“…The interplay between knowledge transfer and academic citizenship can in fact be traced back to individual and contextual factors (Schmidt & Graversen, 2018;Vogelgesang et al, 2010). At an individual level, engagement in knowledge transfer and academic citizenship has been related to previous accomplishments (e.g., Tagliaventi et al, 2019), research awards (e.g., Lutter & Schröder, 2016), grants obtained by research councils (e.g., Schmidt & Graversen, 2018), international collaborations (e.g., Cañibano et al, 2020), visiting scholarships (e.g., Jonkers & Cruz-Castro, 2013), discipline (Moosmayer, 2011;Crespi et al, 2011), gender (e.g., Anzivino et al, 2020), and academic rank (e.g., Salter et al, 2017). Taking context features into account, university size (e.g., Abramo et al, 2011), university and department orientation to research (Salter et al, 2017), and department heterogeneity (Somech & Drach-Zahavy, 2013;Stewart, 2006) have been shown to be influential.…”