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Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence-based policymaking and the politics of neoliberal reason: a response to Newman

Adam Standring
- 15 Mar 2017 - 
- Vol. 11, Iss: 2, pp 227-234
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TLDR
The authors argue that the different perspectives within the literature on evidence-based policymaking, broadly distinguished between rationalists and constructivists, have failed to produce a productive scholarly debate, and that a solution to overcome this often vitriolic impasse is for scholars to be more accepting of the different goals of each approach.
Abstract
In his recent article, Newman argues that the different perspectives within the literature on evidence-based policymaking, broadly distinguished between rationalists and constructivists, have failed to produce a productive scholarly debate. A solution to overcome this often vitriolic impasse is for scholars to be more accepting of the different goals of each approach. This response challenges Newman’s argument on the basis of three weaknesses: a failure to properly understand the incommensurability of different ontological and epistemological positions; a narrow conceptualization of ‘evidence’; and the absence of a historical context for his argument.While undoubtedly well intentioned, in practice, the article serves to blunt the critical tools necessary to constructivist approaches, perhaps at a time when they are needed most – when we are observing the growth in what is termed ‘post-truth politics’.

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Citations
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‘State governing of knowledge’–constraining social work research and practice*

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Relational expertise and the spatial (re)production of austerity: Challenges and opportunities for progressive politics:

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‘We know it works..’: The Troubled Families Programme and the pre-determined boundary judgements of decontextualised policy evaluation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw on the Troubled Families Programme (TFP) to highlight the ways in which particular contexts, such as socioeconomic and symbolic structures, are neglected in forms of evaluation.
References
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Book

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Political Analysis: A Critical Introduction

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TL;DR: In this paper, structural, agential, and ideational factors in the analysis of political change are identified as structural, structural, and agential factors in political change, and a common language for conceptualizing power is used to describe the faces of power controversy.
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Interpreting British Governance

TL;DR: This article developed the argument that we can understand political practices only by grasping the beliefs on which people act and offered a governance narrative as a challenge to the Westminster model of British government and searched for a more accurate and open way of speaking about British government.
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