Across Canada, misguided populism is
creating bad public policy, preventing the spreading of economic benefits to all citizens By Joseph Quesnel Research Fellow Frontier Centre for Public Policy Misguided moratoriums... Read more»
Not exact matches
For one thing, there is the baggage associated with the National Energy Program backed by his father decades ago that taxed oil and
created a lot of
bad blood with Alberta, said Barry Rabe, a professor of
public policy at the University of Michigan and Wilson Center
policy scholar.
The intersection of science, funding, politicians, media and
public policy is doomed to
create bad science.
So is «the intersection of science, funding, politicians, media and
public policy doomed to
create bad science»?
Second, I would use these two parallel lines of development to ask the question: is it possible that, regardless of the best intentions on all parts, the intersection of science, funding, politicians, media and
public policy is doomed to
create bad science (in terms of oversimplification and suppression of uncertainty), questionable
public policy and, in the internet age, bitter acrimony amongst those who should be colleagues?