This article explores the use of research and expertise within a selection of government agencies at state and federal levels in Australia. A recent survey of public officials provides new data on the reported use of evidence and expertise sourced from within the public service and from external sources. The survey instrument targeted the policy, program and evaluation staff in human service agencies and central policy coordination agencies. The survey findings provide new information on public servants' policy skills and organisational context, their attitudes to non-government sources of expert evidence and knowledge, and their perceptions of the relevance of academic social research. Data are reported on the relative importance assigned ...
This paper reports data from semi-structured interviews on how 26 Australian civil servants, ministe...
Political science is, we are led to believe, the study of power. Cabinet and the executive appear to...
This paper reports data from semi-structured interviews on how 26 Australian civil servants, ministe...
While academics can do more to communicate the key messages of their research, the organisational cu...
Evidence-based policy has become rhetoric for many western governments across a broad range of healt...
The cultures and practices of the public service and academic researchers are very different. Howeve...
Demand on researchers to justify the impact of their work outside academia is increasing. Both incre...
Governments in many jurisdictions have called for an increase in ‘evidence-based’ policy-making. How...
The disparity between academics’ perception of the impact of their research and the opinions of poli...
Purpose-The “two communities” metaphor for the relationship between policy and academia is inconsist...
Background: Policy decisions are informed by a number of factors: politics, ideology and values, per...
There are calls for policymakers to make greater use of research when formulating policies. Therefor...
The literature on knowledge utilization generally reveals limited use of social science research in ...
This article examines the uncertain growth and future prospects of "evidence-based" policy-making, w...
This chapter considers how high-quality social research can be undertaken, and communicated, in ways...
This paper reports data from semi-structured interviews on how 26 Australian civil servants, ministe...
Political science is, we are led to believe, the study of power. Cabinet and the executive appear to...
This paper reports data from semi-structured interviews on how 26 Australian civil servants, ministe...
While academics can do more to communicate the key messages of their research, the organisational cu...
Evidence-based policy has become rhetoric for many western governments across a broad range of healt...
The cultures and practices of the public service and academic researchers are very different. Howeve...
Demand on researchers to justify the impact of their work outside academia is increasing. Both incre...
Governments in many jurisdictions have called for an increase in ‘evidence-based’ policy-making. How...
The disparity between academics’ perception of the impact of their research and the opinions of poli...
Purpose-The “two communities” metaphor for the relationship between policy and academia is inconsist...
Background: Policy decisions are informed by a number of factors: politics, ideology and values, per...
There are calls for policymakers to make greater use of research when formulating policies. Therefor...
The literature on knowledge utilization generally reveals limited use of social science research in ...
This article examines the uncertain growth and future prospects of "evidence-based" policy-making, w...
This chapter considers how high-quality social research can be undertaken, and communicated, in ways...
This paper reports data from semi-structured interviews on how 26 Australian civil servants, ministe...
Political science is, we are led to believe, the study of power. Cabinet and the executive appear to...
This paper reports data from semi-structured interviews on how 26 Australian civil servants, ministe...