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Uncertainty in Policy Making
 

Uncertainty in Policy Making

Values and Evidence in Complex Decisions

Michael Heazle   Griffith University

208 pages, 234 x 156 mm
Publisher: Earthscan from Routledge



   
Hardback - 2010
ISBN: 9781849710831 - AU $144.00
 

 Uncertainty in Policy Making explores how uncertainty is interpreted and used by policy makers, experts and politicians. It also offers an alternative framework for how to deal with uncertainty.  It argues that conventional notions of rational, evidence-based policy making – hailed by governments and organisations across the world as the only way to make good policy – is an impossible aim in highly complex and uncertain environments; the blind pursuit of such a 'rational' goal is in fact irrational in a world of competing values and interests.

The book centres around two high-profile and important case studies: the Iraq war and climate change policy in the US, UK and Australia. Based on three years' research, including interviews with experts such as Hans Blix, Paul Pillar, and Brian Jones, these two case studies show that the treatment of uncertainty issues in specialist advice is largely determined by how well the advice fits with or contradicts the policy goals and orientation of the policy elite. Instead of allowing the debates to be side-tracked by arguments over whose science or expert advice is 'more right', we must accept that uncertainty in complex issues is unavoidable and recognise the values and interests that lie at the heart of the issues. The book offers a 'hedging' approach which will enable policy makers to manage rather than eliminate uncertainty. This approach is applied to the two case studies to show how it could have been employed in the case of Iraq and how it might be used in some of the policy challenges posed by climate change.

 

 Foreword by Paul Pillar
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
1. Introduction: A Story of (Irrational) Great Expectations
2: Policy Making and Specialist Advice: Concepts and Approaches
3: Empowering Nightmares: Uncertainty and the Precautionary Principle
4: Legitimizing the Iraq Intervention: Threat Inflation versus Precaution
5: Climate Change and the Politics of Precaution
6: Uncertainty, Ideology, and the Politics of Denial
7: Revealing Values and Uncertainty in Policy Debate
8: Alternative Responses to Uncertainty: Bringing Politics Back in
9: Uncertainty as Deus Ex Machina: Some Concluding Remarks
Notes
Bibliography
 

 Michael Heazleis Associate Professor in International Relations with the Griffith Asia Institute and the Department of International Business and Asian Studies at Griffith University. 

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