1 / 17

Marieka Klawitter

Public Affairs 513: Policy Analysis " Using logic and evidence to inform policy or management decisions.". Marieka Klawitter. What should we do?:. What was the impact?:. What are we doing? How. ·. ·. Policy Analysis. Outcome evaluation. does it work?:. ·. Benefit. -. cost analysis.

acton-buck
Download Presentation

Marieka Klawitter

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Public Affairs 513: Policy Analysis"Using logic and evidence to inform policy or management decisions." MariekaKlawitter

  2. What should we do?: What was the impact?: What are we doing? How · · Policy Analysis Outcome evaluation does it work?: · Benefit - cost analysis · Performance · Process Evaluation · Cost - Effectiveness Measurement · Needs assessment Activities, Policies, and Programs Outcomes Outcomes Time After During Before

  3. Policy Analysis can use the logic of the logic model: From: W.K. Kellogg Foundation Logic Model Development Guide

  4. Policy Analysis can use the logic of the logic model: From: W.K. Kellogg Foundation Logic Model Development Guide

  5. Policy Analysis Redux

  6. Policy Analysis Redux Logical Thinking!

  7. Policy Analysis Redux Data and Quantitative methods

  8. Policy Analysis Redux Search for information

  9. Policy Analysis Redux Careful Narrative!

  10. Policy Analysis Redux Creativity!

  11. Policy Analysis Redux Caring and Justice!

  12. Matrix is the key summary tool • Policy options • Criteria • Predictions Student examples: http://courses.washington.edu/pbaf513m/assignments.htm Professional Examples: http://courses.washington.edu/pbaf513m/Resources.htm

  13. My philosophy of doing Policy Analysis: • Strive for objectivity and full information • It’s not a sales pitch for "your" policy • But know your role (a la Weimer and Vining) • Objective technician • Client’s advocate • Issue advocate • Do the best analysis with what you can get • Use the best info you can find • Take responsibility for getting the best info • Be cognizant of when more time or analysis is critical to the analysis

  14. Context is everything • Who is your client? What values and powers do they have? • Understand institutional and organizational context of the issue • History, politics, laws, administrative culture matter • What’s in place now, what’s been tried already? (implemented or proposed)

  15. Take responsibility for presenting a clear and concise product • Process is different than product-- Policy analysis is a messy process Use nonlinear thinking, linear writing

  16. The Trouble with Greenlake: • What is the problem at Green Lake? • What types of strategies should the city consider for dealing with this issue? • What criteria should the city consider in choosing a response to this issue (outcomes, resources required)? • Create a matrix with Strategies and criteria and fill in your best guesses about how each strategy would rate on each criterion.

  17. History of Greenlake: http://www.mygreenlake.com/2011/06/bicycle-speed-green-lake-loop/

More Related