Searched for: subject%3A%22Science%255C+policy%22
(1 - 8 of 8)
document
Vreugdenhil, H.S.I. (author), Ellen, Gerald Jan (author), de Vries, Jort (author)
Offshore wind farm development is a is a highly complex process. The societal and political pressure to implement is high while environmental responses and future developments in the global energy network are uncertain. Moreover, many interests in maritime space are at stake. The dependency on knowledge for decision-making is high, but the...
conference paper 2023
document
Armeni, Kristijan (author), Brinkman, Loek (author), Carlsson, Rickard (author), Eerland, Anita (author), Fijten, Rianne (author), Fondberg, Robin (author), Heininga, Vera E. (author), Heunis, Stephan (author), Teperek, M. (author)
Despite the increasing availability of Open Science (OS) infrastructure and the rise in policies to change behaviour, OS practices are not yet the norm. While pioneering researchers are developing OS practices, the majority sticks to status quo. To transition to common practice, we must engage a critical proportion of the academic community. In...
journal article 2021
document
Duran, J.M. (author), Pirtle, Zachary (author)
When one wants to use citizen input to inform policy, what should the standards of informedness on the part of the citizens be? While there are moral reasons to allow every citizen to participate and have a voice on every issue, regardless of education and involvement, designers of participatory assessments have to make decisions about how to...
journal article 2020
document
Vydra, S. (author), Klievink, A.J. (author)
Despite great potential, high hopes and big promises, the actual impact of big data on the public sector is not always as transformative as the literature would suggest. In this paper, we ascribe this predicament to an overly strong emphasis the current literature places on technical-rational factors at the expense of political decision...
journal article 2019
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De Winter, J.C.F. (author), Dodou, D. (author)
It is known that statistically significant (positive) results are more likely to be published than non-significant (negative) results. However, it has been unclear whether any increasing prevalence of positive results is stronger in the "softer" disciplines (social sciences) than in the "harder" disciplines (physical sciences), and whether the...
journal article 2015
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Murdock, K.L.E. (author), Koepsell, D. (author)
journal article 2014
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Mayer, I.S. (author), Zhou, Q. (author), Lo, J. (author), Abspoel, L. (author), Keijser, X. (author), Olsen, E. (author), Nixon, E. (author), Kannen, A. (author)
Marine ecosystems around the globe are increasingly affected by human activities such as fisheries, shipping, offshore petroleum developments, wind farms, recreation, tourism and more. Whereas the necessity and urgency to regulate and plan competing marine spatial claims is growing, the planning and regulation of these claims is even more...
conference paper 2012
document
Zhou, Q. (author), Mayer, I.S. (author)
At the science - policy interface there are several reasons to combine models with the participatory process to facilitate the complex policy making process but the communication of the two sides is often too hard to generate any meaningful results. In this paper we argue that to close the communication gap the rationale of the Meta – rule of...
conference paper 2010
Searched for: subject%3A%22Science%255C+policy%22
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