14 results on '"Ovseiko, Pavel V."'
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2. Perceptions of gender equity and markers of achievement in a National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre: a qualitative study
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Henderson, Lorna R., Dam, Rinita, Shah, Syed Ghulam Sarwar, Ovseiko, Pavel V., and Kiparoglou, Vasiliki
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- 2022
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3. A systems approach for optimizing implementation to impact: meeting report and proceedings of the 2019 In the Trenches: Implementation to Impact International Summit
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Hanney, Stephen R., Ovseiko, Pavel V., Graham, Kathryn E. R., Chorzempa, Heidi, and Miciak, Maxi
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- 2020
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4. Understanding the Athena SWAN award scheme for gender equality as a complex social intervention in a complex system: analysis of Silver award action plans in a comparative European perspective
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Kalpazidou Schmidt, Evanthia, Ovseiko, Pavel V., Henderson, Lorna R., and Kiparoglou, Vasiliki
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- 2020
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5. New indicators and indexes for benchmarking university–industry–government innovation in medical and life science clusters: results from the European FP7 Regions of Knowledge HealthTIES project
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Edmunds, Laurel D., Gluderer, Silvia, Ovseiko, Pavel V., Kamerling, Roel, Ton, Jacqueline, Vis, Laura, Jenni, Mario, Tutton, Gregory, Lawton-Smith, Helen, Nadabán, Márta Völgyiné, Rab, Máté, Rees, Jon, Anson, John, Rushforth, Alexander D., Allen, Maxine, Buchan, Alastair M., Vendrell, Montserrat, Casta, Alex, Mehes, Gábor, Hogendoorn, Pancras C. W., Hafen, Ernst, and Hassan, A. Bassim
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- 2019
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6. Maximising value from a United Kingdom Biomedical Research Centre: study protocol.
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Greenhalgh, Trisha, Ovseiko, Pavel V., Fahy, Nick, Shaw, Sara, Kerr, Polly, Rushforth, Alexander D., Channon, Keith M., Kiparoglou, Vasiliki, and Partnerships for Health, Wealth and Innovation cross-cutting theme of the National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre, Oxford
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MEDICAL research , *HEALTH care industry , *RESEARCH institutes , *PUBLIC health research , *MEDICAL innovations , *MEDICAL care , *RESEARCH funding , *INSTITUTIONAL review boards - Abstract
Background: Biomedical Research Centres (BRCs) are partnerships between healthcare organisations and universities in England. Their mission is to generate novel treatments, technologies, diagnostics and other interventions that increase the country's international competitiveness, to rapidly translate these innovations into benefits for patients, and to improve efficiency and reduce waste in healthcare. As NIHR Oxford BRC (Oxford BRC) enters its third 5-year funding period, we seek to (1) apply the evidence base on how best to support the various partnerships in this large, multi-stakeholder research system and (2) research how these partnerships play out in a new, ambitious programme of translational research.Methods: Organisational case study, informed by the principles of action research. A cross-cutting theme, 'Partnerships for Health, Wealth and Innovation' has been established with multiple sub-themes (drug development, device development, business support and commercialisation, research methodology and statistics, health economics, bioethics, patient and public involvement and engagement, knowledge translation, and education and training) to support individual BRC research themes and generate cross-theme learning. The 'Partnerships' theme will support the BRC's goals by facilitating six types of partnership (with patients and citizens, clinical services, industry, across the NIHR infrastructure, across academic disciplines, and with policymakers and payers) through a range of engagement platforms and activities. We will develop a longitudinal progress narrative centred around exemplar case studies, and apply theoretical models from innovation studies (Triple Helix), sociology of science (Mode 2 knowledge production) and business studies (Value Co-creation). Data sources will be the empirical research studies within individual BRC research themes (who will apply separately for NHS ethics approval), plus documentary analysis and interviews and ethnography with research stakeholders. This study has received ethics clearance through the University of Oxford Central University Research Ethics Committee.Discussion: We anticipate that this work will add significant value to Oxford BRC. We predict accelerated knowledge translation; closer alignment of the innovation process with patient priorities and the principles of responsible, ethical research; reduction in research waste; new knowledge about the governance and activities of multi-stakeholder research partnerships and the contexts in which they operate; and capacity-building that reflects the future needs of a rapidly-evolving health research system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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7. Advancing gender equality through the Athena SWAN Charter for Women in Science: an exploratory study of women's and men's perceptions.
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Ovseiko, Pavel V., Chapple, Alison, Edmunds, Laurel D., and Ziebland, Sue
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GENDER inequality , *EMPIRICAL research , *NARRATIVES , *SOCIAL change , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *COMMUNICATION , *ENDOWMENT of research , *LABOR mobility , *PSYCHOLOGY of men , *SENSORY perception , *SCIENCE , *SEXISM , *WAGES , *PSYCHOLOGY of women , *WOMEN'S rights ,SOCIAL aspects - Abstract
Background: While in the United Kingdom, Ireland, and Australia, higher education and research institutions are widely engaged with the Athena SWAN Charter for Women in Science to advance gender equality, empirical research on this process and its impact is rare. This study combined two data sets (free- text comments from a survey and qualitative interviews) to explore the range of experiences and perceptions of participation in Athena SWAN in medical science departments of a research-intensive university in Oxford, United Kingdom.Methods: The study is based on the secondary analysis of data from two projects: 59 respondents to an anonymous online survey (42 women, 17 men) provided relevant free-text comments and, separately, 37 women participated in face-to-face narrative interviews. Free-text survey comments and narrative interviews were analysed thematically using constant comparison.Results: Both women and men said that participation in Athena SWAN had brought about important structural and cultural changes, including increased support for women's careers, greater appreciation of caring responsibilities, and efforts to challenge discrimination and bias. Many said that these positive changes would not have happened without linkage of Athena SWAN to government research funding, while others thought there were unintended consequences. Concerns about the programme design and implementation included a perception that Athena SWAN has limited ability to address longstanding and entrenched power and pay imbalances, persisting lack of work-life balance in academic medicine, questions about the sustainability of positive changes, belief that achieving the award could become an end in itself, resentment about perceived positive discrimination, and perceptions that further structural and cultural changes were needed in the university and wider society.Conclusions: The findings from this study suggest that Athena SWAN has a positive impact in advancing gender equality, but there may be limits to how much it can improve gender equality without wider institutional and societal changes. To address the fundamental causes of gender inequality would require cultural change and welfare state policies incentivising men to increase their participation in unpaid work in the family, which is beyond the scope of higher education and research policy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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8. Closing the gender leadership gap: a multi-centre cross-country comparison of women in management and leadership in academic health centres in the European Union.
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Kuhlmann, Ellen, Ovseiko, Pavel V., Kurmeyer, Christine, Gutiérrez-Lobos, Karin, Steinböck, Sandra, Knorring, Mia von, Buchan, Alastair M., Brommels, Mats, and von Knorring, Mia
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ACADEMIC medical centers , *WOMEN leaders , *GENDER inequality , *WOMEN medical students , *COMPARATIVE studies , *GENDER identity , *HEALTH services administration , *LABOR mobility , *LEADERSHIP , *RESEARCH methodology , *MEDICAL care , *MEDICAL school faculty , *MEDICAL cooperation , *MEDICAL personnel , *MEDICAL specialties & specialists , *PHYSICIANS , *RESEARCH , *WOMEN'S rights , *ETHNOLOGY research , *EVALUATION research - Abstract
Background: Women's participation in medicine and the need for gender equality in healthcare are increasingly recognised, yet little attention is paid to leadership and management positions in large publicly funded academic health centres. This study illustrates such a need, taking the case of four large European centres: Charité - Universitätsmedizin Berlin (Germany), Karolinska Institutet (Sweden), Medizinische Universität Wien (Austria), and Oxford Academic Health Science Centre (United Kingdom).Case: The percentage of female medical students and doctors in all four countries is now well within the 40-60% gender balance zone. Women are less well represented among specialists and remain significantly under-represented among senior doctors and full professors. All four centres have made progress in closing the gender leadership gap on boards and other top-level decision-making bodies, but a gender leadership gap remains relevant. The level of achieved gender balance varies significantly between the centres and largely mirrors country-specific welfare state models, with more equal gender relations in Sweden than in the other countries. Notably, there are also similar trends across countries and centres: gender inequality is stronger within academic enterprises than within hospital enterprises and stronger in middle management than at the top level. These novel findings reveal fissures in the 'glass ceiling' effects at top-level management, while the barriers for women shift to middle-level management and remain strong in academic positions. The uneven shifts in the leadership gap are highly relevant and have policy implications.Conclusion: Setting gender balance objectives exclusively for top-level decision-making bodies may not effectively promote a wider goal of gender equality. Academic health centres should pay greater attention to gender equality as an issue of organisational performance and good leadership at all levels of management, with particular attention to academic enterprises and newly created management structures. Developing comprehensive gender-sensitive health workforce monitoring systems and comparing progress across academic health centres in Europe could help to identify the gender leadership gap and utilise health human resources more effectively. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
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9. A global call for action to include gender in research impact assessment.
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Ovseiko, Pavel V., Greenhalgh, Trisha, Adam, Paula, Grant, Jonathan, Hinrichs-Krapels, Saba, Graham, Kathryn E., Valentine, Pamela A., Sued, Omar, Boukhris, Omar F., Al Olaqi, Nada M., Al Rahbi, Idrees S., Dowd, Anne-Maree, Bice, Sara, Heiden, Tamika L., Fischer, Michael D., Dopson, Sue, Norton, Robyn, Pollitt, Alexandra, Wooding, Steven, and Balling, Gert V.
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BIOLOGICAL research , *MEDICAL research , *INVESTMENTS & society , *GENDER , *RESEARCH & society , *GENDER identity , *HEALTH policy , *SCIENCE , *SEX distribution , *SEXISM - Abstract
Global investment in biomedical research has grown significantly over the last decades, reaching approximately a quarter of a trillion US dollars in 2010. However, not all of this investment is distributed evenly by gender. It follows, arguably, that scarce research resources may not be optimally invested (by either not supporting the best science or by failing to investigate topics that benefit women and men equitably). Women across the world tend to be significantly underrepresented in research both as researchers and research participants, receive less research funding, and appear less frequently than men as authors on research publications. There is also some evidence that women are relatively disadvantaged as the beneficiaries of research, in terms of its health, societal and economic impacts. Historical gender biases may have created a path dependency that means that the research system and the impacts of research are biased towards male researchers and male beneficiaries, making it inherently difficult (though not impossible) to eliminate gender bias. In this commentary, we - a group of scholars and practitioners from Africa, America, Asia and Europe - argue that gender-sensitive research impact assessment could become a force for good in moving science policy and practice towards gender equity. Research impact assessment is the multidisciplinary field of scientific inquiry that examines the research process to maximise scientific, societal and economic returns on investment in research. It encompasses many theoretical and methodological approaches that can be used to investigate gender bias and recommend actions for change to maximise research impact. We offer a set of recommendations to research funders, research institutions and research evaluators who conduct impact assessment on how to include and strengthen analysis of gender equity in research impact assessment and issue a global call for action. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2016
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10. Organisational culture and post-merger integration in an academic health centre: a mixed-methods study.
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Ovseiko, Pavel V., Melham, Karen, Fowler, Jan, and Buchan, Alastair M.
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CORPORATE culture , *UNIVERSITY hospitals , *STUDENT health services , *STRATEGIC alliances (Business) , *MERGERS & acquisitions - Abstract
Background Around the world, the last two decades have been characterised by an increase in the numbers of mergers between healthcare providers, including some of the most prestigious university hospitals and academic health centres. However, many mergers fail to bring the anticipated benefits, and successful post-merger integration in university hospitals and academic health centres is even harder to achieve. An increasing body of literature suggests that organisational culture affects the success of post-merger integration and academic-clinical collaboration. Methods This paper reports findings from a mixed-methods single-site study to examine 1) the perceptions of organisational culture in academic and clinical enterprises at one National Health Service (NHS) trust, and 2) the major cultural issues for its post-merger integration with another NHS trust and strategic partnership with a university. From the entire population of 72 clinician-scientists at one of the legacy NHS trusts, 38 (53%) completed a quantitative Competing Values Framework survey and 24 (33%) also provided qualitative responses. The survey was followed up by semi-structured interviews with six clinician-scientists and a group discussion including five senior managers. Results The cultures of two legacy NHS trusts differed and were primarily distinct from the culture of the academic enterprise. Major cultural issues were related to the relative size, influence, and history of the legacy NHS trusts, and the implications of these for respective identities, clinical services, and finances. Strategic partnership with a university served as an important ameliorating consideration in reaching trust merger. However, some aspects of university entrepreneurial culture are difficult to reconcile with the NHS service delivery model and may create tension. Conclusions There are challenges in preserving a more desirable culture at one of the legacy NHS trusts, enhancing cultures in both legacy NHS trusts during their post-merger integration, and in aligning academic and clinical cultures following strategic partnership with a university. The seeds of success may be found in current best practice, good will, and a near identical ideal of the future preferred culture. Strong, fair leadership will be required both nationally and locally for the success of mergers and post-merger integration in university hospitals and academic health centres. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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11. Implementation of collaborative governance in cross-sector innovation and education networks: evidence from the National Health Service in England.
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Ovseiko, Pavel V., O’Sullivan, Catherine, Powell, Susan C., Davies, Stephen M., and Buchan, Alastair M.
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Background Increasingly, health policy-makers and managers all over the world look for alternative forms of organisation and governance in order to add more value and quality to their health systems. In recent years, the central government in England mandated several cross-sector health initiatives based on collaborative governance arrangements. However, there is little empirical evidence that examines local implementation responses to such centrally-mandated collaborations. Methods Data from the national study of Health Innovation and Education Clusters (HIECs) are used to provide comprehensive empirical evidence about the implementation of collaborative governance arrangements in cross-sector health networks in England. The study employed a mixed-methods approach, integrating both quantitative and qualitative data from a national survey of the entire population of HIEC directors (N = 17; response rate =100%), a group discussion with 7 HIEC directors, and 15 in-depth interviews with HIEC directors and chairs. Results The study provides a description and analysis of local implementation responses to the central government mandate to establish HIECs. The latter represent cross-sector health networks characterised by a vague mandate with the provision of a small amount of new resources. Our findings indicate that in the case of HIECs such a mandate resulted in the creation of rather fluid and informal partnerships, which over the period of three years made partial-to-full progress on governance activities and, in most cases, did not become selfsustaining without government funding. Conclusion This study has produced valuable insights into the implementation responses in HIECs and possibly other cross-sector collaborations characterised by a vague mandate with the provision of a small amount of new resources. There is little evidence that local dominant coalitions appropriated the central HIEC mandate to their own ends. On the other hand, there is evidence of interpretation and implementation of the central mandate by HIEC leaders to serve their local needs. These findings augur well for Academic Health Science Networks, which pick up the mantle of large-scale, cross-sector collaborations for health and innovation. This study also highlights that a supportive policy environment and sufficient time would be crucial to the successful implementation of new cross-sector health collaborations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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12. Improving accountability through alignment: the role of academic health science centres and networks in England.
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Ovseiko, Pavel V., Heitmueller, Axel, Allen, Pauline, Davies, Stephen M., Wells, Glenn, Ford, Gary A., Darzi, Ara, and Buchan, Alastair M.
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MATERIAL accountability , *NOMOGRAPHY (Mathematics) , *COOPERATIVE research , *STUDENT health services , *TEACHING , *TRIM proteins , *MEDICAL sciences - Abstract
Background As in many countries around the world, there are high expectations on academic health science centres and networks in England to provide high-quality care, innovative research, and world-class education, while also supporting wealth creation and economic growth. Meeting these expectations increasingly depends on partnership working between university medical schools and teaching hospitals, as well as other healthcare providers. However, academic-clinical relationships in England are still characterised by the "unlinked partners" model, whereby universities and their partner teaching hospitals are neither fiscally nor structurally linked, creating bifurcating accountabilities to various government and public agencies. Discussion This article focuses on accountability relationships in universities and teaching hospitals, as well as other healthcare providers that form core constituent parts of academic health science centres and networks. The authors analyse accountability for the tripartite mission of patient care, research, and education, using a four-fold typology of accountability relationships, which distinguishes between hierarchical (bureaucratic) accountability, legal accountability, professional accountability, and political accountability. Examples from North West London suggest that a number of mechanisms can be used to improve accountability for the tripartite mission through alignment, but that the simple creation of academic health science centres and networks is probably not sufficient. Summary At the heart of the challenge for academic health science centres and networks is the separation of accountabilities for patient care, research, and education in different government departments. Given that a fundamental top-down system redesign is now extremely unlikely, local academic and clinical leaders face the challenge of aligning their institutions as a matter of priority in order to improve accountability for the tripartite mission from the bottom up. It remains to be seen which alignment mechanisms are most effective, and whether they are strong enough to counter the separation of accountabilities for the tripartite mission at the national level, the on-going structural fragmentation of the health system in England, and the unprecedented financial challenges that it faces. Future research should focus on determining the comparative effectiveness of different alignment mechanisms, developing standardised metrics and key performance indicators, evaluating and assessing academic health science centres and networks, and empirically addressing leadership issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2014
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13. Assessing research impact in academic clinical medicine: a study using Research Excellence Framework pilot impact indicators.
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Ovseiko, Pavel V., Oancea, Alis, and Buchan, Alastair M.
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CLINICAL medicine , *ECONOMIC impact , *SOCIAL impact , *MEDICAL research , *BIOTECHNOLOGY - Abstract
Background: Funders of medical research the world over are increasingly seeking, in research assessment, to complement traditional output measures of scientific publications with more outcome-based indicators of societal and economic impact. In the United Kingdom, the Higher Education Funding Council for England (HEFCE) developed proposals for the Research Excellence Framework (REF) to allocate public research funding to higher education institutions, inter alia, on the basis of the social and economic impact of their research. In 2010, it conducted a pilot exercise to test these proposals and refine impact indicators and criteria. Methods: The impact indicators proposed in the 2010 REF impact pilot exercise are critically reviewed and appraised using insights from the relevant literature and empirical data collected for the University of Oxford's REF pilot submission in clinical medicine. The empirical data were gathered from existing administrative sources and an online administrative survey carried out by the university's Medical Sciences Division among 289 clinical medicine faculty members (48.1% response rate). Results: The feasibility and scope of measuring research impact in clinical medicine in a given university are assessed. Twenty impact indicators from seven categories proposed by HEFCE are presented; their strengths and limitations are discussed using insights from the relevant biomedical and research policy literature. Conclusions: While the 2010 pilot exercise has confirmed that the majority of the proposed indicators have some validity, there are significant challenges in operationalising and measuring these indicators reliably, as well as in comparing evidence of research impact across different cases in a standardised manner. It is suggested that the public funding agencies, medical research charities, universities, and the wider medical research community work together to develop more robust methodologies for capturing and describing impact, including more valid and reliable impact indicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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14. ISRIA statement: ten-point guidelines for an effective process of research impact assessment.
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Adam, Paula, Ovseiko, Pavel V., Grant, Jonathan, Graham, Kathryn E. A., Boukhris, Omar F., Dowd, Anne-Maree, Balling, Gert V., Christensen, Rikke N., Pollitt, Alexandra, Taylor, Mark, Sued, Omar, Hinrichs-Krapels, Saba, Solans‐Domènech, Maite, Chorzempa, Heidi, for the International School on Research Impact Assessment (ISRIA), Solans-Domènech, Maite, and International School on Research Impact Assessment (ISRIA)
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RESEARCH , *SOCIAL impact assessment , *ECONOMIC impact , *ETHICS , *CONFLICT of interests - Abstract
As governments, funding agencies and research organisations worldwide seek to maximise both the financial and non-financial returns on investment in research, the way the research process is organised and funded is becoming increasingly under scrutiny. There are growing demands and aspirations to measure research impact (beyond academic publications), to understand how science works, and to optimise its societal and economic impact. In response, a multidisciplinary practice called research impact assessment is rapidly developing. Given that the practice is still in its formative stage, systematised recommendations or accepted standards for practitioners (such as funders and those responsible for managing research projects) across countries or disciplines to guide research impact assessment are not yet available.In this statement, we propose initial guidelines for a rigorous and effective process of research impact assessment applicable to all research disciplines and oriented towards practice. This statement systematises expert knowledge and practitioner experience from designing and delivering the International School on Research Impact Assessment (ISRIA). It brings together insights from over 450 experts and practitioners from 34 countries, who participated in the school during its 5-year run (from 2013 to 2017) and shares a set of core values from the school's learning programme. These insights are distilled into ten-point guidelines, which relate to (1) context, (2) purpose, (3) stakeholders' needs, (4) stakeholder engagement, (5) conceptual frameworks, (6) methods and data sources, (7) indicators and metrics, (8) ethics and conflicts of interest, (9) communication, and (10) community of practice.The guidelines can help practitioners improve and standardise the process of research impact assessment, but they are by no means exhaustive and require evaluation and continuous improvement. The prima facie effectiveness of the guidelines is based on the systematised expert and practitioner knowledge of the school's faculty and participants derived from their practical experience and research evidence. The current knowledge base has gaps in terms of the geographical and scientific discipline as well as stakeholder coverage and representation. The guidelines can be further strengthened through evaluation and continuous improvement by the global research impact assessment community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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