Yearly Archives: 2018

How to engage effectively and ‘speak truth to power’

Posted on

A blogpost by Prof Paul Cairney, University of Stirling The story of ‘speaking truth to power’ comes up frequently in these science-policy debates. Many scientists describe their role in producing the best scientific evidence, seeking to maximise the role of scientific evidence in policy, and criticising policymakers vociferously if they don’t use evidence to inform   …Continue Reading


The role of socialisation in education governance: the case of the OECD country reviews [1]

Posted on

A blogpost by Dr. Sotiria Grek, University of Edinburgh As already widely debated by academics and policy actors alike, the OECD has instigated a new era in education governance, primarily through its construction of a commensurable transnational education space. Given the vast policy implications for systems worldwide, the predominant idea is that it is OECD’s   …Continue Reading


Trusting in Expertise? Knowledge, Advice and Policy in the Environmental Domain

Posted on

Prof. Susan Owens, Fellow of the British Academy, introduces her Skape Keynote Lecture, 30 May 2018 At a time when trust in expertise is widely believed to be in decline, this lecture addressed three interrelated sets of questions, with particular reference to the role of expert advisors in the policy processes of modern democracies, and   …Continue Reading


A word that counts? The promise and pitfall of ruling the world by numbers

Posted on

A blogpost by A blogpost by Morten Jerven (University of Edinburgh) This blog post is based on a talk at the SKAPE seminar on 2 May 2018 Perhaps one of the most challenging notion to take on board in the governance of today’s world is that not all that counts can be counted. We increasingly   …Continue Reading


Reckoning with Transvaginal Mesh: Clinical Labour and Affect Economies

Posted on

A blogpost by Ariel Ducey, Department of Sociology, University of Calgary This blog post is based on a talk at the SKAPE seminar on 25 April 2018 For a number of years, I have been collaborating with colleagues in surgery, health services research, and bioethics in studying how and why a community of surgeons changes   …Continue Reading


The Holy Grails of good governance: Why we need naïve policymaking ideals in cynical times

Posted on

A blogpost by John Boswell, University of Southampton This blog post is based on a talk at the SKAPE seminar on 11 April 2018 Among other atrocities, the last year or so has seen leading Brexiteers weasel out of their side-of-the-bus commitment to redirect £350 million per week to the NHS on leaving the EU;   …Continue Reading