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10. Policy as a social experiment
Scientific experiments are based on the notion that trial
and error is necessary in order to learn. Scientific experiments
also take into account that the unexpected may happen, and
that both problems and solutions may have to be redefined
along the way. Rondinelli suggests that the policy process
can be seen as a sort of social experiment. The policy process
is less a matter of prediction, and more a matter of questions
and discoveries as the experiment unfolds. In this model it
becomes important for researchers to be able to provide feedback
at strategic moments throughout the policy experiment, so
that the policy has a chance to readjust and adapt to unforeseen
circumstances as it is progressing.
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