Voices of decision makers on evidence-based policy: A case of evolving TB/HIV co-infection policy in India

AIDS Care ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 28 (3) ◽  
pp. 397-400 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Srikanth Reddy ◽  
Seema Sahay
2020 ◽  

The Handbook on Using Administrative Data for Research and Evidence-based Policy offers guidance for researchers, data providers, and decision-makers who would like to use administrative data to inform policy. Administrative data has the potential to change the future of research, in particular when combined with experiments that can help test the effectiveness of planned programs and evaluate new hypotheses. This Handbook offers a roadmap to overcome potential challenges in using administrative data for research and evaluation purposes. The technical chapters address data use agreements, working with institutional review boards, physical data security, privacy, and more. Ten complementary case studies showcase diverse models of successful administrative data partnerships in the US, Canada, Europe, Africa, and Asia.


2020 ◽  
Vol 18 (8) ◽  
pp. 976-994 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Stratford ◽  
Arjen E Wals

There is a rational assumption built into some research projects that policy contexts are influenced by the quality of the evidence. This is, at best, only somewhat true some of the time. Through policy ethnographies, two education researchers working in the context of sustainability discuss their experiences with evidence-based policy. Central to both accounts is how critical messages about such issues as race, wellbeing and sustainability can become diluted and even lost. In the existing ‘politics of unsustainability’, and at a time of ‘post-truth’ politics, these accounts also show the limits of evidence-based policy. We argue that those working with ‘the evidence’ need to be open about how evidence-based approaches can end up supporting the ‘status quo’. Moreover, while approaches such as knowledge mobilisation emphasise the relational qualities of policy contexts, and the importance of simple compelling narratives for decision-makers, they, like many other practices, do not sufficiently theorise the power structures surrounding knowledge and the policy context. In addition to the careful use of evidence, we argue that there needs to be greater emphasis on building healthy policy ecologies – including far more emphasis on building critical and creative policy alternatives, especially in areas like sustainability and education.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrike Hahn ◽  
David Lagnado ◽  
Stephan Lewandowsky ◽  
Nick Chater

The present crisis demands an all-out response if it is to be mastered with minimal damage. This means we, as the behavioural science community, need to think about how we can adapt to best support evidence-based policy in a rapidly changing, high-stakes environment. This piece is an attempt to initiate this process. The ‘recommendations’ made are first stabs that will hopefully be critiqued, debated and improved.


2007 ◽  
Author(s):  
John F. Pfaff ◽  
Christopher P. Guzelian

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