📄 Abstract
This article presents a meta-synthesis of eighteen qualitative and qual-dominant studies examining how faculty and administrators in Philippine local universities and colleges (LUCs) experience and navigate the intertwined challenges of local politics, organizational change, and well-being. Guided by PRISMA 2020 and JBI Critical Appraisal protocols, the review distilled three major themes?political influences on governance, leadership and change practices, and occupational well-being?across diverse LUC contexts from Luzon to Mindanao. From this synthesis, we derived the REACT-KNP policy model, which outlines five cyclical steps (Revisit, Empower, Adapt, Capture, Transform) underpinned by a Knowledge?Negotiation?Protection (KNP) safeguard to promote resilient and sustainable reform. Key implications include the need for multi-year LGU compacts to stabilize funding, inclusive governance structures to buffer leadership transitions, and integrated well-being supports to mitigate faculty precarity. By foregrounding lived narratives and evidence-based strategies, the study offers actionable guidance for strengthening LUC capacity and faculty resilience in decentralized higher education settings.
🏷️ Keywords
📚 How to Cite:
Mharfe M. Micaroz, Albert Mapalo , NAVIGATING POLITICS, CHANGE, AND WELL-BEING IN LOCAL COLLEGES: A META-SYNTHESIS OF FACULTY AND ADMINISTRATOR NARRATIVES AS THE BASIS FOR THE REACT-KNP POLICY MODEL , Volume 11 , Issue 6, june 2025, EPRA International Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (IJMR) , DOI: https://doi.org/10.36713/epra22390