Alliance for Useful Evidence

Welcome to the Alliance for Evidence Blog.

The Alliance for Useful Evidence has been formed to champion the use of and demand for evidence to help design more effective public services.

Follow this blog to get the latest thinking from the Alliance team.

If you are interested in promoting useful evidence in decision making across social policy, you can join the Alliance for Useful Evidence here.

Membership is free and open to any individual or organisation.






Day 10: Developing a UK Alliance for Useful Evidence

We are delighted to announce that we are working with the ESRC - and others - to create an Alliance for Useful Evidence.

21.10.2011

Day 9: Evidence in the real world

"You say "evidence". Well, there may be evidence. But evidence, you know, can generally be taken two ways" - Dostoevsky, Crime & Punishment, 1866

The blogs over the past two weeks have demonstrated that embedding rigorous evidence in decision making is not always a straightforward task. As the above quote shows, this is further complicated by data not always showing a single course of action for decision makers to take.

20.10.2011

Day 8: Opening up data for better, cheaper evidence and the new army of armchair evaluators

We have talked about the need for more and better use of evidence, but this does not always mean commissioning costly academic research. Instead we can find new ways of utilising the information already available and empowering wider society to make use of it. This means that as well as innovating with new programmes and policies, we also need to innovate with the tools we use to evaluate them.

19.10.2011

Day 7: Making the debate relevant

Not everybody thinks that evidence is the most important thing in the world. But most would recognise that knowing whether a programme of intervention is going to be harmful to them, their family or friends, is a big deal.

18.10.2011

Day 6: Managing the politics of decision making

Research, evidence and data do not exist in a vacuum.  To influence decision making, sources of information have to compete with a myriad of other factors, ranging from political pressure, lobbyists, public opinion, ideology and personal values. If the research findings clash with the dominant view, how can these factors be managed to embed evidence into decision making?

17.10.2011

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