Research Impact Hub: the role of research in policy and public engagement

Free resources, commentary, and analysis

The US Capitol building with a backdrop of American hundred dollar bills

Welcome to our Research Impact Hub, where you'll find curated content on policy engagement, public engagement, and the role and contribution of publishers. 

Whether the pressing issue is climate change or COVID-19, studies show that community participation in world-changing endeavors is absolutely imperative to individual participation. Research that has world-changing impact needs to reach politicians and policymakers who have the power to educate and influence communities. As publishers, we help translate and disseminate this research, which provides solutions to the biggest challenges of our time.

While we're excited about the content on this Hub, it is here for you, not us, and intended to stimulate debate and discussion. If you have ideas or information to contribute, we'd love to share it here. Please contact us at communications@tandf.co.uk.

Related: Research Impact at Taylor & Francis

Impact spelled out in Scrabble letters

Policy engagement

Blog

How can we access the non-economic benefits of the humanities?

by Annabel Dukes, Research Associate at the Centre for Medieval Studies, University of York

bokeh photography of open book

This blog highlights two ways that humanities research knowledge can benefit society.

Report

How to talk to policymakers about research

Brown wooden chairs on blue and brown wooden floor

This report published by the Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) looks at how to engage with policymakers effectively and prove the value of research. Based on interviews with former ministers, special advisers, and officials it considers common errors and makes recommendations on how to change perceptions or influence government.

Viewpoint

Why open access is not enough – how research assessment reform can support research impact

by Liz Allen, Director of Strategic Initiatives, F1000, and Victoria Gardner, Director of Policy, Taylor & Francis

books on brown wooden shelves

Liz Allen and Victoria Gardner suggest adding an additional element to a theoretical framework proposed by Sarah Chaytor at University College London (UCL) to help realize the wider potential benefits of research.

Policy Note

Policy Note on addressing the challenges of making research accessible outside academia

by Dr. Laura Brassington, Policy Manager, HEPI, and Victoria Gardner, Director of Policy, Taylor & Francis

Image of heads depicted as cogs

In Why open access is not enough: Spreading the benefits of research (HEPI Policy Note 42) Dr. Laura Brassington, Policy Manager at HEPI, and our own Victoria Gardner, Director of Policy at Taylor & Francis provide solutions to the challenge of making research accessible outside of academia.

Viewpoint

'In an open access world, would evidence-based policymaking be the norm?'

by Victoria Gardner, Director of Policy at Taylor & Francis

Graphic of an 'evidence' scale

At a HEPI/Taylor & Francis roundtable in June 2022, several experts, including representatives from higher education institutions, advocacy organizations, trade bodies, U.K. Government, funders, learned societies, and publishing, explored these questions: How do we make research more usable? How do we ensure research benefits all stakeholders? Is it enough simply to make the outputs of research openly available?

Viewpoint

Answering the challenges to open access: The '5 Cs'

by Sarah Chaytor, Director of Research Strategy and Policy at UCL

The letter 'C' in various type faces

Open access does not automatically make research accessible. If policymakers are unable to find relevant research or to understand highly technical outputs, they cannot make use of the evidence being published. Sarah Chaytor provides a framework to help policy communities benefit from the increasing volume of research in order to deliver evidence-informed policy.

Viewpoint

Open access: the end or the means?

by Victoria Gardner, Director of Policy, Taylor & Francis

Door of a modern house wide open to the outside

As open access becomes the norm, business, governments, and society face fewer barriers to accessing research, but are they always able to make use of what is available to them? What else could be done to realize the goals of making research accessible, efficient, and effective?

Viewpoint

The open access opportunity: building the "Third Space"

by Matt Flinders, Professor of Politics and Founding Director of the Sir Bernard Crick Centre at the University of Sheffield

Three dimensional render of brightly lit corridor of industrial facility

The "third space" is the sphere that exists between knowledge creation and knowledge mobilization. In this article, Matt Flinders argues that, without thinking about the architecture needed to facilitate effective mobility across this "third space," we risk any additional public investment in research, development, and innovation going to waste.

Public engagement

Blog

How artifical intelligence (AI) impacts on academic publishing

by Priya Madina, Director of External Affairs and Policy at Taylor & Francis

Aerial shot of women's fingers typing on keyboard

This post examines AI's research integrity challenges and highlights the benefits of using AI to foster a more transparent, equitable, and trustworthy research environment.

Blog

Does research provide insights to many of the global challenges we’re facing? A publisher's view

by Priya Madina, Director of External Affairs and Policy at Taylor & Francis

Globe shown as a metal puzzle

Highlights from the HEPI and Taylor & Francis roundtable discussion on how policymakers can better use research to improve the U.K.'s skills base.

Article

Are research-policy engagement activities informed by policy theory and evidence? 7 Challenges to the UK impact agenda

by Anna Hopkins, et al. in Policy Design and Practice

Man of color wearing a suit and holding a pen, contemplating if he will sign something

In this article, the authors ask "In what should we invest if we seek to maximize the impact of research?" and map the activities of 346 organizations investing in research-policy engagement to examine how their aims compare with their outcomes.

Article

A future for public engagement with science in New Zealand

by R.A. Salmon and R.K. Priestly in Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand

New Zealand on the World Map

The New Zealand government has recently announced initiatives and aspirations for greater public engagement in science. In this paper, the authors explore how these initiatives and aspirations might be implemented and achieved in practice.

Article

Centering culture in public engagement on climate change

by Debashish Munshi, Priya Kurian, Raven Cretney, Sandra L. Morrison, and Lyn Kathlene in Environmental Communication

Silhouette of people implying different cultures, ethnicities, or styles

Arguing for a greater emphasis on culture in climate communication, the authors of this article construct a culture-centered framework for a deliberative approach to public engagement on climate change. The framework has the potential to reframe environmental communication on climate change by highlighting the specific contexts of people’s lived experiences.

Video

Evidence Week 2021 – the basis of public support for climate policies

Video of Joanna Depledge from Evidence Week 2021

In this video, shot for Evidence Week, Research Fellow Joanna Depledge from the Cambridge Centre for Environment, Energy, and Natural Resource Governance (C-EENRG), and former editor of Climate Policy, discusses research showing how public acceptance led to the success of climate policies.

Translational research

Design of a motor vehicle blueprint

Policy Note

Advancing Translational Research

By Lan Murdock and Rose Stephenson

This HEPI Policy Note explains the crucial role of translational research in bridging the gap between scientific discovery and real-world application.

Blog

Could translational research be a model for long-term impact in the social sciences and humanities?

by Gabi Lombardo, Jonathan Deer, Anne-Charlotte Fauvel, Vicky Gardner, and Lan Murdock

Close up of a water droplet

Drawing on the findings of a workshop, this post highlights characteristics of translational research, ways of supporting cross-disciplinary collaboration, and the challenges and opportunities of adopting translational principles in the social sciences and humanities.

Report

How can we make "translational research by design" the norm for Europe?

by Gabi Lombardo, Anne-Charlotte Fauvel, Lan Murdock, and Victoria Gardner

A young boy holds a sign that says "11: Sustainable cities and communities

This F1000 Research report summarizes the findings of an interdisciplinary workshop co-convened by Taylor & Francis, the European Alliance for Social Sciences and Humanities (EASSH), and the European infrastructure for translational medicine (EATRIS).

The role and contribution of publishers

External shot of a South African university

Blog

The impact of open access (OA) research from Africa

Highlighting the enormous potential of research from Africa, this article showcases 10 recent OA articles by African researchers that have influenced policy.

Blog

Open access (OA) transformative deals in the US

Campus, The Oval, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio

We summarize three research papers in the Library Resources & Technical Services 2024 edition on transformative OA deals in the U.S.

Blog

10 essential open access books on climate change

Mother and child looking at flood waters around their home

Discover 10 open access books about climate change examining everything from the impact of a changing climate on women to how to build towns and cities that are more resilient to extreme weather events.

Blog

Global South research that is impacting policy

MetroCable public transit system in Medellin, Colombia

Find out about five Taylor & Francis Open Access research articles, published by researchers from the Global South, that have directly influenced recent policy documents from some of the largest and most influential organizations in the world.

Blog

Five open access books that have impacted policy

Illustration of flags of the world, made into a puzzle.

Read about five Taylor & Francis Open Access books that have directly influenced recent policy documents from some of the largest and most influential organizations in the world.

Blog

12 must-read open access books

Close up of someone using a tablet or ereader in a modern-looking home office

Open access books have a higher research impact – in this blog post, our expert editors and publishers highlight 12 OA books tackling global issues.

Report

Accelerating open access in the UK

Image of the Millennium Bridge with St Paul's Cathedral in the background at night

This report looks at how our transformative agreement (TA) with Jisc boosted the impact of U.K. research in 2021 and 202

Blog

Five open access research papers impacting policy right now

Illustration of a diverse crowd of people

This blog highlights five Taylor & Francis open access research articles, published in the past two years, that have directly influenced recent policy documents from some of the largest and most influential organizations in the world.

Blog

Impacting policy with evidence-based research: 5 open access STEM papers

Person waering face mask holding test tube beside a microscope

Read about five Taylor & Francis open access research articles, specifically in STEM topics and published in the past three years, that have directly influenced recent policy documents.

Viewpoint

Artificial intelligence, publishers, and the translation of research – a reflection on making research accessible outside of academia

by Philip Carpenter, Pro-Chancellor at the University of York

blue circuit board

Photo by Umberto on Unsplash

Photo by Umberto on Unsplash

In this post, Philip Carpenter shares some insights on how technology may help make research more accessible to non-specialist audiences.

Blog

Engaged research and publication in the humanities: what connects us?

by Katherine Burton, Routledge Journals (Humanities, Media and the Arts)

People with different skin colors holding gears of different colors like a puzzle

Finding ways to navigate an increasingly digitally complex research and publishing ecosystem can be a challenge, but it also presents a wonderful opportunity for those involved in scholarly communication to support new research practices. How might publishers work alongside scholars to support this evolution and respond to needs emerging now and in the future?

Blog

A typology of the publicly engaged humanities

by Daniel Fisher, National Humanities Alliance

Conversation, community, commenting, collaboration, contribution, all spelled out in wooden block letters

In this blog post, Daniel Fisher provides a summary of publicly engaged humanities work that Humanities for All has compiled from colleges and universities across the U.S. over the last 10 years. Examining 1,500 initiatives, Humanities for All has discovered five distinct types of engagement, which Fisher explains “serve as a structure for articulating the public value of the humanities to students, parents, administrators, and elected officials, (that) can articulate the range of ways in which the humanities are addressing society’s pressing concerns, broadening perceptions of what humanities work can involve and impact."

Working paper

Public humanities and publication: publishing and the Public Humanities Working Group

by Kath Burton and Daniel Fisher

Student working in a traditional library

In this working paper, Kath Burton and Daniel Fisher explore the challenges associated with the publication of publicly engaged work in the humanities, and provide model practices to illustrate how publicly engaged work can ultimately lead to successful publication and feed into institutional credit and reward mechanisms.

Our partners

The Higher Education Policy Institute (HEPI) is the UK’s only think tank focusing exclusively on higher education.

Established in 2002, HEPI is a UK-wide, independent, and non-partisan organization funded by organizations and universities that wish to see a vibrant higher education debate. HEPI is playing a key role in shaping the debate through evidence around the future development of higher education in the UK.

HEPI’s objectives are to promote research into and understanding of all aspects of higher education and to disseminate the useful results of such research for the education and benefit of policy makers and the general public in the UK.

We're thrilled to be partners with HEPI in order to work with their extensive network of thought leaders and policy advisors on solutions to global challenges.

Logo for HEPI

The European Alliance for Social Sciences and Humanities (EASSH) is the largest advocacy and science policy organization for the social sciences and humanities in Europe.

EASSH aims to promote and strengthen the social sciences and humanities in Europe, providing channels and platforms for effectively communicating expertise on policy, programs, and results to decision makers and public officials.

The alliance has over 65 member organizations including a wide range of disciplinary areas, stakeholders, and universities from across Europe - and encompassing over 100,000 researchers.

Taylor & Francis works with EASSH to bring focused expertise from across the social sciences and humanities to bear on public debate, so as to strengthen European research and improve interactions among public and private partners.

Logo for EASSH

Founded in 2002, Sense about Science is an independent charity that challenges misrepresentation of science and evidence in public life. They advocate openness and honesty about research, and ensure the public interest in sound science and evidence is recognized in public debates and policymaking.

We're pleased to partner with Sense about Science to promote sound science and evidence in public debates and policymaking.

#ResearchImpact

Every researcher wants their work to have an impact, whether that’s in the world of academia, in society, or both. Read our guide to creating, capturing, and evaluating the impact of research.

Sense about science logo

You might also like:

Social justice and sustainability

Find out about the content we publish, commitments we've made, and initiatives we support related to social justice and sustainability: