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This book provides an insightful and nuanced account of the roles of knowledge and evidence in behavioural science practices. Utilising evidence from Australia, it draws together the fields of evidence-based policymaking and behavioural insights in order to examine how policy actors negotiate the use of scientific evidence, knowledge, lived experience, and ethics in policymaking. It also considers the ways in which different knowledges can compete in public policy, and the roles of policymakers in that competition. Offering insights for both evidence-based policy processes and the application of behavioural insights more generally, the book is a valuable resource for academics and practitioners interested in behavioural sciences, and the impact of different types of evidence in policymaking.
List of contents
1. Tangled knowledges in behavioural insights: Nudging public policy.- 2. Tangled knowledges.- 3. Webs of knowledge in behavioural insights practices.- 4. Productions of evidence.- 5. Policy makers and the ethics of nudge.- 6. Collaborating and co-designing nudges.- 7. Conclusion.
About the author
Colette Einfeld is a Research Fellow at the College of Asia and the Pacific, Australian National University, Australia. Her research focusses on knowledge and evidence in policy practices in Australia and Asia.
Summary
This book provides an insightful and nuanced account of the roles of knowledge and evidence in behavioural science practices. Utilising evidence from Australia, it draws together the fields of evidence-based policymaking and behavioural insights in order to examine how policy actors negotiate the use of scientific evidence, knowledge, lived experience, and ethics in policymaking. It also considers the ways in which different knowledges can ‘compete’ in public policy, and the roles of policymakers in that competition. Offering insights for both evidence-based policy processes and the application of behavioural insights more generally, the book is a valuable resource for academics and practitioners interested in behavioural sciences, and the impact of different types of evidence in policymaking.