Leibniz Open Science Day 2025: “Better Science for Better Policies”
When? 27 October 2025
Where? Berlin (Leibniz-Association Gemeinschaft)
Keynote: Johanna Rickne (Stockholm University)
ZBW ─ Leibniz Information Centre for Economics, DIW Berlin (the German Institute for Economic Research), WZB (Berlin Social Science Center), and RWI ─ Leibniz Institute for Economic Research are pleased to invite to the Leibniz Open Science Day 2025: Better Science for Better Policies.
With the growing importance of the social sciences in addressing societal challenges, the significance of a meta-scientific perspective is also increasingly on the rise. We need a deeper understanding of how evidence is generated and communicated to society and policymakers.
Replications and meta-studies in particular are becoming increasingly crucial to ensure the reliability and validity of scientific research findings. These approaches help identify heterogeneities and biases, improve methodological standards, and foster transparency, ultimately enhancing the credibility of scientific knowledge.
Programme
*Preliminary program – Subject to change
8:45 - 9:00
Registration
9:00 – 9:10
Welcome
Marianne Saam (ZBW – Leibniz-Information Centre for Economics)
Jörg Ankel-Peters (RWI – Leibniz Institute for Economic Research)
Levent Neyse (WZB Berlin Social Science Center)
9:10 – 10:40
Plenary Session
- 9:10 - 9:40
Robustness in Development Economics - A Many-Analysist MetaReproduction
Julian Rose (RWI – Leibniz Institute for Economic Research, Germany)
- 9:40 - 10:10
#ManyDesignsCarbon
Rene Schwaiger (University of Innsbruck, Austria)
- 10:10 - 10:40
Tba
Essi Kujansuu (University of Turku; Finland)
10:40 – 11:00
Coffee Break
11.00 – 12.00
Keynote by Johanna Rickne (Stockholm University, Sweden)
12:00 – 13:00
Lunch Break
13:00 – 15:00
Parallel Session
ROOM HANNOVER | ROOM BERLIN |
Policy documents across 185 countries predominantly rely on evidence from the Global North | Predicting Social Science Results |
Searching for the External Validity of Social Preference Games: A Guide of Field Environments Based on Expert Perceptions | Pre-registration for Economists: exhaustive templates for primary and secondary data |
Novelty and Reporting Bias in Economics | (Un)Published: Evidence of Publication Bias from Two German Probability-Based Panel Infrastructures |
Weight and See? Investigating the Strategic (Mis)Use of Survey Weights in Empirical Social Research | Lost in the Design Space? Construct Validity in the Microfinance Literature |
Quality-Driven and Reproducible Data Selection in Social Science Research Syntheses: Advocating for Better Data through Meta-Scientific Evidence and Training Infrastructures | The Impacts of Optimal Bandwidths in Regression Discontinuity Design |
15:20 – 16:50
Plenary Session
- 15:20 - 15:50
Is Behavioral Science Predictable?
Daniel Navarro-Martinez (Barcelona School of Economics, Spain)
- 15:50 - 16:20
Gender and Performance Under Competitive Pressure: A Meta-Analysis of Experimental Studies
Eva Markowsky (University of Potsdam, Germany)
- 16:20 - 16:50
Geography of Medical Knowledge
Thiemo Fetzer (Warwick University and at the University of Bonn, Germany)
16:50 – 17:00
Closing
Marianne Saam (ZBW – Leibniz-Information Centre for Economics)
Jörg Ankel-Peters (RWI – Leibniz Institute for Economic Research)
Levent Neyse (WZB Berlin Social Science Center)
Organizing committee:
- Marianne Saam, ZBW and University of Hamburg
- Doreen Siegfried, ZBW
- Jörg Ankel-Peters, RWI
- Macartan Humphreys, WZB
- Levent Neyse, DIW and WZB
Institutional Partners:
- Leibniz Association
- Lab2 Metalab for Better Science
- RWI Policy Lab ‘Climate Change, Development & Migration’
- Institute for Replication (I4R)
- BSoE Insights
Kontakt
Partner:



