to more justice

NRF

Approximately 50 000 ZAR

Melanie Walker (UFS) and

Chris Rawson (UFS)

2022-2023

Sustainable Universities in South Africa (SUSA)

NRF

570 000 ZAR

Melanie Walker (PI),

Lochner Marais (CI),

UP: Talita Calitz (CI),

RAs: Fenella Somerville, Tiffany Banda, Patience Mukwambo

2021-2023

Life after varsity: rural youth narratives on their post-university trajectories

NRF (Thuthuka)

 

233 500 ZAR

Mikateko Mathebula

2022

Pursuing higher education in contexts of socio-spatial exclusion: a scoping study of the educational trajectories of youth from informal settlements

SRHE

£5000

Faith Mkwananzi,

Mikateko Mathebula

2018-2019

South African Alumni Tracking Qualitative Study

Institute of International Education

USD$30000

Vanessa Adesuwa Agbedahin (PI, UFS),
Faith Mkwananzi (CI, UFS),
Patience Mukwambo (CI, UFS)

2019-2020

Street art to promote representation and epistemic justice among marginalised rural Zimbabwean youth in Zimbabwe

AHRC

 

£29875

Melis Cin (PI, Lancaster University),

Faith Mkwananzi (CI, UFS),

Tendayi Marovah (CI, Midlands State University)

2019-continuing (end unclear because of C-19)

Supporting adolescent girls’ education – mapping the aspirations and educational needs of 'out-of-school' girls in Zimbabwe

DFID/ Plan International

Storytelling strand (£50000)

Alison Buckler (PI, Open University),
Liz Chamberlain (CI, Open University),
Faith Mkwananzi (R, UFS)

2020-2021

Youth agency, civic engagement, and sustainable development: ideas for Southern Africa

AHRC

 

£19968,54

Faith Mkwananzi (PI, UFS),
Tendayi Marovah (CI, Midlands State University),

Glen Ncube (CI, University of Pretoria),

Melis Cin (CI, Lancaster University),

Seth Mehl (CI, University of Sheffield)

2021-2023

Ibali: storying new discourses of educational inclusion/exclusion in the UK, Nigeria, and South Africa

AHRC

 

£503327

Alison Buckler (PI, Open University),
Joanna Wheeler (CI, Coventry University),
Faith Mkwananzi (CI, UFS), Jennifer Agbaire (Project Manager, University of Benin/Open University),

Yusra Price (ethnographer, Cape Town)

2022

Transnational and intergenerational exploration of ecological heritage with youth in Southern Africa – gathering data for moringa commercialisation

 

£24980,64

Faith Mkwananzi (PI, UFS), Tendayi Marovah (CI, Midlands State University),

Glen Ncube (CI, University of Pretoria),

Melis Cin (CI, Lancaster University),

Seth Mehl (CI, University of Sheffield),

Paul de Bruyn (partner, Pala Forerunners community organisation, South Africa),

Willard Muntanga (partner, Basilwizi Youth Trust, Zimbabwe),

Matabbeki Mudenda (partner, Binga Craft Centre, Zimbabwe)

2022 -2023

African international students in South African higher education: a multi-university study

EMS/UFS

R90000

Faith Mkwananzi

2023-2025

Mapping higher education beyond Agenda 2030: international students and digital learning in South Africa

Thuthuka -NRF

R210 000

Faith Mkwananzi

2018-2019

Ubuntu Chain Project

UFS

R50000

Mikateko Mathebula,

Carmen Martinez-Vargas,

Faith Mkwananzi, and

Melissa Lucas

2021-2022

Universities as sustainable communities

ESRC/TESF

R500000

(£30 000)

Mikateko Mathebula,

Carmen Martinez-Vargas,

Faith Mkwananzi

2022-2023

Exploring the impact of IKS university programmes as a decolonising strategy in the Global South

NRF

R255000 per year + R50000 for research expenses

Carmen Martinez-Vargas

2019-2020

Young entrepreneurs and job creation in Tanzania

Neil Butcher / African Leadership Academy)

$10000

Nelson Nkhoma (University of the Western Cape),

Ntimi Mtawa (UFS)

2020-2022

African higher education in a COVID-19 and post-COVID-19 world

CODESRIA

$20000

Gerald Ouma (University of Pretoria),

Ishmael I Munene (Northen Arizona University),

Samuel Fongwa (HSRC),
Ntimi Mtawa (UFS), and Bertha Kibona (UFS)

2019-2022

Enhancing university community engagement at Sol Plaatje University: matching institutional outlook

NRF

ZAR 1300000

Thierry Luescher (HSRC),

Samuel Fongwa (HSRC),

Jesmael Mataga (SPU),

Ntimi Mtawa (UFS)

 

2021-2022

Technological and epidemiological changes: opportunities for new frontiers of engaged scholarship

NRF

ZAR 305000

Ntimi Mtawa (UFS)

2021-2022

Collaborative PhD programmes

in the Natural Sciences and the Humanities and Social Science disciplines

ARUA

$87400

Samuel Fongwa, Thierry Luescher (HSRC),

Lydia Mosi (University of Ghana),

Ntimi Mtawa (UFS),

Zama Mthombeni (HSRC),
Ibrahim Oanda (CODESRIA),
Bekele Workie (Ethiopia),
Agnes Lutomiah (Kenya)

 

Contribution to the public’s understanding of our field of expertise, evidence of meaningful and impactful work over time

Because our focus has been on building a strong research network and group from scratch, we have devoted less time to public understanding of our expertise.  However, we are making inroads in addition to our significant scholarly impact, while our arts-based methods point to community intervention and engagement. Further, our ‘community’ is based in higher education spaces as much as outside (students, lecturers). Thus, we have created, maintained, and expanded our local, regional, and international networks, with a focus on interventions through writing workshops and project collaborations (e.g., with the University of Limpopo, Midlands State University, National University of Science and Technology, University of Malawi). We have created and maintained networks with community-based and non-governmental organisations (for example, Pala Forerunners and Basilwizi Youth Trust, both of whom are partners in different projects). We have been involved in radio and blog interviews on the use of storytelling methods for higher education research (for example, https://wels.open.ac.uk/research/projects/ibali/knowledge-hub/shedding-light-educational-inclusion-and-exclusion-through). Contributing to The Conversation (for example, we asked university students to tell their own stories in photos: here’s why, https://theconversation.com/we-asked-university-students-to-tell-their-own-stories-in-photos-heres-why-143565) and produced a short film on participatory research (Reflections on using participatory methods in higher education research with youth, and to the UFS website https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=99kEnL-tP3E). We have sought to use participatory research to illuminate the complexities of poverty and the potential of youth fighting it, and to understand how youth conceptualise and act on social justice, as further examples. Our arts-based methods have been empowering for youth through their participation in storytelling processes and public exhibition; in the case of the graffiti/street art project (Mkwananzi), it involved a travelling national exhibition in Zimbabwe and widespread public engagement. Other participatory projects have engaged students and academic staff, and we have reached out to policy makers.

We continue to work on and develop this aspect of our work now that we have achieved a solid base of scholarly work that needs to underpin such interventions.

 

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