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The use of indicators in environmental policy appraisal: lessons from the design and evolution of water security policy measures
Authors:Michael P Howlett  Janet S Cuenca
Institution:1. Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy, National University of Singapore, Singapore;2. Department of Political Science, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada
Abstract:Drawing up environmental policy options is a complex activity which involves defining and weighing the merits and risks of various alternative courses of action governments could pursue. In its modern version, this task typically involves formal policy analysis or ‘policy appraisal’, that is, policy work specifically undertaken to generate and evaluate policy options in order to address problems or issues on a policy agenda. Indicators play a powerful but under-investigated role in this process. To shed light on this issue, the paper conducts a case study of the design and evolution of policy indicators in water security policy formulation, examining both their utilization and impact. The paper documents the origins of water security policy indicators; assesses their relevance and influence in policy formulation and identifies the reasons for the emergence of certain preferred indices, despite their having several well-known limitations. In particular, the discussion flags the significance of the political advantages surrounding their ease of use and interpretation, rather than their technical merits, as a key factor affecting the continued utilization and influence of specific indicators in environmental policy and planning.
Keywords:Policy formulation  policy indicators  water policy  public policy  policy-making
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