Politics of research-based policy in African policy debates, Synthesis of case study findings.

Author(s)
Broadbent, E.
Publication language
English
Pages
58pp
Date published
01 Jun 2012
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Evidence, Research methodology

This paper presents the findings of a year-long research project—‘The Politics of Research
Uptake’—which contributes to the evolving discussion regarding the relationship between
research and policy by considering the role of research-based evidence in African policy
debates. The notion of a ‘policy debate’ in developed countries is directly associated with
debates over evidence and its role in advancing political purposes, as a number of recent
examples demonstrate. Applying this consideration to the African context, this paper takes a
wider view of the policy process—in which policy debates are understood to be an integral part
of policymaking—by examining the role of research-based evidence in four case studies on
diverse policy debates in sub-Saharan Africa:

• The eviction of street hawkers in Accra, Ghana;
• The HIV/AIDS Prevention and Control Bill, Uganda;
• The introduction of genetically modified organisms (GMOs), Zambia; and
• Reform of the chieftaincy, Sierra Leone.

The objectives of the research are as follows:

• To characterise the policy debates studied in order to provide a reference point
for further work on policy debates in Africa;
• To identify what affects research-based evidence use, including a consideration
of different types of evidence used; and
• To identify the implications for the research–policy discussion and ways to
support the use of research in policy debates.