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Governing with Evidence: Making Sense of Current Uses and Models of Evidence Based Policy

Policy
Institutions
VIR02
Jesper Dahl Kelstrup
University of Roskilde
Johan Christensen
Departments of Political Science and Public Administration, Universiteit Leiden

Wednesday 08:00 - 11:00 BST (20/04/2022)

Wednesday 10:00 - 17:30 BST (20/04/2022)

Thursday 10:00 - 17:00 BST (21/04/2022)

Friday 10:00 - 13:00 BST (22/04/2022)

This workshop focuses on the role of political and bureaucratic actors in designing strategies and institutions for evidence based policy-making and their actual use of evidence in the formulation of public policies. Political actors such as governments and parliaments play an important role in setting ambitions for evidence based policy and in deciding whether to base political decisions on evidence rather than on ideology or interests. Public administrations at the national and international level also have a crucial role to play: they draft and implement legislation, they are key providers of policy advice, and they connect information input with political decision-making (Littoz-Monnet 2017; Christensen 2020). This includes setting evidence standards in attempts to ensure that they consider valid and systematic evidence before preparing and taking decisions (Oh & Rich 1996; Parkhurst 2017). The following models of evidence use by public authorities are used as a starting point for discussion: Public authorities as clearing houses for evidence (the rational model) The rational model starts from the observation that EBP is useful for ministries because valid effects-based knowledge are believed to translate well into policy advice and evaluation. According to the rational model, ministries use evidence strategies both as a means of reducing information overload by giving priority to high-quality evidence as a basis for political decision-making and as a means of making policies more efficient by giving preference to policies showing strong, positive effects and eliminating ineffective policy interventions and programs. A guiding idea is that the need for ministries to filter evidence and information for the purpose of prioritizing effective interventions becomes increasingly important as government and public policy accumulates and becomes more professionalised over time (Baron 2018). Public authorities as boundedly rational evidence users (the bureaucratic model) The bureaucratic model is inspired by an incremental understanding of decision-making, which holds that decision-making is characterized by processes such as “satisficing” (Simon 1955) and “muddling-through” (Lindblom 1959) rather than by rational choices based on full information. In this perspective, policy-makers consider mainly the most relevant evidence and choices with a focus on achieving (positive) marginal changes from the status quo. Under conditions of bounded rationality, experience with past policy plays the dominant role in decision-making and extensive and systematic use of available evidence is considered unlikely because it is both resource-demanding and risks leading to information overload in ministries. In this model therefore, ministries are expected to use evidence strategies selectively to identify evidence on indicators that are already considered important for political or administrative reasons. Public authorities as strategic evidence users (the government politics model) According to the government politics model, political and bureaucratic actors use evidence strategically to pursue specific political or administrative policy agendas and preferences (Hesstvedt and Christensen 2021). This corresponds to ‘political’, ‘strategic’ or ‘symbolic’ models of knowledge utilization, where evidence is used ceremonially to legitimize decision-making or as political ammunition to back up predetermined policy preferences (Weiss 1979; Best & Holmes 2010; Boswell 2018).

With more information available and a wish to increase the efficiency and impact of government programs based on “what works”, evidence based policy (EBP) is now a widespread phenomenon in public administrations. Efforts to conduct and accumulate studies of causal effects has spread from natural and health sciences to the social sciences for example through communities such as the Campbell Collaboration (2019). The strategic as well as ad hoc decisions which public authorities take regarding what evidence to use and what to neglect has made EBP both a prominent theme in public policy research and practice (Sanderson, 2002; Triantafillou, 2015; Cairney, 2016; Parkhurst 2017; Ansell & Geyer 2017). This workshop is broadly interested in contributions concerned with how evidence is governed and used in and across national political systems and international organizations. The workshop invites contributions on the politics and practices of evidence based policy-making in national governments and international organizations. Contributions may focus on a broad range of actors, ranging from the political and bureaucratic actors that commission and use evidence to the expert bodies or NGOs that produce different forms of evidence and knowledge for policy-making. Examples of relevant questions for the contributions to the workshop include: • What procedures, evidence strategies and motivations underpin the use of evidence by public authorities? • To what extent is evidence actually being collected, interpreted and utilized in public policy-making? • How and why are different types of evidence considered as a basis for political action in different phases of the policy process? • How do expert bodies and interest groups act in response to a focus on EBP among public authorities? The workshop aims to discuss how the contributions and governance of evidence can be understood theoretically, empirically and methodologically and to bring together papers that engage theoretically, empirically or methodologically with these issues from a wide range of disciplines and perspectives. It also aims to bring together a diverse group of researchers at different stages in their career.

Title Details
Research Activities of International Organizations View Paper Details
Making Sense of Knowledge Brokering Organisations View Paper Details
Strategies for evidence-based policy in government ministries: What is it, and what does it mean for practice? View Paper Details
Intersectoral variation in knowledge and evidence use: Evidence from external policy advice View Paper Details
Cultures of Evidence, Cultures of Engagement: An empirical examination of the relationship between evidence use and engagement across UK policy organisations View Paper Details
A role-playing game. Policy advice and policy work in the Italian central government during the pandemic View Paper Details
Domesticating death: The necro-politics of COVID-19 data visualization in UK government press briefings View Paper Details
Models, institutions and actors in evidence based policy View Paper Details
The use of evidence by public authorities in the EU’s smallest member state View Paper Details
Influences on norms of ‘good evidence’ among policymakers View Paper Details
Studying expert influence: a methodological agenda View Paper Details
Experts and policy advice in the Nordic countries: A study of commissions of inquiry in Sweden, Finland, Denmark and Norway, 1970-2020 View Paper Details
Power of Experts in Eurozone Crisis View Paper Details
Science – policy interaction spaces: experiences of government officials and social scientists View Paper Details
Regulating for evidence-based expert advice: which prescriptions for non-epistemic value judgments? View Paper Details