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Articles

Vol. 72 No. 3 (2015)

The policy worker and the professor: Understanding how New Zealand policy workers utilise academic research

  • Karl Löfgren
  • Donatella Cavagnoli
DOI
https://doi.org/10.26686/nzsr.v72i3.8591
Submitted
November 17, 2023
Published
2023-11-17

Abstract

​How do policy workers actually use academic research and advice? While there are several recent studies regarding this question from other Westminster jurisdictions (e.g. Talbot & Talbot 2014, for the UK; Head et al. 2014, for Australia; Amara et al. 2004 and Ouimet et al. 2010, Canada), similar academic studies have been rare in New Zealand. So far, most of the local research in this field has been conducted by the Prime Minister’s Chief Science Advisor and the Office of the Prime Minister’s Science Advisory Committee, with the particular instrumental purpose of improving the Government’s ministries and agen-cies’ ‘use of evidence in both the formation and evaluation of policy’ (Gluckman 2013, p. 3; see also Gluckman 2011). However, none of these studies have asked how, and to what extent, policy workers in government are utilising academic research in their everyday work. 

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