Economic Geography
Policy analysis: what is it, who does it
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Economic and social geography
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- Economics is not the only issue
Policy analysis: what is it, who does it,
and how is it done? Economic geographers do not engage in the policy process because they lack the skills to do so (see Staeheli and Mitchell 2005 for a discussion of geographers and policy participation). Policy research is about evidence and is based upon a specific methodology. If we are not prepared to challenge the beast on its own terms, with statistical models and conventional representations of the world, then our contributions will be limited to description. This is good as far as it goes, and in the initial stages of a policy trajectory it is a fundamental place to start. But, to really make a lasting difference, one that improves the lives of people and the health of communities, we must go beyond description and subject our initial hunches to rigorous evaluation, even at the risk of discovering that they are ultimately relevant only in very specific contexts. Rigorous analysis is the only way we can escape from being handmaidens to a policy process that is fraught with unequal power and poorly understood problems (see people like Jennifer Wolch whose research reflects a contemporary example of effective policy research). People like Bennett Harrison and Barry Bluestone used data and statistics to make their interventions. What set them apart now is their ability to listen to and critique policy dialogue on its own terms. Similarly, what set the activist-oriented geographers of the 1980s apart was their training in conventional theoretical approaches and subsequent decision to challenge them. Economics is not the only issue Economists are the dominant advisers in policy discussions today, in part because of their positive view of the world and in part because policy problems are On the intersection of policy and economic geography 213 increasingly narrowly scripted and framed in a manner that excludes questions that are not affirmative. Stated another way, policy discourse is about how to bring into alignment the world as it has been defined by a narrow band of interests. The ascent of economists as hegemonic policy wonks still does not entirely explain the absence of geographers in contemporary policy debates. At least since the beginning of the twentieth century, with minor and temporally specific excep- tions, geographers have been silent on important social issues. There is a singular absence of discussions in the geographic literature about such issues as the Great Depression, the First and Second World Wars, Vietnam, the War on Poverty, and even the 1960s urban crisis. Two years ago I explored geographical perspectives on a critical social issue – poverty in America. I took the top eight journals in geography published elec- tronically in JSTOR, 4 the online full text article service, and asked a simple ques- tion: how many times was the term ‘poverty’ mentioned in the tens of thousands of words in articles published over the 80 or so years for which key journals existed? After conducting a complete search of the eight journals referenced in JSTOR I then expanded my search to the top 20 geography journals. What I found was nothing less than shocking: Over 80 years of journal entries and thou- sands of pages of articles, there were 700 uses of the term ‘poverty’. In the top- ranked journals over the same period only 200 references were found. Half of the time the term, ‘the poverty of knowledge’, was used as a literary device. I found far fewer references to the spatial location of and explanations for endur- ing poverty. Over the same time period literally thousands of references to the term poverty could be found in the sociology, political science and economics texts. In the 1960–1970s, arguably the most active and well-funded period of social policy research focusing on issues of poverty and deprivation in the last 40 years, entries about poverty in sociology and economics journals number in the thousands. Evidently, it is not just that economists and sociologists have carved out a role for themselves in this area, but that geographers have chosen not to study problems like poverty in society. Tracking poverty discourse carefully from the 1950s forward, I could find a few notable geographers actively engaged in policy research and referenced in the field-defining journals. Names do come to mind: Dick Morrill of the University of Washington; Stan Brunn of Kentucky; Bill Bunge and his various institutional associations; Brian Berry, then of Chicago; and Richard Peet of Clark University. Of a more recent vintage, Jan Kodras, J. P. Jones, and a few others also come to mind. A clinical assessment of geographers’ participation in policy discussions of poverty pull up names that include Niles Hansen (an economist), Andrew Isserman (a regional economist), and a few others. Download 3.2 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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