ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

ECPR

Install the app

Install this application on your home screen for quick and easy access when you’re on the go.

Just tap Share then “Add to Home Screen”

Knowledge and Governance

Governance
Policy Analysis
Public Administration
Public Policy
Knowledge
Policy-Making
S39
Justyna Bandola-Gill
University of Birmingham
Christina Boswell
University of Edinburgh
Falk Daviter
Leuphana Universität Lüneburg
Sotiria Grek
University of Edinburgh

Endorsed by the ECPR Standing Group on Knowledge and Governance


Abstract

The Section provides a forum for a growing body of research examining the relationship between knowledge, monitoring and policy in the context of global and European governance. It aims to attract scholars whose research explores the role of ideas in the making of policy; the political uses of expertise and knowledge; the different forms and functions of expertise; the social construction of policy problems and responses; the transnationalisation of knowledge and policy networks; and political science, sociological or ethnographic studies of the tools, actors and organisations involved in the production and utilisation of such knowledge in governance. Over the past two decades, ‘good governance’ has increasingly been assumed to require the continuous production of robust evidence, research and monitoring. Part of this development appears to be linked to the politics of risk: in areas characterised by risk and uncertainty, science and expertise are considered to play a pivotal role in underpinning sound decision-making. Scientific knowledge has become a point of leverage and contention in areas such as global warming, military intervention and arms control, genomics, GM food or data privacy and ethics. At the same time, more traditional policy arenas, like health or education, have also seen a substantial shift towards the adoption of evidence-based policy mantras; further than that, the adoption of large global monitoring projects, such as the Sustainable Development Goals are already having indirect effects on national policy reforms. These developments have led to a burgeoning in the use of auditing, performance indicators and targets as tools for improving performance and accountability. European and international institutions have played a central role in the development and promotion of these new methods and practices. Organisations such as the OECD, European Commission, IPCC, World Bank and others have whole-heartedly adopted – even pioneered – such tools, partly as a means of managing diversity and legitimising their brokerage role. They have found a niche in promoting ‘good practice’ in national public administration, including through the deployment of indicators, evaluations and new practices in data and information gathering. These developments raise important questions about the relationship between knowledge and governance in Europe. Yet much of the research that has emerged since the 1980s – including in public administration and political science – has been largely uncritical of developments. In many cases it has bought into narratives of ‘evidence-based policymaking’ and better regulation, and been implicated in the very processes of knowledge production and exchange that are being analysed. Instead, this Section aims to bring together and consolidate a different, critical field of studies of knowledge and European governance, through supporting a series of panels reflecting on the following questions. First, how and why do actors and organisations deploy knowledge in policymaking? Who are the actors involved in these processes, and what types of narratives, logics or rationales influence practices of knowledge construction and utilisation? Is knowledge used instrumentally to adjust policy outputs, more symbolically or tactically to underpin claims to power or legitimacy or as a means to depoliticize contentious policy issues? Second, what sort of knowledge is deployed, by whom, and with what authority? How are tools for measurement, monitoring and standardisation developed and rolled out? What forms of knowledge or data are considered valid and legitimate, and on what basis? While there has been a great deal of emphasis on expert knowledge and research in policy discourse, there has also been a counter-trend involving the development of news forms of deliberative platforms incorporating both specialized and lay knowledge. Ethics advisory committees have been set up both in domestic and international arenas, thus extending the authority of expert knowledge, albeit of a different kind, to ethical questions. Meanwhile, the proliferation of new media undermines the traditional gate-keeping capacity of ‘experts’, providing a forum for non-experts and lobbyists to advance knowledge claims. New forms of knowledge are increasingly being used by different actors and communities in new ways. Again, how far can we identify such processes emerging in different policymaking settings, and with what implications for the relationship between knowledge and governance? Third, how do experts try to preserve their autonomy, when the politicisation of science is becoming increasingly obvious for the public? Which strategies do they use to draw boundaries between the realm of science and that of politics? How do scientific experts react to the incorporation of lay knowledge in new deliberative forms of governance? How is diversity managed in these new types of reflective governance arenas? Fourth, what are the effects of new tools of measurement, monitoring and evaluation? How do they influence, constrain or distort policy making, modes of governance, or organisational behaviour? What are the policy consequences of making sensitive ethical issues a matter of expert judgement? Through what processes are ideas about knowledge and ‘good governance’ diffused and applied across polities? What is the role of social media in the dissemination and use of expert knowledge? How do actors and organizations ‘learn’ or even reformulate their identities through engagement with these new tools and practices? And what are the implications for accountability and democracy? We invite scholars from across the social sciences and especially the disciplines of political science, public administration, sociology, social anthropology, social policy, science and technology studies, organisation studies, and business and accounting, to submit proposals for panels that work with these ideas and are engaged in their critical analysis.
Code Title Details
P106 Do Think Tanks Still Matter? Myths and Reality of Think Tank Influence in the Digital Age View Panel Details
P131 Evidence-Based Policymaking Under Pressure – New Paradigms, Experts and Practices View Panel Details
P204 Knowing Global Governance - International Organisations, Knowledge Production and the Politics of Numbers View Panel Details
P206 Knowledge, Power and Institutions - The Emergence of New Knowledge and Governance Regimes View Panel Details