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Policy & Politics Journal Blog

democratic

Virtual Issue in celebration of the 10th anniversary of the San Francisco Declaration on Research Assessment (DORA) on May 16, 2023

May 16, 2023May 15, 2023policypressblogLeave a comment

by Sarah Brown and Claire Dunlop

DORA, a public declaration launched in 2013 with now over 23,000 signatories worldwide, aims to radically revise the current methods of research assessment. It speaks of an urgent need to improve the ways in which research is currently evaluated by moving beyond the monopoly of the Impact Factor to a more diverse and inclusive set of measures.

At Policy & Politics, we recognise this need very well. So many in our community tell us how their professional lives are dominated by the Impact Factors of journals: from winning funding awards, to getting jobs and promotions. Indeed, many of our authors tell us that’s their main driver for publishing with us. We want to be part of the journey to change this, recognising the value of taking a broader view of how we’re evaluating research quality. But we can’t do it single-handedly. So we stand alongside those in our community in seeking to diversify the ways in which research is evaluated.

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NewsACF, advocacy strategies, belgium, Beliefs, boundary objects, boundary spanning, citizens, Climate Change Policy, collaboration, COVID-19, creeping crises, crisis governance, crisis management, democratic, DORA, EBP, engagement, epistemic communities, evidence use, evidence-based policymaking, food aid, funders, Interest groups, intermediaries, multilevel governance, Network Analysis, open access, open scholarship, policy, policy change, policy learning, policymaking, process tracing, public engagement, turbulent, turbulent times, UK, universities

Does evidence really improve policymaking?: free article collection from Policy & Politics

May 2, 2023May 2, 2023policypressblogLeave a comment

by Sarah Brown

This edition of our quarterly highlights collection focuses on the role of evidence in policymaking. It’s a theme we’ve curated collections around regularly, but our readership figures for these articles remind us time and again how important our community find this topic.

So, our first article on this theme by authors Clementine Hill O’Connor, Katherine Smith, and Ellen Stewart explores the question of how to balance evidence with public preferences.

How can policy organisations deal with competing (and sometimes conflicting) imperatives to strengthen the role of evidence in policy, with simultaneous calls to better engage diverse publics? Academic research has much to say about both the value of evidence for policymaking to increase (or improve) the policymakers’ engagement with evidence AND investigating a wide range of methods through which publics can be involved in policymaking. Perhaps surprisingly, these contributions are rarely connected. This disconnect is the focus of Integrating Evidence and Public Engagement in Policy Work: An empirical examination of three UK policy organisations.

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Newsboundary objects, boundary spanning, Brazil, bureaucracy, citizens, democratic, EBP, engagement, evidence use, evidence-based policy, evidence-based policymaking, funders, information sources, intermediaries, policy, policy capacity, policy work, public engagement, UK, universities, use of research

Integrating Evidence and Public Engagement in Policy Work: An empirical examination of three UK policy organisations 

March 8, 2023March 22, 2023policypressblogLeave a comment

by Clementine Hill O’Connor, Katherine Smith & Ellen Stewart

Balancing evidence with public preferences – a pressing policy dilemma? 

How can policy organisations balance competing (and sometimes conflicting) imperatives to strengthen the role of evidence in policy, with simultaneous calls to better engage diverse publics? Academic research has much to say about both the value of evidence for policymaking and there are multiple studies examining evidence use in policy and assessing efforts to increase (or improve) the policymakers’ engagement with evidence. Academics have also been involved in developing a wide range of methods through which publics can be involved in policymaking. Perhaps surprisingly, these contributions are rarely connected. So, despite sharing a fundamental concern with the basis on which policy is made and a (sometimes implicit) claim to improve policy, these two areas of academic work are rarely connected. This is important because this disconnect creates real world challenges for people working in policy settings. This disconnect is the focus of our recent research published in Policy & Politics entitled Integrating Evidence and Public Engagement in Policy Work: An empirical examination of three UK policy organisations.

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Newscitizens, democratic, EBP, evidence use, evidence-based, policy-making, public engagement, UK
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