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“Evidence-based Policy†and “Policy of Evidence†: The Dilemma of Post-Soviet Societies

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  • A. I. Soloviev

Abstract

External and internalchallenges, risks and crisis phenomena operatingin the world and national states requirethe ruling regimes to flexibly restructurethe configuration of relations betweenpower and society. One of the toolsof such communication is the methods of“evidence-based policy†, which involve addressingthe population on the basis of expertand scientific recommendations whendeveloping goals that allow people not onlyto judge their legality, but also to challengeand correct their content. At the same time,in a number of transitional and authoritarianstates, preference is given to the “policy ofevidence†that demonstrates the priorities ofpolitically expedient actions of the authoritiesaimed not at partnership with society, but at mobilizing the support of the populationfor the implementation of the goalsof government policy. In this context, thearticle shows the objective and subjectivelimitations of the use of scientific andexpert data in the public sphere by a numberof post-Soviet states, the peculiarities ofthe correlation of “evidence-based policy†and “policy of evidence†in the activities ofthe ruling regimes, and assesses their prospectsin the short term in modern Russiansociety.

Suggested Citation

  • A. I. Soloviev, 2021. "“Evidence-based Policy†and “Policy of Evidence†: The Dilemma of Post-Soviet Societies," Outlines of global transformations: politics, economics, law, Center for Crisis Society Studies, vol. 14(5).
  • Handle: RePEc:ccs:journl:y:2021:id:854
    DOI: 10.23932/2542-0240-2021-14-5-3
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    1. Hollyer, James R. & Rosendorff, B. Peter & Vreeland, James Raymond, 2015. "Transparency, Protest, and Autocratic Instability," American Political Science Review, Cambridge University Press, vol. 109(4), pages 764-784, November.
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