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The Economic Impacts of the Social Sciences Patrick Dunleavy LSE Impact of Social Sciences project http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/ What are the social sciences? Deciding what research to submit Conventional answer CAD disciplines Social sciences Creative arts and Economics, Sociology, design Anthropology, Political Law, Cultural science, International studies, Relations, Management Music, Drama, International and and business studies, History of Art comparative Finance, Accounting, History, Philosophy, studies, Social policy, Social Work, Literature studies, Library studies Education, Planning, Modern Languages and informatics, Demography, Actuarial Linguistics Science, Operational Humanities Research Architecture*, Geography*, Archaeology** Urban design** Health studies**, Psychology*, Information Systems*, some parts of Mathematics/statistics STEM disciplines–sciences, technology, engineering, medicine The social sciences in a human-shaped global environment Human- dominated systems – also Social includes IT, sciences engineering Natural and medicine systems Human- influenced systems Disjunctures in assessing the role of the Social Sciences • Past estimates of university value-added have been overly aggregate. Social sciences c. 33% of sector. • The social sciences work in a more collective way than STEM disciplines – research does not often create competitive advantage for individual firms (or governments) • Existing methods for charting impacts and innovations are poorly attuned to the social sciences’ role • This is a significant problem in advanced industrial societies, with predominantly tertiary sector employment, like the UK. Especially since modern digital and economic changes focus on: –‘servitizing’ products; and –commodifying and ‘productizing’ services
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