TY - JOUR
T1 - Out of the ivory tower
T2 - an explanation of the policy advisory roles of political scientists in Europe
AU - Jungblut, Jens
AU - Gouglas, Athanassios
AU - Katz, Gabriel
AU - Bandola-Gill, Justyna
AU - Brans, Marleen
AU - Timmermans, Arco
AU - Anderson, Alexandra
AU - Aubin, David
AU - Bakir, Caner
AU - Bino, Blerjana
AU - Bleiklie, Ivar
AU - Blum, Sonja
AU - Bolukbasi, H. Tolga
AU - Flinders, Matthew
AU - Fobé, Ellen
AU - Galanti, Maria Tullia
AU - Kallestrup, Morten
AU - Michelsen, Svein
AU - Molnár, Gábor Tamás
AU - Pattyn, Valérie
AU - Pritoni, Andrea
AU - Real-Dato, José
AU - Squevin, Pierre
AU - Xhindi, Nevila
PY - 2023/8/1
Y1 - 2023/8/1
N2 - The relevance and impact of political scientists’ professional activities outside of universities has become the focus of public attention, partly due to growing expectations that research should help address society’s grand challenges. One type of such activity is policy advising. However, little attention has been devoted to understanding the extent and type of policy advising activities political scientists engage in. This paper addresses this gap by adopting a classification that distinguishes four ideal types of policy advisors representing differing degrees of engagement. We test this classification by calculating a multi-level latent class model to estimate key factors explaining the prevalence of each type based on an original dataset obtained from a survey of political scientists across 39 European countries. Our results challenge the wisdom that political scientists are sitting in an “ivory tower”: the vast majority (80%) of political scientists in Europe are active policy advisers, with most of them providing not only expert guidance but also normative assessments.
AB - The relevance and impact of political scientists’ professional activities outside of universities has become the focus of public attention, partly due to growing expectations that research should help address society’s grand challenges. One type of such activity is policy advising. However, little attention has been devoted to understanding the extent and type of policy advising activities political scientists engage in. This paper addresses this gap by adopting a classification that distinguishes four ideal types of policy advisors representing differing degrees of engagement. We test this classification by calculating a multi-level latent class model to estimate key factors explaining the prevalence of each type based on an original dataset obtained from a survey of political scientists across 39 European countries. Our results challenge the wisdom that political scientists are sitting in an “ivory tower”: the vast majority (80%) of political scientists in Europe are active policy advisers, with most of them providing not only expert guidance but also normative assessments.
KW - European political science
KW - policy advisors
KW - latent class analysis
U2 - 10.1057/s41304-023-00440-x
DO - 10.1057/s41304-023-00440-x
M3 - Article
SN - 1680-4333
JO - European Political Science
JF - European Political Science
ER -