Knowledge Exchange and Impact (KEI)

Our research on transformations in the media and communications environment influences evidence-based policy making processes and journalism practice

The Department encourages its academic staff to engage with policymakers, journalists, industry and other stakeholders through numerous knowledge exchange and impact (KEI) activities.

The Department of Media and Communications is committed to fostering an environment that positively values outreach activities, sustaining these during, rather than just at the end of, research projects. The Department encourages its academic staff to engage with policymakers, journalists, industry and other stakeholders through numerous knowledge exchange and impact (KEI) activities.

Our key users and beneficiaries include media and communications organisations (BBC, BT, European Broadcasting Union, ITN, Vodafone), social media companies (Facebook, Google), business organisations (World Economic Forum), third sector organisations (Christian Aid, Gates Foundation, Hansard Society, Open Rights Group), government departments (DCMS, BIS), the sector regulator (Ofcom), DG-Connect in the European Commission, intergovernmental organisations (UNESCO, UNICEF) and mid-sized consultancies (Enders).

KEI projects

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LSE Truth, Trust & Technology Commission

The LSE Truth, Trust and Technology (T3) Commission deals with the crisis in public information. We will work with experts, practitioners and the public to identify structural causes of media misinformation and set out a new framework for strategic policy. Funded by the LSE Knowledge Exchange & Impact Fund.

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The future of national news agencies in Europe

This project will suggest alternative futures for national news institutions by collecting and combining data and analysis from and for industry, policy-makers, and journalists working with and within European news agencies. Funded by the LSE Knowledge Exchange & Impact Fund.

Global Kids Online

Global Kids Online

Global Kids Online aims to advance understanding of whether and how the internet amplifies the risks of harm to children and how to optimize digital opportunities that contribute to children’s well-being.

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From digital skills for tangible outcomes (DiSTO)

This study aims to develop new survey measures of people’s digital skills, digital engagement and outcomes of internet use and map these onto social inequalities.

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Preparing for a Digital Future

A study investigating how children and young people, along with their parents, carers, mentors and educators imagine and prepare for their personal and work futures in a digital ageKEI highlights

KEI activities

Our strategies to achieve lasting impact on society include:

  • acting as advisers on government and third sector committees
  • serving as expert witnesses and consultants
  • working directly with media practitioners
  • creatively using social media and events to shape public discourse and to promote the visibility of our research within policy and practitioner networks

Examples of our work in these areas have included:

Global Kids Online: designing an impact toolkit for a multi-country project

The Global Kids Online impact tools part of the research toolkit developed by the GKO team to enable researchers and research users in any country to conduct rigorous and useful research with children and their parents or careperson on the opportunities, risks and protective factors of children’s internet use.

Past impact case studies

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Regulating media power in democracies

Dr Damian Tambini's research identified new legal concepts for constraining the power of platform companies, helping to protect media plurality and freedom of expression. 

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From skills to outcomes: improving digital inequalities metrics, policy, and interventions

Professor Ellen Helsper's research has transformed how national and international organisations measure, design, and implement policies to tackle digital inequalities.  

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Realising children's rights in a digital world

Professor Sonia Livingstone's research has investigated children’s rights online, and shaped national and international policies to protect children and enhance their human rights in the digital environment.  

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Promoting citizen interests in information society policy

Professor Robin Mansell's research has impacted on government policy and corporate strategy in the areas of copyright and the Internet, investment in broadband networks, and arrangements for achieving network security and individual privacy protection.

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Protecting and empowering children in digital environments

Professor Sonia Livingstone's research on parental struggles with internet safety informed the Internet Service Providers' first Parental Controls Code of Practice, endorsed by Prime Minister David Cameron.

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Regulating the news media to balance press freedom with individual rights

Dr Damian Tambini’s research influenced the Leveson Inquiry and other media entities around proposed changes in press culture and regulation.

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Fostering an inclusive information society

Dr Ellen Helsper’s research helped address digital exclusion and its socio-economic disadvantages in the UK and Europe.

Blogs

Our public-facing blogs are a hub for evidence-based commentary and summaries of research by leading academics, journalists, policymakers, researchers and other leading experts in the field of media and communications.

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Media@LSE

The Media@LSE blog aims to encourage informed and insightful discussion around the vital role of media and communications in contemporary society, bringing the research and expertise of our department to a wider audience that includes fellow academics, policy makers, journalists, media industry professionals and civil society.

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Polis: Journalism and Society

Polis, directed by Professor Charlie Beckett,  is LSE’s media think-tank focusing on journalism and society, aimed at working journalists, people in public life and students in the UK and around the world. The blog features entries from academics, journalists and other expert contributors.

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Parenting For A Digital Future

Parenting for a Digital Future, directed by Professor Sonia Livingstone, examines a host of linked questions currently absorbing parents and the wider public, as they reflect on and manage their daily lives, as well as policy-makers trying to shape the digital future and social scientists keen to track key trends.