For researchers in Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) publishing and collaborating with academics on mutually beneficial projects is uncommon. Drawing on their experience of a major collaborative international research project on public attitudes towards inequality that resulted in a flagship report for Oxfam and a series of academic papers, Franziska Mager, discusses the barriers and benefits to research that brings together charities and academia and how this reflects different valuations of impact
The outsized importance of publications has meant too many research students focus on featuring pape...
A research programme aims to bridge the gap between 'R' and 'D' to build mission-driven, science-ric...
Research impact often tends not to happen in one emphatic, public moment but rather at more discrete...
Academics looking to communicate the findings and value of their research to wider audiences are inc...
Many research evaluation systems continue to take a narrow view of excellence, judging the value of ...
There are now more than 13 million users registered to the ResearchGate platform, which doubles as a...
Funding agencies are increasingly seeking to promote more non-linear developmental approaches to res...
The appeal of collaborating with a government agency, or an organisation funded by one, seems obviou...
COVID-19 has led to rapid and open sharing of research outputs. But will this new, radically open re...
Duncan Green reviews the annual CPAID workshop during which Public Authority researchers had a chanc...
The impact of academic research, particularly on policy and the private sector, is an increasingly i...
Philosophers of science have in recent years presented arguments in favour of increasing cognitive d...
Gender differences in scholarly productivity have proved a persistent problem. But to what extent is...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
Impact has in the past two REF cycles established itself as an integral criteria of research assessm...
The outsized importance of publications has meant too many research students focus on featuring pape...
A research programme aims to bridge the gap between 'R' and 'D' to build mission-driven, science-ric...
Research impact often tends not to happen in one emphatic, public moment but rather at more discrete...
Academics looking to communicate the findings and value of their research to wider audiences are inc...
Many research evaluation systems continue to take a narrow view of excellence, judging the value of ...
There are now more than 13 million users registered to the ResearchGate platform, which doubles as a...
Funding agencies are increasingly seeking to promote more non-linear developmental approaches to res...
The appeal of collaborating with a government agency, or an organisation funded by one, seems obviou...
COVID-19 has led to rapid and open sharing of research outputs. But will this new, radically open re...
Duncan Green reviews the annual CPAID workshop during which Public Authority researchers had a chanc...
The impact of academic research, particularly on policy and the private sector, is an increasingly i...
Philosophers of science have in recent years presented arguments in favour of increasing cognitive d...
Gender differences in scholarly productivity have proved a persistent problem. But to what extent is...
“Filter bubble”, “echo chambers”, “information diet” – the metaphors to describe today’s information...
Impact has in the past two REF cycles established itself as an integral criteria of research assessm...
The outsized importance of publications has meant too many research students focus on featuring pape...
A research programme aims to bridge the gap between 'R' and 'D' to build mission-driven, science-ric...
Research impact often tends not to happen in one emphatic, public moment but rather at more discrete...