1 / 20

Dr Kirsty Newman Evidence-Informed Policy Making

Dr Kirsty Newman Evidence-Informed Policy Making. Overview. INASP Science policy advisors in parliament Capacity building for science in developing countries. Research Communication Cycle. Library Development. Use. Bandwidth management & optimisation. AuthorAid. Research. Access.

fallon
Télécharger la présentation

Dr Kirsty Newman Evidence-Informed Policy Making

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Dr Kirsty Newman Evidence-Informed Policy Making

  2. Overview • INASP • Science policy advisors in parliament • Capacity building for science in developing countries

  3. Research Communication Cycle Library Development Use Bandwidth management & optimisation AuthorAid Research Access Dissemination Journals online Availability Journal Access

  4. Research informed policy Policy for research Science policy

  5. Quiz: What do you know about parliament? • The major roles of parliament are: • i) • ii) • iii) • The UK Parliament consists of: • A: The House of Lords and the House of Commons • B: The Monarch and the Governments • C: The House of Commons only • D: The House of Commons, the House of Lords and the Monarch • The UK Government is formed of: • A: The Cabinet • B: All Labour MPs • C: All Labour MPs and all Labour Peers • D: Ministers and Whips • The major difference between the US Congress and the UK Parliament is.....? • The only person who is allowed to have an alcoholic drink in the House of Commons is: • A: The Speaker • B: The Clerk • C: The Prime Minister • D: The Chancellor of the Exchequer

  6. Quiz cont. B C D E A F A: MP asks parliamentary question about how research funding cuts will affect large research institute in her constituency B: Parliament amends bill on mental health in light of research on effective treatments C: MP from a constituency with a high malaria incidence asks a parliamentary question about the scientific evidence to support a ban on DDT use D: Committee carries out enquiry to establish if government policy on renewable energy is based on scientific evidence E: Parliament approves bill to regulate research ethics F: MP asks parliamentary question about amount of funding the government is spending on physics research

  7. Science support in UK parliament? • Specialist committee staff • Parliamentary library • Specialist office- POST

  8. “An Office of both Houses of the UK Parliament providing MPs and peers with balanced and independent analysis of public policy issues that have a basis in science and technology”

  9. http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_offices/post.cfm

  10. www.parliament.uk/post.cfm

  11. Science advice in African parliament • MPs are faced with many policy issues related to science and technology • To enable parliament to scrutinise government, ALL MPs need access to accurate impartial advice on science topics

  12. Common gaps in capacity • Knowledge • Scientifically knowledge of staff and members • Links to experts • Skills • Advanced internet search skills • Evaluating quality and bias of information • Procedures • Expert review of policy briefings • Recruiting science advisors • Timely production of parliamentary schedule

  13. Evidence-Informed Policy making • Training • Advanced Internet Research and Information Literacy • Summarising Skills • Communication Skills • Networking • Linking parliamentary staff and MPs to researchers • Regional networking • Advocacy • Influencing decision makers on importance of Science, Parliaments and Africa

  14. Evidence-Informed Policy making Science Lead Science Co-facilitator Lead Facilitator Parliamentary Librarian Parliamentary Researcher Parliamentary ICT specialist Co-facilitator

  15. What does my job involve? • Administration/Project management • Travel • Carrying out training • Meeting/networking • Satisfaction... • .. And Frustration

  16. My career journey BSc in Microbiology and Immunology PhD in HIV research Post-doc Malaria Research International Activities team at the Wellcome Trust Evidence-Informed Policy Officer INASP/POST

  17. Kirsty’s top tips • Grab any opportunities in your current job to develop transferable skills • Get help with CV writing • Network • Proactively seek volunteer/work experience opportunities • Expect to take a pay cut • Understand the context…

  18. Understand the context Books e.g. The Trouble with Africa, White Man’s Burden, Dead Aid, The Bottom Billion, Its Our Turn to Eat, The Honest Broker Magazines, journal articles and websites e.g. The Africa Report, Research Africa, Eldis, Scidev.net Reports and policy documents e.g. DFID research strategy, Overseas Development Agency reports, Paris declaration on aid effectiveness, Millennium Development Goals, Monitoring and Evaluation (e.g. log frames, outcome mapping etc) Lectures/seminars- e.g. London School of Economics, Overseas Development Institute, All-party parliamentary groups…

  19. All-party parliamentary groups • Clubs for parliamentarians and other interested parties • Download the Register of All Party Parliamentary Groups for more information

  20. Any questions??

More Related