WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?

There is often just one gender researcher per project or program team or CGIAR initiative so gender research can be a lonely and challenging business due to lack of collaborative and critical discussion with fellow researchers. Collaboration helps researchers to develop and enrich their theory and p...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Bailey, Arwen
Formato: Ponencia
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125590
_version_ 1855521049857228800
author Bailey, Arwen
author_browse Bailey, Arwen
author_facet Bailey, Arwen
author_sort Bailey, Arwen
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description There is often just one gender researcher per project or program team or CGIAR initiative so gender research can be a lonely and challenging business due to lack of collaborative and critical discussion with fellow researchers. Collaboration helps researchers to develop and enrich their theory and practice, and share their experiences, doubts, successes and puzzles /conundrums. Communities of Practice (CoP) are one way to cross organizational boundaries to create overarching learning and knowledge communities, providing spaces for collaborations and conversations throughout a project cycle. CoPs have been described as "A gathering of individuals motivated by the desire to cross organizational boundaries, to relate to one another, and to build a body of actionable knowledge through coordination and collaboration." (World Bank). But what does it take to make a CoP successful? Objective In this session, I will offer some tips from research and experience, so that participants can use CoPs better to achieve their own objectives in gender research. I will draw on examples mainly from the Alliance Gender Nexus Enabler (active since 2015) and the CGIAR Gender Transformative Methodologies (just launched). Who would benefit The session would benefit anyone who is curious about the power of Communities of Practice and thinking of setting one up to exchange experiences and ideas, address challenges, and improve their research-for-development practice Format Format will be a presentation of around 30 minutes, then up to an hour to answer your questions. The session will cover: • Basics of CoP theory • What research and experience show works to make CoPs successful • Examples from two Gender CoPs, one old one new
format Ponencia
id CGSpace125590
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture
publisherStr Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1255902025-12-08T10:29:22Z WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research? Bailey, Arwen gender agriculture There is often just one gender researcher per project or program team or CGIAR initiative so gender research can be a lonely and challenging business due to lack of collaborative and critical discussion with fellow researchers. Collaboration helps researchers to develop and enrich their theory and practice, and share their experiences, doubts, successes and puzzles /conundrums. Communities of Practice (CoP) are one way to cross organizational boundaries to create overarching learning and knowledge communities, providing spaces for collaborations and conversations throughout a project cycle. CoPs have been described as "A gathering of individuals motivated by the desire to cross organizational boundaries, to relate to one another, and to build a body of actionable knowledge through coordination and collaboration." (World Bank). But what does it take to make a CoP successful? Objective In this session, I will offer some tips from research and experience, so that participants can use CoPs better to achieve their own objectives in gender research. I will draw on examples mainly from the Alliance Gender Nexus Enabler (active since 2015) and the CGIAR Gender Transformative Methodologies (just launched). Who would benefit The session would benefit anyone who is curious about the power of Communities of Practice and thinking of setting one up to exchange experiences and ideas, address challenges, and improve their research-for-development practice Format Format will be a presentation of around 30 minutes, then up to an hour to answer your questions. The session will cover: • Basics of CoP theory • What research and experience show works to make CoPs successful • Examples from two Gender CoPs, one old one new 2022-10 2022-11-23T06:52:02Z 2022-11-23T06:52:02Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125590 en Open Access application/pdf Bioversity International and the International Center for Tropical Agriculture Bailey, Arwen. 2022. Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?. Presented a the CGIAR GENDER Science Exchange, Nairobi, 12-14 October 2022. Rome: Alliance of Bioversity International and CIAT
spellingShingle gender
agriculture
Bailey, Arwen
WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?
title WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?
title_full WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?
title_fullStr WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?
title_full_unstemmed WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?
title_short WE2.1: Can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research?
title_sort we2 1 can communities of practice help us accelerate and improve our gender research
topic gender
agriculture
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/125590
work_keys_str_mv AT baileyarwen we21cancommunitiesofpracticehelpusaccelerateandimproveourgenderresearch