Using Policy Labs as a process to bring evidence closer to public policymaking: a guide to one approach
Saba Hinrichs-Krapels (),
Jocelyn Bailey,
Harriet Boulding,
Bobby Duffy,
Rachel Hesketh,
Emma Kinloch,
Alexandra Pollitt,
Sarah Rawlings,
Armida Rij,
Benedict Wilkinson,
Ross Pow and
Jonathan Grant
Additional contact information
Saba Hinrichs-Krapels: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Jocelyn Bailey: University of the Arts London, Social Design Institute
Harriet Boulding: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Bobby Duffy: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Rachel Hesketh: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Emma Kinloch: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Alexandra Pollitt: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Sarah Rawlings: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Armida Rij: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Benedict Wilkinson: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Ross Pow: Power of Numbers
Jonathan Grant: King’s College London, The Policy Institute
Palgrave Communications, 2020, vol. 6, issue 1, 1-9
Abstract:
Abstract While robust evidence is one ingredient in the policymaking process, it is by no means the only one. Engaging with policymakers and the policymaking process requires collaborative working models, navigating through the experiences, values and perspectives of policymakers and other stakeholders, as well as communicating evidence in an accessible manner. As a response to these requirements, over recent years there has been proliferation of activities that engage producers of evidence (specifically, academics), policymakers, practitioners, and the public in policy formulation, implementation and evaluation. In this article, we describe one engagement approach for facilitating research evidence uptake into policy and practice—an activity called a ‘Policy Lab’—as conducted by the team at The Policy Institute at King’s College London on numerous policy challenges over the past four years. Drawing on our experience in running 15 Policy Labs between January 2015 and September 2019, we (a) provide a guide to how we have run Policy Labs, while sharing our learning on what has worked best in conducting them and (b) demonstrate how these labs can contribute to bringing evidence closer to policymaking, by comparing their characteristics to enablers for doing so identified in the literature. While this approach to Policy Labs is not the only one of its kind, we suggest that these types of Labs manifest characteristics identified in previous studies for influencing the policymaking process; namely: providing a forum for open, honest conversations around a policy topic; creating new networks, collaborations and partnerships between academics and policymakers; synthesising available evidence on a policy topic in a robust and accessible format; and providing timely access to evidence relevant to a policy issue. We recognise the limitations of measuring and evaluating how these Labs change policy in the long-term and recommend viewing the Policy Lab as part of a process for engaging evidence and policymaking and not an isolated activity. This process serves to build a coalition through participation of diverse communities (thereby establishing ‘trust’), work on the language and presentation of evidence (thereby enabling effective ‘translation’ of evidence) and engage policymakers early to respond when policy windows emerge (thereby taking into account ‘timing’ for creating policy action).
Date: 2020
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:pal:palcom:v:6:y:2020:i:1:d:10.1057_s41599-020-0453-0
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DOI: 10.1057/s41599-020-0453-0
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