Personal bonds in the internationalization of the social sciences: A view from the periphery

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Abstract

Due to the interest in formal relationships at work or to the difficulty to define what personal means, personal bonds in the social sciences have been an understudied topic. Even less has been the interest in connecting such bonds with the internationalization of careers and knowledge. In this article, the authors aim at filling this gap by studying what role personal bonds have played in the internationalization of the social sciences in Latin America. They identify factors that affect personal bonds as well as translations that scholars produce to capitalize on these ties. The most relevant of such translations, academic mobility, has to be interpreted, from a peripheral standpoint, as operating within a logic of leveling, a process that highlights structural asymmetries in the global social sciences. The authors describe both dimensions of this process and, in the concluding section, offer some policy implications and future research directions.

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Rodriguez-Medina, L., & Vessuri, H. (2021). Personal bonds in the internationalization of the social sciences: A view from the periphery. International Sociology, 36(3), 398–418. https://doi.org/10.1177/0268580920962014

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