Litcius/Paper detail

Governing Researchers through Public Involvement

Aris Komporozos‐Athanasiou, Jonathan Paylor, Christopher McKevitt

2021Journal of Social Policy13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract This paper focuses on recent developments in UK health research policy, which place new pressures on researchers to address issues of accountability and impact through the implementation of patient and public involvement (PPI). We draw on an in-depth interview study with 20 professional researchers, and we analyse their experiences of competing for research funding, focusing on PPI as a process of professional research governance. We unearth dominant professional narratives of scepticism and alternative identifications in their enactment of PPI policy. We argue that such narratives and identifications evidence a resistance to ways in which patient involvement has been institutionalised and to the resulting subject-positions researchers are summoned to take up. We show that the new subjectivities emerging in this landscape of research governance as increasingly disempowered, contradictory and fraught with unresolved tensions over the ethical dimensions of the researchers’ own professional identities.

Topics & Concepts

SkepticismNarrativeAccountabilityCorporate governanceSubject (documents)Resistance (ecology)Public relationsPolitical scienceSociologyEngineering ethicsPublic administrationEpistemologyBusinessLawLibrary scienceEngineeringPhilosophyFinanceComputer scienceBiologyEcologyLinguisticsMental Health and Patient InvolvementHealth Policy Implementation ScienceHealthcare innovation and challenges