2020
DOI: 10.1007/s10734-020-00624-0
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

The two dimensions of Italian academics’ public engagement

Abstract: The article aims at investigating Italian academics’ Public Engagement highlighting its two dimensions, namely “Local Community Engagement” (LCE) and “General Political Engagement” (GPE). It is based on the results of a national survey on academics’ third mission activities carried out in the year 2015/2016 collecting information from a representative sample of 5,123 respondents working at 62 universities, with a response rate of 34.2%. In addition to detecting distinct dimensions of academics’ Public Engageme… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

0
8
0

Year Published

2021
2021
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
6
1

Relationship

1
6

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 10 publications
(10 citation statements)
references
References 17 publications
0
8
0
Order By: Relevance
“…Among these, the gender factor is the most ambiguous because it is not clear if it discriminates the participation in these activities, and if so, in which direction. In fact, in some studies, being male is positively associated with the engagement (Bentley and Kyvik, 2011;Besley et al, 2012;Crettaz von Roten, 2011;Kreimer et al, 2011), in others, it is negatively associated (Jensen, 2011;Jensen et al, 2008), and in others, it is not associated (Anzivino et al, 2018;Dudo, 2012). This ambiguity does not exist for the other personal and academic characteristics.…”
Section: Public Engagement and Associated Factorsmentioning
confidence: 94%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Among these, the gender factor is the most ambiguous because it is not clear if it discriminates the participation in these activities, and if so, in which direction. In fact, in some studies, being male is positively associated with the engagement (Bentley and Kyvik, 2011;Besley et al, 2012;Crettaz von Roten, 2011;Kreimer et al, 2011), in others, it is negatively associated (Jensen, 2011;Jensen et al, 2008), and in others, it is not associated (Anzivino et al, 2018;Dudo, 2012). This ambiguity does not exist for the other personal and academic characteristics.…”
Section: Public Engagement and Associated Factorsmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Age is usually positively associated with public engagement, as well as academic rank, seniority and belonging to some academic fields. In fact, being aged, senior or full professor increases the probability of being involved in public engagement activities (Anzivino et al, 2018;Bentley and Kyvik, 2011;Jensen, 2011;Jensen et al, 2008;Kyvik, 2005;Scamuzzi and Tipaldo, 2015;Thune et al, 2016), and all studies show that social science and humanities' scholars -when these disciplines are included -are more involved in public engagement activities than those belonging to STEM disciplines (Anzivino et al, 2018;Burchell et al, 2017;Jensen, 2011;Kreimer et al, 2011;Kyvik, 2005;Rainie et al, 2015;Thune et al, 2016).…”
Section: Public Engagement and Associated Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The interplay between knowledge transfer and academic citizenship can in fact be traced back to individual and contextual factors (Schmidt & Graversen, 2018;Vogelgesang et al, 2010). At an individual level, engagement in knowledge transfer and academic citizenship has been related to previous accomplishments (e.g., Tagliaventi et al, 2019), research awards (e.g., Lutter & Schröder, 2016), grants obtained by research councils (e.g., Schmidt & Graversen, 2018), international collaborations (e.g., Cañibano et al, 2020), visiting scholarships (e.g., Jonkers & Cruz-Castro, 2013), discipline (Moosmayer, 2011;Crespi et al, 2011), gender (e.g., Anzivino et al, 2020), and academic rank (e.g., Salter et al, 2017). Taking context features into account, university size (e.g., Abramo et al, 2011), university and department orientation to research (Salter et al, 2017), and department heterogeneity (Somech & Drach-Zahavy, 2013;Stewart, 2006) have been shown to be influential.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The problem with the above, similar to many other intuitive examples for the prisoner dilemma game (O’Connor, 2019), lies in its lack of fit to the facts. Studies show that academics who publish more also obtain higher levels of public engagement (Anzivino et al, 2021; Besley et al, 2013; Entradas et al, 2019; Jensen, 2011). The evidence—not only historical but also current—shows that the presumed excellence–relevance trade-off is wrong.…”
Section: History Aside Any Other Escape From the Excellence–relevance...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet one cannot miss the critical overtones among many faculty members experiencing a crushing trade-off between the university’s goals of social relevance and research excellence. The sad result is mediocre levels of social engagement among faculty (Anzivino et al, 2021)—and relatively low levels of trust in science among the general public, particularly in lower socioeconomic communities (Wellcome Global Monitor 2018, 2019). 1 Various factors are used for explaining the problem of trust, yet in this article our main focus is justice.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%