Enabling successful science‐policy knowledge exchange between marine biodiversity research and management: An Australian case study

Author:

Karcher Denis B.12ORCID,Cvitanovic Christopher3ORCID,Colvin Rebecca4ORCID,van Putten Ingrid25ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science Australian National University Canberra Australia

2. Centre for Marine Socioecology University of Tasmania Hobart Australia

3. School of Business University of New South Wales Canberra Australia

4. Crawford School of Public Policy Australian National University Acton Australia

5. CSIRO, Oceans and Atmosphere Hobart Australia

Abstract

AbstractKnowledge exchange (KE) between research and decision‐making is increasingly demanded for tackling environmental challenges, yet there is still much to learn about how to enable that effectively. Here, we analyze a distributor of research funding (i.e., the Australian National Environmental Science Program Marine Biodiversity Hub (‘the hub’)) which actively coordinated KE between researchers and state‐ and Commonwealth Government end‐users. Through 30 in‐depth qualitative interviews with researchers, hub executives and end‐users we identify enablers of KE engagement, compare what researchers and decision‐makers found most important, and highlight what research programs and funding organizations can learn from this case study. Through an evolution of programs, the hub had a strong governance structure, co‐identified priority setting, and funding for emerging priorities. Additional enablers were a legacy of longstanding interpersonal working relationships, regular engagement, knowledge brokering roles, and the nationally trusted role of the hub. Researchers more so than end‐users found trust, the focus on clear end‐user needs as well as the hub's governance and progress‐monitoring key to success. End‐users more often indicated the early engagement, collaborative nature, and flexibility to adjust as important assets to effective interaction. Visions for future KE included better engagement of Traditional Owners, streamlining direct access to expertise, more accessible outputs, and earlier involvement of researchers in policy development. In sum, we find that time (e.g., pre‐story, early engagement) and boundary roles (e.g., knowledge brokering individuals, engaged research funders or coordinators) are key to success underlining that there are substantial components to KE success that can be nurtured and planned for.

Funder

Centre for Marine Socioecology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Geography, Planning and Development

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