Pandemic exposed global research inequality—and created leverage to fix it
A new study shows COVID-19 forced Northern researchers to depend on local collaborators in Africa and Asia, revealing vast pay and credit gaps that had been hidden. The crisis created a rare opening to restructure how international research is conducted—but only if institutions act now.
Originaltitel: Visibilising hidden realities and uncertainties: the ‘post-covid’ move towards decolonized and ethical field research practices
<p>This article seeks to move beyond the Euro/North-centrism recurrent in methodological discussions on what we may learn from the COVID-19 pandemic. Such debates often centre on uncertainty and involuntary immobility – aspects which are hardly new for many researchers. In this article, we argue that the pandemic offers an opportunity to rethink research relations between what we term ‘contracting researchers’ in the Global North and ‘facilitating researchers’ in the Global South. Such relations are often marked by rampant inequalities in remuneration, working conditions, and visibility/authorship. Drawing upon experiences in DR Congo, Sierra Leone, and India, we argue that the pandemic increased the dependence on – and highlighted the invaluable contributions and skills of – facilitating researchers, in part slightly refiguring bargaining power. We also propose pathways for change, arguing for a strong collaborative approach and the need for institutional change, without discarding the responsibilities of individual researchers.</p>