2. Research, Engagement and Public Policy
“For policy to be effective, it needs to be grounded in the experiences
and worldview of those most likely to be affected.”
P. Weller, A. Feldman and K. Purdam (2001), Religious Discrimination in England and
Wales, Home Office Research Report 221. London: Research Development Statistics
Directorate, the Home Office.
Academic research brings to bear:
expertise rooted in long and deep development of knowledge capital
critical reflexivity that goes beyond the immediate task
3. Research, Engagement and Public Policy
National Audit Office (2003)
Getting the Evidence: Using Research in Policy-Making
gulf between UK academics and policy-makers
academics have a poor understanding of policy questions
the results of research are not easily accessible
the results of research lack short-term relevance
academics are poor communicators
dissemination is grossly undervalued in academia
Higher Education Academy Centre for Religious and Philosophical Studies
The Relationship Between (the Study and Research of) Theology/Religious
Studies and Policy Development [not published]
relative neophytes in methodological issues/challenges of this kind of research
4. The Study of Religion, Relevance and Policy-Related Research
Relevance, irrelevance and religion-related policy research:
“From a pub in Prague, CSSR to Research and Public Policy Case Studies”
Home Office (1999-2001)
Religious Discrimination in England and Wales Research Project
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20070507055347/http://communities.gov.uk/pub/945/Reli
giousdiscriminationinEnglandandWales_id1504945.pdf
Equality and Human Rights Commission (2010-2011)
Religious Discrimination in England in Wales: Review of the Evidence, 2000-
2010
http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/uploaded_files/research/research_report_73_religious_discrim
ination.pdf
Arts and Humanities Research Council and Economic and Social
Research Council [Religion and Society Programme] (2010-2013)
Religion and Belief, Discrimination and Equality in England and Wales (2000-
2010): Theory, Policy and Practice
http://www.derby.ac.uk/religion-and-society
5. More Policy-Related Research
and the Study of Religion
Office of the Deputy Prime Minister (2005-2006)
Review of the Evidence Base on Faith Communities
http://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/20120919132719/http://www.communities.gov.uk/document
s/corporate/pdf/143816.pdf
Equality Challenge Unit (2010-11)
Religion and Belief in Higher Education: Researching the Experiences of Staff
and Students in England, Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland
http://www.ecu.ac.uk/publications/files/religion-and-belief-staff-and-students-in-he-report.pdf/
6. Policy-Related Research and the Study of Religion:
Some Broad Considerations
why Theology/Religious Studies
and not (only) Sociology (of Religion)?
“standing on the shoulders of others”
and the enduring value of textual and philological research
historical studies and policy-related research:
the missing dimension
positionality, objectivity and “engaged scholarship”:
“to hide or not to hide”
taking risks and being responsible:
“walking the tightrope”
7. Policy-Related Research and the Study of Religion:
Academic Experience and Some Specific Issues
Working to others’ agendas, academic rigour and integrity
- “who pays the piper calls the tune” and other stakeholders
- “give us the evidence” (we want for what we are going to do?)
- academic freedom, responsibility and pre-set Terms of Reference
- research findings as commercial/government property
- from contractual frameworks to the Official Secrets Act
8. Policy-Related Research and the Study of Religion:
Academic Experience and Some Specific Issues
Two-way translation
- evidence based policy-making, reporting and recommending
- “give us the facts and figures!” (what counts as evidence)
- complexity, clarity, simplicity and simplification
- dissemination perspectives and impact perspectives
- knowledge exchange and the research process
9. Policy-Related Research and the Study of Religion:
Academic Experience and Some Specific Issues
Dealing with the media
- working in the public eye
- on becoming “fair game” and developing a “thick(er) skin”
- researcher, commissioner and media messages
- the fickleness and capriciousness of the media
- “sound bites” and the importance of media training
- research findings as (often misunderstood) public property
10. Policy-Related Research and the Study of Religion:
Some Concluding Reflections
good to do research that (can) make a difference
important to be able to live with ethical ambiguities
need to be ready to make provisional judgements in public
learn how to relate a contractual “end” to an ethical “telos”
“engaged research” can be rewarding for oneself and others when:
- methodologically self and context aware
- accepts ethical responsibility for the process and effects of research
- and is therefore “scholarly” in the full sense of the word