A major new report declares Scotland has everything needed to become the global “test-bed” for turning cutting-edge research into real-world policy that actually works.
Published today by Universities Scotland and the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the landmark study says Scotland’s small size, tight-knit networks and collaborative spirit give it a unique edge to solve big problems like climate change, child poverty and the drugs crisis through evidence, not ideology.
What Makes Scotland Different
Scotland already punches far above its weight in research impact.
With just 8% of the UK population, its universities produce 16% of the country’s highly cited research papers. The country is compact, connected and trusting: civil servants, ministers, academics and third-sector leaders often know each other personally or are only one introduction away.
That closeness breeds speed and trust, exactly what is needed when policy makers need answers fast.
The report highlights three standout examples that show what is possible when research and government work hand-in-hand.
Police Scotland officers now carry Naloxone nasal spray after Edinburgh Napier University research proved it saves lives. Since the rollout, officers have reversed more than 520 opioid overdoses, many before ambulances arrived.
University of Strathclyde evidence on job quality directly shaped the Scottish Government’s Fair Work agenda and led to the creation of the independent Fair Work Convention.
University of Edinburgh’s digital education research reached every single state school in Scotland, 51,000 teachers and over 600,000 pupils, modernising the curriculum to include computer science as a core subject.
These are not one-off successes. They are proof the system can work at scale when everyone pulls in the same direction.
The Gap That Still Exists
Despite the progress, the report is blunt: too many brilliant research projects still gather dust because motivations between researchers and policy makers are not aligned.
Academics chase publications and grants. Civil servants need quick, digestible answers that fit tight political timetables. Think tanks want headlines. Without deliberate bridges, good evidence gets lost.
Funding remains fragmented. Too many short-term projects, too little incentive for long-term partnerships.
Four Actions Scotland Must Take Now
The report sets out a clear roadmap:
- Tailor engagement so every side gets what it needs, using tools like Areas of Research Interest to match questions with expertise.
- Force collaboration, cut duplication and reward universities that work together instead of competing.
- Build permanent capacity through secondments, fellowships and skills audits across government.
- Properly reward researchers for policy impact in promotions and funding, not just papers, and make sure diverse voices are heard.
If Scotland gets this right, the report argues, it will not just improve policy at home. It will create a model other nations copy.
In an age of misinformation, polarised politics and complex crises, countries that can turn evidence into action fastest will be the ones that protect their people best.
Scotland has the talent, the trust and the track record. Now it needs the political will to seize the opportunity.
The full report is available on the Royal Society of Edinburgh website.
What do you think: can Scotland really become the world’s best laboratory for evidence-led government? Drop your thoughts below.
