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Opportunities and Challenges for Policy Advice and Policy Making in Education
Future Possibilities
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Description
Despite mantras such as 'evidence-based policy' and 'evidence-for-policy', many working in and with an interest in education remain unconvinced that policies are truly underpinned by, to draw on an oft-used proclamation, 'the best available evidence'. Thus, there have been growing calls for new ways of producing education policy. This book is intended to make headway and add fuel to this movement. A wide range of scholars have been assembled to make contributions to this book that are likely to be of interest to academics, politicians, civil servants, school staff, and other education professionals in the public, private, and voluntary sectors. The book's chapters reflect on opportunities and challenges for policy advice and policy making in education and, significantly, they put forward new possibilities for the future.
The conversations, debates, and further research that this book ignites could prove fruitful over time, ultimately leading to more optimal policies.
Table of Contents
Introducing Key Issues and Ideas for Policy Advice and Policy Making in Education Craig Skerritt
Part 1 Opportunities, Challenges and Future Possibilities: Knowledge and Evidence
1. Evidence-Informed Education Policy in a Complex Knowledge System: The Case for Epistemic Pluralism Dirk Van Damme
2. Towards a Social Capital-Based Heuristic Framework for Improved Policy Making in Education James Hall & Chris Brown
3. Minding the Data Gap: Challenges and Opportunities to Informing Education Policy in Northern Ireland Erin Early, Laura Dunne & Sarah Miller
Part 2 Opportunities, Challenges and Future Possibilities: Academics and Advice
4. Policy Formation in England and Scotland: Opportunities and Challenges for Academic Researchers Navigating the Pathways to Policy Impact Alice Tawell, Hilary Emery, Gillean McCluskey & Ian Thompson
5. 'Thank You, We'll Take That Back': Academics Battling for Teacher Education in England Clare Brooks & Joanna McIntyre
6. From Lived Experience to Informed Policy: The Transformative Vision of Working-Class Academics Teresa Crew
Part 3 Opportunities, Challenges, and Future Possibilities: Citizens and Democracy
7. Polycentrism in Education Policy Making in England and Aotearoa New Zealand: Strengths as well as Weaknesses? Taylor A. Hughson & Loic Menzies
8. Co-Constructing Knowledge to Inform Policy: Challenges and Opportunities in Research-Policy-Practice Partnerships Claire Forbes
9. Teachers as Policy Makers: A Warning against a 'Big Bang' Approach to Decentralization Elaine Sharpling & Gareth Evans
10. Framing Equitable Teacher Engagement and Authentic Participation for Education Policy Development Louise Campbell, Charlaine Simpson & Anna Beck
Product details
| Published | 09 Jul 2026 |
|---|---|
| Format | Hardback |
| Edition | 1st |
| Pages | 248 |
| ISBN | 9781350538955 |
| Imprint | Bloomsbury Academic |
| Illustrations | 10 bw illus |
| Dimensions | 234 x 156 mm |
| Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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Timely, reader friendly and incisive, this book makes us rethink how education policy is done and justified.
Manuel Souto-Otero, Professor of Education, University of Bristol, UK
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This edited volume makes an important and insightful contribution to understanding the complex and at times fraught relationship between researchers and policy-makers in education. The chapters illustrate, with depth and nuance, that the relationship is rarely linear or straightforward but situated, negotiated and contingent.
Phil Nicholson, Lecturer in Education Studies, University of Glasgow, Scotland
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Challenging simplistic discourses surrounding academic impact and evidence-based policy, this volume offers fascinating insights into the complexities of policy advice, acknowledging its social and political dynamics. It is essential reading for researchers seeking to better understand education policy-making, and for those who aim to engage with or reshape it.
Anja Giudici, Lecturer in Education, Cardiff University, UK
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An in-depth analysis of national policy styles and ecosystems that convincingly explains why global education reforms resonate and are “translated” differently across countries. A must-read for policy analysts, planners, and researchers interested in current educational reforms in their own country and around the world.
Gita Steiner-Khamsi, William H. Kilpatrick Professor at Teachers College, Columbia University, New York & UNESCO Chair in Comparative Education Policy at the Geneva Graduate Institute
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In the midst of recent challenges to education as a public good, it is important to consider how actors, knowledge and policy spaces interact in the complex process of policy making. This comprehensive volume addresses some of the fundamental obstacles at the heart of policy creation and proposes new possibilities for paths forward. The book is an engaging, insightful read for scholars, policymakers and educators who are committed to lasting improvement.
Kerry A. McKeon, Boston College, USA
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At a time when education policy making is increasingly centralised yet poorly understood, this rich collection interrogates the relationship between research, practice and policy. By amplifying undervalued voices and questioning whose knowledge counts, Skerritt and contributors offer compelling perspectives deserving attention from academics, policy makers, practitioners, and the wider education community.
Moira Hulme, Professor of Education, University of the West of Scotland, UK

























