Ruth Puttick - 04.03.2013
Today Nesta hosted a Ministerial announcement of the What Works Centres. These new centres will help improve the evidence used in decision making across a number of key policy areas.
The What Works centres are a world first. They have the ambitious task of improving the links between the supply, the demand, and the use of evidence, across the areas of active and independent ageing, early intervention, policy and crime and local economic growth, to help greatly improve service delivery across these areas.
And in doing so, the What Works Centres will build upon the great progress made over the past few years. Advancements already underway include the Alliance for Useful Evidence, a network of over 1,000 members who champion evidence, the opening up of government data for interrogation and use, alongside the sophistication in research methods and their applications. Geoff Mulgan and I explore these further in our latest paper.
Few would doubt that the What Works initiative is ambitious, and as a world first, the creation of these new centres need careful consideration. This means that as the What Works Centres move from concept to reality over the coming months we need to continue working together to ensure they are fit for purpose, helping ensure the overall ambition of finding safe, efficient ways of delivering our public services is not compromised.
We hope that this is the moment that evidence truly moves from margins to mainstream. And that this is where it remains.
For further details on the announcement of the What Works Centres see the video
Click here to subscribe to the Policy Innovation Blog
This paper outlines why the ‘What Works’ evidence centres are needed and the role they will play.
Download the paper
Announcing the What Works Centres
By Ruth Puttick (March 2013)
A good day for evidence
By Ruth Puttick (June 2012)
Wouldn't it be NICE?
By Geoff Mulgan (June 2012)
1. Moving beyond discussing evidence based
2. Enabling evidence and innovation to co-exist
3. Debunking the myths about Randomised Control Trials (RCTs)
4. Institutionalising the demand for evidence
5. Dealing with negative findings
6. Managing the politics of decision making
7. Making the debate relevant
8. Opening up data for better, cheaper evidence and the new army of armchair evaluators
9. Evidence in the real world
10. Developing a UK Alliance for Useful Evidence
Add your comment
In order to post a comment you need to
be registered and signed in.
artifartblast
06 Mar 13, 3:15pm (3 weeks ago)
What Works? This video doesn't...
At least not for me. I can't hear what's being said, which is my problem. But you could make it intelligible to me and so many more people by subtitling it. You'd also then make the metadata searchable through any search engine, aiding its distribution. I note you have translated your site into Welsh. The population of Wales is 3.5m; there are 10m or so people with varying degrees of hearing loss in the UK. People for whom English isn't a first language would find subtitling invaluable. It's not about disability: it's about how you enable your audience. Would've thought NESTA would be onto that.
What Works...? Don't know.
Yet...