CAMBRIDGE, MA—October 05, 2017—MIT announces today the third Call for Proposals from the International Policy Lab (IPL) at the Center for International Studies, which helps leading MIT researchers develop the policy implications of their research and thus better inform the policymaking community in the United States and abroad. The IPL provides funding and staff support for translating scholarly work into digestible, policy-relevant materials and for direct outreach to policymakers.
“We are very pleased with the success of this initiative so far,” said faculty director Chappell Lawson, associate professor of political science. “Solving the challenges facing our country and the world is central to MIT's mission; better connecting MIT researchers and policymakers contributes to that goal. Engineers, scientists, and other scholars at MIT produce a great deal of research that has direct implications for policy, but it is not always in a form that helps policymakers know what to do tomorrow. We have found that many faculty members here want to have an impact on policy but don't feel familiar enough with how the process works to do so efficiently. Helping to connect the academic and policy communities is another way MIT can fulfill its mission of helping to solve the world's great challenges."
In its previous call for proposals, the IPL received applications and offered support for projects with faculty members from all five Schools, helping to translate and disseminate their research to policy audiences, soliciting feedback from policymakers, and providing funding for travel to policy-oriented meetings.
Richard Samuels, Ford International Professor of Political Science and director of the Center for International Studies, said “We are delighted to be working with colleagues across the Institute to help extend the reach of their path breaking ideas to the policy world.”
Projects from faculty spanned a diverse set of topics, including energy and environment, international security and development, health and biology, and privacy issues.
“The IPL provides tremendous support for educating MIT faculty and researchers about how to think about the policy implications of their work,” said Elizabeth Wood, professor of Russian & Soviet history. “I personally benefited both from the special workshops that IPL held and also from Dan Pomeroy’s expert advice and editing as I was preparing materials to take to Washington and to an international meeting in Berlin.”
“With the support of IPL, I have been able to extend the reach of my research findings not only in the context of US policy, but also abroad,” said Elsa Olivetti, Atlantic Richfield Assistant Professor of Energy Studies in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering. “IPL’s prompt, professional, consistent support has been essential to my work, and I find they strike the perfect balance between offering constructive feedback and listening to where I feel the impact of my research will resonate most.”
"The IPL helped connect us to major players in the area of US-Russia nuclear security to discuss the technologies that we are developing here at MIT,” said Areg Danagoulian, Norman C. Rasmussen Professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering. “Given my non-policy background, the advice I received both directly from IPL and from the experts that the IPL connected me with was crucial to developing a strategic and efficient outreach plan.”
“The support of the IPL program and team has allowed for fantastic opportunities to identify partnerships in public health policy and to facilitate onset of new collaborations and outreach activities,” said Lydia Bourouiba , assistant professor of civil and environmental engineering, who studies respiratory disease transmission. “In addition, IPL support has been particularly valuable for receiving feedback early in the process of translating scientific research results into policy recommendations.”
About the Request for Proposals: Proposals are welcome from all researchers at MIT with Principal Investigator status who wish to engage the policy community in the U.S. and abroad. Proposals are sought from all parts of MIT. Awards of up to $10,000 in direct costs per project are available; proposals that require only staff support for outreach are also welcome. Guidelines for submission are available at: https://policylab.mit.edu/proposals.
The submission deadline is December 08, 2017. Final selections will be made by February 14, 2018.
About MIT International Policy Lab:
The mission of the International Policy Lab is to enhance the impact of MIT research on public policy, in order to best serve the nation and the world in the 21st century. The IPL accomplishes the mission by helping participating faculty to define realistic policy goals and develop an effective “impact plan” based on these goals and the time the faculty member wishes to devote. The IPL then provides modest grants for MIT faculty members to translate their scholarship into workable policy recommendations and to deliver those recommendations to policymakers. Finally, the IPL provides staff assistance and training. All of these efforts are designed to maximize the impact of faculty members' policy engagements while minimizing the expenditure of faculty time.
Related links:
IPL Projects: http://policylab.mit.edu/projects
Proposals: http://policylab.mit.edu/proposals
Submissions: http://policylab.mit.edu/submit
L-r: Henrik Selin, Boston University (ICMGP Scientific Steering Committee); Celia Chen, Dartmouth (ICMGP Co-Chair); Noelle Selin, MIT (ICMGP Executive Committee); Sae Yun Kwon, MIT (Postdoc); Amanda Giang, MIT (Postdoc); Helene Angot, MIT (Postdoc)
(Photo courtesy IISD/ENB | Mike Muzurakis)
With support from the International Policy Lab (IPL), Professor Noelle Selin led a delegation of MIT researchers to the first Conference of Parties (COP-1) to the Minamata Convention on Mercury. At the Conference, Selin and her team disseminated mercury science policy briefs developed, with IPL support, by the 13th annual International Conference on Mercury as a Global Pollutant (ICMGP).