Knowledge Sharing and Transfer (KST) That Really Works: An Exploration of KST in Sub-Saharan South African Public Sector Institution
Contextualising African Studies: Challenges and the Way Forward
ISBN: 978-1-80455-339-8, eISBN: 978-1-80455-338-1
Publication date: 12 December 2023
Abstract
This chapter presents the outcome of an empirical study titled ‘Knowledge Sharing and Transfer (KST) that Really Works: An exploration of KST in Sub-Saharan South African Public Sector Institutions’. Enablers of KST were explored through the lens of lived experiences of managers working at Gautrain Management Agency (GMA), a rail transport public sector operator in South Africa. Qualitative data were collected from 15 managers and analysed using Thematic and Trans Positional Cognition Approach (TPCA) qualitative analytical tools. Four themes, essential originating antecedent factors, complementary people enabling factors, organisational enabling factors and effective KST implementing factors emerged. Rahman’s KST model was adopted as a theoretical framework and used to better understand the study findings. The current study affirms two elements within the theoretical framework, namely, complementary people enabling factors and organisational enabling factors, while the remaining two, essential originating antecedent factors and effective KST implementing factors, were not affirmed. This study contributes a new KST framework that helps business managers understand KST from the South African public sector practitioners’ perspectives, which represents this study’s contribution to the business performance measurement body of knowledge and practice.
Keywords
Citation
Olekanma, O.O. and Nadison, D. (2023), "Knowledge Sharing and Transfer (KST) That Really Works: An Exploration of KST in Sub-Saharan South African Public Sector Institution", Harrison, C. and Omeihe, K.O. (Ed.) Contextualising African Studies: Challenges and the Way Forward (New Frontiers in African Business and Society), Emerald Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 101-127. https://doi.org/10.1108/978-1-80455-338-120231006
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2024 Obafemi O. Olekanma and Donovan Nadison