A systematic mapping protocol for understanding knowledge exchange in forest science
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Date
5/8/2021
Authors
Westwood, Alana Rachel
Hutchen, Jenna
Kapoor, Tyreen
Klenk, Kimberly
Saturno, Jacquelyn
Wang, Jonathan
Falconer, Matthew
Nguyen, Vivian
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley & Sons
Abstract
1. When making decisions about forest and environmental management, managers
and policymakers often rely upon scientific knowledge. There is awell-documented
‘knowledge–integration gap’ where often the production of knowledge and its use
are not aligned. Though there are several theoretical frameworks that conceptualize
how knowledge is exchanged between producers of scientific knowledge and
users of that information, there has been little attention to documenting knowledge
exchange practices and their effectiveness, especially about forests.
2. In the systematic map, we will examine the peer-reviewed academic and grey literature
to document and classify the knowledge exchange techniques suggested and
adopted by knowledge producers and users in the forest sciences globally. Characterizing
this knowledge exchange landscape will provide new information about
which techniques are used and their frequency, if there is evidence of effectiveness
for particular techniques, and recommendations for best practices. This map will
also show whether approaches to knowledge exchange differ between sectors (e.g.
academia, government).
3. We will create a systematic literature map as defined by the Collaboration for
Environmental Evidence to capture case studies of, or theories about, knowledge
exchange related to forest science. The search of peer-reviewed academic and grey
literaturewill be conducted in English and French in two academic databases (BASE
and Scopus) and one specialist database (ResearchGate). Candidate search strings
will be evaluated against a test list of documents to determine strings with maximum
sensitivity and specificity. Eligibility criteria will be applied to items at two
screening stages: (1) title and abstract and (2) full-text. All screening decisions will
be recorded in a databasewith 15% of full-text screening decisions validated. Items
retained for inclusion will have data extracted according to a standardized strategy.
Each reviewer conducting data extraction will have at least three of their extractions
validated.
4. The systematic map will employ a narrative synthesis approach that includes
descriptive statistics, tables, and figures which describe the types and frequency
of knowledge exchange techniques theorized or described, a network map displaying
the institutions within and between which knowledge exchange occurs, as well
as summarizing any available evidence of effectiveness for particular knowledge
exchange techniques.
Description
Journal article and associated datasets and appendices.
Keywords
Citation
Westwood, A., Hutchen, J., Kapoor, T., Klenk, K., Saturno, J., Wang, J., Falconer, M., Nguyen, V. 2021. A systematic mapping protocol for understanding knowledge exchange in forest science. Ecological Solutions and Evidence, 2: e12096. http://hdl.handle.net/10222/82259