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Salience, Credibility, Legitimacy and Boundaries: Linking Research, Assessment and Decision Making


Citation:
Cash, David, William Clark, Frank Alcock, Nancy Dickson, Noelle Eckley, and Jill Jäger. 2002. Salience, Credibility, Legitimacy and Boundaries: Linking Research, Assessment and Decision Making. John F. Kennedy School of Government Faculty Research Working Paper RWP02-046. John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University.
Abstract:
The boundary between science and policy is only one of several boundaries that hinder the linking of scientific and technical information to decision making. Managing boundaries between disciplines, across scales of geography and jurisdiction, and between different forms of knowledge is also often critical to transferring information. The research presented in this paper finds that information requires three (not mutually exclusive) attributes - salience, credibility, and legitimacy - and that what makes boundary crossing difficult is that actors on different sides of a boundary perceive and value salience, credibility, and legitimacy differently. Presenting research on water management regimes in the United States, international agricultural research systems, El Niņo forecasting systems in the Pacific and southern Africa, and fisheries in the North Atlantic, this paper explores: 1) how effective boundary work involves creating salient, credible, and legitimate information simultaneously for multiple audiences; 2) the thresholds, complementarities and tradeoffs between salience, credibility, and legitimacy when crossing boundaries; and 3) propositions for institutional mechanisms in boundary organizations which effectively balance tradeoffs, take advantage on complementarities, and reach thresholds of salience, credibility, and legitimacy.

Keywords:
salience, credibility, legitimacy, boundaries, research, assessment, decision making, institutions, science and technology, water management regimes, international agricultural research systems, El Niņo forecasting systems, fisheries, thresholds, tradeoffs
Full Text:
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Related Links:
John F. Kennedy School of Government Faculty Research Working Paper Series

For further information regarding this publication, contact David Cash.
 

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