HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series
HKS Working Paper No. RWP10-035
September 2010
Abstract
Previous research on the determinants of effectiveness in knowledge systems seeking to support
sustainable development has highlighted the importance of “boundary work” through which
research communities organize their relations with other fields of science, other sources of
knowledge, and the worlds of action and policymaking. A growing body of scholarship
postulates specific attributes of boundary work that promote used and useful research. These
propositions, however, are largely based on the experience of a few industrialized countries. We
report here on an effort to evaluate their relevance for efforts to harness science in support of
sustainability in the developing world. We carried out a multi-country comparative analysis of
natural resource management programs conducted under the auspices of the Consultative Group
on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR). We discovered 6 distinctive kinds of boundary
work contributing to successes of the CGIAR programs—a greater variety than has been
documented in previous studies. We propose that these different kinds of boundary work can be
understood as a dual response to the different uses for which the results of specific research
programs are intended, and the different sources of knowledge drawn on by those programs. We
show that these distinctive kinds of boundary work require distinctive strategies to organize them
effectively. Especially important are arrangements regarding participation of stakeholders,
governance, and the use of boundary objects. We conclude that improving the ability of
research programs to produce useful knowledge for sustainable development will require both
greater and differentiated support for multiple forms of boundary work.
Citation
Clark, William C., Thomas P. Tomich, Meine van Noordwijk, Nancy M. Dickson, Delia Catacutan, David Guston, and Elizabeth McNie. "Toward a General Theory of Boundary Work: Insights from the CGIAR’s Natural Resource Management Programs." Center for International Development and HKS Faculty Research Working Paper Series (199 and RWP10-035), September 2010.