Submitted:
29 June 2026
Posted:
30 June 2026
You are already at the latest version
Abstract
Keywords:
Mapping the Literature
Practice Research as Collaborative Knowledge Production
Organisational Supports as Epistemic Infrastructures
Indigenisation Beyond Localisation
Epistemic Justice as Institutional Design
Global South Knowledge and Polycentric Circulation
The Institutional Penalisation of Peripheral Knowledge
Career Structures and Publication Ecology
Rankings, Funding, and Bounded Knowledge Ecologies
Mainland China as an Illustrative Case
Conceptualising Polycentric Indigenisation
A Polycentric Epistemic Ecology
Translation in Situations
Boundary Critique as an Organisational Mechanism
From Unidirectional Support to Negotiated Co-Authorship
Comparative Patterns in Existing Organisational Supports
Reimagining Support Arrangements: Four Evolutionary Directions
Authentic Indigenisation
Polycentric Dialogue
Contextualised Critical Autonomy
Ethical Co-Creation
Propositions for Future Research
Proposition 1: Organisational Supports as Distributed Epistemic Infrastructures
Proposition 2: Dynamic Indigenisation and Cross-Contextual Utility
Proposition 3: State Alignment, Legitimacy Pressure, and Epistemic Narrowing
Proposition 4: Boundary Critique and Contextualised Critical Autonomy
Proposition 5: Layered Epistemic Justice
Proposition 6: Temporal Alignment and Research Sustainability
Proposition 7: Ethical Co-Creation Under Digital Governance
Conclusion
References
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| Direction | Core purpose | Main risk addressed | Institutional emphasis | Expected contribution |
| Authentic indigenisation | Consolidate locally grounded concepts, methods and standards | Dependence on imported models and weak local codification | Documentation, theorisation, training and formal recognition of local practice knowledge | Stronger epistemic autonomy and visibility of local knowledge |
| Polycentric dialogue | Enable reciprocal cross-contextual exchange | Inward-looking closure or one-way inter-nationalisation | Multilingual dissemination, cross-border platforms and reciprocal agenda-setting | More multi-directional knowledge circulation across contexts |
| Contextualised critical autonomy | Preserve reflexivity under macro-level constraints | Epistemic narrowing through compliance, hierarchy or policy alignment | Boundary critique, pilot spaces, practitioner-led evaluation and place-sensitive interpretation | Greater local responsive-ness and professional critical capacity |
| Ethical co-creation |
Build shared governance of inquiry and application | Technocratic standardisation and hidden asymmetries in digital or institutional systems | Participatory ethics, joint interpretation and scrutiny of technological and organisational design | More reflexive, just and collaborative knowledge production |
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