Policy-based evidence making: Difference between revisions

Content deleted Content added
Cat4567nip (talk | contribs)
creating new category to bring several related articles together
Citation bot (talk | contribs)
Removed URL that duplicated identifier. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | #UCB_CommandLine
 
(43 intermediate revisions by 34 users not shown)
Line 1:
The{{Short term '''Policy based evidence making''' is a pejorative term which refers to the commissioningdescription|Commissioning of research in order to support a policy which has already been decided upon. The name has been suggested as a corollary to [[Evidence-based policy|evidence based policy making]]. }}
"'''Policy-based evidence making'''" is a pejorative term which refers to the commissioning of research in order to support a [[policy]] which has already been decided upon. It is the converse of [[Evidence-based policy|evidence-based policy making]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Strassheim |first1=Holger |last2=Kettunen |first2=Pekka |date=2014-05-01 |title=When does evidence-based policy turn into policy-based evidence? Configurations, contexts and mechanisms |url=http://openurl.ingenta.com/content/xref?genre=article&issn=1744-2648&volume=10&issue=2&spage=259 |journal=Evidence & Policy: A Journal of Research, Debate and Practice |language=en |volume=10 |issue=2 |pages=259–277 |doi=10.1332/174426514X13990433991320}}</ref>
 
As the name suggests, policy -based evidence making means working back from a predefined policy to produce underpinning evidence. Working from a conclusion to provide only supporting evidence is an approach which contradicts most interpretations of the [[scientific method]]; however, it should be distinguished from research into the effects of a policy where such research may provide either supporting or opposing evidence.
 
== Examples ==
In July 2006 Rebecca Boden and Debbie Epstein <ref>[http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/content~db=all~content=a747710742 Managing the Research Imagination? Globalisation and Research in Higher Education. ''Globalisation, Societies and Education'']</ref> published a paper in which they wrote:
In ''The Politics of Evidence: From evidence-based policy to the good governance of evidence'', Justin Parkhurst quotes the following example from Professor [[Anne Glover (biologist)|Anne Glover]], then Chief Scientific Officer to the European Commission:<ref>{{Cite book |last=Parkhurst, Justin O. |title=The politics of evidence : from evidence-based policy to the good governance of evidence |date=4 October 2016 |isbn=978-1-317-38086-3 |___location=London |oclc=963180218}}</ref>
<blockquote>Let's imagine a Commissioner over the weekend thinks, "Let's ban the use of credit cards in the EU because credit cards lead to personal debt". So that commissioner will come in on Monday morning and say to his or her Director General, "Find me the evidence that demonstrates that this is the case"</blockquote>
 
Similar reasoning has been advanced in respect of public policy on alcohol<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Marmot |first=Michael G |date=2004-04-17 |title=Evidence based policy or policy based evidence? |journal=BMJ: British Medical Journal |volume=328 |issue=7445 |pages=906–907 |doi=10.1136/bmj.328.7445.906 |issn=0959-8138 |pmid=15087324|pmc=390150 }}</ref> and narcotics.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Hughes |first1=Caitlin E. |date=2007-01-01 |title=Evidence-based policy or policy-based evidence? The role of evidence in the development and implementation of the Illicit Drug Diversion Initiative |journal=Drug and Alcohol Review |volume=26 |issue=4 |pages=363–368 |doi=10.1080/09595230701373859 |pmid=17564871 |issn=0959-5236|doi-access=free }}</ref>
:This need [for evidence] has been reified in the UK and elsewhere, as routines of ‘evidence-based policy’-making have been hardwired into the :business of Government. Intuitively, basing policies that affect people’s lives and the economy on rigorous academic research sounds rational and :desirable. However, such approaches are fundamentally flawed by virtue of the fact that Government, in its broadest sense, seeks to capture and :control the knowledge producing processes to the point where this type of ‘research’ might best be described as ‘policy-based evidence’. (Boden and :Epstein 2006: 226).
 
== Mentions ==
The term "policy based evidence making" was later referred to in a report of the [[United Kingdom]] [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]] Select Committee on Science and Technology into Scientific Advice, Risk and Evidence Based Policy Making issued in October 2006. The committee stated:
In July 2006, Rebecca Boden and Debbie Epstein published a paper in which they wrote:<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Boden|first1=Rebecca|last2=Epstein|first2=Debbie|date=2006|title=Managing the research imagination? Globalisation and research in higher education|journal=Globalisation, Societies and Education|volume=4|issue=2|pages=223–236|doi=10.1080/14767720600752619|s2cid=144077070}}</ref>
 
:<blockquote>This need [for evidence] has been reified in the UK and elsewhere, as routines of ‘evidence"evidence-based policy’policy"-making have been hardwired into the :business of Government. Intuitively, basing policies that affect people’speople's lives and the economy on rigorous academic research sounds rational and :desirable. However, such approaches are fundamentally flawed by virtue of the fact that Government, in its broadest sense, seeks to capture and :control the knowledge producing processes to the point where this type of ‘research’"research" might best be described as ‘policy"policy-based evidence’evidence". (Boden and :Epstein 2006: 226). </blockquote>
{{quotation|[Ministers] should certainly not seek selectively to pick pieces of evidence which support an already agreed policy, or even commission research in order to produce a justification for policy: so-called "policy-based evidence making" (see paragraphs 95–6). '''Where there is an absence of evidence, or even when the Government is knowingly contradicting the evidence&mdash;maybe for very good reason&mdash;this should be openly acknowledged.'''<br />
Paragraph 89, ''House of Commons Science and Technology Committee: Scientific Advice, Risk and Evidence Based Policy Making''<ref>[http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200506/cmselect/cmsctech/900/900-i.pdf House of Commons Science and Technology Committee: Scientific Advice, Risk and Evidence Based Policy Making]</ref>}}
 
The term "policy -based evidence making" was later referred to in a report of the [[United Kingdom]] [[British House of Commons|House of Commons]] Select Committee on Science and Technology into Scientific Advice, Risk and Evidence Based Policy Making issued in October 2006. The committee stated:<ref>[https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm200506/cmselect/cmsctech/900/900-i.pdf House of Commons Science and Technology Committee: Scientific Advice, Risk and Evidence Based Policy Making], paragraph 89</ref>
The term has also been applied outside the strictly scientific arena, for example in a position paper for the [[Arts and Humanities Research Council]]<ref>[http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/images/position_paper_oliver_bennett.pdf Position paper for AHRC by Oliver Bennett]</ref>
 
{{quotation|<blockquote>[Ministers] should certainly not seek selectively to pick pieces of evidence which support an already agreed policy, or even commission research in order to produce a justification for policy: so-called "policy-based evidence making" (see paragraphs 95–6). '''Where there is an absence of evidence, or even when the Government is knowingly contradicting the evidence&mdash;maybe for very good reason&mdash;this should be openly acknowledged.'''<br [emphasis in original]</blockquote>
 
The term has been applied to climate policy. Oliver Geden, writing in ''[[Nature (journal)|Nature]]'' in 2015, said (p28):{{nnbsp}}<ref name="geden-2015">
{{cite journal
| last1 = Geden | first1 = Oliver
| title = Climate advisers must maintain integrity
| date = 7 May 2015
| journal = Nature
| volume = 521
| issue = 7550
| pages = 27–28
| doi = 10.1038/521027a
| pmid = 25951268
| url = http://www.grandkidzfuture.com/occasional-pieces/ewExternalFiles/2%20degrees%20Geden%20Nature%202015.pdf
| access-date = 2024-07-09
}} {{open access}}
</ref>
 
<blockquote>
Everyday politics is therefore dominated not by evidence-based policy-making but by attempts at 'policy-based evidence-making'.
</blockquote>
 
The term has also been applied outside the strictly scientific arena, for example in a position paper for the [[Arts and Humanities Research Council]].<ref>[http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/images/position_paper_oliver_bennett.pdf Position paper for AHRC by Oliver Bennett] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928060852/http://www.ahrc.ac.uk/images/position_paper_oliver_bennett.pdf |date=September 28, 2007 }}</ref>
 
== See also ==
{{colbegin}}
* {{annotated link|Campbell's law}}
* {{annotated link|Goodhart's law}}
* {{annotated link|Inverse benefit law}}
* {{annotated link|Politicization of science}}
* {{annotated link|Woozle effect}}
{{colend}}
 
==References==
{{reflist}}
<references />
 
{{Evidence-based practice}}
 
[[Category:PejorativesPejorative terms]]
[[Category:Public administration]]
[[Category:Evidence-based practices]]