Announcement

Highly cited collection from Policy & Politics and Evidence & Policy

Other - Deadline : 07/31/2025

06/23/2025

Thea Cook

Subtitle : Celebrating our 2024 citation metrics

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Bristol University Press and Policy Press are celebrating their new citation metrics with a free collection of highly cited articles. This collection features papers that have contributed to our 2024 citation metrics.

 
This collection features papers from Policy & Politics and Evidence & Policy. Explore the collection for free until 31 July, including:   


Policy & Politics 

Cite Score: 7.8 | Impact Factor 3.1 (Q1 for Public Administration and Political Science)  


New pathways to paradigm change in public policy: combining insights from policy design, mix and feedback [Open access]
Sebastian Sewerin, Benjamin Cashore and Michael Howlett


How does policy learning take place across a multilevel governance architecture during crises?
Bishoy Louis Zaki and Ellen Wayenberg


When do disasters spark transformative policy change and why? [Open access]
Daniel Nohrstedt


Making interpretive policy analysis critical and societally relevant: emotions, ethnography and language
Anna Durnová


Conceptualising policy design in the policy process
Saba Siddiki and Cali Curley


Evidence & Policy 
Cite Score: 4.5 | Impact Factor: 2.5 (Q1 in Social Sciences, Interdisciplinary) 


How are evidence and policy conceptualised, and how do they connect? A qualitative systematic review of public policy literature
Sonja Blum and Valérie Pattyn
 
What is co-production? Conceptualising and understanding co-production of knowledge and policy across different theoretical perspectives [Open access]
Justyna Bandola-Gill, Megan Arthur and Rhodri Ivor Leng


Defining brokers, intermediaries, and boundary spanners: a systematic review [Open access]
Jennifer Watling Neal, Zachary P. Neal and Brian Brutzman


Arts-based co-production in participatory research: harnessing creativity in the tension between process and product [Open access]
Louise Phillips, Maria Bee Christensen-Strynø and Lisbeth Frølunde


What works to promote research-policy engagement? [Open access]
Kathryn Oliver, Anna Hopkins et al.


Go to the Highly Cited Collection: https://bristoluniversitypressdigital.com/page/highly-cited-collection 

 

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