Lost in translation: Overcoming barriers to integrating evidence with practice

Erik Johnston, Qian Hu, Jennifer Claire Auer

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    1 Scopus citations

    Abstract

    A considerable amount of research is produced regarding the critical problems that nations face, yet local, national and international decision makers are not always apt to use the research for evidence-based policy making. The barriers to translating research into practice come from many sources and are often addressed piecemeal in the decision support literature, with little systematic analysis of the connections among them. To build decision infrastructures that are resilient and work seamlessly through the many decision moments of managing complex problems, it is important to have a framework for organising the sequence of those problems. This study presents such a framework and offers real world examples of decision infrastructures that have supported evidence-based decision making throughout the sequence. It draws on a diverse set of barriers identified from policy analysis, organizational management, and technology studies. The purpose of this paper is to give a broad perspective of the common and discovered challenges in relation to each other and to explore how systems thinking, policy informatics, and mature decision infrastructures can help to overcome some of these barriers.

    Original languageEnglish (US)
    Pages (from-to)317-334
    Number of pages18
    JournalInternational Journal of Critical Infrastructures
    Volume7
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    StatePublished - Jan 2011

    Keywords

    • Barriers
    • Decision infrastructures
    • Evidence-based decision making
    • Framing; anticipation
    • Resilience; policy informatics
    • Systems thinking
    • Translational research
    • Willingness

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Safety, Risk, Reliability and Quality
    • General Environmental Science
    • General Energy

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