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May 07, 2007Policy Research? We Don't Need No Stinkin' Policy ResearchPosted to Author: Pielke Jr., R. | The Honest Broker From today's New York Times a tale of incredible myopia all too common in the Bush Administration: When Jon Oberg, a Department of Education researcher, warned in 2003 that student lending companies were improperly collecting hundreds of millions in federal subsidies and suggested how to correct the problem, his supervisor told him to work on something else.Posted on May 7, 2007 02:31 PM CommentsRoger, What's the policy research angle? This is more a failure of program implementation and/or evaluation. Neither of these are necessarily connected to policy research. Posted by: David Bruggeman Hi David- Jon Oberg was doing policy evaluation research -- pretty important if performance matters -- and when he brought to his supervisor was punished as the bearer of bad news. Effective implementation depends upon effective evaluation, and effective evaluation is a research function. Thanks! Posted by: Roger Pielke, Jr. Roger: a bit of a side point, I know, but what is the spend on climate research at the moment? How does this compare/relate to other budgets, for example energy R&D, or spending on 'perceived threats to national security'? And do you think that the time has come to classify GW as the latter? Posted by: Fergus Brown at May 8, 2007 06:50 AM Fergus- Thanks. Climate research is about 5% of health research and about 25% of energy R&D. It is less than the homeland security R&D budget. If you want some actual numbers see: http://www.aaas.org/spp/rd/tbres08p.pdf There is really no line item for "perceived threats to national security" other than DHS, and I would not recommend transferring any climate funding to DHS;-) On the other hand, developing effective policies in response to climate change (adaptive) would beenfit from a closer connection to the mission agencies, and national security is an important mission, so there is probably some merit to what you suggest. Thanks! Posted by: Roger Pielke, Jr. Can somebody explain why the term 'climate change ' seems to used almost exclusively as opposed to the term 'global warming"? Posted by: tom at May 8, 2007 09:13 AM Tom- "Global warming" is just a subset of "climate change" as discussed at Climate Science on May 1 2007 in the weblog entitled "Confusion in the Definitions of Global Warming and Climate Change" [http://climatesci.colorado.edu/2007/05/01/confusion-in-the-definitions-of-global-warming-and-climate-change/]. People who use the term "climate change" when they mean global system heat changes (i.e. "global warming") are significantly oversimplifying the climate system. Posted by: Roger A. Pielke Sr. at May 8, 2007 04:55 PM I have a theory that most of the public were really actually looking forward to a bit of warming so the new theory about warming possibly causing cooling via gulf stream shifts started to be really pushed forward. Hence global warming becomes global climate change and all bad weather; hot, cold, wet, dry can be easily attributed to it some way or another. Of course dry areas always get drier, wet areas get wetter, windy areas get windier etc. From whence comes all this pessimism? Posted by: JamesG at May 9, 2007 05:15 AM |
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