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Published in: Archives of Public Health 1/2016

Open Access 01-12-2016 | LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Persistent misunderstandings about evidence-based (sorry: informed!) policy-making

Authors: Pierre-Olivier Bédard, Mathieu Ouimet

Published in: Archives of Public Health | Issue 1/2016

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Abstract

Background

The field of research on knowledge mobilization and evidence-informed policy-making has seen enduring debates related to various fundamental assumptions such as the definition of ‘evidence’, the relative validity of various research methods, the actual role of evidence to inform policy-making, etc. In many cases, these discussions serve a useful purpose, but they also stem from serious disagreement on methodological and epistemological issues.

Discussion

This essay reviews the rationale for evidence-informed policy-making by examining some of the common claims made about the aims and practices of this perspective on public policy. Supplementing the existing justifications for evidence-based policy making, we argue in favor of a greater inclusion of research evidence in the policy process but in a structured fashion, based on methodological considerations. In this respect, we present an overview of the intricate relation between policy questions and appropriate research designs.

Summary

By closely examining the relation between research questions and research designs, we claim that the usual points of disagreement are mitigated. For instance, when focusing on the variety of research designs that can answer a range of policy questions, the common critical claim about ‘RCT-based policy-making’ seems to lose some, if not all of its grip.
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Metadata
Title
Persistent misunderstandings about evidence-based (sorry: informed!) policy-making
Authors
Pierre-Olivier Bédard
Mathieu Ouimet
Publication date
01-12-2016
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Archives of Public Health / Issue 1/2016
Electronic ISSN: 2049-3258
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-016-0142-z

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