Drawing Inferences From Policy Experiments
- 1 February 1984
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Evaluation Review
- Vol. 8 (1) , 3-24
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0193841x8400800101
Abstract
The article argues that the sctentific credibility and policymaking utility of policy evaluation research is threatened by inappropriate inference strategies. These inference strategies are a consequence of a system of incentives and a methodology that encourage vague, ambiguous, or nonspecification of primary inferences and extended or unwar ranted tangential inferences. The result is policy research designed more to promote the enterprise of policy research than to assist in the useful application of research in policymaking settings. These points are illustrated through an analysis of the inference strategy pursued in the Police Foundation's Kansas City Preventive Patrol Experiment. One solution to the problem of inappropriate inferencing is for policy researchers to adopt the practice ofspecifying an illustrative range of potential primary inferences at the initial stages of analysis.Keywords
This publication has 5 references indexed in Scilit:
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- A response to “what happened to patrol operations in Kansas City?”Journal of Criminal Justice, 1976
- What happened to patrol operations in Kansas city? A review of the Kansas city preventive patrol experimentJournal of Criminal Justice, 1975
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- Reforms as experiments.American Psychologist, 1969