The social sciences are increasingly ill-equipped to design system-level reforms

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 46:e162 (2023)
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Abstract

Our social policy landscape is characterized by incrementalism, while public calls for more radical reform get louder. But the social sciences cannot be relied upon to generate a steady stream of radical, system-level policies. Long-standing trends in social science – in particular, increasing specialization, an increasing emphasis on causal inference, and the growing replication crisis – are barriers to system-level policy development.

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