Policymakers are often unaware of publicly funded research 鈥渟ometimes hidden away in the footnotes鈥 of the guidance presented to them, a senior civil servant has acknowledged.
However, Mark Holmes, deputy director for impact and innovation infrastructure at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, said that research 鈥渓eads to better outcomes as well as better policy鈥.
Mr Holmes was among speakers at a seminar organised by the Westminster 糖心Vlog Forum on the social impact of academic research 鈥 and how far its different dimensions are captured by the research excellence framework.
The event also heard from David Halpern, director of the Cabinet Office鈥檚 Behavioural Insight Team (often called the 鈥淣udge Unit鈥), who explained the process by which research had become more central to policymaking.
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In the past, he said, 鈥渁cademics used to pull together research with policy implications and throw it over the wall into Whitehall鈥. This haphazard process was improved through the creation in 2001 of the Prime Minister鈥檚 Strategy Unit, which brought together researchers and civil servants in 鈥渁n elite unit at the heart of government chucking ideas over the walls into other departments鈥. But often these ideas were too remote from departmental thinking to be easily taken up.
The birth in 2010 of the Behavioural Insight Team, said Dr Halpern, offered a new way of working based on 鈥渞esearch within government鈥. As an example, he said that if the government wanted to encourage organ donation, letters could be sent out to people incorporating references to social norms (鈥渢housands of people who see this page decide to register鈥) or reciprocity (鈥測ou may need an organ yourself in the future鈥) 鈥 to see what proved most effective in influencing behaviour.
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This amounted to a form of practical scientific method, in Dr Halpern鈥檚 view, since 鈥測ou have to try things out and test them. We don鈥檛 know what works in advance.鈥
The seminar, held at the Royal Society on 10 October, also offered academics, university leaders and research 鈥渦sers鈥 an opportunity to subject official government views to scrutiny.
Several participants wondered if much valuable work being done by universities slipped through the net of the REF 鈥渋mpact鈥 criteria.
Sophie Duncan, deputy director of the National Co-ordinating Centre for Public Engagement, suggested that 鈥渦niversities are not good at telling stories about or quantifying their social impact鈥 鈥 which, like their direct economic impact, was still underestimated by the public.
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Lianne Deeming, who is director for business excellence at Tata Steel and serves on an REF 鈥渦ser鈥 panel, saw a case for more investment in riskier areas of research, 鈥渂ecause you often learn from failure鈥.
And Jane Tinkler, research fellow at the London School of Economics, reported on research that indicates that policymakers often valued academics less for specific research projects than for 鈥渆xpertise鈥, 鈥渓ong-term views鈥 and 鈥渃onceptual frameworks鈥, which she was 鈥渘ot sure the REF captures鈥.
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