Authors
Edward Miguel, Colin Camerer, Katherine Casey, Joshua Cohen, Kevin M Esterling, Alan Gerber, Rachel Glennerster, Don P Green, Macartan Humphreys, Guido Imbens, David Laitin, Temina Madon, Leif Nelson, Brian A Nosek, Maya Petersen, Richard Sedlmayr, Joseph P Simmons, Uri Simonsohn, Mark Van der Laan
Publication date
2014/1/3
Journal
Science
Volume
343
Issue
6166
Pages
30-31
Publisher
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Description
There is growing appreciation for the advantages of experimentation in the social sciences. Policy-relevant claims that in the past were backed by theoretical arguments and inconclusive correlations are now being investigated using more credible methods. Changes have been particularly pronounced in development economics, where hundreds of randomized trials have been carried out over the last decade. When experimentation is difficult or impossible, researchers are using quasi-experimental designs. Governments and advocacy groups display a growing appetite for evidence-based policy-making. In 2005, Mexico established an independent government agency to rigorously evaluate social programs, and in 2012, the U.S. Office of Management and Budget advised federal agencies to present evidence from randomized program evaluations in budget requests (, ).
Total citations
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Scholar articles
E Miguel, C Camerer, K Casey, J Cohen, KM Esterling… - Science, 2014