Presenting a concrete plan of action for anyone who needs to perform a policy analysis, Eugene Bardach’s fourth edition is full of helpful tips and case studies written to enthuse and appeal to undergraduate students. Jennifer Miller finds that the book steers clear of technocratic jargon and ideological bias, and believes that it will continue to play an important role in the professional development of policy analysts
Supporting student learning is the name of the game for academic librarians, but what that means in ...
Book review by Steven Michels. Mattern, Mark. Putting Ideas to Work: A Practical Introduction to Pol...
Being an economist has become a quite fascinating profession. Alongside teaching, the economist’s jo...
Dave O’Brien opens up the black box of policy making in this diverse collection of essays for the ac...
In Thinking like a Political Scientist: A Practical Guide to Research Methods, Christopher Howard ma...
In Evidence-Based Policy Making in the Social Sciences: Methods that Matter, editors Gerry Stoker an...
This book provides an introduction to educational research and statistics. The book cannot hope (and...
In The Econocracy: The Perils of Leaving Economics to the Experts, Joe Earle, Cahal Moran and Zach W...
This interesting and important book is a valuable contribution to what Fischer and Forester (1993) h...
In The American Myth of Markets in Social Policy: Ideological Roots of Inequality, Debra Hevenstone ...
With the financial crisis continuing after five years, many question why economics failed either to ...
Paul Caruana-Galizia finds a passionately written account of the problems within social policy, but ...
This book is a compilation of papers presented in a seminar on “Policy and project evaluation: ...
Across the globe, there are more than four thousand policy institutes or think tanks that research o...
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) was established in 1974, one of a fundamentally important seri...
Supporting student learning is the name of the game for academic librarians, but what that means in ...
Book review by Steven Michels. Mattern, Mark. Putting Ideas to Work: A Practical Introduction to Pol...
Being an economist has become a quite fascinating profession. Alongside teaching, the economist’s jo...
Dave O’Brien opens up the black box of policy making in this diverse collection of essays for the ac...
In Thinking like a Political Scientist: A Practical Guide to Research Methods, Christopher Howard ma...
In Evidence-Based Policy Making in the Social Sciences: Methods that Matter, editors Gerry Stoker an...
This book provides an introduction to educational research and statistics. The book cannot hope (and...
In The Econocracy: The Perils of Leaving Economics to the Experts, Joe Earle, Cahal Moran and Zach W...
This interesting and important book is a valuable contribution to what Fischer and Forester (1993) h...
In The American Myth of Markets in Social Policy: Ideological Roots of Inequality, Debra Hevenstone ...
With the financial crisis continuing after five years, many question why economics failed either to ...
Paul Caruana-Galizia finds a passionately written account of the problems within social policy, but ...
This book is a compilation of papers presented in a seminar on “Policy and project evaluation: ...
Across the globe, there are more than four thousand policy institutes or think tanks that research o...
The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) was established in 1974, one of a fundamentally important seri...
Supporting student learning is the name of the game for academic librarians, but what that means in ...
Book review by Steven Michels. Mattern, Mark. Putting Ideas to Work: A Practical Introduction to Pol...
Being an economist has become a quite fascinating profession. Alongside teaching, the economist’s jo...