{"title":"Enabling knowledge brokerage intermediaries to be evidence-informed","authors":"D. Gough, C. Maidment, J. Sharples","doi":"10.1332/174426421x16353477842207","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Target audience: What Works Centres; other intermediary brokerage agencies; their funders and users; and researchers of research use.Background: Knowledge brokerage and knowledge mobilisation (KM) are generic terms used to describe activities to enable the use of research evidence to inform policy, practice and individual decision making. Knowledge brokerage intermediary (KBI) initiatives facilitate such use of research evidence. This debate paper argues that although the work of KBIs is to enable evidence-informed decision making (EIDM), they may not always be overt and consistent in how they follow the principles of EIDM in their own practice.Key points for discussion: Drawing on examples from existing brokerage initiatives, four areas are suggested where KBIs could be more evidence-informed in their work: (1) needs analysis: evidence-informed in their analysis of where and how the KBI can best contribute to the existing evidence ecosystem; (2) methods and theories of change: evidence-informed in the methods that the KBI uses to achieve its goals; (3) evidence standards: credible standards for making evidence claims; and (4) evaluation and monitoring: evidence-informed evaluation of their own activities and contribution to the knowledge base on evidence use. For each of these areas, questions are suggested for considering the extent that the principles are being followed in practice.Conclusions and implications: KBIs work with evidence but they may not always be evidence-informed in their practice. KBIs could benefit from more overtly attending to the extent that they apply the logic of EIDM to how they work. In doing so, KBIs can advance both the study, and practice, of using research evidence to inform decision making.","PeriodicalId":51652,"journal":{"name":"Evidence & Policy","volume":"1 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":1.8000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Evidence & Policy","FirstCategoryId":"90","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1332/174426421x16353477842207","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"SOCIAL SCIENCES, INTERDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Target audience: What Works Centres; other intermediary brokerage agencies; their funders and users; and researchers of research use.Background: Knowledge brokerage and knowledge mobilisation (KM) are generic terms used to describe activities to enable the use of research evidence to inform policy, practice and individual decision making. Knowledge brokerage intermediary (KBI) initiatives facilitate such use of research evidence. This debate paper argues that although the work of KBIs is to enable evidence-informed decision making (EIDM), they may not always be overt and consistent in how they follow the principles of EIDM in their own practice.Key points for discussion: Drawing on examples from existing brokerage initiatives, four areas are suggested where KBIs could be more evidence-informed in their work: (1) needs analysis: evidence-informed in their analysis of where and how the KBI can best contribute to the existing evidence ecosystem; (2) methods and theories of change: evidence-informed in the methods that the KBI uses to achieve its goals; (3) evidence standards: credible standards for making evidence claims; and (4) evaluation and monitoring: evidence-informed evaluation of their own activities and contribution to the knowledge base on evidence use. For each of these areas, questions are suggested for considering the extent that the principles are being followed in practice.Conclusions and implications: KBIs work with evidence but they may not always be evidence-informed in their practice. KBIs could benefit from more overtly attending to the extent that they apply the logic of EIDM to how they work. In doing so, KBIs can advance both the study, and practice, of using research evidence to inform decision making.
目标受众:What Works Centres;其他中介经纪机构;他们的资助者和使用者;以及研究人员的研究用途。背景:知识中介和知识动员(KM)是用来描述能够利用研究证据为政策、实践和个人决策提供信息的活动的通用术语。知识经纪中介(KBI)倡议促进了这种研究证据的使用。这篇辩论论文认为,尽管kbi的工作是实现循证决策(EIDM),但他们在自己的实践中如何遵循EIDM原则方面可能并不总是公开和一致的。讨论要点:借鉴现有的经纪倡议的例子,建议在四个方面,KBI可以在他们的工作中更多地以证据为依据:(1)需求分析:在分析KBI在哪里以及如何才能最好地为现有的证据生态系统做出贡献时,以证据为依据;(2)变革的方法和理论:基于证据的KBI实现其目标的方法;(三)证据标准:提出证据主张的可信标准;(4)评价和监测:对自己的活动和对证据使用知识库的贡献进行循证评价。对于每一个领域,都提出了一些问题,以考虑在实践中遵守这些原则的程度。结论和启示:kbi的工作有证据,但他们在实践中可能并不总是循证的。kbi可以从更公开地关注将EIDM逻辑应用于其工作方式的程度中获益。这样做,kbi可以推进研究和实践,利用研究证据为决策提供信息。