This article reviews the advice from the academic and 'grey' literatures to identify a list of dos and don'ts for academics seeking 'impact' from their research. From 'how to do it' sources, we identify consistent advice on how to engage effectively, largely because it is necessarily vague, safe, and focused primarily on individuals. We then consider the wider policymaking system in which actors make political choices and have unequal access to impact opportunities. We identify the effort it takes to have actual policy impact and how far academics should be expected to go to secure and take credit for it
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
This article reviews the advice from the academic and 'grey' literatures to identify a list of dos a...
Many academics have strong incentives to influence policymaking, but may not know where to start. We...
Many academics have strong incentives to influence policymaking, but may not know where to start. We...
Research into the barriers of getting evidence produced by academics into policymaking processes has...
What can academics learn from how civil society organisations and NGOs approach policy impact? Julia...
UK social scientists feel a growing pressure to achieve policy change. In reality, this process is m...
Pressures have increasingly been put upon social scientists to prove their economic, cultural and so...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
A previous blog post by Jill Rutter discussed an Institute for Government project on how Government ...
Academics should be engaged with the wider world, but impact, if it is routinised, loses its potenti...
Communication between researchers and policymakers is key to achieving policy impact. Steve Johnson ...
Following on from the recent debate at the ‘From Research to Policy: Academic Impacts on Government’...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
This article reviews the advice from the academic and 'grey' literatures to identify a list of dos a...
Many academics have strong incentives to influence policymaking, but may not know where to start. We...
Many academics have strong incentives to influence policymaking, but may not know where to start. We...
Research into the barriers of getting evidence produced by academics into policymaking processes has...
What can academics learn from how civil society organisations and NGOs approach policy impact? Julia...
UK social scientists feel a growing pressure to achieve policy change. In reality, this process is m...
Pressures have increasingly been put upon social scientists to prove their economic, cultural and so...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from OUP via the DOI in this ...
A previous blog post by Jill Rutter discussed an Institute for Government project on how Government ...
Academics should be engaged with the wider world, but impact, if it is routinised, loses its potenti...
Communication between researchers and policymakers is key to achieving policy impact. Steve Johnson ...
Following on from the recent debate at the ‘From Research to Policy: Academic Impacts on Government’...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...
Of all the social sciences, social policy is one of the most obviously policy-orientated. One might,...