Skip to main content

Impact Assessment Resources for Institutional Leaders

  • Current Introduction to Societal Impacts of Research
  • Defining Your Organization's Societal Goals
  • Describing Societal Impacts
  • Purpose of Your Impact Assessment
  • Assessment Roles and Responsibilities
  • Assessing Cumulative Impacts
  • Communicating Your Impact
  • Impact in Academic Careers
  • Preview

Understanding the Societal Impacts of Research

The societal impacts of research are the ways research, or the process of conducting research, influences the world beyond academia. In other words, when we plan for and assess societal impacts, we are looking beyond scientific advancement to ask how our work can be more directly or immediately beneficial to our communities, our region, and society as a whole.

Incorporating plans for societal impact into research projects has a number of benefits. Research is a powerful tool for helping to find solutions to problems that affect people, our communities, and our environments. Research can make the largest contribution to problem-solving when it is designed to address a problem and engages the people affected by the problem, who can provide key information and knowledge about workable solutions. Land grant universities, like The University of Arizona, have a mission to benefit the public. To maximize our benefit to our surrounding communities and the larger society, we need to include the research enterprise directly in the land grant mission.

This section of the Toolkit for Research Impact is designed to guide you through the process of assessing the societal impacts of your program, department, or institute as a whole.

This section covers:

  • Defining your organization's societal goals
  • Describing societal impacts
  • Additional sources of impact data
  • Purpose of impacts assessment
  • Assessment roles and responsibilities
  • Assessing cumulative impacts
  • Sharing impact examples
  • Impact in academic reward structures

Getting Started

As you move through the Toolkit, you'll have opportunities to respond to prompting questions so you can note your ideas and plans for your project. If you would like to be able to save your responses to finish later or to save for future projects, please enter your email below. We will only use your email if we need to retrieve a copy of your responses for you. Toolkit administrators will not access your responses without your permission.

Optional - for saving and retrieving your Toolkit responses only.