This article aims to critically explore how qualitative case study research that is founded on realist principles can fundamentally enhance social policy evaluation methodologies and, in turn, provide improved learning for policy makers and practitioners. We suggest these methodological advantages are accrued through the careful construction of theory-based explanations of 'how' policy programmes work thereby addressing the limitations of quasiexperimental methods - namely a focus on and prioritisation of outcome measures. The paper situates this key argument within wider, long-standing debates about evidence-based policy-making and what constitutes 'evidence' of impact in social policy. It does so through reflection on the contentious a...
This research adopted a Realistic Evaluation approach (Pawson and Tilley, 1997) to elicit and refine...
Public policymakers and institutional decision-makers routinely face questions about whether interve...
This project was developed by a research team at the University of the West of England (UWE) under t...
This article aims to critically explore how qualitative case study research that is founded on reali...
This article draws on the Troubled Families Programme (TFP) to highlight the ways in which particula...
This article focuses attention on explaining and understanding state intervention into the lives of ...
Using ‘evidence’ to falsify rather than verify patterns in data and searching for alternative explan...
© 2017 Cambridge University Press. The Troubled Families Programme (TFP) is the latest example of a ...
Evidence-based policy is a dominant theme in contemporary public services but the practical realitie...
The evidence base on social protection programmes is expanding rapidly, largely pointing towards the...
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are increasingly playing a central role in shaping policy for de...
This article examines how intensive family interventions in England since 1997, including the Coalit...
This article draws on the Troubled Families Programme (TFP) to highlight the ways in which particula...
Over the last twenty years or so policymakers, commissioners, and those delivering social programmes...
This article reports on a study of local implementation in the UK Troubled Families Programme (TFP)....
This research adopted a Realistic Evaluation approach (Pawson and Tilley, 1997) to elicit and refine...
Public policymakers and institutional decision-makers routinely face questions about whether interve...
This project was developed by a research team at the University of the West of England (UWE) under t...
This article aims to critically explore how qualitative case study research that is founded on reali...
This article draws on the Troubled Families Programme (TFP) to highlight the ways in which particula...
This article focuses attention on explaining and understanding state intervention into the lives of ...
Using ‘evidence’ to falsify rather than verify patterns in data and searching for alternative explan...
© 2017 Cambridge University Press. The Troubled Families Programme (TFP) is the latest example of a ...
Evidence-based policy is a dominant theme in contemporary public services but the practical realitie...
The evidence base on social protection programmes is expanding rapidly, largely pointing towards the...
Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are increasingly playing a central role in shaping policy for de...
This article examines how intensive family interventions in England since 1997, including the Coalit...
This article draws on the Troubled Families Programme (TFP) to highlight the ways in which particula...
Over the last twenty years or so policymakers, commissioners, and those delivering social programmes...
This article reports on a study of local implementation in the UK Troubled Families Programme (TFP)....
This research adopted a Realistic Evaluation approach (Pawson and Tilley, 1997) to elicit and refine...
Public policymakers and institutional decision-makers routinely face questions about whether interve...
This project was developed by a research team at the University of the West of England (UWE) under t...