Paper from May 2004 by Dr Adam Graycar, Executive Director, Cabinet Office, Department of the Premier and Cabinet, Government of South Australia. This speech is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/Discusses the requirement for obtaining evidence for policy makers, collecting and analysing data, and (1) how is evidence assembled, and (2) how much does evidence impact on policy
From the long history of efforts to improve policy by drawing systematically on evidence about effec...
This report summarises the outputs from a series of four seminars held at the Institute for Governme...
Over the last twenty years or so policymakers, commissioners, and those delivering social programmes...
Getting evidence into policy is notoriously difficult. In this empirical case study we used document...
Policy-making should be informed by solid evidence. This paper explores four Australian examples of ...
Ministers are always calling for more evidence-based interventions. Do they apply the same criterion...
Calls for evidence-based policy often fail to recognise the fundamentally political nature of policy...
At the request of the Prime Minister, this report has been designed to explore in greater detail the...
Over the last twenty or so years, it has become standard to require policy makers to base their reco...
Evidence-based approaches to policy making are growing in popularity. A generally embraced view is t...
In recent years, there has been a marked increase in interest in the use of evidence for public poli...
ANZSOG/ANU Public Lecture Series 2009, Canberra, 4 February. Early versions of this paper were prese...
This article examines the uncertain growth and future prospects of "evidence-based" policy-making, w...
Recent enthusiasm for evidence-based policy-making in Australia has many sources. So-called 'ma...
The idea that there should be a link between systematically structured knowledge and the policies pu...
From the long history of efforts to improve policy by drawing systematically on evidence about effec...
This report summarises the outputs from a series of four seminars held at the Institute for Governme...
Over the last twenty years or so policymakers, commissioners, and those delivering social programmes...
Getting evidence into policy is notoriously difficult. In this empirical case study we used document...
Policy-making should be informed by solid evidence. This paper explores four Australian examples of ...
Ministers are always calling for more evidence-based interventions. Do they apply the same criterion...
Calls for evidence-based policy often fail to recognise the fundamentally political nature of policy...
At the request of the Prime Minister, this report has been designed to explore in greater detail the...
Over the last twenty or so years, it has become standard to require policy makers to base their reco...
Evidence-based approaches to policy making are growing in popularity. A generally embraced view is t...
In recent years, there has been a marked increase in interest in the use of evidence for public poli...
ANZSOG/ANU Public Lecture Series 2009, Canberra, 4 February. Early versions of this paper were prese...
This article examines the uncertain growth and future prospects of "evidence-based" policy-making, w...
Recent enthusiasm for evidence-based policy-making in Australia has many sources. So-called 'ma...
The idea that there should be a link between systematically structured knowledge and the policies pu...
From the long history of efforts to improve policy by drawing systematically on evidence about effec...
This report summarises the outputs from a series of four seminars held at the Institute for Governme...
Over the last twenty years or so policymakers, commissioners, and those delivering social programmes...