Knowledge and Public Policy

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A01=Judith Eleanor Innes
Annual Social Report
Author_Judith Eleanor Innes
Average Income
BLS
Category=JPQB
CEA
environmental impact assessment
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
evidence-based decision making
Family Assistance Plan
FBI Crime Index
Hayward Alker
HEW
housing policy
human rights policy
indicator development process
institutional theory
Internal Revenue Service
IQ Measure
Joint Economic Committee
Life Styles
Low Income Line
National Industrial Conference Board
NWLB.
OEO Program
policy analysis methods
Policy Issues
public sector evaluation
quantitative social research
Research Social Scientist
Seasonal Adjustment
social indicator creation for policy
Social Indicators Movement
Social Work Solutions
Standard Budget
Term Instrument
Welfare Reform
WPA

Product details

  • ISBN 9780887388101
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 1989
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book addresses the question of what it takes to develop social indicators that genuinely influence important public decisions. It looks historically at the processes of creating and using three important social indicators in the United States: unemployment rates, standard budgets, and crime rates. It then develops principles for choosing concepts, designing measures, and creating policy processes that institutionalize their use.

For this second edition, Innes has provided a major new introductory essay, which reflects on social indicators research and her own and others' continuing work on the role of quantitative and other professionally generated information in policy making. She contends that in practice knowledge is influential as it becomes part of the myths that shape public life, as it empowers some policy actors over others, as it establishes the agendas and frames the problem, as it sets the terms for negotiation and public discourse. For these arguments, she draws on her research on human rights policy, environmental impact assessment, housing policy and local community development. The case studies in the original book have stood the test of time, and remain valid supports for the author's interpretations.

The author contends that to understand how knowledge and policy are linked, we need to replace the "scientific" model of explicit knowledge use with a more inclusive, interactive model of knowledge influence. To do this we must rethink both the education and practice of policy professionals. Innes sees indicators as lenses on the world that help define problems and point the way to solutions. It is not surprising that the case studies show that the most influential indicators are developed jointly with policy and theories about the problem. As she says, "there are no facts without theories and the only way a statistician can keep out of politics is to collect only irrelevant data." This new edition will be of immense interest to those interested in the sociology of ideas, policy studies, and the emerging field of knowledge transfer.

Judith Innes is a professor in the city and regional planning department of the University of California, Berkeley.

Judith Innes is a professor in the city and regional planning department of the University of California, Berkeley.

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