1 |
Worthwhile policy ideas emerge from science, but scientists have no responsibility for disseminating the policy implications of their research among policy-advising bureaucrats and politicians |
D |
2 |
No matter their differences, science and politics eventually serve a similar function creating conditions for cooperation between people. |
C |
3 |
It is admirable that scientists translate political ideas into transparent models, and objectify them into measurable indicators |
C |
4 |
The client or principal defines what knowledge is relevant |
C |
5 |
It is only natural for bureaucrats to collaborate with scientists; after all, research is a link in the chain of policy implementation |
C |
6 |
There will always be a political struggle about values; and correspondingly, types of knowledge that align with, or deviate from political value systems |
C |
7 |
In public policy, learning is limited to instrumental, financial and organizational matters |
D |
8 |
Dealing with uncertainty primarily is a matter of thorough and honest political debate |
C |
9 |
Most of the time it is concepts, models or story lines originating in science that are the glue in agreement on policy development issues |
C |
10 |
It is in the nature of things that politics and science are incompatible activities |
D |
11 |
When the chips are down, lay and practitioners’ knowledge have less value than scientific knowledge; therefore, they deserve no standing at the policy table |
D |
12 |
Scientific experts and advisers are lawyers: their business is advocacy for political positions |
D |