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Impact is a Two-Way Conversation

Dickinson, Edward LU (2019) In IIIEE Master Thesis IMEN41 20192
The International Institute for Industrial Environmental Economics
Abstract
Sustainability researchers are facing increasing pressure to improve their scientific communication and to achieve impacts in wider society with their research. Knowledge mobilisation (KMB) is a key component of both challenges, as it relates to efforts undertaken by researchers to achieve impacts with their research. This study seeks to identify some of the KMB practices being undertaken by experienced researchers, the types of support that they are receiving from their organisations and what matters they think need to be included in debates going forward about KMB and research impact. For this study, experienced sustainability researchers, KMB experts and funding assessors based in the United Kingdom and Canada were interviewed. These... (More)
Sustainability researchers are facing increasing pressure to improve their scientific communication and to achieve impacts in wider society with their research. Knowledge mobilisation (KMB) is a key component of both challenges, as it relates to efforts undertaken by researchers to achieve impacts with their research. This study seeks to identify some of the KMB practices being undertaken by experienced researchers, the types of support that they are receiving from their organisations and what matters they think need to be included in debates going forward about KMB and research impact. For this study, experienced sustainability researchers, KMB experts and funding assessors based in the United Kingdom and Canada were interviewed. These two countries were chosen as the UK was the first to include research impact within its national assessment of research funding, whilst the KMB sector has witnessed rapid growth in Canada. Interviewee transcripts were subject to a content analysis, the results of which were then compared against survey data provided by Springer Nature, who circulated a survey in June 2019 to researchers who had published at least 3 papers in the last 5 years, asking them for their views on research impact. Across the interviews with sustainability researchers, 65 different KMB practices, grouped into 10 categories, and 26 different types of potential support grouped into 11 categories were identified. With respect to KMB practices reported, the study provides a detailed qualitative synthesis of all interviewees’ experiences and views on a range of KMB practices, including research design, stakeholder engagement, networks, open access issues, researcher attributes and tailored communications. In addition, a detailed synthesis of support for KMB is provided, covering organisational culture, reflective spaces and fora, incentives, training, external communications, dedicated KMB personnel, time and interdisciplinary teams. Interviewees views on other matters to consider, such as the advocacy dilemma, competing interests, resistance to sustainability, possible implications for certain types of sustainability research and possible changes needed at research organisations and funding agencies are also provided. The study concludes by contending that KMB is far more complex and diverse that has traditionally been conceived, requiring key parties to investigate what is working and what is not (with respect to KMB) and that KMB is the responsibility of everyone, not just researchers and their organisations. Finally, the study offers nine recommendations for those interested in improving the KMB of sustainability research. (Less)
Popular Abstract
Sustainability researchers are facing increasing pressure to improve their scientific communication and to achieve impacts in wider society with their research. Knowledge mobilisation (KMB) is a key component of both challenges, as it relates to efforts undertaken by researchers to achieve impacts with their research. This study seeks to identify some of the KMB practices being undertaken by experienced researchers, the types of support that they are receiving from their organisations and what matters they think need to be included in debates going forward about KMB and research impact. For this study, experienced sustainability researchers, KMB experts and funding assessors based in the United Kingdom and Canada were interviewed. Sixteen... (More)
Sustainability researchers are facing increasing pressure to improve their scientific communication and to achieve impacts in wider society with their research. Knowledge mobilisation (KMB) is a key component of both challenges, as it relates to efforts undertaken by researchers to achieve impacts with their research. This study seeks to identify some of the KMB practices being undertaken by experienced researchers, the types of support that they are receiving from their organisations and what matters they think need to be included in debates going forward about KMB and research impact. For this study, experienced sustainability researchers, KMB experts and funding assessors based in the United Kingdom and Canada were interviewed. Sixteen interviews were conducted in total. In addition, the results of a survey circulated by Springer Nature, the academic publishing company, looking at attitudes and approaches to research impact are analysed and used to triangulate the data from the interviews.
The study claims that KMB is far more complex and diverse that has traditionally been conceived, requiring key parties to investigate what is working and what is not (with respect to KMB) and that KMB is the responsibility of everyone, not just researchers and their organisations. Finally, the study offers nine recommendations for those interested in improving the KMB of sustainability research. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Dickinson, Edward LU
supervisor
organization
course
IMEN41 20192
year
type
H2 - Master's Degree (Two Years)
subject
keywords
Knowledge mobilization, research impact, sustainability research, academic engagement, knowledge exchange, knowledge transfer, societal impact, influencing policy, stakeholder engagement, scientific communication
publication/series
IIIEE Master Thesis
report number
2019:17
ISSN
1401-9191
language
English
id
8996965
date added to LUP
2019-10-22 15:41:49
date last changed
2019-10-24 08:39:55
@misc{8996965,
  abstract     = {{Sustainability researchers are facing increasing pressure to improve their scientific communication and to achieve impacts in wider society with their research. Knowledge mobilisation (KMB) is a key component of both challenges, as it relates to efforts undertaken by researchers to achieve impacts with their research. This study seeks to identify some of the KMB practices being undertaken by experienced researchers, the types of support that they are receiving from their organisations and what matters they think need to be included in debates going forward about KMB and research impact. For this study, experienced sustainability researchers, KMB experts and funding assessors based in the United Kingdom and Canada were interviewed. These two countries were chosen as the UK was the first to include research impact within its national assessment of research funding, whilst the KMB sector has witnessed rapid growth in Canada. Interviewee transcripts were subject to a content analysis, the results of which were then compared against survey data provided by Springer Nature, who circulated a survey in June 2019 to researchers who had published at least 3 papers in the last 5 years, asking them for their views on research impact. Across the interviews with sustainability researchers, 65 different KMB practices, grouped into 10 categories, and 26 different types of potential support grouped into 11 categories were identified. With respect to KMB practices reported, the study provides a detailed qualitative synthesis of all interviewees’ experiences and views on a range of KMB practices, including research design, stakeholder engagement, networks, open access issues, researcher attributes and tailored communications. In addition, a detailed synthesis of support for KMB is provided, covering organisational culture, reflective spaces and fora, incentives, training, external communications, dedicated KMB personnel, time and interdisciplinary teams. Interviewees views on other matters to consider, such as the advocacy dilemma, competing interests, resistance to sustainability, possible implications for certain types of sustainability research and possible changes needed at research organisations and funding agencies are also provided. The study concludes by contending that KMB is far more complex and diverse that has traditionally been conceived, requiring key parties to investigate what is working and what is not (with respect to KMB) and that KMB is the responsibility of everyone, not just researchers and their organisations. Finally, the study offers nine recommendations for those interested in improving the KMB of sustainability research.}},
  author       = {{Dickinson, Edward}},
  issn         = {{1401-9191}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  series       = {{IIIEE Master Thesis}},
  title        = {{Impact is a Two-Way Conversation}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}