Authors : Ole Henning Sørensen, Stine Dandanell Garn, Steffen Bohni Nielsen
Through an umbrella review, this article identified and surveyed 24 societal impact of research (SIR) models. Most of these models were developed within health domains and in Anglo-Saxon countries. The authors mapped the SIR models against constituent components of a robust theory of change.
The study found that logic models were predominantly used to conceive SIR models. Yet, only nine models had explicit causal links, and only two made explicit assumptions about why research contributes to societal change.
The old proverb among evaluators—when using theories of change to describe change—“and then a miracle occurs…,” rings uncomfortably true to the current state of SIR theorizing. Further theorizing and conceptual clarity are needed to advance the science of research impact.
URL : And then a miracle occurs—a review of theory of change models for societal impact of research
DOI : https://doi.org/10.1093/reseval/rvaf057