17. Towards Policy Analysis 2.0: Platforms for Knowledge Sharing and Collaboration among Policy Analysts

2017 ◽  
pp. 302-322 ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 16 (3) ◽  
pp. 233-248 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph Kahne

Concern for academic excellence and equity often structures the work of mainstream policy analysts. These matters certainly deserve careful attention, but this focus often obscures many other important concerns. In particular, analysts are often inattentive to the relation between educational policy and the creation of democratic communities. To highlight the impact of this omission, I examine mainstream debates over tracking policy. While exploring these debates, I consider how placing greater attention on Deweyan notions of democratic community might enrich policy dialogues and alter the form and focus of mainstream policy discussions.


How well can democratic decision making incorporate the knowledge and expertise generated by public policy analysts? This book examines the historical development of policy analysis (a new professional class of advisors that began developing during the 1950s in the United States), as well as its use in legislative and regulatory bodies and in the federal executive branch. The chapters show that policy-analytic expertise effectively improves governmental services only when it complements democratic decision making. When successful, policy analysis fosters valuable new ideas, better use of evidence, and greater transparency in decision processes. The book concludes by assessing the development and impact of the policy-analytic profession and suggests that the growth in the voluntary employment of analysts not only by governments of all types as well as private sector and nonprofit agencies is a key indicator of the profession's effectiveness and value.


Author(s):  
John A. Hird

Policy analysis traverses and aims to bridge the space between truth and power. Indeed, policy analysts are trained to be in a position to ‘speak truth to power.’ With its political origins in the United States during the progressive era, the operational origins of policy analysis occurred in the 1950s when both truth and power were more clearly defined and when those in power presumably were interested in truth. Policy analysis emerged from systems analysis, which was applied successfully to clearly delineated problems with unambiguous objective functions....


2012 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 1 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodolphe Gouin ◽  
Jean-Baptiste Paul Harguindéguy

Cognitive approaches have become very fashionable in the field of policy analysis. Nevertheless, despite a common label, cognitive policy analyses vary greatly from one author to the next. So, are policy analysts talking about the same thing? Drawing on the dichotomy established by Sperber between soft cognition and hard cognition, we guess that not all authors seek to transfer theoretical assumptions from one scientific discipline to another. In order to demonstrate this hypothesis, we propose to round out these formal categories with additional sub-divisions based on the degree of conceptual transfer from cognitive science to policy analysis..


2017 ◽  
Vol 18 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert Hockett

AbstractIt is common for normative legal theorists, economists and other policy analysts to conduct and communicate their work mainly in maximizing terms. They take the maximization of welfare, for example, or of wealth or utility, to be primary objectives of legislation and public policy. Few if any of these theorists seem to notice, however, that any time we speak explicitly of maximizing one thing, we speak implicitly of distributing other things and of equalizing yet other things. Fewer still seem to recognize that we effectivelyTo attend systematically to this form of inter-translatability, with a view in particular to that which maximization formulations latently prescribe that we distribute and equalize, might be called “putting distribution first.” It is explicitly to recognize the fact that all law and policy are implicitly as equalizing and citizen-defining as they are aggregative and maximizing, and to trace the many salient consequences that stem from this fact. It is likewise to recognize that all law and policy treat us as equals in some respects and as non-equals in other respects. Putting distribution first by attending explicitly to these “respects” yields greater transparency about how well or poorly our laws and policies manage to identify, count, and treat us as equals in theThis Article works to lay out with care how to put distribution first in normative legal and policy analysis. The payoffs include both a workable method by which to test proposed maximization norms systematically for their normative propriety, and an attractive distributive ethic that can serve as a workable normative touchstone for legal and policy analysis. Indeed, the Article concludes, much — though not yet quite all — of our law can illuminatingly be interpreted as giving inchoate expression to just such an ethic.


Author(s):  
Eluska Fernández ◽  
Claire Edwards

This chapter synthesises the main themes of the volume, and provide a broader discussion of the contribution that governmentality-inspired studies can make to our understanding of health and health policy.In particular, the chapter discusses where governmentality-based studies might take us in both methodological and theoretical terms. Cognisant of critiques of governmental analyses, it places a specific emphasis on exploring what, or how, governmentalty can contribute to those themes which have so often occupied critical social policy analysts, not least issues of inequality, the role of politics as social relations, and the place of contestation and resistance in policy processes. Thus, the chapter seeks to explore how we might write critical politics, and critical policy analysis, back into governmentality studies.


Author(s):  
Robert Nelson

The government practice of policy analysis is often conceived to be a value-neutral task in which economic and other professional experts respond to well-defined analytical tasks as defined by their political superiors. This chapter shows that the real world is more complicated. Government policy analysts often serve in entrepreneurial roles themselves, seeking to generate top-level attention to pressing policy issues as seen by the analyst. It is difficult to separate clearly professional expert and political roles in government. Policy analysts typically incorporate a strong set of “economic values” into their professional work efforts; they frame policy options for government decision makers in light of existing political realities. Robert Nelson explores these themes relating to professional economic ethics, drawing on his personal experiences as a career economist from 1975 to 1993 in the Office of Policy Analysis in the Office of the Secretary of the Interior.


2014 ◽  
Vol 52 (3) ◽  
pp. 799-804
Author(s):  
John Geweke

Public policy setting often involves quantitative choices with quantitative outcomes. Yet unqualified statements about the precise consequences of alternative choices characterize much of the policy analysis bearing on these decisions. Public Policy in an Uncertain World: Analysis and Decisions by Charles F. Manski characterizes and richly illustrates the nature of this unwarranted certitude. It details specific constructive alternatives on which the economics profession has achieved varying degrees of consensus. Those in our profession charged with the education of future policy analysts should consider using it and how to round out its presentation of decision making from their own perspective. (JEL D02, D04, D80, E61)


Author(s):  
Erik Godwin ◽  
Kenneth Godwin ◽  
Scott Ainsworth

Corporations and trade associations engage in economic, legal, political, and scientific policy analysis. They employ more lobbyists, file more comments on proposed regulations, and sit on more government advisory committees than other categories of interest organizations. These efforts to influence government make extensive use of policy analysis. Routine business decisions by corporations involve of many of the tools used in policy analysis such as calculating the net present value, discount rate, and benefits and costs of alternative investment decisions. We examine the effectiveness of corporate policy analyses in three ways: (1) comparing the success of different interest organizations comment letters concerning a proposed regulation, (2) conducting case studies of three major government decisions involving policy analysis, and (3) examining the use of waivers to improve profits. The chapter ends with recommendations concerning how policy analysts can improve our understanding of American democracy.


The professionalization of policy analysis is usefully viewed as a cultural phenomenon that encompasses not only the expert’s relationship to the state and to various groups in society, but also the impact of policy experts on the popular consciousness and the general discourse within which more specialized policy discourses are situated. Viewed from this wider angle, the influence of policy analysts and their specialized knowledge has never been greater in Canada. In tracing the professionalization of policy analysis this chapter is concerned chiefly with how analysts and their craft have become embedded in our culture and governance in the widest sense. In this era of “fake news”, where the ability to ascertain the facts is perhaps more difficult than has ever been the case, speaking truth to power and about power have never been more important.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document