University of Ciego de Ávila Máximo Gómez Báez
|
ISSN: 2309-8333
|
RNPS: 2411
|14|2026|
This is an Open Access article under the license CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/)
Estrategia y Gestión Universitaria EGU
Review article
How to cite:
Roman-Acosta, D., &
Domínguez Albear, Y. (2026). From
agreements to active networks: epistemic
value for managing cooperation,
internationalization, and relations with the
academic world.
Estrategia y Gestión
Universitaria
, 14, e9143.
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20008603
Received: 15/04/2026
Accepted: 06/05/2026
Published: 12/05/2026
Corresponding author:
danieldavidromanacosta@gmail.com
Conflict of interest:
the authors declare
that they have no conflict of interest,
which may have influenced the results
obtained or the proposed interpretations
.
From agreements to active networks:
epistemic value for managing
cooperation, internationalization, and
relations with the academic world
De convenios a redes vivas: utilidad
epistémica para gestionar cooperación,
internacionalización y vinculación
universitaria
Dos acordos às redes ativas: utilidade
epistêmica para gerenciar a cooperação,
a internacionalização e o
relacionamento com o mundo
universitário
Abstract
Introduction: a management gap persists in higher education
institutions: agreements and contacts increase, while
sustained and impactful academic cooperation remains
uneven. Objective: to interpret the evolution of academic
networks and to propose epistemic utility as a lens for
understanding their sustainability and their articulation with
internationalization, extension, and social engagement.
Methodology: a qualitative narrative review with thematic
synthesis was conducted; studies were searched in SciELO,
Redalyc and Dialnet (20202026), in Spanish and English,
including reviews, empirical studies and case studies, with
screening documented using a flow diagram. Results: the
literature shows that networks have positioned themselves as
coordination infrastructure for universities in digital and
hybrid environments; their continuity is associated with
governance, leadership, institutional support and digital
infrastructure with clear rules; their contribution is evident
when they connect international cooperation with territorial
engagement through projects, outputs and knowledge
transfer; management improves when it prioritizes active
partnerships and evaluates verifiable outcomes. Conclusion:
sustainability depends on the value generated; epistemic
utility, understood as the cognitivepractical value of
exchange, allows distinguishing active networks from nominal
ties and guides institutional decisions toward impact.
Keywords: university cooperation, international education,
higher education, university extension, epistemic utility
Resumen
Introducción: en las instituciones de educación superior
persiste una brecha de gestión: aumentan convenios y
contactos, mientras la cooperación académica con
continuidad e impacto sigue siendo irregular.
Daniel Roman-Acosta
1
Universidad Pedagógica Experimental
Libertador
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-4300-9174
danieldavidromanacosta@gmail.com
Venezuela
Yanet Domínguez Albear
2
Universidad de Ciencias Pedagógicas
Enrique José Varona
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1024-5613
yanetda@ucpejv.edu.cu
Cuba
Estrategia y Gestión Universitaria
|
ISSN
: 2309-8333
|
RNPS:
2411
| Vol. 14 |2026|
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
Objetivo:
interpretar la evolución de las redes académicas y proponer la utilidad
epistémica como lente para comprender su sostenibilidad y su articulación con
internacionalización, extensión y vinculación social.
Metodología:
se realizó una
revisión narrativa cualitativa con síntesis temática; se buscaron estudios en
SciELO, Redalyc y Dialnet (20202026), en español e inglés, incluyendo revisiones,
estudios empíricos y estudios de caso, con cribado documentado mediante
diagrama de flujo.
Resultados:
la literatura muestra que las redes se han
posicionado como infraestructura de coordinación universitaria en entornos
digitales e híbridos; su continuidad se asocia a gobernanza, liderazgo, soporte
institucional e infraestructura digital con reglas claras; su aporte se evidencia
cuando conectan cooperación internacional con vinculación territorial mediante
proyectos, productos y transferencia; la gestión mejora cuando prioriza alianzas
activas y evalúa por resultados verificables.
Conclusión:
la sostenibilidad
depende del valor generado; la utilidad epistémica, entendida como valor
cognitivo-práctico del intercambio, permite distinguir redes activas de vínculos
nominales y orientar decisiones institucionales hacia impacto.
Palabras clave:
cooperación universitaria, educación internacional, educación
superior, extensión universitaria, utilidad epistémica
Resumo
Introdução: nas instituições de ensino superior persiste uma lacuna de gestão:
aumentam convênios e contatos, enquanto a cooperação acadêmica com
continuidade e impacto permanece irregular. Objetivo: interpretar a evolução das
redes acadêmicas e propor a utilidade epistêmica como lente para compreender
sua sustentabilidade e sua articulação com internacionalização, extensão e
vinculação social. Metodologia: realizouse uma revisão narrativa qualitativa com
síntese temática; buscaramse estudos na SciELO, Redalyc e Dialnet (20202026),
em espanhol e inglês, incluindo revisões, estudos empíricos e estudos de caso, com
triagem documentada por meio de diagrama de fluxo. Resultados: a literatura
indica que as redes se posicionaram como infraestrutura de coordenação
universitária em ambientes digitais e híbridos; sua continuidade associase à
governança, liderança, suporte institucional e infraestrutura digital com regras
claras; sua contribuição é evidenciada quando conectam cooperação internacional
com vinculação territorial por meio de projetos, produtos e transferência de
conhecimento; a gestão melhora quando prioriza parcerias ativas e avalia por
resultados verificáveis. Conclusão: a sustentabilidade depende do valor gerado; a
utilidade epistêmica, entendida como o valor cognitivoprático da troca, permite
distinguir redes ativas de vínculos nominais e orientar decisões institucionais rumo
ao impacto.
Palavras-chave:
cooperação universitária, educação internacional, ensino
superior, extensão universitária, utilidade epistêmica
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
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Introduction
A recurring management symptom plagues many higher education
institutions: formal agreements proliferate, reported alliances multiply, and
contacts expand, yet sustained cooperation with verifiable results remains sporadic.
This tension raises a practical question: under what conditions does connectivity
translate into academic collaboration, organizational learning, and meaningful
territorial impact? This manuscript addresses that problem and proposes an
interpretive framework for university strategic management.
The contemporary university operates within a social logic organized by
networks, flows, and nodes, where relational position conditions access to
information, collaboration, and recognition (Castells, 2000; Day, 2019; Flores Torres,
2020). Digital transformation accelerates exchanges, expands cooperation
platforms, and reorganizes academic production routines, directly affecting the
coordination of research, teaching, and engagement (Ramos-Zaga, 2024). In this
context, university management requires criteria for deciding which connections
warrant strategic investment and how to sustain them over time.
In this article, academic networks are understood as webs of relationships
among researchers, groups, units, and institutions that coordinate the production,
circulation, and validation of knowledge. Their relevance materializes when they
enable sustained cooperation, mobilize capacities, and stabilize shared agendas.
Regional literature highlights their contribution to scientific collaboration,
knowledge transfer, and collective synergy, as well as their potential to sustain
collaborative practices in virtual environments (Román Acosta & Rodríguez Torres,
2024). This evidence supports a management criterion: a network matters for its
products and continuity, not merely for its declared existence.
Internationalization is incorporated as a strategic dimension that reorders
institutional priorities. Foundational approaches link it to curriculum, cooperation,
and research (Knight, 2003, 2005), while critical perspectives caution against
instrumentalization and visibility pressures, tensions that are intensified in Latin
America by asymmetries and restricted access to cooperation (De Wit, 2024; Labraña
Vargas & Brunner, 2020; De Giusti, 2025; Gacel-Ávila et al., 2024).
In parallel, university outreach and societal engagement are understood as
processes that connect academic production with external actors and dynamics. The
literature indicates that relevance and legitimacy are strengthened when stable
links, territorial articulation, and university-society transfer mechanisms exist
(Verdezoto Reinoso et al., 2025; López & Obregón, 2025a, 2025b; Maldonado Moreno
& Obregón, 2025; Ayala & Rivas-Martínez, 2026). Thus, networks,
internationalization, and engagement converge on a single imperative: coordinating
relationships to produce verifiable impact.
To avoid theoretical leaps, the manuscript adopts a multi-level articulation.
At the macro level, the network society describes an environment where an
institution's relational position conditions access to information, collaboration, and
recognition, making networks a strategic resource for university performance
(Castells, 2000). At the meso level, a network is understood as an operational
assembly of actors, rules, and mediations that enables cooperation to be coordinated
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
e9143
under real conditions. This perspective shifts the emphasis from "having links" to
"making links work" through devices, routines, and coordination agreements (Latour,
2005).
At the micro level, networks gain density when they operate as communities
of practice, where collaboration stabilizes shared repertoires and fosters learning
through participation (Lave & Wenger, 1991; Wenger, 1998). This dynamic is
sustained because much of the academic craft circulates as tacit knowledge,
transmitted more effectively through interaction, feedback, and situated practice
(Polanyi, 1966). Finally, the structure of the academic field introduces a distributive
dimension: resources, recognition, and opportunities associated with networks
accumulate as scientific capital, helping to explain unequal access and the
differential effects of cooperation (Bourdieu, 2001). With this articulation,
epistemic utility is proposed as an integrative lens for describing the cognitive-
practical value that keeps cooperation active and turns interaction into verifiable
capacities and products.
Implementation gaps, however, persist. Studies on internationalization,
accreditation, and university cooperation show that institutional value is
compromised when collaboration operates as a formality, with problems in
activation, follow-up, and continuity (Becerra et al., 2024; Barquero Morales et al.,
2024). The literature on development alliances emphasizes that productive
cooperation requires shared objectives, governance, resources, and evaluation.
Proposals such as circular cooperation reinforce the centrality of reciprocity and
shared responsibility (Rodríguez Cotilla, 2023; Paletta, 2024; Glennie, 2025). Here,
management faces a task of discernment: distinguishing nominal relationships from
those capable of sustaining academic production, innovation, and territorial work.
To address this distinction, an interpretive category is introduced: epistemic
utility, understood as the cognitive-practical value that actors recognize in a
network's exchanges, expressed through guidance on criteria, access to repertoires,
reduction of academic uncertainty, and strengthened agency for research and
writing. This lens engages with tacit knowledge (Polanyi, 1966), communities of
practice (Lave & Wenger, 1991; Wenger, 1998), and the dynamics of scientific capital
within the academic field (Bourdieu, 2001). The sustainability of networks and
alliances is also linked to leadership and governance: transformational and
distributed leadership are associated with cultural change, continuity, and
institutional appropriation; digitalization and emerging technologies introduce risks
that demand ethical and regulatory criteria in academic coordination (Bass, 1985;
Burns, 1978; Cuenca, 2025; Jiménez & González, 2026; Pérez-Ugena Coromina, 2024;
Peña-García et al., 2026).
Based on these elements, the article presents a qualitative narrative review
aimed at interpreting the evolution of academic networks in higher education and
proposing epistemic utility as a lens for understanding their sustainability and impact
on internationalization, outreach, and social engagement (Roman-Acosta, 2025).
The review is structured around four guiding questions that organize the
results section: (1) What stages or shifts help us understand the evolution of
academic networks in contemporary higher education? (2) What relational and
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
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managerial mechanisms explain their continuity, including trust, reciprocity,
governance, and institutional support? (3) How do networks articulate
internationalization with outreach and territorial engagement, connecting university
capacities with local problems? (4) What strategic implications arise for university
management regarding leadership, incentives, and an organizational infrastructure
oriented toward verifiable outcomes? The manuscript is organized into five sections:
methodology, results by thematic axis, a discussion oriented toward management
decisions, and conclusions.
Methodology
A qualitative narrative review with thematic synthesis was conducted. This
choice aligns with the manuscript's purpose: to integrate heterogeneous evidence
(reviews, empirical studies, and case studies) and develop an interpretive reading
useful for university management. In this field, a narrative review is appropriate
when the goal is to organize debates, identify patterns, and build an applied
conceptual framework, rather than to estimate effects or answer efficacy questions
using the exhaustive criteria typical of systematic reviews. To enhance reported
transparency, the identification and screening process was documented using a flow
diagram based on PRISMA 2020, and the quality of the narrative review was
addressed using the SANRA criteria (Page et al., 2021; Baethge et al., 2019; Grant &
Booth, 2009).
Information sources and search strategy
The search was conducted in SciELO, Redalyc, and Dialnet for publications
in Spanish and English with a time window of 2020-2026. These databases were
selected for two reasons: (1) their coverage and availability of Ibero-American and
Latin American open-access literature, which is pertinent for analyzing academic
networks, internationalization, and engagement from the Global South; and (2) their
institutional accessibility, given that Scopus and WoS require a subscription. This
decision is acknowledged as a coverage limitation, so no claim of global corpus
exhaustiveness is made (a limitation explicitly noted in the discussion section).
Combinations of terms in Spanish and English, adjusted to each database's
engine, were used. The base strategy applied (with minor syntax variations
depending on the platform): ("redes académicas" OR "redes de investigación" OR
"academic networks" OR "research networks" OR "scientific collaboration") AND
("educación superior" OR universidad OR "higher education") AND
(internacionalización OR "internationalization" OR extensión OR "university
extension" OR vinculación OR "community engagement") AND (gestión OR gobernanza
OR liderazgo OR "governance" OR management). Filters: 2020-2026; Spanish/English;
document type: review articles, empirical articles, and case studies. Bibliographic
management and deduplication were performed using Mendeley.
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
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Eligibility criteria
Studies were included if they addressed academic networks in higher
education and provided evidence or argumentation on: (i) network evolution, (ii)
sustainability mechanisms (governance, leadership, institutional support, digital
mediation), (iii) articulation with internationalization and/or outreach/engagement,
and (iv) implications for university management. Letters to the editor, documents
in other languages, and non-pertinent designs were excluded. The category
previously reported as "without variables of interest" is specified as follows: texts
that mentioned networks tangentially or descriptively without developing findings,
categories, or results related to network sustainability/management, without a link
to higher education, or without a connection to the defined analytical axes
(governance, internationalization, outreach/engagement, impact).
Selection and screening process
The identification, screening, and selection process was reported using a
PRISMA flow diagram, following recommendations for transparency in presenting the
flow of records, exclusions, and reasons for exclusion (Page et al., 2021).
In the identification phase, 864 results were registered: SciELO (n = 148),
Dialnet (n = 456), and Redalyc (n = 260). Before screening, 221 duplicates were
removed using Mendeley, leaving 643 records for title and abstract examination. At
this stage, 417 were excluded for not addressing the topic. Subsequently, 226 reports
were sought for retrieval; 28 could not be retrieved due to lack of full-text access.
Full-text analysis for eligibility was applied to 198 reports. In this phase, 162
documents were excluded for the following reasons: other language (n = 6), letter
to the editor (n = 19), other design (n = 51), and absence of variables of interest (n
= 86). The final corpus consisted of 36 studies included in the review.
Figure 1
Flow diagram of the study selection process according to PRISMA
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
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Source: Authors’ own elaboration.
Quality criteria
Given the narrative nature and methodological heterogeneity of the corpus,
a descriptive assessment of reporting quality and thematic relevance was conducted
during the full-text analysis, paying attention to the clarity of the objective,
coherence of the design, transparency of the procedure, and relevance to the study's
axes. This decision is consistent with recommendations that propose explicit criteria
for evaluating narrative reviews and maintaining their editorial rigor.
Records identified from
databases:
ScIElo (n = 148)
Dialnet (n = 456)
Redalyc (n = 260)
Total N = 864 Records
Records removed before
screening:
Duplicate records removed by
Mendeley (n = 221)
Records screened (n = 643)
Records excluded for not addressing
the topic (n = 417)
Reports sought for retrieval
(n = 226)
Reports not retrieved / No full-text
access (n = 28)
Reports assessed for
eligibility (n = 198)
Reports excluded:
Other language (n = 6)
Letter to the editor (n = 19)
Other design (n = 51)
Without variables of interest (n
= 86)
Identification of studies via databases and records
Identification
Inclusion
Total studies included in the
review (n = 36)
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Results and discussion
The results are organized into four thematic axes. The first synthesizes the
recent evolution of academic networks in the 2020-2026 period. The second
identifies mechanisms that explain the continuity or fragility of networks, with
emphasis on governance, leadership, and digital mediation. The third examines how
networks operate as infrastructure for articulating internationalization and
territorial engagement. The fourth integrates strategic implications for university
management, highlighting criteria for alliance activation, results-based evaluation,
and digital governance challenges.
The evolution of academic networks in higher education
Academic networks are no longer seen as a mere accessory for exchange but
are increasingly and consistently described as a structural condition of university
functioning. In the recent period, the network has become a space where a
substantive part of knowledge circulation, agenda coordination, and institutional
responsiveness is defined. This shift is linked to digital transformation, which has
reconfigured teaching and research routines, accelerated platform-mediated
collaboration, and turned connectivity into a strategic resource that influences
visibility, productivity, and relevance (Ramos-Zaga, 2024; Sánchez Arreaga et al.,
2025). Academic interaction now unfolds in hybrid environments that combine
institutional spaces and open settings, expanding opportunities for sustaining
distributed cooperation, though it also introduces frictions related to platform
dependency, speed pressures, and the reorganization of academic time. Here, the
discussion on "platformization" provides a framework for understanding how digital
infrastructures affect rhythms, autonomy, and modes of collaboration, with direct
implications for the continuity of ties (Jiménez & González, 2026).
In network-focused studies, another shift is observable: the language of
"collaboration" gains density and begins to structure the field, displacing readings
centered on "exchange." A narrative review on scientific collaboration in education
positions collaboration as the core of networks, implying they should be understood
as spaces where shared repertoires are built, cognitive tasks are distributed, and
knowledge production routines are stabilized (Román-Cao et al., 2025). In the same
vein, a transition from individual efforts to collective synergies is reported,
emphasizing that a network's value is expressed when it manages to coordinate
capacities and sustain interaction continuously; in virtual environments, moreover,
its motivational and organizational support function in high-demand scenarios is
documented (Román Acosta & Rodríguez Torres, 2024).
This evolution connects with a cross-cutting problem in academic practice:
the conditions that facilitate or hinder research in real-world settings. A systematic
review identifies that scientific production depends on institutional and relational
mediations typically organized through support, mentoring, and access to active
communities (Perines & Roman-Acosta, 2026). Finally, network strengthening
appears associated with institutional priorities of internationalization, quality, and
social relevance, which push toward more consistent and comparable forms of
cooperation (Gacel-Ávila et al., 2024; Fliguer et al., 2025), with an additional turn
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
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toward an internationalization oriented to social contributions and external impact
(Cai & Leask, 2026).
Even though the literature coincides in describing a shift toward networks as
infrastructure, analytical limitations should be noted. A portion of the work treats a
network as a desirable outcome or as evidence of institutional modernization, with
little attention to the mechanisms that produce continuity and the conditions that
make collaboration verifiable. This tendency pushes toward descriptions of "network
expansion" without distinguishing relational density, reciprocity, and quality of
interaction. Furthermore, several contributions assume that digitalization inherently
strengthens cooperation, while analyses of platformization warn of frictions that
reorganize academic time, incentives, and collaborative depth, risking faster but
less sustainable links (Jiménez & González, 2026; Ramos-Zaga, 2024). An evidence
gap is also identified: diagnoses and typologies predominate, while comparative
approaches showing how a network translates into concrete products, agenda
continuity, and institutional capacities remain scarce, a central issue in reviews that
position collaboration as the operational core of networks (Román-Cao et al., 2025).
This set of tensions suggests that the evolution of networks must be read alongside
criteria of functioning and generated value, paving the way for the sustainability
mechanisms addressed in the next axis.
As a synthesis of this axis, Table 1 organizes the identified trends and the
references that support them.
Table 1
Evolution of academic networks in higher education
Trend 2020-2026
How it is expressed in the
literature
Corpus
references
(2020-2026)
Digitalization and hybridization
of collaboration
Connectivity and hybrid
environments reorder
academic routines and
expand possibilities for
cooperation
Ramos-Zaga
(2024);
Sánchez
Arreaga et al.
(2025)
Intensification of
platformization
Digital mediation modifies
time, coordination, and
conditions of academic work
Jiménez &
González
(2026)
Consolidation of collaboration
as the core of networks
Networks are described as
spaces for coordinating
practices, repertoires, and
shared production
Román-Cao et
al. (2025)
Networks as motivational and
continuity support
The network sustains faculty
participation and
commitment in virtual
environments
Román Acosta
& Rodríguez
Torres (2024)
Networks as a condition for
sustaining research in teaching
practice
Research is facilitated or
blocked according to
institutional and relational
Perines &
Roman-Acosta
(2026)
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
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conditions associated with
active networks
Networks and reorientation
toward
internationalization/quality
with a social purpose
Cooperation and societal
orientation push networks
toward greater consistency
and verifiable products
Gacel-Ávila et
al. (2024);
Fliguer et al.
(2025); Cai &
Leask (2026)
Networks and university
educational transformation
Networks become a device for
responding to changes in
educational models and
relevance
Sánchez-
Pástor (2024)
Digitalization and hybridization
Overload/fragmentation due
to platformization
Jiménez &
González
(2026)
Source: Authors’ own elaboration.
Mechanisms that sustain or weaken academic networks
Recent evidence converges on a point of direct interest to university
management: an academic network becomes sustainable when its interaction leaves
repeatable traces. These traces take the form of coordinated work, shared learning,
the circulation of repertoires, project continuity, and outcomes recognized by the
community. When these signals fade, the network becomes intermittent, dependent
on individual will, and fragments in the face of any change in agenda or leadership.
Therefore, the question shifts from "what is a network" to a more demanding one:
what keeps it alive when institutional pressure grows and academic time is squeezed
(Román-Cao et al., 2025; Perines & Roman-Acosta, 2026).
A first set of mechanisms is located at the level of governance. The literature
on distributed leadership underscores that the sustainability of complex initiatives
improves when coordination capacities are shared, roles are clarified, and a
decision-making structure not dependent on a single figure is created (Cuenca, 2025;
Ahumada Figueroa et al., 2023). Within this framework, the network is strengthened
when operational agreements exist regarding responsibilities, priorities, and
coordination methods. Transformational leadership provides a relevant complement
by focusing on institutional climate, collective motivation, and the strategic
direction of collaborative effort, elements associated with innovation and cultural
change in educational institutions (Muñoz-Chávez et al., 2022; Pallango Espín et al.,
2025). In managerial terms, these approaches converge on a practical idea: without
leadership and rules for continuity, a network behaves like a sum of contacts; with
governance, the network functions as institutional infrastructure.
A second set of mechanisms appears in digital mediation. Between 2020 and
2026, the hybridization of academic work and dependence on digital environments
for coordinating teaching, research, and collaboration were consolidated. This shift
opens opportunities for sustaining distributed interaction, though it also introduces
frictions related to overload, speed, productivity pressures, and the reorganization
of academic time (Ramos-Zaga, 2024; Sánchez Arreaga et al., 2025). The discussion
on platformization describes an additional tension: when cooperation is organized
| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
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around platform logics, interaction can become transactional and fragmented,
affecting the sense of intellectual work and the stability of collaborative ties
(Jiménez & González, 2026). For university management, this evidence suggests a
concrete task: equipping networks with infrastructure and usage norms that reduce
friction, protect collaboration time, and maintain focus on pertinent academic
outcomes.
A third set of mechanisms relates to the quality of interaction and the
conditions that facilitate research in practice. The literature examining the
facilitators of and barriers to research within teaching work warns that research
continuity depends on institutional supports, access to academic communities, and
mediations that sustain the process beyond individual intention (Perines & Roman-
Acosta, 2026). This line connects with studies on scientific collaboration in networks,
where the network is understood as a space for coordinating practices and shared
production, with direct effects on learning and career consolidation (Román-Cao et
al., 2025). In management terms, this invites looking at a network through the lens
of installed capacity: the network grows when it offers practical guidance, feedback,
and clear pathways for converting interaction into verifiable products.
The discussion on regulatory approaches to artificial intelligence in different
contexts underscores that technological adoption demands frameworks of
transparency, accountability, and usage criteria, especially when it intervenes in
institutional decisions (Pérez-Ugena Coromina, 2024). Debates on algorithmic biases
and dialogic reflection add that technological mediation can reinforce inequalities
if applied without a focus on inclusion and critical oversight (Peña-García et al.,
2026). For academic networks operating in digital environments, this evidence
translates into a direct implication: the sustainability of collaboration also depends
on trust in the devices, clarity about interaction rules, and the protection of fair
academic practices. Table 2 organizes the mechanisms that the 2020-2026 literature
associates with the sustainability or weakening of academic networks, indicating
their typical manifestation and their interpretation from a university management
perspective.
Table 2
Sustainability mechanisms of academic networks
Mechanism
How it
manifests in
academic
networks
Interpretation for
university
management
References
Distributed governance
Shared roles,
horizontal
coordination,
continuity of
initiatives
Design roles,
decision-making
rules, and
responsibilities;
avoid dependence
on a single figure
Cuenca
(2025);
Ahumada
Figueroa et
al.
(2023)
Leadership oriented
toward change and
innovation
Collaborative
climate,
collective
Align networks
with strategic
priorities; sustain
Muñoz-
Chávez et al.
(2022);
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motivation,
impetus for new
practices
a collaborative
culture
Pallango
Espín et al.
(2025)
Institutional
infrastructure and
support
Spaces, time,
minimum
resources for
coordination and
production
Provide "light
infrastructure"
that reduces
friction and
sustains continuity
Perines &
Roman-
Acosta
(2026);
Román-Cao
et al. (2025)
Hybridization and
digital mediation
Remote
coordination,
asynchronous
work, continuity
via platforms
Establish usage
norms, protect
academic time,
manage overload
Ramos-Zaga
(2024);
Sánchez
Arreaga et
al. (2025)
Platformization and
productivity pressure
Fragmented
interaction,
acceleration,
loss of
collaborative
depth
Design indicators
that reward
collaboration
quality and
verifiable products
Jiménez &
González
(2026)
Conditions for
sustaining research in
teaching practice
Barriers and
facilitators
influence
participation and
continuity
Prioritize
mentoring,
resources, and an
active academic
community
Perines &
Roman-
Acosta
(2026)
AI governance and
regulatory frameworks
Need for
transparency,
accountability,
and risk control
Define criteria for
use, auditing, and
accountability in
mediated
decisions
Pérez-Ugena
Coromina
(2024)
Inclusion and bias
control in digital
mediation
Risk of inequality
and algorithmic
biases
Incorporate a
focus on inclusion,
critical review,
and correction
mechanisms
Peña-García
et al. (2026)
Source: Authors’ own elaboration.
Networks as infrastructure for articulation
The reviewed literature shows that internationalization is increasingly
understood less as an administrative block and more as a dynamic activated when
networks capable of coordinating sustained academic cooperation exist. In this
approach, value shifts toward integration with curriculum, research, quality
standards, and institutional responsibility. Internationalization of the curriculum and
academic mobility are presented as connected components whose effectiveness
depends on coherence with institutional purposes (Álvarez-Salgado et al., 2024),
while quality assurance places internationalization within a logic of internal and
external improvement linked to evaluation and organizational consistency (Fliguer
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et al., 2025). In the Latin American context, structural restrictions, asymmetries,
limited resources, and models that can drift toward competition or privatization are
noted when cooperation is reduced to visibility, reinforcing the need for stable links
and active networks as a condition for institutional practice (Gacel-Ávila et al., 2024;
Labraña Vargas & Brunner, 2020; De Giusti, 2025).
In parallel, outreach and societal engagement appear as a space where the
public legitimacy of the university is validated by connecting academic capacities
with social, productive, and community problems (Verdezoto Reinoso et al., 2025).
Territorially focused models agree that impact requires continuity, defined actors,
coordination, and follow-up; in operational terms, it requires a network. Evidence
shows that environmental needs guide priorities and strengthen extension when it is
structured as a process with a trajectory (López & Obregón, 2025a, 2025b), and that
research gains social traction when a framework exists that connects knowledge,
decisions, and application settings (Maldonado Moreno & Obregón, 2025).
This logic is confirmed in the transfer from postgraduate programs, where
the university-society link is recognized as a condition for results to circulate and
translate into social and educational value (Ayala & Rivas-Martínez, 2026). In this
axis, networks operate as a bridge that stabilizes cooperation through task
coordination, the circulation of repertoires, and shared production (Román-Cao et
al., 2025), in addition to sustaining faculty motivation and interaction in virtual
environments (Román Acosta & Rodríguez Torres, 2024).
An "outside-in" approach reinforces that internationalization gains legitimacy
when oriented toward social contributions, shifting attention toward public value
and institutional responsibility (Cai & Leask, 2026), with instrumental supports for
translating cooperation into plans and decisions (Herrera Timana, 2022). Finally,
external projection is linked to responsibility and coexistence, where university
action is validated by its impact on community life through sustained relationships
(Insuasty Rodríguez & Espinosa Menéndez, 2024; Alcaraz-Herrera et al., 2023; López
Morales et al., 2020; Vorontsova et al., 2023).
Strategic implications for university management
The reviewed literature converges on an uncomfortable but clarifying
warning: an academic network does not sustain itself by inertia. It is sustained when
the institution decides to govern it, assigns responsibilities, protects collaboration
time, and translates cooperation into verifiable products. This emphasis shifts the
conversation from celebrating connections to a question of strategic direction: what
decisions convert dispersed links into institutional capacity? In this line, studies on
quality and internationalization situate internal coherence as a decisive factor;
cooperation gains value when it is integrated into processes and standards, when it
becomes traceable, evaluable, and useful for institutional improvement (Fliguer et
al., 2025; Becerra et al., 2024).
A first set of implications relates to leadership and governance. Approaches
to distributed leadership highlight the need to broaden the scope of leadership and
prevent continuity from depending on a single authority. This approach encourages
creating organizational arrangements where coordination is shared, roles are
clarified, and decision-making becomes more horizontal (Cuenca, 2025; Ahumada
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Figueroa et al., 2023).
In parallel, transformational leadership appears associated with innovation
and the mobilization of the academic community, with effects on the willingness to
collaborate, sustain changes, and convert initiatives into institutional practices
(Muñoz-Chávez et al., 2022; Pallango Espín et al., 2025). The management
implication is direct: strengthening networks requires leadership, simple rules,
coherent incentives, and a culture that legitimizes collaborative work.
A second set of implications emerges when analyzing the management of
alliances and agreements. Analyses of agreements show that the document itself
does not guarantee activation; the problem centers on follow-up, continuity, and
alignment with institutional priorities (Barquero Morales et al., 2024). The literature
on alliances for development proposes criteria that help differentiate formal
cooperation from operational partnerships: shared objectives, coordination,
resources, evaluation mechanisms, and mutual learning (Rodríguez Cotilla, 2023;
Paletta, 2024).
In practice, this approach invites a strategic decision often postponed:
prioritizing partnerships, closing agreements that produce no activity, and
concentrating resources on relationships that do generate academic and social
results. The notion of circular cooperation reinforces this agenda by placing
reciprocity and shared responsibility as attributes that increase sustainability and
legitimacy (Glennie, 2025).
A third set of implications appears in the operationalization of results. The
literature on societal engagement and territorial models suggests that cooperation
gains meaning when expressed in products recognized by the environment: projects
with external actors, transfer, situated training, continuity of community work, and
evidence of impact (Verdezoto Reinoso et al., 2025; López & Obregón, 2025a).
At the research and postgraduate level, the discussion on transfer reinforces
that the university-society link requires stable mechanisms that translate academic
results into practices and decisions for use (Ayala & Rivas-Martínez, 2026). This
evidence feeds a useful criterion for university management: evaluating networks by
the volume of agreements produces an illusion of cooperation; evaluating networks
by products and continuity reveals their real capacity.
A fourth set of implications relates to digital infrastructure and its
governance. Digital transformation presents opportunities for coordinating
distributed collaboration, though it also introduces frictions: overload, acceleration,
platform dependency, and the reorganization of academic time (Ramos-Zaga, 2024).
The discussion on platformization alerts that collaboration risks fragmentation and
loss of depth when adjusted to logics of immediacy and performance, affecting the
stability of academic ties (Jiménez & González, 2026).
Added to this is the debate on artificial intelligence: comparative regulation
shows that technological adoption demands frameworks of transparency,
accountability, and responsibility (Pérez-Ugena Coromina, 2024), while studies on
algorithmic bias warn that digital mediation can reproduce inequalities if
incorporated without critical oversight and an inclusion focus (Peña-García et al.,
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2026). The strategic implication is clear: the digital support of academic networks
requires rules, protection of time, ethical criteria, and risk assessment.
University cooperation is navigating a paradoxical scenario: institutional
connectivity and the visibility of networks and alliances are increasing, while the
conversion of these ties into installed capacity remains uneven. The reviewed
literature tends to celebrate the expansion of connections as a sign of
modernization, yet offers less clarity on the conditions that convert interaction into
continuity, verifiable academic products, and territorial impact. This analytical
asymmetry explains why certain contributions remain at a descriptive level: the
"existence of networks" is reported with little discrimination regarding relational
density, reciprocity, governance, and the quality of the link. In this sense, the
relevant debate for university management is no longer about expanding contacts;
it is about building mechanisms that stabilize cooperation, with measurable effects
on quality, research, relevance, and strategic coherence (Fliguer et al., 2025;
Becerra et al., 2024).
In internationalization, the literature converges on the idea that its
effectiveness depends on integration with substantive processes, particularly
curriculum, research, and quality assurance. Works on internationalization of the
curriculum and mobility show value when institutional coherence and formative
consistency exist (Álvarez-Salgado et al., 2024), while quality analyses place
internationalization within a logic of improvement with standards and evaluation
(Fliguer et al., 2025). The contrast appears when observing regional approaches:
comparative views in Latin America warn of risks of drifting toward competition,
privatization, or "visibility" disconnected from substantive cooperation (Gacel-Ávila
et al., 2024; Labraña Vargas & Brunner, 2020; De Giusti, 2025). This point
necessitates a critical reading: part of the literature confuses internationalization
with reputational outcomes, while another part insists on criteria of verifiable
cooperation. The "outside-in" approach further stresses the field by shifting
legitimacy toward social contributions, which demands networks capable of
producing public value and not merely academic circulation (Cai & Leask, 2026).
In outreach and territorial engagement, the literature provides a criterion
that serves as a practical test of cooperation: continuity with external actors,
coordination, and outcomes recognizable in the territory. Engagement studies
highlight its relationship with relevance and positioning, warning that the link
weakens when reduced to episodic actions (Verdezoto Reinoso et al., 2025).
Territorial models agree that impact requires a relational architecture: defined
actors, follow-up mechanisms, and translation of knowledge into settings of use
(López & Obregón, 2025a, 2025b; Maldonado Moreno & Obregón, 2025).
The review on transfer in postgraduate programs reinforces this argument
by situating the university-society link as a condition for results to circulate and
become applicable capacities (Ayala & Rivas-Martínez, 2026). Overall, the literature
suggests that networks and territorial impact connect when project governance,
continuity, and verifiable products exist. This evidence also reveals a gap: the
importance of engagement is widely discussed, yet criteria for evaluating whether a
network truly sustained transfer or merely accompanied activities are less
operationalized.
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The field of alliances and governance introduces a second critical contrast.
Several studies show that a signed agreement does not activate cooperation by itself;
the decisive factor lies in follow-up, resources, shared objectives, evaluation rules,
and institutional learning (Rodríguez Cotilla, 2023; Paletta, 2024; Barquero Morales
et al., 2024). This finding questions metrics based on the volume of partners or
number of agreements and pushes toward portfolio decisions: prioritizing
partnerships, purging nominal links, and concentrating efforts on relationships with
products and continuity. Circular cooperation adds a further requirement of
legitimacy: reciprocity and shared responsibility, especially relevant when
asymmetries erode cooperation (Glennie, 2025). In practice, this literature forces
the recognition that a network is not managed by the number of nodes; it is managed
by coordination capacity and generated value.
The technological dimension deepens the debate and helps explain why some
networks become fragile. Digital transformation expands possibilities for distributed
coordination, though it alters academic time, expectations, and modes of
interaction (Ramos-Zaga, 2024; Sánchez Arreaga et al., 2025). Platformization
introduces additional frictions: acceleration, loss of collaborative depth,
productivity pressures, and the erosion of cooperation (Jiménez & González, 2026).
The artificial intelligence component introduces a governance layer: comparative
regulation, transparency, and accountability, along with risks of biases and inequity
in technology-mediated decisions (Pérez-Ugena Coromina, 2024; Peña-García et al.,
2026). This literature leads to an operational implication: sustainable networks
require usage rules, protected time, technical support, and ethical criteria to
preserve trust and continuity.
Based on the reviewed corpus, the manuscript proposes an integrative lens
to resolve the concern about concept "diffusion": epistemic utility is defined as the
cognitive-practical value attributed to exchanges within a network when it guides
criteria, reduces uncertainty, and converts interaction into verifiable capacities and
products. Its operationalization is proposed through observable dimensions that
allow moving from the concept to evidence: criterion guidance (justifiable decisions
on a problem, method, or strategy), uncertainty reduction (decrease in rework,
clarification of next steps), access to repertoires (literature, frameworks,
methodological pathways, pertinent contacts), translation of tacit knowledge
(improvements in writing, argumentation, responses to evaluation), agency and
continuity (persistence of participation, assumption of roles, sustaining of projects),
and conversion into products (projects, co-authorships, training materials,
engagement actions, transfer).
Regarding limitations, the narrative design prioritizes conceptual integration
over exhaustiveness, so the corpus does not claim to represent the totality of global
production. The coverage is restricted to SciELO, Redalyc, and Dialnet, with
expected biases of availability and open access, in addition to a limited time
window. The heterogeneity of included designs (reviews, empirical studies, cases)
conditions the type of inferences and demands caution when generalizing across
institutions with different capacities. These limitations open a research agenda
applicable to other investigative contexts: comparative case studies on active
networks, qualitative evaluation of generated value using epistemic utility
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indicators, analysis of alliance governance, and studies on the effects of platforms
and artificial intelligence on collaborative continuity (Ayala & Rivas-Martínez, 2026;
Pérez-Ugena Coromina, 2024).
Conclusions
Academic networks have evolved into coordination infrastructure for
universities, with their value observable through continuity, work organization, and
verifiable products. Their sustainability is associated with distributed governance,
leadership, institutional support, and digital infrastructure governed by clear rules.
These networks facilitate the articulation between internationalization and
outreach/engagement by connecting academic cooperation with external actors,
projects with follow-up, and transfer. It is proposed that networks be managed by
the value they generate, using the lens of epistemic utility, which is the cognitive-
practical value that guides criteria, reduces uncertainty, and converts interaction
into results, thus guiding alliance prioritization, incentives, evaluation, and impact.
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| Daniel Roman-Acosta | Yanet Domínguez Albear |
Estrategia y Gestión Universitaria EGU
About the main author
Daniel Roman
-Acosta:
A doctoral candidate in Educational Sciences at the
Universidad Pedagógica Experimental Libertador (UPEL), he holds a Master’s degree
in Educational Innovations from the same institution and a degree in Sociology from
the Universidad del Zulia. Currently, he serves as the Director of the Platform for
Social Action, Management, and Research (PLAGCIS), in addition to working as an
educator, researcher, and consultant. He has led projects focused on academic
networks and virtual learning environments, distinguished by his prolific research
output regarding the ethical and technical application of emerging technologies in
higher education.
Declaration of author responsibility
Daniel Roman
-Acosta 1: Conceptualization, Data curation, Formal
analysis,
Research, Methodology, Resources, Software, Supervision, Validation/Verification,
Visualization, Writing/original draft and Writing, review and editing.
Yanet Domínguez Albear 2:
Data Curation, Formal Analysis, Investigation,
Resources, Software,
Supervision, Validation/Verification, Visualization, Writing
Original Draft, and Writing
Review & Editing.
Financing:
Own resources.
Special Acknowledgments: