Contributors to this highly original book address the many questions raised by researchers and policymakers about the complex and often uneasy relationship between evidence and policy from an international and interdisciplinary perspective. They explore both the institutions acting as evidence brokers and the different methods used to collect, assess and use evidence in a variety of national and international settings, by drawing on their experience of working in international contexts and in different disciplinary and policy environments, and in some cases analysing their own involvement in the evidence-based policy process. The policy areas covered range from national and state level economic and social policies more generally to specific areas of intervention, such as EU bio-fuels targets, the Active Ageing Index, mental health and media, the construction of second-language learning policies, microfinance and alcohol policy. The authors highlight the strengths and weaknesses, the use and abuse, or successes and failures, of different institutional and methodological approaches to evidence-based policy. They consider what elements of the lessons learned might be transferable across national and cultural boundaries, and if so under what conditions. This book was originally published as a special issue of Contemporary Social Science.

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Foreword 1. Evidence-based policy: exploring international and interdisciplinary insights 2. Institutionalising evidence-based policy: international insights into knowledge brokerage 3. Using evidence to improve policy and practice: the UK What Works 4. Evidence-based policy as iterative learning: the case of EU biofuels targets 5. Creating and using the evidence base: the case of the Active Ageing Index 6. Media and evidence-informed policy development: the case of mental health in Australia 7. Using evidence to reconstruct second-language learning policies in Estonia 8. CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis: Dutch (economic) policy-making 9. Evidence and the policy process from an Indian perspective 10. (Mis)use of evidence in microfinance programming in the global south: a critique 11. Evidence and alcohol policy: lessons from the Italian case 12. Evidence-based research, epidemiology and alcohol policy: a critique

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781138392229
Publisert
2019-01-03
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
246 mm
Bredde
174 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
138

Biographical note

Linda Hantrais, FAcSS, is Emeritus Professor of European Social Policy at Loughborough University, UK, and Visiting Fellow at the LSE Centre for International Studies (tbc). Her research interests span international comparative research theory, methodology, management and practice, with particular reference to public policy and institutional structures in the European Union, and the relationship between socio-demographic trends and social policy.

Ashley Thomas Lenihan is a Fellow at the LSE Centre for International Studies and a Senior Fellow at the Institute for Law, Science, & Global Security at Georgetown University. Her research focuses on the political economy of international security, international law, and the relationship between social science research and the policymaking process.

Susanne MacGregor, FAcSS, is an Honorary Professor of Social Policy at LSHTM, and Emeritus Professor at Middlesex University. She has been a Scientific Adviser to the UK Department of Health and was Programme Coordinator for their Drug Misuse Research Initiative (2000–2008). She is a member of the UNRISD research collaboration: Towards universal social security in emerging economies.