Policy Indicators
Links Between Social Science and Public Debate
By Duncan MacRae Jr.
432 pp., 6 x 9
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Paperback ISBN: 978-0-8078-6565-1
Published: January 2011
Urban and Regional Policy and Development Studies
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The usefulness of a public statistical series depends on the goals it represents and on our knowledge of how to act collectively to achieve those ends. The measures chosen, MacRae notes, can include gauges of social objectives, such as health and education improvements or crime reduction, and administrative inputs that promote them. He recommends, however, that the measures should be organized around general ends such as net economic benefit, subjective well-being, and equity. Knowledge about how to further collective aims, MacRae contends, requires strenthening of "technical communities" of researchers who study the means to the ends that policy indicators measure.
Policy Indicators provides a critical review of the field of social indicators, stressing the uses of statistics in policy debate. For applied social scientists and policy analysts, it presents broad proposals for the roles of their fields in a democracy.
Originally published in 1985.
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About the Author
Duncan MacRae, Jr.'s books include Policy Analysis for Public Decisions, The Social Function of Social Science, and Parliament, Parties, and Society in France, 1946-1958.
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Reviews
"Makes an original and brilliant contribution to the field."-- Peter H. Rossi