External validity and policy adaptation. From impact evaluation to policy design
Resource type
Author/contributor
- Williams, Martin J. (Author)
Title
External validity and policy adaptation. From impact evaluation to policy design
Abstract
With the growing number of rigorous impact evaluations worldwide, the question of how
best to apply this evidence to policymaking processes has arguably become the main challenge
for evidence-based policymaking. How can policymakers predict whether a policy will
have the same impact in their context as it did elsewhere, and how should this influence the
design and implementation of policy? This paper introduces a simple and flexible framework
to address these questions of external validity and policy adaptation. I show that failures of
external validity arise from an interaction between a policy’s theory of change and a dimension
of the context in which it is being implemented, and develop a method of “mechanism
mapping” that maps a policy’s theory of change against salient contextual assumptions to
identify external validity problems and suggest appropriate policy adaptations. In deciding
whether and how to adapt a policy in a new context, I show there is a fundamental informational
trade-o↵ between the strength and relevance of evidence on the policy from other
contexts and the policymaker’s knowledge of the local context. This trade-o↵ can guide
policymakers’ judgments about whether policies should be copied exactly from elsewhere,
adapted, or invented anew.
Report Number
BSG-WP-2017/019
Series Title
BSG Working Paper Series
Place
Oxford
Institution
Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford
Date
2017.07
Accessed
11/10/2017, 15:09
Citation
Williams, M. J. (2017). External validity and policy adaptation. From impact evaluation to policy design (BSG-WP-2017/019; BSG Working Paper Series). Blavatnik School of Government, University of Oxford. https://www.bsg.ox.ac.uk/sites/www.bsg.ox.ac.uk/files/documents/BSG-WP-2017-019_0.pdf
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