Article, 2024

Policy utilisation of occupational safety and health research: results from a tripartite unicameral parliamentary system in Denmark

Evidence & Policy, ISSN 1744-2656, 1744-2648, Pages 1-26, 10.1332/17442648y2024d000000025

Contributors

Rasmussen, Charlotte Diana Nørregaard 0000-0002-1769-717X [1] Nielsen, Steffen Bohni 0000-0003-1077-5398 [1] Sørensen, Ole Henning 0000-0002-1782-1660 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] National Research Centre for the Working Environment
  2. [NORA names: NFA National Research Centre for the Working Environment; Governmental Institutions; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

Background: Use of research evidence in policy decisions is under-researched. Especially, there is a need for more research in countries with different forms of government than bicameral legislatures. Aims and objectives: This article examines the impact of occupational safety and health (OSH) research on decision-makers in a tripartite unicameral parliamentary system (legislature and agreements). More specifically, we identify and discuss information acquisition and types of research use in policy decisions. Methods: Using both semi-structured and structured questions, we conducted 30 interviews distributed evenly within three groups of elite political actors: elected members of parliament; top-level public administrators; and social partner politicians. Analysis and reporting were subject to investigator triangulation. Findings: The three groups of elite political actors acquire information about OSH issues from different sources. The most important are: interest groups, networks and internal specialists. Findings show that elite actors generally use research knowledge conceptually and instrumentally, and to a lesser degree strategically and tactically. Many types of information influence politicians. They mostly perceive themselves as initiators of new research. The social partners primarily perceive themselves as users of new research results to initiate change and influence political decisions. Discussion and conclusion: How and when research knowledge is used differs between the three groups. It is important for researchers to tailor research communication to the particular needs of different stakeholders and interact directly with the elite actors and indirectly through lower level specialists from stakeholder organisations, and gain exposure through external sources such as the press and social media.

Keywords

Denmark, OSH, OSH issues, Parliament, acquisition, actors, administration, aim, analysis, bicameral legislature, changes, communication, countries, decision, decision-making, degree, elite actors, elite political actors, elites, evidence, exposure, external sources, findings, government, group, health, health research, impact, impact of occupational safety, influence political decisions, influence politicians, information, information acquisition, initiation, international specialists, interviews, investigation, investigator triangulation, issues, knowledge, legislature, lesser degree, medium, members, members of parliament, network, objective, occupational safety, organisations, parliamentary system, partners, policy, policy decisions, political actors, political decisions, politicians, press, public administration, questions, reports, research, research communication, research evidence, research knowledge, research results, research use, results, safety, semi-structured, social media, social partners, source, specialists, stakeholder organisations, stakeholders, structured questions, system, triangulation, use, users

Data Provider: Digital Science