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Sustainable
Development: Bridging the Research-Policy Gaps in Southern Contexts
11-13
December 2003, Islamabad
Concept
note
This
Conference seeks to problematize knowledge production processes/research in
relation to policies in the South. As there are gaps between policy and research
at multiple levels, it will raise questions such as: who are the knowledge
producers? Who raises the demands for knowledge production? What are the sites
of knowledge production? Who uses such knowledge? Who benefits from new knowledge?
What are the lessons learnt? And how can we bridge these gaps?
Specifically, the Conference will focus on the problematique of knowledge production about southern contexts in the South. It will explore policy/research gaps in two directions: in some places policy needs to be fed by better research while in others, policy needs to take better account of existing solid research. It will focus on the ways and means for translating this knowledge into effective policy initiatives locally, nationally, regionally and internationally by identifying the multiple gaps between research and policies in different sectors.
The Conference seeks to bring together theorists, researchers, creative thinkers, writers, activists, policy makers, academicians to debate bridging the real and imagined gaps. How can the research we produce in third world contexts be translated into effective policy for sustainable development (SD)? Is SD only a question of reorienting the research/policy connections? Or, is it about claiming and putting value into the fragmented and disparate work that speaks to and about the third world?
These questions will be tackled at several inter-related levels: in purely third world contexts; in terms of the relationship with first world institutions; and, within and between third world contexts.
The Conference will address three themes.
The Conference will be multi and transdisciplinary in order to open up new ways of seeing, which may lead to effective strategies for overcoming the gaps we presently face in policy making.
The Conference will investigate critical policy issues ranging from the status of social sciences to issues of migration and urbanization, food security, employment, governance, gender, violence, poverty, the WTO regime and trade, renewable energy, and conflict. It will highlight the cross-cutting linkages between such diverse themes and the increasingly complex demands upon the policy arena to respond to these issues quickly and effectively.