Van Kerkhoff, Lorrae, and Nicole A. Szlezák. "The role of innovative global institutions in linking knowledge and action." Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 113.17 (2016): 4603-4608.
Type: Non-experimental study
Knowledge user level addressed by the literature: Individual, Organizations, Sectors.
Experience level of reader: Fundamental
Knowledge user(s) to whom the piece of literature may be relevant: Policy makers, Clinicians, Brokers, Manufacturers, Developers, Intermediaries, Users, Advocates, and Researchers.
Setting(s) to which the reported activities/findings are relevant: Community, Federal Lab, Government, Large business, Small business, University.
Format: Peer-reviewed journal article
Annotation: Innovation within institutes has great capacity for generation, sharing, and application of scientific and technical knowledge. This paper examines knowledge management using a case study of The Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis, and Malaria. The foundation created a pull for knowledge but failed to strategically manage projects. The study substantiates claims that policies greatly affect knowledge creation, access, distribution, and use.
This article uses the Commercial Devices and Services version of the NtK Model
Barriers:
Carriers:
Best practices must evolve over time to incorporate successful innovations. From comparison of two case studies. Occurrences within model: NtK 3.3, 3.7
Methods:
Requiring proposals to meet social commitments can incentivize coalitions to adapt more widely beneficial policies in order to obtain funding. From comparison of two case studies. Occurrences within model: NtK 1.4, 3.2
Tips:
Proposals may be assessed to ensure projects are consistent with international best practices, provide strong evidence of feasible implementation arrangements, and show that interventions are evidence-based. From comparison of two case studies. Occurrences within model: NtK 3.4