12 December 2019
A partnership between Springer Nature and the Association of Universities in the Netherlands (VSNU) and the Dutch Consortium of University Libraries and the National Library (UKB) will provide data, insights and tools to advance knowledge about how academic research and open research is having a societal impact and accelerating the delivery of the United Nations’ sustainable development goals (SDGs). The first phase of data from this project has been released.
Since the SDGs were launched in 2015, researchers, their funders and other collaborative partnerships have sought to contribute to the SDGs. However it has been challenging to demonstrate the value of this contribution, and therefore be able to identify emerging trends and best practice for the research community, and wider society, to better understand where to focus efforts to drive progress and support open science and research. With a little over ten years left to achieve the targets set out by the UN and agreed by 193 nations, this analysis is vital to progress.
The partnership sets out to address this by undertaking three projects.
Firstly, using natural language programming and machine learning, all Dutch scholarly output from the past 10 years has been categorised for a subset of five of the SDGs, based on relevancy. This work has been developed in partnership with Digital Science. Once proven, the technology has the potential to be used to look at other research from other regions and be broadened out to all SDGs.
A second project will dig deeper to assess the exact nature and scope of impact that research outputs in selective SDGs have on non-academic actors. These stakeholders include business, politics, industry, and interest groups, all drawing on research for critical decision making.
A third project runs alongside the above projects in helping researchers to deal with societal relevance. This will include both an in-depth review of researcher actions concerning societal impact, along with a best practice guide for achieving social relevance.
The project aims to support:
- universities, funders, research groups and researchers in raising awareness of and increasing the discoverability of their work related to the SDGs from other disciplines/sectors eg AURORA Network
- universities, businesses, funders, and other stakeholders who are working on the SDGs, to better network and share ideas
- enhanced interdisciplinary collaboration and engagement – bringing together researchers from the natural and physical sciences with scholars from the social sciences and humanities
- librarians and institutional leadership with tools and best practice guidance so that they can both demonstrate the societal impact of their research, and increase that impact over time
- the drive towards open research by showcasing research impact and societal relevance along the themes of the SDGs
Preliminary results already indicate that societal impact is important to the majority of researchers, with more than two thirds of respondents in a survey of more than 9,000 researchers stating that societal impact was 'important' or 'very important' to them.