As academics think about impact, they can draw on some of the lessons and strategic approaches used by civil society and campaigning groups. Andy Martin, Director of strategy consulting firm Firetail, says academics should ask themselves three questions when thinking about the impact of their research to help form a broader understanding of how their work operates beyond reductive measurables
Questions over how academics and the third sector can collaborate to influence policy are not new. H...
UK social scientists feel a growing pressure to achieve policy change. In reality, this process is m...
Research users are not passive recipients of knowledge, but engage with research from their own pers...
Charities and NGOs are primary users of academic research, playing a significant role in the social ...
Human society is full of would-be ‘change agents’, a restless mix of campaigners, lobbyists, and off...
What can academics learn from how civil society organisations and NGOs approach policy impact? Julia...
The following reflections are from speakers at today’s one-day workshop, Communicating impact: the r...
While academic social science is extremely effective at generating public value, it is less adept at...
This article reviews the advice from the academic and 'grey' literatures to identify a list of dos a...
The inevitable chaos and unpredictability of politics makes trying to achieve policy change a real c...
James Lloyd’s recent post “Should academics be expected to change policy? Six reasons why it is unre...
This article articulates the nature of the challenge of the academic–practitioner “divide” as one of...
Correctly targeting your audience and specifically tailoring outputs to policymakers is key to impro...
Proving research ‘impact’ can be tricky and impact itself can be hard to define, despite expectation...
Enhancing the capacity to understand academic influence can help all of us in the social sciences to...
Questions over how academics and the third sector can collaborate to influence policy are not new. H...
UK social scientists feel a growing pressure to achieve policy change. In reality, this process is m...
Research users are not passive recipients of knowledge, but engage with research from their own pers...
Charities and NGOs are primary users of academic research, playing a significant role in the social ...
Human society is full of would-be ‘change agents’, a restless mix of campaigners, lobbyists, and off...
What can academics learn from how civil society organisations and NGOs approach policy impact? Julia...
The following reflections are from speakers at today’s one-day workshop, Communicating impact: the r...
While academic social science is extremely effective at generating public value, it is less adept at...
This article reviews the advice from the academic and 'grey' literatures to identify a list of dos a...
The inevitable chaos and unpredictability of politics makes trying to achieve policy change a real c...
James Lloyd’s recent post “Should academics be expected to change policy? Six reasons why it is unre...
This article articulates the nature of the challenge of the academic–practitioner “divide” as one of...
Correctly targeting your audience and specifically tailoring outputs to policymakers is key to impro...
Proving research ‘impact’ can be tricky and impact itself can be hard to define, despite expectation...
Enhancing the capacity to understand academic influence can help all of us in the social sciences to...
Questions over how academics and the third sector can collaborate to influence policy are not new. H...
UK social scientists feel a growing pressure to achieve policy change. In reality, this process is m...
Research users are not passive recipients of knowledge, but engage with research from their own pers...