While America’s political divide remains stark across key policy domains, the concept of “evidence-based” policymaking – the notion that decisions about design, implementation, and funding of policies and social programs should be based on scientific evidence of effectiveness – continues to garner support among policymakers from both sides of the aisle.
However, despite important advances in the development and use of evidence to improve government effectiveness (including the work of the bipartisan Commission on Evidence - Based Policymaking), critical gaps between the integration of research and public policy persist.
Chief among them: 1) the current supply of evidence-based practices and programs that provide meaningful solutions for communities is thin; and 2) most providers of education, health care, and social services lack the capacity, resources, and data they need to rigorously measure the impact of their work and to influence public policies that affect their communities.
Read the full brief here.
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