Eva Maria Heim
University of Bern
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Publication
Featured researches published by Eva Maria Heim.
Archive | 2013
Claudia Michel; Eva Maria Heim; Anne Zimmermann; Karl Günter Herweg; Thomas Breu
Interest is growing in the impact that science can have on reducing poverty in the global South. If we understand impact as the “demonstrable contribution that excellent research makes to society and the economy”, the concept encompasses a variety of contributions of research-related knowledge and skills that benefit people and the environment. One reason for the growing interest in impact in this context is research councils’ increasing focus on documenting the social and environmental benefits of science, as indicated by the above quotation from the British research councils. Another reason is that research funding agencies from the private and public sectors are now more interested in social innovations for solving problems on the ground. Research can indeed influence policymakers’ views, policy development, funding patterns, and implementation or practice. This is promising for those who would like to improve – and prove – the influence research can have on policy and practice. It is also of importance for better understanding the intended and unintended effects of research. This report presents the NCCR North-South approach to increasing the impact of development-oriented research. It explains how we can maximise our impact and how we can assess whether our efforts have worked, based on six case studies from around the world. The report is of interest to all researchers who wish to respond to policy and practice from their point of view and who are keen on publicising their evidence. It is also relevant to those who teach how to maximise research impact.
Archive | 2010
Eva Maria Heim; Claudia Michel; Anne Zimmermann; Thomas Breu; Peter Messerli; Karl Günter Herweg; Annika Salmi
Partnership Actions for Mitigating Syndromes (PAMS) are small transdisciplinary projects which bring scientific research insights from the NCCR North-South into policy and practice. They are implemented by researchers from different disciplines in collaboration with non-scientific actors. PAMS aim to implement and test approaches, methods and tools developed in research, in order to identify promising strategies and potentials for sustainable development. In this sense, they are solution-oriented. This paper will provide insights into our experience with PAMS, with a special focus on the implementation of transdisciplinarity and its outcomes. From 2001 to 2010, 77 PAMS were implemented in Africa, Asia and Latin America. An internal evaluation of the first 55 projects was conducted in 2006. Results of this evaluation led to a refinement and improvement of the tool. A second internal evaluation is currently underway in the NCCR North-South. This evaluation will provide an overview of 22 new PAMS. We will look at partners involved, project beneficiaries, activities implemented, outcomes achieved, and lessons learnt. In the first evaluation, transdisciplinarity was considered as “a form of collaboration within scientific fields … and as a form of continuous dialogue between research and society” (Messerli et al., 2007). The evaluation report concluded that this understanding of transdisciplinarity was not satisfactorily applied in the 55 projects. Only about half of the PAMS addressed mutual exchange between researchers and society. Some involved only one specific field of research and clearly lacked interdisciplinary co-operation, and most often knowledge was transferred mainly unilaterally from the scientific community to society, without society having any effect on science. It was therefore recommended to address transdisciplinarity more carefully in Phase 2 PAMS. The second evaluation, which is currently under way, is analysing whether and how this recommendation has been met, based on criteria defined in the NCCR North-South’s Outcome Monitoring Strategy. The analysis is focusing on partners with whom researchers interact and investigating whether practices have changed both in research and society. We are also exploring the role of researchers in PAMS. Preliminary results show that researchers can assume different roles, from direct implementation, mediation, and promotion of social learning between different actors, to giving advice as neutral outsiders.
Energy for Sustainable Development | 2014
Violet Moraa Mogaka; Albrecht Ehrensperger; Miyuki Iiyama; Martin Birtel; Eva Maria Heim; Simon Gmuender
Knowledge Management for Development Journal | 2010
Claudia Michel; Eva Maria Heim; Karl Günter Herweg; Thomas Breu
Archive | 2012
Eva Maria Heim; Sonja Engelage; Anne Zimmermann; Karl Günter Herweg; Claudia Michel; Thomas Breu
Archive | 2010
Claudia Michel; Eva Maria Heim; Karl Günter Herweg; Anne Zimmermann; Thomas Breu
Archive | 2013
Claudia Michel; Eva Maria Heim; Anne Zimmermann; Karl Günter Herweg; Thomas Breu
Archive | 2013
Claudia Michel; Maria Paulsson; Eva Maria Heim; Anne Zimmermann; Karl Günter Herweg; Thomas Breu
Archive | 2012
Claudia Michel; Eva Maria Heim; Christoph Lüthi; Bishnu Raj Upreti; Cuéladio Cissé; Constanze Pfeiffer
Archive | 2011
Christoph Lüthi; Morel Antoine; Sherpa Mingma; Tilley Elizabeth; Eva Maria Heim
Collaboration
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Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology
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