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Evaluation, policy learning and evidence-based policy making

By: SANDERSON, Ian.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticlePublisher: 2002Public Administration: An Internationalo Quarterly 80, 1, p. 1-22Abstract: The increasing emphasis on the need for evidence-based policy indicates the continuing influence of the `modernist' faith in progress informed by reason. Although the rationalist assumptions of evidence-based policy making have been subject to severe challenge from constructivist and pos-modernist perspectives, it is a argued that the attempt to ground policy making in more reliable knowledge of `what works' retains its relevance and importance. Indeed, its importance is enchanced by the need for effective governance of complex social systems and it is argued that `reflexive social learning' informed by policy and programme evaluation constitues an increasingly important basis for `interactive governance'. The expanded use of piloting of new policies and programmes by the current UK Government is considered to provide limited scope for evaluation to derive relable evidence of whether policies work. There is a need for greater clarity about the role of evaluation in situations where piloting essentially constitutes `prototyping'. More emphasis should be placed on developing a sound evidence base for policy through long-term impact evaluation should be theory-based and focused on explaining and position that such evaluation should be theory-based and focused on explaining and understanding how policies achieve their effects using `multi-method' approaches
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Periódico Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos
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The increasing emphasis on the need for evidence-based policy indicates the continuing influence of the `modernist' faith in progress informed by reason. Although the rationalist assumptions of evidence-based policy making have been subject to severe challenge from constructivist and pos-modernist perspectives, it is a argued that the attempt to ground policy making in more reliable knowledge of `what works' retains its relevance and importance. Indeed, its importance is enchanced by the need for effective governance of complex social systems and it is argued that `reflexive social learning' informed by policy and programme evaluation constitues an increasingly important basis for `interactive governance'. The expanded use of piloting of new policies and programmes by the current UK Government is considered to provide limited scope for evaluation to derive relable evidence of whether policies work. There is a need for greater clarity about the role of evaluation in situations where piloting essentially constitutes `prototyping'. More emphasis should be placed on developing a sound evidence base for policy through long-term impact evaluation should be theory-based and focused on explaining and position that such evaluation should be theory-based and focused on explaining and understanding how policies achieve their effects using `multi-method' approaches

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Escola Nacional de Administração Pública

Escola Nacional de Administração Pública

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