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How universities facilitate city network socialization through knowledge exchange on immigrant integration

How universities facilitate city network socialization through knowledge exchange on immigrant integration
How universities facilitate city network socialization through knowledge exchange on immigrant integration
Universities increasingly facilitate as well as study social change alongside decision-makers and users. This is partly in response to demands for civic engagement and demonstrable public impact. While existing scholarship has critically examined these collaborations’ impacts, less work addresses either how they develop or what benefits they confer to participants—especially those operating at local scales. By examining two university-initiated networks comprising 28 cities in 12 European countries working on immigrant integration issues, we show how two-way knowledge exchange among researchers and municipal policymakers can foster peer learning and co-productive dynamics. We argue that these exchanges socialize cities into more cohesive groups with shared goals and agendas, particularly in low-salience policy areas, as integration can be in some national contexts. Moreover, universities and university-affiliated researchers play unique roles in facilitating this process. Our results have theoretical implications for multi-level and networked governance and offer practical guidance for designing knowledge exchange initiatives.
1470-2266
430-446
Broadhead, Jacqueline
297ba054-ee25-409b-862c-b6e765c4c034
Allen, William L.
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97
Broadhead, Jacqueline
297ba054-ee25-409b-862c-b6e765c4c034
Allen, William L.
f0d4731a-81c1-4886-b11c-74dfa412bb97

Broadhead, Jacqueline and Allen, William L. (2022) How universities facilitate city network socialization through knowledge exchange on immigrant integration. Global Networks, 22 (3), 430-446. (doi:10.1111/glob.12361).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Universities increasingly facilitate as well as study social change alongside decision-makers and users. This is partly in response to demands for civic engagement and demonstrable public impact. While existing scholarship has critically examined these collaborations’ impacts, less work addresses either how they develop or what benefits they confer to participants—especially those operating at local scales. By examining two university-initiated networks comprising 28 cities in 12 European countries working on immigrant integration issues, we show how two-way knowledge exchange among researchers and municipal policymakers can foster peer learning and co-productive dynamics. We argue that these exchanges socialize cities into more cohesive groups with shared goals and agendas, particularly in low-salience policy areas, as integration can be in some national contexts. Moreover, universities and university-affiliated researchers play unique roles in facilitating this process. Our results have theoretical implications for multi-level and networked governance and offer practical guidance for designing knowledge exchange initiatives.

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Accepted/In Press date: 4 February 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 March 2022
Published date: 20 June 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499584
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499584
ISSN: 1470-2266
PURE UUID: 240cf797-065d-422f-b899-b3866daa9d8a
ORCID for William L. Allen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3185-1468

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Date deposited: 27 Mar 2025 17:36
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Jacqueline Broadhead
Author: William L. Allen ORCID iD

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