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Policy briefs as a communication tool for development research

20 Jun 2008

Paul Chinnock

Source: Overseas Development Institute

The UK-based Overseas Development Institute is a leading independent think tank on international development and humanitarian issues. ODI’s series of Background Notes aims to provide summaries or snapshots of issues or of areas of ODI work in progress.

A recent addition to the Background Notes series discusses the role of policy briefs, which the authors describe as: ‘short documents that present the findings and recommendations of a research project to a non-specialist readership.’ The authors point out that, while policy briefs are often recommended as a key tool for communicating research findings to policy actors, there has been little systematic research in the development field about the communication needs of developing country policy-makers and how such research can be used to inform policy brief content and design.

The eight-page background note presents recent research by the Research and Policy in Development (RAPID) Group at ODI and the Science and Development Network (SciDev.Net) on the research communication environment involving researchers, policy-makers and development practitioners from the North and South in science, technology and innovation.

The authors begin with an overview of the theoretical literature on bridging research and policy, with a focus on insights from scholars interested in the science–policy interface. Drawing on an international survey and country case studies, they go on to highlight the barriers to, and opportunities for, strengthening communication between researchers, knowledge brokers and policy-makers working in international development, and the key requisites of policy briefs to meet the challenges of this landscape.

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