University research currently speaks to a limited audience. For it to become the 鈥渇ifth estate鈥, as Beate Scholz and David Bogle suggest (鈥Truth in research鈥, Letters, 22 December), will require radical realignment.
Finding an affordable place to live, earning enough to pay the bills, obtaining timely medical treatment, and dealing with hate crimes: these are the manifestations in people鈥檚 daily lives of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which Scholz and Bogle cite.
But genetics research, indicators of climate change, and even analysis of social problems can appear to be of little immediate significance to large sections of society. Mass media reinforce this apparent mismatch, disregarding the majority of university research as merely 鈥渁cademic鈥.
We believe that the 鈥減opulism鈥 to which Scholz and Bogle refer can be harnessed into rights-based approaches to research increasingly deployed: participatory action research.
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Unless universities build two-way partnerships with those beyond the scientific, political and industrial elites that can quickly address people鈥檚 daily struggles, an increasing proportion of the public will dismiss academia as largely irrelevant.
Tom Wakeford
Centre for Agroecology, Water and Resilience
Coventry University
John Wakeford
Missenden Centre for the Development of Higher Education
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