LOGIC: Good Practice Principles for Mainstreaming Behavioural Public Policy
This report outlines good practice principles intended to encourage the incorporation of behavioural perspectives as part of standard policymaking practice in government and governmental organisations. Evidence from the behavioural sciences is potentially transformative in many areas of government policy and administration. The 14 good practice principles, organised into five dimensions, present a guide to the consistent production and application of useful behavioural science evidence. Governments and governmental organisations looking to mainstream behavioural public policy may use the good practice principles and case studies included in this report to assess their current policy systems and develop strategies to further improve them.
Integration
Behavioural science experts and policy makers can shape and influence the partners, stakeholders, and structures around them to produce a better enabling environment for behavioural public policy. The principles in this section call for behavioural science to be embedded into standard processes and guidelines, for behavioural science activities to be conducted responsibly and openly to build citizens’ trust, and for behavioural science experts to inform the development of data structures that enable more efficient and effective problem diagnosis and solution development.
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