Book Summary of Frame Reflection: Toward the Resolution of Intractable Policy Controversies by Donald A. Schon and Martin Rein
Citation:
Frame Reflection: Toward the Resolution of Intractable Policy Controversies, Donald A. Schon and Martin Rein, (New York: Basic Books, 1994).
This Book Summary written by: Conflict Research Consortium Staff
The authors argue that, contrary to much of the
current opinion in the field, there is an important place for theoretical
reflection within policy practice. Theorists such as Hanna Arendt, Joseph
Gusfield, Albert Hirschman, Renata Mayntz, Jon Elster, and Thorstein Veblen
have defended a sharp distinction between practice and reflection, and
argued that "higher-level reflection in policy-making practice is neither
feasible nor desirable."(xiii) Generally, such theorists argue that reflection
requires distancing and disengaging oneself from the objects of thought.
Reflecting on and questioning basic assumptions and values results in uncertainty,
and so impairs the ability to act. In policy practice one must act decisively,
and in order to act one must rely on some enabling assumptions. Reflection,
then, is the antithesis of practice. Reflection should be left to the scholars.
This dichotomy between reflection and practice
produces a dilemma. "Reflection of a kind that might hold potential for
help in the resolution of intractable policy controversies is deemed to
be out of place in policy making, where it might be most fruitful, while
in the academy, which is seen as its proper locus, it tends to unfold in
a way that is useless to those who are engaged in policy practice. On both
counts practice loses out."(xvii)
Schon and Reid seek to develop an account
of reflection in practice which will resolve the traditional split between
reflection and practice. They are motivated to develop such an account
by the problems presented by intractable policy controversies. Their text
then is an attempt to respond to a basic set of questions: "How should
we make sense of intractable policy controversies? How should we understand
policy-making processes in which such controversies arise and persist?
How should we account for the processes by which they are, or might be,
resolved through reasoned discourse and reflection in policy making?"(22)
Part I: Setting the Problem of Reframing
Chapter One: Intractable Policy Controversies
The authors begin by distinguishing between policy
disagreements and policy controversies.
-
Policy disagreements: disputes in which the
parties to contention are able to resolve the questions at the heart of
their disputes by examining the facts of the situation. For example, parties
may disagree as to how many clients used a particular service. (3)
-
Policy controversies: disputes which are immune
to resolution by appeal to facts. Such disputes tend to be intractable.
For example, parties may disagree as to whether abortion should be legally
available.(4)
Generally, we can distinguish between disagreements
and controversies by the role that facts play in the dispute.(4-5) First,
parties to a controversy often focus on different facts as being most relevant.
For example, in the current controversy over abortion some people emphasize
the potential human life of the fertilized egg, while others emphasis the
right to self-determination of the woman. Second, parties to controversies
tend to interpret the same facts in different ways. A decrease in the number
of abortions performed may be seen as reflecting a decreased in the desire
for the procedure among women, or as the result of legislative or practical
barriers which make abortions increasingly difficult to obtain. The authors
observe that "by focusing our attention on different facts and by interpreting
the same facts in different ways, we have a remarkable ability, when we
are embroiled in a controversy, to dismiss the evidence adduced by our
antagonists."(5) Schon and Reid illustrate this phenomena by examine
controversies over the sources of poverty and crime.(5-8)
Intractable policy controversies are damaging
to the public in at least two ways. First, such controversies impair public
learning because, the authors argue, " any attempt to conduct public inquiry
into policy issues requires a minimally coherent, more or less consensual
framework within which the results of policy issues can be evaluated and
the findings of investigation can be interpreted."(8) Second, such controversies
threaten to overwhelm societies ability to manage conflict, and so threaten
the stability of liberal democracy itself. Controversies are increasingly
"settled" (though not resolved) by appeal to the courts, or by policy stalemates
which simply maintain the status quo.
Schools of Policy Analysis
Schon and Reid argue that traditional approaches
to policy analysis can neither account for intractable controversies, nor
aid in their resolution. They review the three main schools of policy analysis,
each of which is characterized by its own notion of agent rationality.
The authors describe the earliest approach as the policy-analytic approach,
and credit Harold Lasswell with its founding.(11-3) This approach focuses
on rational choice models of agency, and draws heavily from economic models.
Policies are evaluated in terms of their cost to benefit ratio. This approach
tends to assume that there is an objectively best solution to any policy
problems. This approach to policy analysis rests "on a conception of economic
rationality according to which policy problems are seen as instrumental
in nature, and policy makers are seen as rational to the extent that they
do the best they can do to satisfy the combined welfare functions of those
affected by their policies.
This approach suffers from three difficulties.
First, it has not been able to establish adequate standards for evaluating
policy failure or success. Second, by focusing on evaluating outcomes it
neglects processes, and so yields little understanding of why a particular
policy succeeds or fails. Third, such analysis tends to be geared toward
providing information for legislative oversight, rather than toward providing
information for the policy consumers and public.
Shortcomings of the policy-analytic approach sparked
the development of the political approach to analyzing policy.(13-6)
The political approach emphasized the pluralism, and the presence of conflicting
and competing interests. On this view agents are rational insofar as they
rationally promote their own interests and values. Interest groups and
agents bargain and exchange to achieve the policy or compromise which best
satisfies their individual interests.
The authors identify two difficulties with this
approach. First, it cannot account for intractable conflicts. Why should
some conflicts be immune to bargaining and compromise? Second, it does
not address the issue of disproportionate power. Powerful groups may be
better able to satisfy their interests at the expense of relatively powerless
groups.
The consensual dispute resolution, or mediated
negotiation approach draws on its predecessors.(16-9) It seeks to identify
policies which best satisfy the welfare of all affected, taking into account
the presence of different and possibly competing interests among the parties.
Key to achieving such satisfaction among all the parties is to distinguish
between the partiesà explicit positions, and their underlying interests.
Parties are rational insofar as they attempt to "achieve joint gains for
the participants by converting win-lose to win-win situations."(17)
Again, there are two difficulties with this approach.
First, some theorists concede that this approach may not be effective in
disputes over basic rights or values. That is, it may not be useful in
addressing the sorts of policy controversies in which the authors are most
interested. Second, it assumes that the parties interests are constant
or given. As Schon and Reid ask, "How can one develop reliable approaches
to the achievement of joint gains if the participantsà views of gains become
unstable?"(19) And yet, some negotiation theorists have claimed one of
the greatest benefits of mediated negotiation lies in the partiesà transformed
understandings of their own and othersà interests. Indeed the resolution
of values conflicts seems to hinge on just such transformations.
Chapter Two: Policy Controversies as Frame
Conflicts
In this chapter Schon and Reid begin to develop
their own approach to policy making, the frame-critical approach.
They begin by introducing the concept of frames.
-
Frames: structures of belief, perception,
and appreciation which underlie policy positions (23)
-
Policy controversies: disputes in which the
contending parties hold conflicting frames (23)
Real situations are complex, vague, ambiguous and
indeterminate. In order to make sense of any situation one must select
out certain features and relations which are taken to be the most relevant
characteristics of that situation. These features allow one to create a
story which explains the situation. The authors refer to this selection
process as the process of "naming and framing"(26) They explain, "From
a problematic situation that is vague, ambiguous and indeterminateÃeach
story selects and names different features and relations that become the
ëthingsà of the story -- what the story is aboutÃEach story places the
features it has selected within the frame of a particular context."(26)
Schon and Reid refer to these underlying contexts as generative metaphors.
Examples of such generative metaphors include the metaphor of disease and
health, of sin and redemption, or of natural processes versus unnatural
interference. Framing is necessary to make a problematic situation intelligible.
However most situations can be framed in different, and even incompatible,
ways.
Frames do more than simply describe a situation.
Frames have normative implications, that is, they imply that a certain
type of solution is called for. For instance, a problem framed in terms
of disease calls for a rather different response than one framed in terms
of sin. The authors note that "It is typical of diagnostic-prescriptive
stories such as these that they execute the normative leap [from describing
a problem to recommending a solution] in such a way as to make it seem
graceful, compelling, even obvious."(26) Furthermore, "This sense of obviousness
of what is wrong and what needs fixing is the hallmark of policy frames
and of the generative metaphors that underlie them, and it is central to
our account of the intractability of the frame conflicts implicit in policy
controversies."(28)
There is a reciprocal relationship between partiesÃ
interests and the way that they frame a problem. On the one hand their
understanding of their interests may motivate them to frame a situation
in a particular way. On the other hand their framing of the situation affects
their perception of their interests.
Because of this relation between frames and interests,
and because of our tendency to interpret facts differently in light of
our frames and interests, it is not possible to falsify a frame. It is
generally not possible to conclusively disprove or disconfirm someoneÃs
framing of an issue. And so frames cannot be said to be objectively right
or wrong, objectively correct or incorrect. In addition, there is no objective
stance from which to evaluate frames, if by objective we mean frame-neutral.
Key concepts
The authors offer a number of key concepts and
distinctions which they will use to further explore the role of framing
in intractable policy controversies.
-
Policy discourse: a verbal exchange or discussion
about policy issues (31)
-
Policy forum: the institutional setting or
vehicle for policy discourse. Examples include courts, legislatures, political
parties, editorial pages, radio and television programs. Different forums
have different rules of discourse (32)
-
Rhetorical frame: underlies the persuasive
use of story and argument in policy discourse (32)
-
Action frame: underlies policy practice ad
implementation. A single policy may have markedly different rhetorical
and action frames (32)
-
Policy frame: action frame that an institutional
actor uses to construct the problem of a specific policy situation (33)
-
Institutional frame: a more generic action
frame from which institutional actors derive their policy frames. The frames
that affect how institutional actors frame policy issues. Such frames tend
to be complex, and may involve elements typical of the institution, and
elements particular to the individual actor. (33)
-
Metacultural frame: broad, culturally shared
systems of belief. These frames shape institutional action frames and rhetorical
frames. The generative metaphors noted above are examples of metacultural
frames. Nature versus nurture debates are another example of contrasting
metacultural frames (33-4)
Difficulties in recognizing and reconstructing
frames
Framing beliefs are usually not explicitly recognized;
they are generally tacit beliefs and assumptions. In attempting to identify
and reconstruct (or as the authors say, construct) the various frames that
underlie policy issues we face a number of problems.
The first problem the researcher faces in constructing
a frame is that it can be difficult to tell which frame is underlying a
particular policy position. For example, the rhetorical frame used to "sell"
a policy may differ from the action frame that guides its implementation.
A second problem is that the same set of actions
may be consistent with very different frames, and so one cannot tell which
frame is being relied upon by the actions alone.
Third, different levels of policy administration
and application may employ different frames. The meaning of a policy may
differ, for example, from the legislature which formulates the policy to
the federal agency which enforces it, and differ again at the local level
of implementation.
Another difficulty arises in distinguishing between
conflict that arise within a frame, and conflicts that cut across frames.
This task is made more complicated by the different, nested, levels of
frames. A conflict may cut across institutional frames, yet have a shared
metacultural frame.
Yet another difficulty arises in trying to distinguish
between the potential for shifting a frame, and he actual occurrence of
a shift in framing.
A final, more theoretical problem is that the
individuals seeking to uncover and construct frames are themselves investigating
from within some frame. There seems to be no "unbiased" position from which
to reconstruct otherÃs frames.
Despite these difficulties, Schon and Reid
believe that the project of developing a frame-critical approach to policy
analysis is feasible. They are hopeful that many of the practical difficulties
noted above can be overcome by "carefully nuanced observations and analyses
of the processes by which policy utterances and actions evolve over time
and at different levels of the policy making process."(36) The validity
of frame constructs can be tested against relevant data -- debate transcripts,
for instance -- although the authors concede that what the "relevant data"
consists of may itself be an object of contention on occasion.
Chapter Three: Rationality, Reframing and Frame
Reflection
A central thesis of Schon and ReidÃs frame-critical
approach is that "human being can reflect on and learn about the game of
policy making even as they play it, and, more specifically, that they are
capable of reflecting in action on the frame conflicts that underlie
controversies and account for their intractability."(37) The authors believe
that people possess and can develop a frame-critical rationality which
will allow them to see how their actions and beliefs can contribute to
either the continuation or resolution of policy conflicts.
Schon and Reid begin by considering three
conceptual obstacles to developing an account of frame-critical rationality.
First is the relation between frame reflection, reframing, and conflict
resolution. The second obstacle is the problem of relativism. And the final
obstacle is the practical problem of reflecting across frames.
The first difficulty lies in clarifying the relation
between reflecting on frames, reframing issues, and resolving controversies.
The authors note that frame reflections does not always lead to reframing,
and that reframing does not always lead to resolution. Moreover reframing
may happen even without any explicit reflection on frames. Frame-critical
analysis may not be a panacea for all policy controversies.
The second obstacle that they note is the problem
of relativism, which has been alluded to above. The relativist worry is
that, in the absence of some frame-neutral standpoint real evaluation of
frames is not possible. The validity of any frame must always be relative
to some other frame, the validity of which is itself only relative. It
would seem then that there can be no final standards or independent criteria
from which to judge.
In general, theorists have employed two strategies
for dealing with relativism. The first coping strategy appeals "not to
a shared perception of fact, but to consensual, logically independent criteria
for evaluating frames and choosing among them."(43) The second strategy
seeks to translate between different frames. Parties to a conflict would
seek to put themselves in the other parties shoes. The authors explain
that "in order to do this...each party would have to be able to put in
terms of his or her own frame the meaning of the situation as seen by the
other in terms of the otherÃs frame."(45) Reciprocal translation would
allow for mutual understanding and could facilitate joint resolutions and
the creation of shared frames.
Each strategy raises its own further difficulties.
The authors observe that, "the difficulty with any model of frame choice
based on superordinate criteria is that the sponsors of conflicting frames
are likely to apply the ësameà criteria -- beauty or utility, for example
-- in different ways."(44) We will be faced with the further problem of
reconciling our understanding of the criteria. And so attempts to employ
this strategy lead us to the strategy of reciprocal translation.
The strategy of reciprocal translation presents
its own difficulties. Why would conflicting parties attempt the difficult
task of discourse across frames? And how could such discourse occur? Schon
and Reid argues that the parties BATNAs would be the source of their motivation,
if any, to discourse. For models of how such frame crossing discourse might
occur they appeal to Thomas Kuhn and Jurgen Habermas.
Kuhn explains how scientists operating from within
different paradigms might learn to communicate: "Each may...try to discover
what the other would see and say when presented with a stimulus to which
his own verbal response would be different...each will have learned to
translate the otherÃs theory and its consequences into his own language
and simultaneously to describe in his language the world to which that
theory applies."(47) Kuhn suggests that one party may "go native" and adopt
the new language as her own. However Kuhn does not specify why or when
such conversions would occur.
Habermas theorizes the ideal discourse setting.
Discourse should be governed by norms of freedom, openness and justice.
Discourse should be free from domination. All parties must have equal rights
to raise issues, ask questions, give reasons and present arguments. Parties
must be open to accepting or rejecting arguments based solely on the argumentÃs
merits. In practice Seyla Benhabib has argued that these norms demand that
we attempt to reverse perspectives with others, that is, that we try to
see things from the otherÃs perspective.(49)
The third obstacle to developing an account of
frame-critical rationality lies in implementing reflection across frames.
Kuhn and Habermas both give very abstract accounts of cross-frame discourse.
In attempting to make these abstract accounts practically applicable, the
authors turn to the work of John Forester, Charles Lindblom, James March
and Albert Hirschman.
Forester suggests that mediatorsà practice might
better approximate ideal discourse if it revised its notions of mediator
neutrality. Mediators must acknowledge that when their practice is most
effective it does affect the partiesà interests. The goal then would be
for mediators to be "Ãless like experts, judges or implausibly neutral
bureaucratsà and more like ënew friends who can create a space for speaking
and listening, for difference and respect, for the joint search for new
possibilities, and ultimately for newly fashioned agreements about how
we shall live together.Ã"(51)
From Lindblom the authors adopt the idea of disjointed
incrementalism, which sees policy analysis as, "incremental, exploratory,
serial, marked by adjustments of ends to available means, and socially
fragmented,"(52) They also stress the effect that policy inquiry have in
unblocking controversies. They authors differ from Lindblom in that they
focus their analysis more on specific policies and processes.
March emphasizes the ways in which institutions
take on a life of their own. Institutions change in ways that are "complex,
uncertain and discontinuous," and that are independent of any individualsÃ
intentions or ability to control.(54) Yet March also points out those distinct
and limited spaces in which intentional human action may have an institutional
effect.
Finally, The authors adopt HirschmanÃs "bias toward
hope," namely the hope that "societal development and institutional reform
may be deliberately pursued through the exercise of human reason."(55)
They also share his goal of producing knowledge which is useful to the
practitioner.
Informed by these authorsà views, Schon and
Reid develop their own account of frame reflective policy analysis by examining
three policy cases. In each case they consider how controversies emerge,
how policy positions are reframed, what is the relation of frame reflection
to reframing and reframing to resolution, and how policy practitioners
reason when they are reasoning well.
Part III: Toward Frame-Reflective Policy Conversation
Chapter Seven: Design Rationality Revisited
Following their examination of the cases, Schon
and Reid conclude that "competent practitioners can reflect on the meaning
of the policy-making game from a position within it" and argue further
that "policy controversies are frame conflicts that may be pragmatically
resolved by reframing, and that such frame reflection is central to design
rationality--the kind of limited reason that is feasible and appropriate
in policy making."(105) In this chapter Schon and Reid present a fuller
account of design rationality. They use a number of terms introduced within
the case studies.
-
Policy dialectic: a drama in which contention
among institutional actors in a policy arena combines with the actorsÃ
adaptations to shifts in a larger policy environment so as to effect, over
time, the transformation of a policy object. Policy dialectic is an ongoing
process wherein solutions to one problem generate new problems.(81)
-
Design rationality: approaches policy making
as a process of design, subject to a design rationality. The policy designer
notices how meanings, criteria and constraints change as the policy object
takes shape, is attentive to unintended consequences of her policy making,
and revises her framing of the policy problem and invents modifications
of the policy objects in light of these insights.(86)
-
Policy conversation: a metaphor for policy
design seen as communicative interaction between designers and those who
use or have a stake in the policy object.(122)
-
Back-talk: in the policy conversation, messages
sent back to policy designers that surprise them by violating their taken-for-granted
assumptions and tacit "action frames" telling them that the policy object
as perceived and used by other actors is different from the one they intended
to design and deploy.(123)
Policy design is a complex process. Schon and
Reid begin by describing design rationality as it is employed at different
levels of complexity. The simplest level involves the designer, the materials,
and the intended object. The authors describe the design process at this
level:
A designer works with materials to produce an
intended object and discovers that the materials resist , more or less,
his attempts to impose his intentions upon them. In this process, the designerÃs
intentions evolve. Design moves inevitably produce some unintended effects,
which the designer may see as flaws to be corrected, or as happy accidents
that suggest new opportunities. In designing, as distinct from instrumental
problem solving, something is being made under conditions of uncertainty
and complexity, so that it is not initially clear what the problem is or
what it would mean to solve it.(166)
Three basic norms of design rationality come into
play at this level.
-
The designer must set up the problem in a way that
allows for a solution.
-
The formulation of the problem must take into account
all of the important constraints, possibilities and uncertainties inherent
in the situation.
-
The designer must observe the consequences (intended
and unintended) of her designing moves and reformulate her problems and
solutions in light of her evolving understanding of the evolving situation.
Another layer of complexity is added when we consider
not a lone designer, but multiple actors designing, implementing and consuming
policy. Schon and Reid call this level of complexity the communicative-political
design drama. Design at this level is a social process in two senses. The
lone designer is replaced by the design system with multiple actors. The
design object is presented to a broader audience. Design at this level
is communicative both because it requires communication among the designers,
and because it requires larger policy conversation with policy consumers
and other stakeholders. The process is political both because the design
system is made up of actors with their own (potentially divergent) interests
and power, and because of the interaction with actors in the larger environment.
Rationality in the communicative-political design
drama starts with the basic norms. But with the added complexity "the objects
of reflection expand to include the designing systemÃs communication with
other actors in the policy drama: the messages sent and received, the interpretations
constructed for them, and the tests of such interpretations."(169) The
authors suggest additional norms to guide the designers reflection on their
communications.
-
Members of the design system should seek agreement
on the nature of the problem and the general character and content of a
solution. They are attentive to the meanings of the messages they receive,
and to the interpretations of the messages they send, and seek to reach
a common understanding of these meanings.
-
Designer must gauge their moves to meet both the
"substantive requirements of problem-setting and -solving, an the requirements,
political and interpersonal, of sustaining the design coalition."(170)
A third layer of complexity is introduced by actorsÃ
conflicting action frames. The design rational response to such frame conflicts
is co-design, "in which the contending parties become members of a reformed
designing system for the purpose of redesigning the policy objective."(170)
Co-designing requires that participants reflect on frames in three ways.
They must reflect on and possibly revise their framing of the problem.
They must reflect on how the various parties intentions and actions have
caused the policy making process to become blocked. They must reflect on
the framing of the policy object, and attempt to understand the intentions
and meanings of the other parties.
Co-design calls up further norms of design rationality.
-
Designers must reflect on the meanings that underlie
back-talk, in order to become aware of any controversies that might necessitate
policy redesign or reframing.
-
Designers must also reflect on how their own actions
may have contributed to the controversy, or may have precipitated the back-talk.
-
They must reflect on background learning and on facts
which have been uncovered over the course of the policy making process.
-
When blocked by controversy, designers must reflect
on the structure and politics of the policy process, seeking to unblock
the process by marketing and revising the policy object, by negotiation
and compromise, or by co-design.
-
Designers may need to invent new elements for the
policy object which synthesize aspects of the conflicting action frames.
Schon and Reid distill four basic features which
characterize design rationality across levels of complexity.
-
There is a design process which involves making something
out of available materials in a complex and uncertain situation.
-
The designerÃs intentions must always be emerging
and evolving in response to the emerging and evolving situation.
-
The designer is engaged in a conversation in which
he "seeks to grasp the meanings of his moves, and of otherà responses to
his moves, and to embody his interpretations in the invention of further
moves."(172)
-
The process of problem-setting and problem-solving
can be evaluated by how well it satisfies the partiesà emerging interests,
values and intentions, and by what further features of the design situation
it discovers.
Contrary to the concerns raised in the Introduction
to this book, the authors argue that frame reflection does not require
the thinker to distance or disengage herself from the problematic situation.
Case studies show that practitioners can engage in situated reflection.
They can reflect, for instance, on metacultural frames via the medium of
the concrete situation at hand.
In practice, the design rational approach also
avoids the relativist problems described in Chapter Three. The cases show
that, despite policy participantsà different frames, certain brute facts
often emerge for all participants. Differing frames may lead the participants
to interpret the causes, implications and importance of such facts in different
ways, but the emerging facts are nonetheless the same in some basic sense
for all the participants. As the participants each adjust their frames
to accommodate the new facts their frames are likely to begin to take on
a family resemblance. Shared perceptions and similar experience also aid
participants in reflecting on and understanding each otherÃs frames.
Situated reflection and controversy resolution
One of the authors main claims is the policy controversies
which seem intractable in principle may nevertheless be resolved at the
practical level by the use of design rationality and situated frame reflection.
They offer a number of reasons why progress may be possible at the practical
level, when it would seem to be blocked to a more distanced viewer. First,
participants tend to be very strongly motivated to make something happen.
Second, concrete situations are rich in information, and this informational
richness may open up more opportunities for progress. Third, action frames
are usually complex and made up of many elements. In practice parties may
reach mutually acceptable resolutions by merely shifting the emphasis placed
on various elements of their existing action frames, and so without the
need for fundamental reframing. Fourth, changes in the situationÃs larger
context may open up new opportunities for resolution. Finally, the presence
of others with differing views compels reflection on their perceptions
and interpretations. The need for coordination within the design team strongly
motivates them to achieve effective communication across their differing
frames.
Policy design is a cooperative process, and so
its success depends crucially on maintaining mutual trust among
the participants. Trusting in such situations means being "prepared to
act as though your counterparts will behave cooperatively in spite of the
risk that they might not do so and in advance of evidence that reveals
how they will behave."(179) Civic spirit, friendship, mutual respect, common
values and shared purposes all help to support mutual trust. In order to
maintain mutual trust actors must also have the behavioral and communication
skills needed to effectively convey their intentions and to express their
reliability.
The applicability of a design rational approach
Schon and Reid offer four reasons to believe
that design rationality will be generally applicable, that is appropriate
and helpful in the great majority of policy situations. First, everyone
involved in policy design has a rational interest in maintaining effective
communications. Frame conflicts are a source of miscommunication. And so
policy designers have a rational interest in frame reflection in order
to address frame-based miscommunication.
Second, all policy designers must deal with transactional
effects between their actions and their environment. Humans both shape
their actions in response to their environment, and shape their environment
by their actions. Policy designers "have a rational interest in discovering
how their own beliefs may have lead them to undertake actions that helped
to create the environmental conditions by which they are constrained."
In other words, policy designers have a rational interest in understanding
their own action frames.
Third, policy makers have a rational interest
in detecting and understanding flaws in their designs. They must try to
make sense of peopleÃs back-talk, protests, unintended uses or disuse of
policy objects. In order to make sense of such feedback, policy makers
must "be able, again, to put themselves in [other peopleÃs] shoes, entering
into their ways of framing the policy situation and constructing meaning
for the policy object."(185) Policy makers have a rational interest in
understanding otherÃs frames.
Finally, hybrid frames created to resolve policy
controversies may not be internally consistent. The new frame may contain
older elements which, if reactivated or reemphasized, would renew the controversy.
Or the reframing may resolve the immediate issue but leave a deeper frame
disagreement intact. Policy makers need to understand these framing issues
in order to seek more lasting and stable resolutions.
Chapter Eight: Conclusion, Implications for
Research and Education
The split between reason and practice noted in
the Introduction also shows up in policy research and education. The rigorously
tested truths of the social sciences tend to be trivial and of little use
to the practitioner. On the other hand the heuristic principles of craft
distilled from examination of successful practice tend to be "mutually
contradictory, noncumulative, not generally applicable, and nontestable."(191)
Schon and Reid hope that this split can be healed by emphasizing design
rationality in research and education.
Policy research must address policy practice.
"Policy researchers should focus on the substantive issues with which policy
makers deal, the situations within which controversies about such issues
arise, the kinds of inquiry carried out by those practitioners who participate
in a controversy or try to help resolve it, and the evolution of the policy
dialectic within which practitioners play their roles as policy inquirers."(193)
Research by policy academics should be carried out in collaboration with
policy practitioners.
The authors suggest a number of ways in which
such collaboration could occur. They might analyze success stories, study
current policy issues, study past policy controversies, or engage in frame
reflective studies of ongoing policy design processes. Collaboration between
academics and practitioners would have two main benefits. It would help
in the process of reciprocal frame reflection. And it could help practitioners
to maintain the conditions needed for mutual trust. Research of this type
could be thought of as a type of frame-reflective consultation.
The test of such research would be how useful it was to policy practitioners.
When policy research does not focus on practice
it can exacerbate tensions within the field. The authors note that there
are distinctions among policy practitioners. There are the practitioners
who design policy, and practitioners who are more involved in implementing
established policy. There is often some tension between these two branches
of practitioners. DesignerÃs interests in accountability in implementation
are often in tension with field workers desires for autonomy. Policy researchers
may exacerbate this tension. Policy researchers are often hired by oversight
agencies to evaluate policy programs. "Such evaluative research is not
designed to help practitioners perform better but to evaluate whether their
activity is worth doing in the first place." Since such evaluations are
very often program killers, practitioners often find policy research threatening.
For this reason the authors recommend a triadic
approach to research collaboration. Research should involve collaboration
between academics, designers, and every-day practitioners.
The research setting should be neither so close
to the policy situation as to completely embroil the researcher, nor so
distant as to leave the researcher disconnected from the situation. Researchers
should seek an optimally distant setting, "close enough to the actual policy
situation so that a practitioner move in and out of it with ease, yet distant
enough from it so that she is protected from its pressures, threats, and
distractions."(199)
Practice oriented policy research must have standards
of generality, rigor and validity which are appropriate to it. The causal
model used in much of the social sciences (which seeks the unique determinants
of an event) in not appropriate to policy research. Policy research should
instead emphasize the causal tracing of events, generating causal stories.
Such causal stories are validated to the extent that they solve the original
problem, just as the success of a medical treatment may serve to confirm
the original diagnosis. While normal social science attempts to formulate
covering laws, policy research should instead aim to describe generalizable
patterns. Such patterns are employed by practitioners via the process of
reflective transfer, which is "the process by which patterns detected
in one situation are carried over as projective models to other situations
where they are used to generate new causal inferences and are subjected
to new, situation-specific tests of internal validity."(204)
Policy education
Schon and Reid argue that current policy
education focuses on choice and decision-making, and neglects issues of
problem-setting and formulation, and of implementation. They suggest that
policy education should aim at producing "policy-specific versions of a
generic design capacity."(207) Policy schools might model themselves after
design schools. In particular they should adopt the idea of the design
studio to create a reflective policy practicum as a key part of policy
education. In such a practicum students, under the guidance of an instructor,
would respond to a problematic policy situation. The practicum should be
a virtual policy arena which represents much of the complexity, ambiguity,
and evolving meanings of actual policy conversations. Within such a practicum
students would have to be learn the task of frame reflection, and to learn
how to build and sustain mutual trust.
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