ODI Logo
  ODI Home Page  
RAPID  Home
 
The Overseas Development Institute’s (ODI) Research and Policy in Development (RAPID) group is undertaking a long-term study on research policy networks and their roles in linking research and policy. A literature review, a series of background papers on the subject and the development of a framework to better understand and work with research policy networks have been completed. Evidence from these studies shows that networks play a key role in bridging research and policy.

ODI’s networks research has as its main objective to provide networks with the necessary knowledge to tackle internal and external challenges better and improve their capacity to use research-based evidence to influence policy processes in their own contexts. It is not the objective of this paper, or of the case studies, to provide an evaluation of the networks. We make the assumption that networks are relevant and necessary if they fulfil a function for which there is a demand (Mendizabal 2006). Hence, although we make some references to the network’s successes in influencing policy in their respective sectors, these are not intended as an evaluation of these efforts. As such, we hope that the lessons from these four cases from Cambodia will provide civil society there and elsewhere with insights into how networks work and what can they do to work better.

The four case studies listed below used the function-form framework to describe four networks in Cambodia. The cases show how these networks undertake various roles and functions and how their own structural characteristics and the external environment affect them. The cases have provided insights into the activities undertaken under each function as well as the key actors responsible for them.

Back to Networks Study index

COSECAM websiteECPAT websiteMedicam website

 

 
Last Updated: 13 January, 2009
www.odi.org.uk