Societal impact, innovation, or public value? Switzerlands approach to research impact evaluation and the SSH

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Ressource 1Request a copy Under embargo until 10/11/2025.
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State: Public
Version: Author's accepted manuscript
License: All rights reserved
Serval ID
serval:BIB_A0910D8BA0D6
Type
A part of a book
Publication sub-type
Chapter: chapter ou part
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Societal impact, innovation, or public value? Switzerlands approach to research impact evaluation and the SSH
Title of the book
Accountability in academic life: European perspectives on societal impact evaluation
Author(s)
Ochsner Michael, Balaban Corina, Iseli Marlène
Publisher
Edward Elgar Publishing
ISBN
9781800885738
9781800885721
9781800885738
Publication state
Published
Issued date
10/11/2023
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Pages
203-222
Language
english
Abstract
Switzerland has no formal research evaluation framework, and evaluation differs from institution to institution. Nevertheless, there are national discourses about research evaluation and about what, in other countries, is called “societal impact”. Drawing on interviews with higher education stakeholders, we show that the concept of “societal impact” has not gained ground in Switzerland. Rather, the science policy discourse revolves around the term “innovation”. The dual system in (higher) education in Switzerland leads to a clear distinction between applied and basic research; having a demonstrable impact on society is within the realm of the first of these. However, in a direct democracy such as Switzerland, civic functions of research influence the perception of academia, especially in the social sciences and humanities. The research-society nexus, however, is not perceived as something that can be captured by the idea of “societal impact” in any meaningful way. Creating public value rather than impact is at the heart of Swiss science policy.
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05/01/2024 20:21
Last modification date
06/01/2024 8:22
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