Policy Analysis: Empiricism, Social Construction and Realism

Authors

  • Clive Spash Institute for Multi-Level Governance and Development, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.15203/ozp.291.vol43iss4

Keywords:

Policy analysis, interpretive policy analysis, critical realism, historical materialism, critical state theory, knowledge

Abstract

In a recent article Ulrich Brand has discussed how best to perform policy analysis. I reflect upon the paper as an interdisciplinary researcher experienced in public policy problems and their analysis with a particular interest in the relationship between social, economic and environmental problems. At the centre of the paper is the contrast between two existing methodologies prevalent in political science and related disciplines. One is the rationalist approach, which takes on the character of a natural science, that believes in a fully knowable objective reality which can be observed by an independent investigator. The other is a strong social constructivist position called interpretative policy analysis (IPA), where knowledge and meaning become so intertwined as to make independence of the observer from the observed impossible and all knowledge highly subjective. Brand then offers his model of HMPA as a way forward, but one that he closely associates with the latter. My contention is that policy analysis, and any way forward, needs to provide more of a synthesis of elements from both approaches. Indeed I believe this is actually what Brand is doing.

 

Author Biography

  • Clive Spash, Institute for Multi-Level Governance and Development, WU Vienna University of Economics and Business

    Clive L. Spash is an economist who hold the Chair of Public Policy and Governance at WU Vienna. He works on a range of topics including environmental values, human behaviour, biodiversity and climate change, combining philosophy of science, ethics, economics, social psychology, political science, critical institutionalism and some basic natural science. These elements are brought together in his pursuit of social ecological economics. More information, including recent publications, is available at www.clivespash.org



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Published

2014-11-17

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