How can impact strategies be developed that better support universities to address twenty-first-century challenges?

Author:

Reed Mark S.1,Gent Saskia2,Seballos Fran3,Glass Jayne14,Hansda Regina5,Fischer-Møller Mads16

Affiliation:

1. Rural Policy Centre and Thriving Natural Capital Challenge Centre, Department of Rural Economy, Environment & Society, Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC), Edinburgh, UK

2. Insights for Impact, Basingstoke, UK

3. School of Global Studies, University of Sussex, Brighton, UK

4. Natural Resources and Sustainable Development, Department of Earth Sciences, Uppsala University, Sweden

5. School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh, UK

6. WWF Scotland, Edinburgh, UK

Abstract

To better address twenty-first-century challenges, research institutions often develop and publish research impact strategies, but as a tool, impact strategies are poorly understood. This study provides the first formal analysis of impact strategies from the UK, Canada, Australia, Denmark, New Zealand and Hong Kong, China, and from independent research institutes. Two types of strategy emerged. First, ‘achieving impact’ strategies tended to be bottom-up and co-productive, with a strong emphasis on partnerships and engagement, but they were more likely to target specific beneficiaries with structured implementation plans, use boundary organisations to co-produce research and impact, and recognise impact with less reliance on extrinsic incentives. Second, ‘enabling impact’ strategies were more top-down and incentive-driven, developed to build impact capacity and culture across an institution, faculty or centre, with a strong focus on partnerships and engagement, and they invested in dedicated impact teams and academic impact roles, supported by extrinsic incentives including promotion criteria. This typology offers a new way to categorise, analyse and understand research impact strategies, alongside insights that may be used by practitioners to guide the design of future strategies, considering the limitations of top-down, incentive-driven approaches versus more bottom-up, co-productive approaches.

Publisher

UCL Press

Subject

General Earth and Planetary Sciences,General Environmental Science

Reference52 articles.

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