Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done

Most of the world’s population that derives their livelihoods or part of their livelihoods from forests are out of the information loop. Exclusion of public users of natural resources from access to scientific research results is not an oversight; it is a systemic problem that has costly ramifications for conservation and development. Results of a survey of 268 researchers from 29 countries indicate that institutional incentives support the linear, top-down communication of results through peer-reviewed journal articles, which often guarantees positive performance measurement. While the largest percentage of respondents (34%) ranked scientists as the most important audience for their work, only 15 percent of respondents considered peer-reviewed journals effective in promoting conservation and/or development. Respondents perceived that local initiatives (27%) and training (16%) were likely to lead to success in conservation and development; but few scientists invest in these activities. Engagement with the media (5%), production of training and educational materials (4%) and popular publications (5%) as outlets for scientific findings was perceived as inconsequential (o14%) in measuring scientific performance. Less than 3 percent of respondents ranked corporate actors as an important audience for their work. To ensure science is shared with those who need it, a shift in incentive structures is needed that rewards actual impact rather than only ‘high-impact’ journals. Widely used approaches and theoretical underpinnings from the social sciences, which underlie popular education and communication for social change, could enhance communication by linking knowledge and action in conservation biology

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shanley, P., López, C.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:communication, culture, distribution, knowledge management,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20237
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2857
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-202372016-05-30T17:48:57Z Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done Shanley, P. López, C. communication culture distribution knowledge management Most of the world’s population that derives their livelihoods or part of their livelihoods from forests are out of the information loop. Exclusion of public users of natural resources from access to scientific research results is not an oversight; it is a systemic problem that has costly ramifications for conservation and development. Results of a survey of 268 researchers from 29 countries indicate that institutional incentives support the linear, top-down communication of results through peer-reviewed journal articles, which often guarantees positive performance measurement. While the largest percentage of respondents (34%) ranked scientists as the most important audience for their work, only 15 percent of respondents considered peer-reviewed journals effective in promoting conservation and/or development. Respondents perceived that local initiatives (27%) and training (16%) were likely to lead to success in conservation and development; but few scientists invest in these activities. Engagement with the media (5%), production of training and educational materials (4%) and popular publications (5%) as outlets for scientific findings was perceived as inconsequential (o14%) in measuring scientific performance. Less than 3 percent of respondents ranked corporate actors as an important audience for their work. To ensure science is shared with those who need it, a shift in incentive structures is needed that rewards actual impact rather than only ‘high-impact’ journals. Widely used approaches and theoretical underpinnings from the social sciences, which underlie popular education and communication for social change, could enhance communication by linking knowledge and action in conservation biology 2009 2012-06-04T09:13:11Z 2012-06-04T09:13:11Z Journal Article Shanley, P., Lopez, C. 2009. Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done . Biotropica 41 (5) :535–544. ISSN: 0006-3606. 0006-3606 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20237 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2857 en Biotropica
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic communication
culture
distribution
knowledge management
communication
culture
distribution
knowledge management
spellingShingle communication
culture
distribution
knowledge management
communication
culture
distribution
knowledge management
Shanley, P.
López, C.
Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done
description Most of the world’s population that derives their livelihoods or part of their livelihoods from forests are out of the information loop. Exclusion of public users of natural resources from access to scientific research results is not an oversight; it is a systemic problem that has costly ramifications for conservation and development. Results of a survey of 268 researchers from 29 countries indicate that institutional incentives support the linear, top-down communication of results through peer-reviewed journal articles, which often guarantees positive performance measurement. While the largest percentage of respondents (34%) ranked scientists as the most important audience for their work, only 15 percent of respondents considered peer-reviewed journals effective in promoting conservation and/or development. Respondents perceived that local initiatives (27%) and training (16%) were likely to lead to success in conservation and development; but few scientists invest in these activities. Engagement with the media (5%), production of training and educational materials (4%) and popular publications (5%) as outlets for scientific findings was perceived as inconsequential (o14%) in measuring scientific performance. Less than 3 percent of respondents ranked corporate actors as an important audience for their work. To ensure science is shared with those who need it, a shift in incentive structures is needed that rewards actual impact rather than only ‘high-impact’ journals. Widely used approaches and theoretical underpinnings from the social sciences, which underlie popular education and communication for social change, could enhance communication by linking knowledge and action in conservation biology
format Journal Article
topic_facet communication
culture
distribution
knowledge management
author Shanley, P.
López, C.
author_facet Shanley, P.
López, C.
author_sort Shanley, P.
title Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done
title_short Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done
title_full Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done
title_fullStr Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done
title_full_unstemmed Out of the loop: Why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done
title_sort out of the loop: why research rarely reaches policy makers and the public and what can be done
publishDate 2009
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/20237
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/2857
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