000 01430pab a2200145 454500
008 180718b2001 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aKrane, Dale
245 _aDisorderly progress on the frontiers of policy evaluation
260 _c2001
300 _ap.95-123
520 _aCantankerous conflicts and debilitating debates characterize the disorderly development of policy evaluation. The clashes over methods, paradigms, and purposes have been so severe that no approach or idea has avoided criticism. This article reviews the turbulent history of evaluation from its multiple roots to its acceptance as an essential tool of contemporary public management. Next, the article examines the war between constructivists and positivists over methodology as well as the puzzling games played in the search for consensus over the purpose(s) of evaluation. The article concludes with a discussion of the future of policy evaluation from the perspective of democratic public management. Several vital issues glossed over by the previous debates are identified. The article ends with an appeal for evaluators to devote less time to methodological and paradigmatic infighting and more time to the solution of these other problems more directly related to the administration and improvement of public programs. - Reproduced
650 _aPolicy making
773 _aInternational Journal of Public Administration
909 _a48416
999 _c48416
_d48416