1st Edition

Mind the Gap Perspectives on Policy Evaluation and the Social Sciences

By Phillip Allman, Jos Vaessen Copyright 2010
    254 Pages
    by Routledge

    254 Pages
    by Routledge

    Over the past twenty to thirty years, evaluation has become increasingly important to the field of public policy. The number of people involved and specializing in evaluation has also increased markedly. Evidence of this trend can be found in the International Atlas of Evaluation, the establishment of new journals and evaluation societies, and the increase in systems of evaluation. Increasingly, the main reference point has become an assessment of the merit and value of interventions as such rather than the evaluator's disciplinary background. This growing importance of evaluation as an activity has also led to an increasing demand for the type of competencies evaluators should have.

    Evaluation began as a niche area within the social and behavioral sciences. It subsequently became linked to policy research and analysis, and has, more recently, become trans-disciplinary. This volume demonstrates an association between the evaluation tradition in a particular country or policy field and the nature of the relationship between social and behavioral science research and evaluative practice. This book seeks to offer comprehensive data, which lead to conclusions about patterns that transcend the gap between evaluation and the social scientific disciplines.

    Mind the Gap has a twofold aim. The first is to highlight and characterize the gap between evaluation practices and debates, and the substantive knowledge debates within the social and behavioral sciences. The second is to show why this gap is problematic for the practice of evaluation, while at the same time illustrating possible ways to build bridges. The book is centered on the value of producing useful evaluations grounded in social science theory and research.

    Foreword -Ray C. Rist Preface -Jos Vaessen and Frans L. Leeuw Introduction: Mind the Gap -Frans L. Leeuw and Jos Vaessen Part I: The Evolving Relationship between Evaluation and the Disciplines 1. US Sociology and Evaluation: Issues in the Relationship between Methodology and Theory -Nicoletta Stame 2. Evaluation and the Disciplines in Development -Robert Picciotto 3. Economics and Evaluation -Sandra Speer Part II: Evaluation and Its Disciplinary Basis 4. The Intellectual Underpinnings of a Comprehensive Body of Evaluative Knowledge: The Case of INTEVAL -Lisa Birch and Steve Jacob 5. Public Management Theory, Evaluation, and Evidence-Based Policy -Robert Schwartz Part III: Bridging the Gap between Evaluation and the Disciplines 6. Interventions as Theories: Closing the Gap between Evaluation and the Disciplines? -Jos Vaessen and Frans L. Leeuw 7. Middle Range Theory and Program Theory Evaluation: From Provenance to Practice -Ray Pawson 8. Realistic Evaluation and Disciplinary Knowledge: Applications from the Field of Criminology -Nick Tilley Contributors Index

    Biography

    Jos Vaessen