|
Policy Research - Who Needs It?
The relationship between government policymaking and policy research
changes over time and between governments. It seldom follows the
orderly sequence of logical events which researchers may like to
imagine. In attempting to understand the relationship between the
creation of knowledge and its use by policymakers, it is essential
to understand the needs and behaviour of politicians, the pressures
upon their time and the wide range of channels of information, informal
as well as formal, open to them and to their immediate advisers.
Social policy research, partly because of its frequent ambiguity
and partiality, is particularly likely to be ignored by its official
consumers in government. Some social and economic questions are
probably not capable of effective testing by research other than
by governments putting policies into effect on a national scale.
Evaluation of such experiments is difficult. More attention needs
to be paid to the marketing of ideas by pressure groups and think
tanks. Governments can shop around for acceptable advice from a
wide range of sources outside academic life. Except in highly consensual
political cultures, the only decisions which are made primarily
on the basis of research findings are politically unimportant ones.
In considering the role of policy research it is essential to keep
the primacy of politics firmly in mind.
[Abstract taken from article]
|