Title: A Systems Approach to Establishing Scientific Integrity in Evidence Based Policy Making
1A Systems Approach to Establishing Scientific
Integrity in Evidence Based Policy Making
- Prof. Dr. Wijnand J. Swart
- Centre for Plant Health Management (CePHMa)
- Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences
- University of the Free State
- Bloemfontein
- South Africa
- swartwj.sci_at_ufs.ac.za
2EVIDENCE in Policy Context
- Sound, credible and robust evidence, whether
- quantitative
- qualitative
- statistical
- economic
- attitudinal / behavioural
- anecdotal
- social
- opinion based
- or review based .....
- ......is an essential and necessary part of
the enabling environment for formulating policies
that are coherent and effective in terms of their
outcomes.
3The Policy Making Process
- Techniques, analyses and judgements used to
evaluate and formulate data and information into
knowledge / evidence for making effective
policies are critical.
4What is Sound Evidence?
- Concept of sound and credible evidence is very
complex. - Dependant on inter alia
- types
- sources
- generating techniques
- context
- understanding
- ...... of data / information / knowledge
5Sound Evidence Context Understanding
TRUTH?
- Data are facts (e.g. numbers, names, symbols) and
have little value in themselves. - Information relates to description, definition,
or perspective (what, who, when, where). - Knowledge comprises strategy, practice, method,
or approach (how). - Wisdom embodies principle, insight, morals, or
archetypes (why). - Absolute Truth ?
WISDOM
understanding principles
KNOWLEDGE
CONTEXT INDEPENDENCE
understanding patterns
INFORMATION
understanding relations
DATA
UNDERSTANDING
6Knowledge vs Science
- Science is organized knowledge. Herbert Spencer
- Science a knowledge of principles and
causes.(Webster's Revised Unabridged
Dictionary) - Science is a way of thinking much more than it is
a body of facts. Carl Sagan - Good Science could be defined as those
practices which contribute most to advances in
understanding. - Sindermann The Joy of Science 1985.
- Science is to see what everyone else has seen but
think what no one else has thought. Albert
Szent-Gyorgyi
7Science and Policy Making
- Creative and innovative contributions of
scientists and policy makers and the trust
engendered in them by the public, to whom they
are accountable is of paramount importance. - Follows therefore that fostering an environment
that promotes research or scientific integrity is
an integral part of that accountability and the
pursuit of new knowledge.
8Scientific Integrity
- Integrity by definition
- honesty
- a state of being entire or whole
- Perspectives of scientific integrity
- Ethical issues relating to misconduct (fraud)
or manipulation, suppression, or distortion of
facts. - 2. Striving towards wholeness or excellence
in the search for knowledge.
9Research Integrity
- Essential for maintaining scientific excellence
and for keeping the publics trust. - Research integrity characterizes
- Institutional integrity
- creating an environment that promotes responsible
conduct and high levels of integrity - embracing standards of excellence,
trustworthiness, and lawfulness - Individual integrity Scientists commitment to
intellectual honesty and personal responsibility
and is an aspect of moral character and
experience. A good scientist must - communicate well
- obtain research grants
- excel in teaching and mentoring
- engage in ethical decision making
- use knowledge wisely to plan and execute
research.
10Institutional IntegrityPolitics vs Science
- Politicization of science as old as science
itself e.g Galileo's theory that the Earth
revolves around the sun perceived as a challenge
to the authority of the Catholic church. - Political interference threatens the integrity of
government science and policy making all over the
world. - Manipulation, suppression, and distortion of
government science misinforms public and leads to
poor policy decisions. - Especially rife in developing countries, e.g. the
assertion of the South African president Thabo
Mbeki that AIDS is not caused by HIV flew in the
face of decades of research and threatened to
undermine proper treatment of the disease.
11Bush Administration's Misuse of Science
- On February 18, 2004, 62 pre-eminent scientists
AND researchers released a statement titled
Restoring Scientific Integrity in Policy Making
in the USA. - Scientists charged the Bush administration with
widespread and unprecedented manipulation of the
process through which science enters into its
decisions. - Scientists accused Bush administration of
- Epidemic altering and concealing of scientific
information by senior officials in various
federal agencies. - Active censorship of scientific information that
the administration considered threatening to its
own philosophies - Restriction of the ability of government-supported
scientists to freely communicate scientific
ideas related to "sensitive" issues .
12Integrity of Research Institutions
- The organizational structure and processes that
typify the mission and activities of a research
institution can either promote or detract from
the responsible conduct of research. - These process are in part determined by the
external environment and are influenced by the
dynamics between and among organizational
members. - Any element or part of an organization can be
viewed as a system in and of itself. - External conditions influence the inputs into an
organization, affect the reception of outputs
from an organizations activities, and directly
affect an organizations internal operations.
13- Open systems model of internal environmental
elements of a research organization showing - Inputs / resources for organizational functions
- Structures and processes that define an
organizations operation - Outputs / outcomes of activities carried out by
individual scientists, research groups or teams,
and other research-related programs.
Source National Academy of Sciences -
http//www.nap.edu
14- Interrelatedness between research organizations
and the various external influences that have an
impact on integrity in research. - Systems and subsystems of the external-task
environment are embedded within the general
sociocultural, political, and economic
environment. - Relationships also exist between and among the
elements within the external environment.
Source National Academy of Sciences -
http//www.nap.edu
15Holistic Knowledge / Evidence
- Rather than focus on the ethical or moral aspects
of scientific integrity, focus here is on the
process of generating data and information and
integrating it into sound knowledge (sound
evidence) for decision-making.
- Integrity by definition
- honesty
- a state of being entire or whole
- Integrate by definition
- to combine parts into a whole
- A whole.. is more than the sum of its parts.
Jan Christian Smuts, Holism and Evolution 1926
16Sound Evidence A Holistic View
- A collection of data is not information.
- A collection of information is not knowledge.
- A collection of knowledge is not wisdom.
- Information, knowledge, and wisdom are more than
simply collections - Each concept represents more than the sum of its
parts and has a synergy of its own.
17A WHOLE AS A SYSTEM
- A system is defined as a set of interacting
units with relationships among them. The
properties (or behaviour) of the system as a
whole emerge out of the interaction of the
components comprising the system. - The interactions of the parts become more
relevant to understanding the system than
understanding the parts. - This definition of a system implies something
beyond cause and effect.
18The Ultimate System
- In truth only one system, the Universe"
- All systems are sub-systems of a larger system.
?
universe
galaxy
solar system
world
nation
state
community
COMPLEXITY
person
organ
cell
molecule
atom
particle
NUMBER OF SUB-SYSTEMS
19Systems Thinking and Policy
- Science is a way of thinking much more than it is
a body of facts. Carl Sagan - Systems thinking offers a conceptual framework
or model for thinking differently. -
- Systems thinking has permeated many scientific
fields including education, business management,
human development, sociology, psychology,
agriculture, ecology and biology, earth sciences.
20Hard vs Soft Systems
- Adopting a systemic perspective on solving policy
problems therefore appear to offer a useful way
of correcting these deficiencies. - In 1960s, a hard (quantitative) systems
approach was touted as the policy science. - However, hopes not realized for variety of
reasons its comprehensive modelling too
information-intensive and mathematical. - The soft (qualitative) systems approach of
systems thinking has increasingly been used since
the 1990s as a paradigm in policy planning and
implementation. - Soft systems methods stress the self-organizing
and adaptive capacities of appropriately designed
systems.
21Hard vs Soft Systems
- Soft systems methods
- Subjective (interpretive) philosophy
- Systems sociological theory base
- Flexible methodology
- Organizational problem-solving focus
- Creative / intuitive
- Analyst is facilitator
- Participative
- Organizational learning outcomes
- Several ambiguous outcomes
- Hard systems methods
- Objective philosophy
- Computer science systems theory
- Rigid method
- Data, process, database technical focus
- Scientifically analytical
- Analyst is expert
- Analyst dominated
- Computer design outcomes
- One correct solution
22Agro-ecosystem
A hard systems view of a farming system a
biological network suitable for mathematical
solution.
A soft systems view of a farming system an arena
for gaining experience and increased
understanding.
Source Robinson, B. 2003. 11th Australian
Agronomy Conference)
23Soft Systems Methodology (SSM)
- Can be used both for general problem solving and
in the management of change. - Used in the analysis of complex situations where
there are divergent views about the definition of
the problem "soft problems" or policy options
(e.g. How to improve health services delivery
How to manage disaster planning). - At the heart of SSM is a comparison between the
world as it is, and some models of the world as
it might be. - Out of this comparison comes a better
understanding of the world ("research"), and some
ideas for improvement ("action").
24SSM for Problem Solving
- Classic form of SSM consists of seven steps
- Problem unstructured by researchers
- Problem situation expressed to capture rich
picture - Create root definitions of relevant systems (i.e.
social, political environmental) - Making and testing conceptual models based upon
world views - Comparing conceptual models with reality
- Identifying feasible and desirable changes
- Acting to improve the problem situation
reality
understanding and improvement
conceptual models
- Differences between models and reality become the
basis for planning and policy making process.
25Multi-agent systems (MAS)
- Policy increasingly has to address topics that
have to do with disequilibrium, dynamics, and
locality. - The overwhelming complexity of biophysical and
socio-economic constraints that increasingly
characterize rural areas in developing countries
necessitates the development of more
sophisticated tools to support policy making in
these areas. - Multi-agent systems (MAS) are a relatively new
field in computer science that have been proposed
as a modelling approach for establishing even
higher levels of scientific integrity in the
generation and evaluation of evidence for making
policies. - Analogous to artificial intelligence.
26MAS for Policy Making
- Multi-agent models might be the preferred choice
when heterogeneity and interactions of agents and
environments are significant and policy responses
cannot be aggregated linearly. - MAS can thus complement bio-economic simulation
models which cannot fully capture the
heterogeneity in biophysical and socio-economic
constraints and the interactions between them. - There are several policy questions in the context
of agricultural development of rural areas where
MAS simulations may generate useful information
for decision making on public investments in RD
and the targeting of policy interventions. - Examples of such policy questions
- Should funds be spent on crop breeding for stress
resistance or in research for improved crop
management? - Should micro-finance be promoted or should
agricultural inputs be subsidized?
27Agents
- An agent is anything that can be viewed as
perceiving its environment through sensors and
acting upon that environment through effectors - Agents may be persons, farms, markets, computer
programmes or anything that is reactive,
autonomous, and goal-oriented. - Agents may have the ability to communicate with
other agents, learning, mobility, and
flexibility. May even have personality and show
emotions!
AGENT
SENSOR
EFFECTOR
OUTPUT
INPUT
SYSTEM
ENVIRONMENT
28Agent Flexibility
- An intelligent agent is capable of flexible
autonomous action. - FLEXIBLE
- Reactive A reactive system is one that maintains
an ongoing interaction with its environment, and
responds to changes that occur in it (in time for
the response to be useful) - Pro-active Generating and attempting to achieve
goals not driven solely by events taking the
initiative i.e. goal directed behavior
recognizing opportunities - Social Ability to interact with other agents via
some kind of agent-communication language, and
perhaps even cooperate with others.
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30BIBLIOGRAPHY
- Balmann, A. 2000. Modeling land use with
multi-agent systems perspectives for the
analysis of agricultural policies. - Berger, T. and Ringler, C. 2002. Trade-offs,
efficiency gains and technical change Modeling
water management and land use within a
multiple-agent framework, Quarterly Journal of
International Agriculture 41119144. - Berger, T., Schreinemachers, p., and Woelcke, J.,
2006. Multi-agent simulation for the targeting
of development policies in less-favored areas.
Agricultural Syatems 8828-43. - Checkland, P. 1981 Systems thinking, systems
practice. Chichester Wiley. - Checkland, P., and Holwell, S. 1998 Information,
systems, and information systems making sense of
the field. Chichester, UK Wiley.  - Checkland, P. and Scholes, J. 1991 Soft systems
methodology in action. Chichester Wiley. - Harrison MI. 1994. Diagnosing Organizations
Methods, Models, and Processes, 2nd ed. Thousand
Oaks, CA Sage. - Schreinemachers, P. Berger, T. and Aune, J.B.,
2007. Simulating soil fertility and poverty
dynamics in Uganda A bio-economic multi-agent
systems approach. Ecological Economics
64387-401 - Union of Concerned Scientists. 2004. Scientific
integrity in policy making An investigation into
the Bush administration's misuse of science.
Cambridge (Massachusetts) Union of Concerned
Scientists 49 pp. - Woolridge, M. 2002. An Introduction to Multiagent
Systems by John Wiley Sons (Chichester,
England).
31THANK YOU!