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Researcher engagement in policy deemed societally beneficial yet unrewarded.


ABSTRACT: Maintaining the continued flow of benefits from science, as well as societal support for science, requires sustained engagement between the research community and the general public. On the basis of data from an international survey of 1092 participants (634 established researchers and 458 students) in 55 countries and 315 research institutions, we found that institutional recognition of engagement activities is perceived to be undervalued relative to the societal benefit of those activities. Many researchers report that their institutions do not reward engagement activities despite institutions' mission statements promoting such engagement. Furthermore, institutions that actually measure engagement activities do so only to a limited extent. Most researchers are strongly motivated to engage with the public for selfless reasons, which suggests that incentives focused on monetary benefits or career progress may not align with researchers' values. If institutions encourage researchers' engagement activities in a more appropriate way - by moving beyond incentives - they might better achieve their institutional missions and bolster the crucial contributions of researchers to society.

SUBMITTER: Singh GG 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC6910643 | biostudies-literature | 2019 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Researcher engagement in policy deemed societally beneficial yet unrewarded.

Singh Gerald G GG   Farjalla Vinicius F VF   Chen Bing B   Pelling Andrew E AE   Ceyhan Elvan E   Dominik Martin M   Alisic Eva E   Kerr Jeremy J   Selin Noelle E NE   Bassioni Ghada G   Bennett Elena E   Kemp Andrew H AH   Chan Kai Ma KM  

Frontiers in ecology and the environment 20190730 7


Maintaining the continued flow of benefits from science, as well as societal support for science, requires sustained engagement between the research community and the general public. On the basis of data from an international survey of 1092 participants (634 established researchers and 458 students) in 55 countries and 315 research institutions, we found that institutional recognition of engagement activities is perceived to be undervalued relative to the societal benefit of those activities. Ma  ...[more]

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